The Cooper Point Journal Volume 4, Number 18 (February 19, 1976)

Item

Identifier
Eng cpj0110.pdf
Title
Eng The Cooper Point Journal Volume 4, Number 18 (February 19, 1976)
Date
19 February 1976
Evergreen Subject
Evergreen Organic Farm
Student Organizing and Activism
Faculty Hiring and Governance
Native American Studies
Description
Eng Pg 1: the Cooper Point Journal (front page) Student Workers at Evergreen: Where Do They Stand?;
Pg 1: 'No Two Boards are Alike...' Organic Farmhouse-A Hand-Crafted Home (images: Organic Farm house under construction (by Buster), Students working on the farmhouse);
Pg 1: 76-77 Revisions;
Pg 1: Inside (table of contents);
Pg 2: Letters (Image: old bicycle seat (by Krall);
Pg 2: Letters: Learning Need;
Pg 2: Letters: Disaster;
Pg 2: Letters: Housing - Not So Glowing;
Pg 2: Letters: Nude Swimming;
Pg 2: Letters: 'Nam/Indian Parallel;
Pg 2: Classified ad;
Pg 2: Staff credits;
Pg 2: (advertisement) KAOS 89.3 FM
Pg 2: Image: beach gravel partially submerged (by Buster);
Pg 3: A Summer in Canoes (image: two persons in a canoe (by Hill));
Pg 3: 'Olympia's Standing Joke' Saunas & Message Parlors (image: statue (by Uffist);
Pg 3: Backspace;
Pg 4: No Blood, No Gore: Rainier Indoor 'cycle Meet (image: cyclist #10);
Pg 4: (advertisement) Cooper Point Journal (solicitaton editor applications);
Pg 4: (advertisement) BAP Olympia Ltd.;
Pg 4: (advertisement) Sandies (women's clothing);
Pg 5: In Brief: image: swimming meet competition in progress;
Pg 5: In Brief: Tuition Hike Bills Rejected;
Pg 5: In Brief: Evergreen Art: You Help Decide;
Pg 5: In Brief: Biocides on Campus;
Pg 5: In Brief: Anthrax in Imported Yarns;
Pg 5-6: In Brief: Toxic Spill Kills;
Pg 5: (advertisement) The Third Moto;
Pg 5: (advertisement) Ash Tree Apartments;
Pg 5: (advertisement) Eld Equipment (hiking gear);
Pg 5: (advertisement) Erlich Stationers;
Pg 5: (advertisement) Capital Honda;
Pg 5: (advertisement) Raudenbush Motor Supply;
Pg 5: (advertisement) Olympia Sport Shop;
Pg 5: (advertisement) Paul's Mobil Service;
Pg 6: In Brief: Gregory to Speak in Olympia Mar. 1;
Pg 6: In Brief: A Special Internship;
Pg 6: In Brief: Asian Camps;
Pg 6: (advertisement) The Artichoke Mode;
Pg 6: (advertisement) Willie's Sports Enterprises;
Pg 6: (advertisement) U.S. Air Force Recruiter;
Pg 6: (advertisement) Olympia Greenhouses;
Pg 6: (advertisement) VinoFino;
Pg 6: (advertisement) Villa Roma (pizza parlor);
Pg 7: Program Guide KAOS 89.3 FM;
Pg 8: News from Career Planning/Placement;
Pg 8: (advertisement) Rainy Day Record Co.;
Pg 8: (advertisement) Evergreen State College Bookstore;
Pg 8: (advertisement) House of Cameras;
Pg 8: (advertisement) Bob;s Big Burgers;
Pg 9: Older Women and Health Care;
Pg 9: Announcements;
Pg 9: Bailey Critiques Legal System;
Pg 9: (advertisement) Evergreen Coins and Investments;
Pg 9 (advertisement) Rags International Hair Designers;
Pg 9: (advertisement) The Duck House Arts & Crafts;
Pg 9: (announcement) Med School Admissions;
Pg 9: (advertisement) Dirty Dave's Gay 90's;
Pg 9: (advertisement) South Sound National Bank;
Pg 10: (announcement) Holly Near and Jeffrey Langley in Concert: EPIC and the Women's Center sponsored (image: Holly Near);
Pg 10: Succulents (image: cacti and Aloe plants);
Pg 10 Food/Westerman;
Pg 10: (advertisement) Rainy Day Record Co.;
Pg 11: Entertainment: Beauty Pageants... (images: Woman with trophy (by Krall) , women in bathing suits (by Krall));
Pg 11: Entertainment: general area listings;
Pg 11: Entertainment: Women's Poetry Reading;
Pg 11: Entertainment: Take Two;
Pg 12: "I'm Really int the Bizarre...," Photojournalist Mike Mathers;
Pg 12: PIRG at Evergreen State College;
Pg 12: (advertisement) The Cooper Point Journal: Demiurge submissions sought
Creator
Eng Strassner, Rick
Eng Case, Don
Eng Torrence, Marc Keith
Eng Belcher, Susan
Eng Jones, Sean
Eng Lakes, Gary
Eng Karla, Jackson
Eng Taylor, Doug
Eng West, Robin
Eng Brown, Betty
Eng Judd, David
Eng Hill, Burnell
Contributor
Eng Locke, Ti
Eng Stewart, Jill
Eng Milton, Curtis
Eng Dodge, John
Eng King, Doug
Eng Buster, Doug
Eng Gilbreath, Ford
Eng Meighan, Kathleen
Eng Gendreau, Joe
Eng Morawski, Joe
Eng Wright, Molly
Eng Norrgard, Lenore
Eng Cowger, Chris
Eng Groening, Matthew
Eng Shore, Stan
Eng Feyk, Jim
Eng Riddell, Catherine
Eng Lozzi, Craig
Eng Shelton-Mason County Journal
Subject
Eng Student labor
Eng Evergreen curriculum
Eng Agriculture
Eng Botany
Eng Construction
Eng Educational practices
Eng TESC housing
Eng Nudity
Eng Travel adventures
Eng Prostitution
Eng Motorcycle Racing
Eng Anthrax
Eng Japanese internment camps
Eng Healthcare
Eng U.S. Legal system
Eng Recipes
Eng Poetry
Eng Von Volkenburg, Don
Eng Kormondy, Edward
Eng Carlson, Craig
Eng Knauss, Bill
Eng Corke, Michael
Eng Evans, Ralph
Eng Moses, Louise
Eng Tuso, Fred
Eng Stauffer, Rob
Eng Abdu’l-Bahá
Eng Bahá'u'lláh
Eng Moss, John
Eng Clabaugh, Dean
Eng Groening, Matthew
Eng Wayne, John, 1907-1979
Eng Hill, Burnell
Eng Shushan, Jeff
Eng Keith, Chunky
Eng Pritz, Neil
Eng Unsoeld, Debbie
Eng Riddell, Fred
Eng Redmond, Don
Eng Mattews, Ken
Eng Gabriel, Judy
Eng Wales, Mike
Eng Alexander, Gerry L.
Eng Stevens, Ken
Eng Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616
Eng Darwin, Charles, 1809-1882
Eng Kant, Immanuel, 1724-1804
Eng Einstein, Albert, 1879-1955
Eng Marx, Karl, 1818-1883
Eng Whiting, T.
Eng Witz, M.
Eng Mauksch, L.
Eng Benkoozv, J.
Eng Holtz, C.
Eng Fithian, Glenn
Eng Schmidt, J.
Eng Jacobs, Bob
Eng Mann, D.
Eng Osbourne, M.
Eng Peters, B.
Eng Wasner, S.
Eng Morrill, T.
Eng Rohde, S.
Eng Maxie, Peggy
Eng Dlugokenski, Chris
Eng Schillinger, Jerry
Eng Springer, Stan
Eng Gregory, Dick
Eng Yost, Bruce
Eng Yost, Colleen
Eng Roosevelt, Franklin D. (Franklin Delano), 1882-1945
Eng Clear, Aaron
Eng Stone, Anne
Eng Rhythm, Kidd
Eng Bo Diddley, 1928-2008
Eng Berry, Darren, 1969-
Eng Crook, Robin
Eng Riback, Lee
Eng Murphy, Joe
Eng Coltrane, Robbie
Eng Hutcheson, Greg
Eng Bookspan, Martin
Eng Holden, Chris
Eng Foster, John S.
Eng Furlong, Brad
Eng Hess, Diane
Eng Stewart, Cindy
Eng Meister, Lee
Eng Mae, Laura
Eng Macht, Rob
Eng Hood, Tom
Eng Ray, Brent
Eng Burrows, Howard
Eng Chambers, Lee
Eng Blunt, David
Eng Furlong, Brad
Eng Ivan, Jivan
Eng DePrez, Dan
Eng Nichols, Mike
Eng May, Elaine
Eng Bruce, Lenny
Eng Moore, James
Eng Knoper, Carla
Eng Obetz, John
Eng Schaffer, Shirley
Eng Tiranoff, Michael
Eng Johnson, Robert
Eng Griggs, Mike
Eng Sonego, Aaron
Eng Russell, Tom
Eng Gill, Tom
Eng Fleishman, Rhoda
Eng Gaver, Jananne
Eng Dawn, Aubrey
Eng Rice, Doug
Eng Winiger, Stephen
Eng Cook, Carl L.
Eng Bickelhaupt, John
Eng Krall, Greg
Eng Ingram, Brent
Eng Robertson, Rob
Eng Rabow, Stephen
Eng Everett, Michael
Eng Harrison, Randy
Eng Zeidenstein, Laura
Eng Haefner, Ruth
Eng Ansley, Helen
Eng Levine, Irvine
Eng Prestion, Caroline
Eng Elston, Bill
Eng Coontz, Sharron
Eng Jennings, Pamela
Eng Cardiff, Gladys
Eng Moorehead, Mary
Eng Bailey, F. Lee
Eng Hearst, Patty
Eng Near, Holly
Eng Langley, Jeffrey
Eng Humble, Florence
Eng Robinson, Edward G.
Eng Dietrich, Marlene
Eng Laughton, Charles
Eng Percival, Jack
Eng Keys, John Grace
Eng Maraire, Dumi
Eng Gipple, Cindy
Eng Docekal, Susan
Eng Chytolova, Vera
Eng Bloomingdale, Wayne
Eng Bloomingdale, Dorothy
Eng McBride, Del
Eng Bohn, David
Eng Russell, Anna
Eng Lenthe, Jean Vi
Eng Frasca, Marilyn
Eng KAOS Radio
Eng Cooper Point Journel
Eng Sandie's
Eng BAP Olympia
Eng Olympia Sport Shop
Eng Erlich Stationers
Eng Paul's Mobil Service
Eng Capital Honda
Eng ELD Equipment
Eng Ash Tree Apartments
Eng Raudenbush Motor Supply
Eng The Third Moto
Eng The Artichoke Mode
Eng Willie's Sports Enterprises
Eng Olympia Greenhouses
Eng U.S. Air Force
Eng Vino Fino
Eng Villa Roma
Eng Rainy Day Record Company
Eng House of Cameras
Eng TESC Bookstore
Eng Bob's Big Burgers
Eng Dirty Dave's
Eng Rags' International Hair Designers
Eng Evergreen Coins and Investments
Eng The Duck House
Eng South Sound National Bank
Eng EPIC
Eng TESC Women's Center
Eng Western Washington State College
Eng TESC Board of Trustees
Eng Daily Olympian
Eng Judy's Sauna
Eng Gannett
Eng The King and I Dating Services
Eng Washington State Department of Motor Vehicles
Eng Thurston-Mason Health District
Eng Thurston County Sheriff's Department
Eng International Raceway Parks
Eng Rainier Beer
Eng Seattle Center Coliseum
Eng Seattle Totems
Eng American Motorcycle Association
Eng Washington Arts Commission
Eng Evergreen Visual Environment Group
Eng TESC Sounding Board
Eng Weaving Works
Eng Magnolia Weaving
Eng La Tienda
Eng Millard-Pollard
Eng Fiber to Fabric
Eng Lacey Co-Ply
Eng Washington State Ecology Department
Eng Washington (State). Department of Fisheries and Game
Eng Playboy Club (Chicago)
Eng Washington (State) Department of Welfare
Eng Washington (State) Department of Vocational Rehabilitation
Eng Washington (State) Department of Employment Security
Eng Washington (State) Department of Probation/Parole
Eng Washington (State) Alcohol Referral Center
Eng Washington (State) Bureau of Indian Affairs
Eng Radio Canada International
Eng Zodiac and Earth News
Eng Washington State Office of Community Development
Eng Washington State Women's Council
Eng Washington State Patrol
Eng Disney Entertainment
Eng Senior Actualization and Growth Exploration of California
Eng Seattle Menopause Study Group
Eng University of Washington
Eng Driftwood Day Care Center
Eng TESC Gay Center
Eng TESC Center for Poetry
Eng TESC Academic Advising
Eng WashPIRG
Eng University of Puget Sound
Eng Greenwood Inn
Eng ASH Coffeehaus
Eng Pub Tavern
Eng Rainbow Deli
Eng Save the Children Federation
Eng Washington State Capitol Museum
Eng The Music Bar
Eng Applejam Folk Center
Eng The Sunnyside Folk Arts Center
Eng Royal Lichtenstein Circus
Eng Bon Marche
Language
Eng eng
Place
Eng Olympia (Wash.)
Eng Bellingham (Wash.)
Eng Alberta (Canada)
Eng California
Eng Seattle (Wash.)
Eng Lacey (Wash.)
Eng Chehalis (Wash.)
Publisher
Eng The Evergreen State College Board of Publications and members of the Evergreen community
Extent
Eng 12 pages
Temporal Coverage
Eng 1976/1977
extracted text
STUDENT WORKERS AT EVERGREEN:
'I'M REALLY INTO THE BIZARRE ..

PIRG AT TESC?

1111.tt.ti.tll.e.l;llist ,\\ilt:e '\\;Itlle.es
,,,"

b y Joh n Dodge
T ,1ke ,In tid ve n tu re s ome s pirit and
:1urt u re it with th e li terary works of Jac k
!-.-l' I" 'U'l( and
lack Londo n , Equip th e
<,1111l' \'.'ung man w ith a ca mera and a
',1 ,W
Il'«'rd er , Transport t h is budding
"'I1I,];1t l< I< t t" a small tow n railroa d yard
" IOI'n n<\'h-,ln ia and p lace him o n a
1"<' lght tr,1ln for an unk n ow n destin a t io n.
T I'1 1 the aspiring vagabond he is abo ut
" pdl'tdkl' in a ten yea r odyssey: the end
' .', u!t b lln g the p r oduc ti o n of tw o
: n usual ph.l to-jou rnali sm books - o ne
--n shceplwrdprs , th e o the r o n hobos,
Sl' gl' (" the directi o n of the li fe of
\ I" h'1\'1 \ tat he rs, a rough-hewn man in
: 115 th lrt i ~s \\'h,> has ca ptured in pi ctures
,he Iil e, t yle (If two su b c ulture s o f
,Inwn ' :rl, dden , lo nely men, , ,
HOBOS
Tir,,.,, i< 11 certai" prel'alellt "'Iy tll abo ut
I"'/'l"
. tllat tlley cilOose th eir li fe -;ty /e,
!llJlr tl ,,.,.,, is SUel l a thin g as a haJlPY
111' [>. '
/ tili"k tl rese m en ha v e b ee n
-.))Il ,/lr!;.' r:!'.1 i-l1'yo ll ci th e Jlo illl of reality ,
. ' \ ' \/1 ' 1. !/,' U' (' i.v it }, th at ?
O h \'(',110. . The idea of a ho bo is
,.'Ille' I"W \\'h •• doesn 't ca re abo ut ma teri a l
' hill )!, he c,lu se he does n't have them a nd
!1 1' d .,,,, " 't work for someone he dll es n't
\\',1nt to ', ,The re a re no resp o nsi bilities
In IOE'lng ,I h o b o, , ,and th at ' s kinda
bu ll s h'il ~hl l tha t's w here th e ro man t icism
co mes in, ,A lo t of the ro m a nti cis m
, an1(' 111 the 40 's, D urin g the 30 's
[)e pre", o n yea rs) the men rode th e rai ls
."lI t (1 1 necess ity , no t o ut o f choice,
In reali tv , hobo, a re o ut casts , movj ng
,.I .'ng t he edges of society w ith a tat te red
bl'dr o ll. .J p las tic w<l te rjug a nd if money
all" ,,'" d c heap bo ttle of w in e, The
tr ... mp ., ",('riel is a closed world full of
s~crc t l \'e, self-c onsc iou s men , With Ih is in
mind , the work Michael Ma th ers' ha s
d,'n l' I~i-.e, o n heig ht ened significance ,
l.ik! ' mm ·t subcultures, th e ho bo wo rld
has a \'ocdb ulary a ll it s ow n , Th e
Co n linental Div ide is th e " hump" a nd
\'C'lI ' rc no t co nsidered a ho b o until you 've
( r",sed th e h u m p. The area ne a r a

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railroad ya rd where the hobos co ngregate
to te ll sto ries, pass th e bo ttle a nd sleep is
ca ll ed th e " jungle, " The largest jungles left
o n th e hobo circuit are in Wenatchee,
Sp(okane dnd Havre, Mo nt ana ,
Wes t of Chicago, ho bos prefer to be
ca ll ed " tramps " because the word hobo
infers th a t a perso n d oesn't w ork , {Most
railrid ers a re migrato r y laborers.} Ea st of
C hi cago the label hobo is preferred,
Eas t o f C hicago ri ding the rails is
risk y - the men a re often hassled by
"bull s" (railroa d ya rd sec urity officials)
and th ere is very litt le migrant work
ava il a bl e, Hopping freight s in the Deep
So uth is a lso ' dan ge ro u s - if you ' re
ca ug ht you may spend three weeks o n a
cha in ga ng ,
There is m o re to "ca t c hing out "
(ho pping a freight) than meets the eye of
th e casual o bserver , Tramps look for a
boxca r wi th bo th doors o pen so if o ne
door closes from a sudden jolt ca used by
"coup ling" (joining of ca rs to make a
tra in ) th e tramp runs less risk of being
trapped in side,
A ll the ho bos have "road na mes" like
Pa sco Slim and Reno Blackie, Denver Red
and Sp oka ne Bob , Hobos usually ride the
rai ls w ith a partner for added protection.
A, d run ke n rage, a sudden pu sh o ff a
s p ee din g train , a fla s hin g "equalizer "
(k nife in th is case) - a ll pose threats to a
tramJ; alo ne,
W~!I does a tralllp slay on th e rai/s 7
If yo u s it in a boxca r door o nce, you' re
hooked . Look ing out th e open doo r at the
landsca pe ru shin g ,by , , ,No ma tter how
ma n y tim es you 've trave led tha t same
trac k before, it 's like a new mov ie every
time, .Tra mps s tay on the move for
exc it eme nt. ,to fig ht the boredom,
Wh en yo u get to you r destin a ti o n, it
never quit e meets up to yo ur expectat io ns, .The on ly thing to do is head
back d ow n to th e ya rd a nd cat ch ou t, , .
SHEEPHERDERS
Michael spent a total o r eight m o nths
stud y ing and doc umenting sheepherders in
Ce ntral Oregon, Wyoming and Idaho. He

immersed himse lf in their daily life, using
ant hropo logica l field techniques and his
ever-presen t camera to portray the ir lives
as honest ly as possible.
"I got a much nicer feeling from the
s heeph e rder s th an the hobo s, " sai d
Mat hers, "Sheeph erders are a very mellow
group of men - kind to their animal
companions (dogs a nd horses) and in a
constant flow with nature ,"
Sh eeph er ders live in a lmo s t total
isolation from th e civilized world .
Working for large ranches and tending
anywhere from ] 5 to 2000 sheep, the men
spend the summers in the mountains and
the winters on the range, The months
from February to April are set aside for
" lambing" (when the ewes give birth).
S heep herders, usually men 55 and over,
a re the lone liest among people, Their
spo radic trips to town inev itably lead to
extended " tears" {drinking sprees}. They
o ften spend all their money in a few days
a nd if th ey ca n't spe nd it all, they give the
rest away, Then back to the range they
go,
More so tha n hobos, sheepherders are
a n eccentr ic bunch , Mathers , a storyteller
to the fi rst degree, loves to reminisce
about the unforgettabl e characters he has
me t :
Fred Murdock, 75 (7), and a sheepherder for the pas t 70 years, gives the
word eccentric a new dimension, For the
past twe nt y years hi s diet has consisted of
g in ge r s n aps and sar dines with an
o cca s io nal s lice of moldy bread - he
insist s th at the bread be moldy , Fred has
subsc rib ed to U, S, News and World
Repo rt for 45 years and loves to talk
politics, Miserly with his money , Murdock
has saved over $100,000 over the years
a nd plan s to donate his sav ing to the U.S.
Government to help payoff the national
debt. Fred also hates to throw anything
away. Fred' s sma ll cabi n is so full of junk
that he can ' t ' eve n ge t to hi s bed
a nym o re: consequently he sleeps sitti ng
up on a small shelf .
S ince o ne ram can service up to 200
ewes , ca stratin g young rams is common
activity and the responsibility of the
sheepherders.

Wh en y ou showed your picture of the
sir eepil erder "do cking " (castratin g) the
yO lmg ram , ,I go t a feeling peo ple w ere
1I0 t quit e ready for what they we re
seeing, How'd you fee l abo ut it ?
A herder told me we were going to
dock sheep , Dock sheep, What 's that?
O,k , I'll go out there , .. 1 watched and
he re's thi s man cutt ing the tip of (the
yo ung ram's) sac a nd pulling the balls ou t
with his teeth . I had to be real cool, calm
a nd, co ll ec ted. I see it every day , you
know, no proble m . . ,And I just photog raphed it. , .I cou ldn't believ e it. . ,

Hut the picture itself is v ery tasteful.
That's a goo d pun .
As Michael Mathers said himself : ''I' m
rea ll y into the bizarre, "

by Jill Stewa rt

by Ti Locke
The people begat Ralph Nader, and
Ralph Nader begat the Public Information
Research Group (PIRG).
PIRG groups have been formed to give
college-age students a means to study
complex societal problems - and effect
change, Hundreds of PIRG groups have
been established on college campuses nationwide . Students in those groups are not
only receiving public recognition, but also
academic credit for their work .
INPIRG (Indiana) won a major battle
against telephone rate increases through
its successful , intervention in a Public
Service Commission meeting, The PSC
denied the request for 10-cent directory
assistance charges, (A similar directory
assistance charge is currently being considered for Washington . )
MaryPIRG (Maryland) succeeded in
banning an industrial b y- product salt.
The salt, which contained cancer-causing
asbestos fiber, was being marketed as
table salt,
CalPIRG (California) studied fat content in ground beef, The result was a lawsuit by the California Attorney General
for false representation in the sale of
meat.
aSPIRG (Oregon) and others have
taken action against the sales of
dangerous toys. And in Washington, a
WashPIRG group has recently been approved on the Western Washington State
College {WW5C} campus. The University
of Washington has nearly completed its
petition drive .
Petition drive? Fifty-one percent or
18,000 UW students have to endorse
PIRG before it can be implemented on
campus, By endorsing PIRG, UW students agree to pay an' additional , refundable, $2 tuition fee, Later, if more than
half ot the student body requests its $2
back , PIRG would be abolished.
The students, and not the administration , have control over PIRG. WashPIRG
would be controlled by students elected
by statewide governing bodies . Those
students would have the responsibility of
setting policy , hiring staff, and reviewing
projects statewide.
On the individual campus, stude nts
elected by their peers would have respon,sibility for WashPIRG activities, At departmentalized universities, representatives
would represent individual departments
(Political Science, Engineering, Agriculture , etc, ), At Evergreen we would perhaps have an interdisciplinary PIRG DTF ,
The individual contract - group contract
system at Evergreen would also provide
an ideal home for PIRG studies . _
Provided that there are a number of Evergreen students interested in PIRG and
facult y is available to advise, then the
only major stumbling block is money .
WWSC, and the UW are using tuition
annexations, and therefore the univer sity, as a co llection agency . However,
a bill before the Washington legislature
would prohibit the u se of the tuition system as a method of co llec ting fees for orga niza tions that d o not operate so lely for
the college's benefit.
Next week: the finances of PIRG ,

Student e mpl oy ment is bi g business at
Evergree n , Close to one-fou rth of Evergreen's student popu la ti o n w o rk a t the
co llege, brin gi ng in hourl y sa la ries that
ra nge from mi nimum wage to o ver $4,00
a n ho.ur.
Althou gh Everg reen s tuden ts are o ft en
pa id we ll above m in imum wages, no body
is amassing a fortune working here ,
The s tan dard co mpl ai nt s come up as a lW<lys; wages are too low, prices too high ,
ti me too preci o ll ~,
However , we are not nearly",> bad off
as We,tern W ... ,hington Sta te College in
Be lli ngham, At Western every ,t uden t is
h'l'eJ at min imum wtige , nl' mat ter what
the io b. N" ,t~ldl'nt recc i v e~ d raise ev('r .
In (\t'ltr ,l~1 f.\ Pq!: t't'n ~tud(:'nll. USUJ ll y
begin ""l' rk ,It 52.:~ or S2 ,7l' an 'w ur ,
and rt'cei\'f! pa\' '11k." lin ,) 300-hour-pe r raise ,che dule. Tnis sy,lem pa y' ut f for
the stud ent wh" cdn , ti ck wilh il. One
equipment che( k-,Hlt O\orker in the C RC
has wo rked there s(' long he mdkp, 53.20
an ho ur.
H IGH PAY
Most a rea s un ca mpu s ha ve made an
honest effo r t to pa y st udent s a cco rd in g to
the class ification sC dle (see below ), bu t

1)~,"IUI2f3~

1)1~III(JI1(.I~
T he Demiurge, th e Jo urna l's a nthology of s tudent poe try and prose, photography and original art , will be published March 11 .
The j o urnal welcomes all members of the Evergreen community to bring their assorted creative work to the Journal office. Let's make
the Demiurge into a showcase of printed art.
If yo u have a ny questions concerning publis hing your work , ca ll John Dodge, T he Demiurge Edito r, at 866-6213 or stop by the office.
We look Fo rward to see ing you and your work .

lU<.:.t \;;,n'! dl)Jll' orteil .

pa id fo r the a m o unt o t s kill required , tv erg reen refl ects that tradition ," she said ,
As a communications stude nt I was part ic ularly in t e res ted in co mp lai n ts th at
Coo per Point journal (CPj) a nd K AO S
em pl oyees a re underpaid, Fin ancia,l Aid
Cou nselo r Do n Vo n Volkenburg ' ca ll ed
t hese areas "The bigges t ri p- off o n cam pus,
All CP j e mpl oyees start a t 52.45 , leve l
two , but t he jobs ac tual Iv ra nge from
Ipvet three to leve l five in skills , experience
.md r~~po n s ib il il y , The KAOS co re ,tafl ,
which includps .,ome highly ,k illed po~i'. I ll,," , a l,,) ,t,lrt .Jt I"vel ,w o.
The size (,f the Fi nancial Aid std!! doc"
I' ,' t ,111 ,)w Ihern t<l check e"'('n p,b t"r

wall is that th IS is sup posed to be an a lter na tive co ll ege , but as fa r as I'm co ncerned
there are a rra ngemen ts made outside o ur
affi rmat ive acti o n po licies , , , T hese dr'
ra nge men ts can ofte n scree n out Th ird
World p eop le ," he sai d ,
O ther pro blems that co nce rn Vo n Vo l·
ken bu rg a re the abse nce o f train in g P!'l' grams fo r st uden t wo rkers and the need
for a n off -ca m p us employ men I ",r vit<'
He a lso advocate, the creation 01 ,I ~ r in ·
a nC!: Cl1l11mittee fl'r student',
Bccdu se of " recent 555 ,COO work st ll d\'
aw ard It ) the college :n<1ny wl'rk st ud\'
r(l~ i tions .JfP nC.' \\ dV.Jjla~lt.' 1m ( d ;rlrll~
Th~~ rc.,pl..'n .,L' t l) th e<.L' ~ f"I.....' ; ... ,h", h,; . . r'l 1'l':1

hjrin~. pro<'l;du re.."
~):! thp v du In\ t'~ l i g.Jll.' it thl'Y rCCPlve J
nllnt""l.Ji;,t . Thl . . yeJr hl:' t) tfi o' I ').] .... rl~
(Ci\'('l! vcry' rev\' to n1plcllni'" rfl)nl .... ~ ll(. ienh

.... tl:d t'n to..: h'hl.. l dpf1Jied ff.)r \\"'Ifk
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I-llH lNG
O nl' ul til!' re>li prob lems iO\'olv ing st u dl' nt ern pl"vnwnt is hi r i n ~ p rc>ced u res, AI tho ll bh jC'bs ~re displayed In Fintinc ia l Aid
,1nd most s tudent lob o penings we re made
pub li c to student s durin),; t he fall Job Fa ir ,
Vo n Vo lkenburg ,ays that man y ut the
jubs were p ub licized as a gesture - tha t a
ce rt ain student had a lrea dy been p il ked,
"Th e th ing that real ly d ri ve~ me u p th e

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[ Ilf tno re frl1~al \.V ..lgL' pt1 yl'r~ on CdlT1I ' U ~· ,Ire the b usinc'" uff ice a nd th.· eRe ,

t hl' hdnd f lll " I , 11I \ (' nts I In u nd
',vl'rki :lg dl leve l one thi ,; yeor, a ll were:
t!'l'm th ese tw<) arlas, C!e ricJ i ti idcs and
li h tl\i" ef [( 10m ouendanh star t d l $2 .20 ,
;md secret a ries u5 u,dl y ma ke 52.45 to
52,70 an Iwu r,
Stu de nt jane Gora i, Coordin ator 01 Stu den t Emp lo y me nt in Fi na nci al Ai d , feels
01

Level 2 sk ill o r experience o r respons ibilit y

$2 ,45

Level 3 a ny co mbina t ion of two from above, o r C o unse lor I

$2 ,70

Level 4 skill and exper ience a nd respo nsibility , or Supervisor,
Ma nage r, Coordinator I o r Counselor II

$2 ,95

Level 5 Superv iso r, Manager, Coo rdinat or II or Counselor 1Il

$3,20

so me places ' a re known to be better working areas than others, The Library usually
starts people out at level two or three and

that the business office workers are underpaid for their work, " Secretaries and business office jobs are traditionally under-

ORGANIC FARMHOUSEA HAND-CRAFTED HOME

Construction of the student-funded Organic Farmhouse is moving along at a .
steady pace under the direction of a dedicated nucleus of Evergreen students and
school architect Bill Knauss .
The heavy timber, post and beam structure is located at the Organic Farm site.
(See map for directions,) The project is
funded through S&A funds to the tune
of $15 ,000.
Students are encouraged to come down
to the building site to see the innovative
wooden structure . Anyone interested in
actual construction work is also welcome
to participate.
"We are not an elitist group, " said
Michael Corke, student and one of the
prime movers behind the project. Other
Evergreen community members actively
involved in construction are Ralph Evans,
Louise Moses and Fred Tuso .
Individuals interested in full-time work
on the handcrafted building should contact Bill Knauss at the Office of Facilities
(866-6120). He will be carrying some contracts for academic credit this spring when
construction moves back into full swing .
The Organic Farmhouse has been approved by the Board of Trustees as a permanent bUilding offering a sorely
needed alternative to the concrete struc tures that now abound on campus.
Plans for the Organic Farmhouse include . use as a meeting place and focal
point for Organic Farm projects, The
downstairs meeting room will accommodate from 50 ~o 70 people. A spacious

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Students '~o;idng on the farmhouse sal vaged and scrounged timber from campus
property, They spent several summer
weeks in 1975 sawing up some 30,000
board feet of lumbe.r at a small sawmill in

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(L) r~plain about wdge~ o r hinng practi(t>1.,

Financial Aid is there 10 help vou ,

the
evergreen
state
coll ege

Volume IV Number 18

-

,

February 19, 1976

76-77 REVISIONS

Autobiolluphy
Dellocracy and Ty ra nn y
Life and Health
Pol1 tlc al Ecolo gy
Di vh i onal
COlMllunication. a nd CORIIIuni t y
Foundation a of Na tural Sc i e n ce
f'oWldat1ona of Viaual Art
Hyt h and R.alit y
Perforrlin,.: Art 8 Today
tnte~dlate

Cnataqua
I:"ren ch Lanaua"e , Cu ltu re _
a nd Civi liza tion
I lM.Iles
lnur_diate Hwun lt lea
Manageme n t and th e Pub li c _
Inte rest
The Nor thve s t Co.at

Although a group co ntract in Commun ications is no longe r on the li st , facult y
member Craig Carlson will coordinate
Co mmunications and Communit y a
new offering ,
Foundations of Visual Arts wi ll st udy
the a rt s the first two quarters and then
break up into group contracts , possibl y in
arc hitecture and a t leas t two o ther areas .
Other Pro~rams no t included on the
new li st a re Basic Design (although the re
is a 3 - D art contract ) and Photography.
Some programs have remained essentially the same but have different names,
Great Books is now Intermediate Humanities , Grass Roots will be called Back to
the Land and Marine Organisms changes
to Aquatic Bio logy,

hBourcea fo r Se lf-Deterlllinatio n
RUB.i a -USS R
A WOalln' . Pla c e
Advanced

f1arln. S t udl e l a n d Craf ts

Ad van c ed An alys1a
The El egant Vint • • .,
Env iron_nt,
Root . of Rountlcism
Theorv and Prac tice of Mo dern Ev l.l
Wealth a nd Power
Gr oup Ccntracta
Adva n ced Field 810 10gy
Ajax COlllpact II
Aquu1c Biology
Back to the Land
ChanR! n. S tatua of Ho.a»exu als
Conmun i ty Ad vocacv
Ct2a tlve Jazz Musician
Earh- Childh ood DeveloplMnr
larth Envi ronments
Expl o ring Nati ve AIIIe rica ll Ar t
The Found in" Peri od
Frail Cell to Arun18m

Lacey. Working with fir, hemlock and
cedar, the novice mill workers ended up
with a collection of lumber in which no
two boards were exactly alike.
Construction eHorts are focused now '
on building trusses for the roof and preparing materials (splitting cedar shakes) ,
Throughout the project, emphasis has
been on the sell-help learning process of
building and the group dynamics involved
when individuals from varied backgrounds
join forces in a common goal,
The individuals involved in the design
and construction of the Organic Farmhouse take great pride in the quality of
their work. The structure, although only
.p artially buil t, reflects this pride .
On March 2 at 1 p . m , in LH five, the
project members will present a "History
, and Progress Report of the Organic Farmhouse." The slide presentation explains
the project from start to present ,

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Jo ma ny o th er a rea" 1
If yo u are lo oking for d jub or "d n: tl

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The "ood LHe tn the Good Society
Helping Relationship Skllls
lluNn Ways
L...." Powe r li nd Po l i t l c 11 Chan".,
liarxhm
"1ole c ular Biololl;'o'
Na tive Ameri c an Art Expert en t: e.5
Na t ural His torv o f WA!lh in,lt on
Th~ New Non-Fi c ti ona l Pr Ol e
"lorthwesr ForeQ t !l
Outdoor Edu c: a t t o n
" 111nt 1ng
Recent Ar t His[OT V
Rel1~'on in [he Li fe of Human Group s
Shaktll! s p eare and Writln;

The S tate in Co nt emporanlSoc l er"
St udy in Afrika
Three Dimenslona l Po rn
Transport PhenolMoa
Woaen.' Literature
WritlnR and Tho Uph [

INSIDE ••• ••
The KAOS Program Guide
Succulents
Anthrax Carried in Imported Yarns
Canoeing
Saunas / massage parlors
Food / Westerman
Dick Gregory coming
F.Lee Bailey in Tacoma
'Cycle Flat Track Racing

~iSS Washington-Universe ,

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Thl' t)n:y In.:'')c, C.'n C.l nl pl." ~h . l!

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community kitchen overlooks the Organic Farm site. Upstairs space includes two
caretaker bedrooms and a study room.
The Organic Farmhouse is being built
in conjunction with local. state and federal building codes and the first floor of
the two-story structure will be " handicap
accessible."
The project was approved by the Board
of Trustees and funded through S&A
monies in the winter of 1975,
Design ideas began to materialize as
blueprints soon thereafter and actual surveying and clearing of the farmhouse site
occurred in the spring of 1975, Every effort was made to nestle the building into
the natural setting with as little environmental impact as possible.

F!n.lnudl A.d '(., ~'lnL j( ~!!l~

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A revised lis t of program offer ings for
the 1976 - 77 schoo l vear has been re lea~ed b}' Vi,.e - P reside~t and Provost Ed
Kormondy .
During thi ~ last fine tuning stage some
progra m s have been postponed or shifted
from group co ntracts to coordinated studies, The revisions are as follows :
Planners of the Whole Earth Catalog
program have decided to wait another
year on their offering and Evergreen Environment will be postponed until next
spring and summer,
American Studies has been transformed
to an advant:ed coordinated st udies in humanities and history, now called " Elegant
Vintage," and the Performing Arts group
contract has been shifted to a coordinated
studies, at the request of students.
by john Dodge

<.;()

.s COOPER POINT
URNAL

'NO TWO BOARDS ARE ALIKE . . . '

demidemiurge
demiurge
urge
d etnlurge
·

de.iu'qe

. gives the student am pl e roo m for promotion.
Comput e r Serv ice jobs, often requirin g
technica l knowledge, are some of the
more lu crative o n ca mpu s , They pay from
$2 ,45 to 53.77, depending o n s kill level
a nd leng th of time e mpl oyed,
S tudent cuslodia ns do we ll a lso , usuall y
ma king a ro un d $3 ,50 a n h o ur.
The hi g hest paid posi tions are in the
Sc iences, job~ like Field Eco log ist and Lab
T('chnil' ian b ring in 54.]2 ho url y.
Even tho ug h vir tually a ll o r the h ig her
pa id jobs are not ","'o rk :stud y but ins til u tio nal li oh, any sludent Gin quality lori ,
ther l' is no pul; cy dg a lnst c mpluy ing
w.'rk ,tud v ,[ ud .. nt, .1 1 !t ighl' r rat es. it

STUDENT EMPLOYMENT CLASS IFICA TlON SYSTEM
Duties
Starting wage
Level I n o spec ial skill o r experience
$2,20

bemlUQq€

'd eUlinrge

Where Do They Stand?

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swimming, and equally enjoy the
relaxed atmosphere of free sa una s . Since the camp us is fa irl y
deserted o n Friday even ings and
the chances of someone being offended by nudit y wou ld be consid erably reduced, it see ms tha t
Friday evenings between 6 a nd
8:30 p.m. wo ul d be the most opportune t im e fo r those who ca re
to indu lge in ski nny dipping and
free sa un a, to do just th a t.
Evergreen is quit e di fferent
from o th er scho ols in it s liberal
t o le rance of radical political
gro ups a nd the gay co mmunit y,
alo ng wi th th e va ri ous ethni c organizations whi ch operate here
for the good of all the people.
Therefore, there is no reason
why nu d ists sho ul d feel un inv ited
to make an equal contrib ution in
see in g th a t Evergreen rea ll y be comes a un ique co mmunit y.
Gary Lakes

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d rL' fll en l h c r t o
and d o uble -space !
1.<11,1" II' clt arCI/ t IY}Jeci or are
I. ,t'cd i'lt! s illgle -s}Ja(" pd so m eo l/ c
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TI 'clJl /.."s .
Ed. Note: Apologies to I{ob
Sta uffer. We mad e an unfortu nal e error in hi s letter "Ba ha'i
and Women" in last week's
IllU rna I.
The firs' sentence o f the third
paragraph should read , "My
only question is: will a coalition
open on ly to wo men promote
the right s so long denied to
\,\'omen?"

LEARNING NEED
To the Ed itor :
There seems to me a great
need for lea rning , and ed ucatio n
i, the so urce of know ledge. To
quote Ab dul -Baha w ho exp la in s
furth er : "The primary, the most
urge nt requirement is the promoli o n of edu catio n . It is in CJnc(' iva ble that any nation sho uld
achieve prospe ril y and success
un less thi s pa ram ount , this fundam ental co ncern is carried for wa rd . The pr in cipa l reason for
th e decl ine a nd fa ll of peop le is
igno rance. " And agai n, "A scien ti fic man is a true index and repres ent a tive of hum a nit y, for
th ro ug h processes of inductive
reasonin g a nd research of all that
appertains to humanity, it s sta tus, co ndi tion s and happen ings.
11(' studies human body polit ic,
understa nd s soc ia l problems and
" 'caves the web and texture of
l/v ili za ti o n . In fact . sc ience ma y
111' lik ('ned to a mirror wherein
the in fini te form s and images of
e~ i s t ing Ihings are revea led and
refl ec ted . It is th e ve ry fo und a tion 0 1 a ll indi v idual and na ti<lna l tl eve lo pmenl. Without thi s
bJ , i, nf inves ti ga ti o n, dev elop ment is im puss ible . Ther e fo re
"'l'J.. with dili ge nt endeavour the
kn llw ledge a nd at ta inment of all
th~t I,('s within the po wer o f thi s
"'I'ndC' ri u l bestowal ."
To end on educa tion , unlim -

ited it be. I wi ll quote Ba ha - ulIah. " Firsl a nd foremost a mong
th esl' lavo r" whirh the Alm ight y
ha , co nferred upon man , is the
gill "I un derstan ding. Hi s pur I'''s(' in co nfe rring suc h a gift is
none oth er excep t to enab le Hi s
creature to know an d recogni ze
Ihe one true God - exal ted be
Hi s glory . T h is gifl giveth man
' t he power to disce rn the truth in
a ll things, leadeth him to th a t
whi ch is right , a nd helpet h him
to d iscover the secrets of creation. " '
Marc Ke ith Torrence

DISASTER
To th e Edi tor:
There is a d isas ter in our "la nd
- T he Guata ma la n eart hquake.
It shak es houses. It shakes
brick buil dings , a nd it runs the
lown int o the ground.
T here are a lot of people down
there who need you r he lp .
So, a ll you can give, give _
whet her it be food , clothing,
money , or o therwi se.
Susan Belcher

HOUSING NOT SO GLOWING
To the Editor:
[ not iced in an a rticle you ra n
las t week (Feb . 12) e ntitl ed
" WSU (Almos t ) Has Tuiti o n
St ri ke" a ce rtain pride in the reporter's tone as he glowingly desc ribed Housing here at Evergreen . "As most Geod ucks
know. o n-ca mpu s hou sing at Ev ergreen is a good thing when
compa red 10 other schools, etc."
Bravo. You got the point. Housing at Evergreen is definitely
among th e fin est around.
But that 's all the farth er com pli me nt s go around here. If you
haven 't heard by now, Hous in g
is experiencing budget cu tbacks
to th e tun e of $20,000 - $30,000 ,
They are ca tching criticism _
nol just from students, but admini strat io n as wel l. Residen ts
complain about uncomfortab le
livin g s ituation s . wh il e those
above us expect Hou sing to tu rn
a pmfit.
Well , now it's my turn to com plain . How in th e he ll can any on e gene rate reve nu e fo r im prov ements or profit when few
w ill stay beca use of poor condi ti o ns
a t cost just slightly too

' ~JOURNAL
:TOR

staff

I I I oc kl'

NEWS EDITORS
Iill )teI\'.lrl
l lClI" " li1 ton

fE ATURE EDITOR
I" hn Doclgp

PHOTOGRAPHY

NEWS STAFF
Joe Morawski
Moll y Wr ight
Le nore No rrgard
Chri s Cowge r
CJ th e rin e Ridde ll
Mat t Groe nin g

Do ug King
Do u'g Bus te r
PRODUCTION
Fo rd G ilbrea th
Ka th lep n Me igha n ' Joe Ge ndreau

hi gh ? Fo lk s, Ihey' re in a bind.
So nex t time you fee l in the
mood to throw Ho using a complim ent. save it fur th ose stu dent s or ce rtain members of th e
ad mini st ration (i.e., Jo hn Moss,
Dean Clabaugh , the Board of
Trustees, et al) who grumble
abo u t tho se guys over in
Housin g.
Sean Jones
Student Manager. Ho using

NUDE SWIMMING
To the Ed it o r :
There a re ma ny kinds of people sharing the Evergreen expe ri ence, T here is an asso rtment of
orga ni zations he re th at are not
tol erated in traditional surroundin gs . Eac h organ izat io n he re
seems to feel that it is mak ing a
co ntributio n to th is communit y
in their at tempts to enlighten
others and m ake the wo rld a little nicer place . Also there are
people here who are yet to rea lize th eir own potential, am o ng
ot hers wou ld include those who
share a nudist phil osop hy.
Many peo ple en joy the freedom that co mes fro m nud e
LETTERS POLICY
The Journal w elcomes all
sign ed letters to the Editor
(names will be withh eld on
req uest) and prints th em as
space permits . To be co nsidered for pub li ca tiol1 that
week, letters ' must be received
by 5 p. m . all the Tuesday be fore th e Thursday of publica tion. Le tt e rs received after
deadline will b e consid ered
for the n ex l issue , Letters
mus t be typ ed , double -spaced
and 400 wo rds o r less, T h e
Editor reserves the rigllt to
edit letters over 400 words.
Genera lly , a p ho to or original art is also run on th e let ters page . To be considered
for publicat ion . photos / art
from th e commun ity l17ust
also be s ubmitt ed by 5 p. m.
Tuesday befo re th e TlllIrsday
of }Jub licali o n. Submission
size : 5" x 7" o r 8 " x 10" al th o ugh o th er siz es are accept able . N am e. addres s arid
ph o n e musl be on all submis siolls and all o riginals will be
returned .

BUSINESS MANAGER
Jim Feyk

ADVERTISING
Cra ig

LO lZ I

PRINTER

!!:;;]ourllal

I hl' Journal news and I;>usin ess offices ar" located in the Coll ege Activities Bui ldin g (C AB ) rm.
....Nt" " rlwll"" 866- 6214 and -6213 ; advertisin g and business 866-6080.
306,

'NAM /INDIAN
PARALLEL

To the Editor :
I would li ke to comment that
Matt G roening's rev iew o f Littl e
Big Man (CP J 2/ 11 / 76) was
qu ite good, and touched upon
two important aspects of the
movie: It is one of the fir st to
portray A meri ca n Ind ia ns in a
rea li sti c a nd pos itive li ght; and
the performa nces of the Indi an
actors a re super b
Howeve r , a lth o ugh I agree
that a maj o r portion of Littl e Big
Man I S a har sh sa tir e o n White
A merica, and not very relevant
to Indi ans per se, I wou ld lik e to
take issue with Groen ing's interpr etatio n of the theme. T he most
releva nt a nd moving parts of t he
mov ie are Indian a nd that is the
maj o r element of the theme. The
massacres do not signi fy simpl y
an end to a roma nt icized way of
li fe a nd the beginning of a new
page of hi story . T hey are a documentation of rea l events, per so n a l i zed through one man 's
eyes
It is not poss ib le to dr aw a di reet para ll e l between the even ts
that hapiJened du ring the soca ll ed "wi nning of t he W est" a nd
Viet Nam . As t he John Wayne
quote (" .
peop le needed la nd
."J expressed, the destructio n
of Indian peop les was over the
issue of la nd . Occupa ncy a nd
settl ement was never an issue in
the Viet Nam war. A lthough the
war in Viet Na m sha red atrocities wit h that in America, it rema ined a two-si ded wa r which
was eventua lly fought to a stand st ill . In this countr y the genocide
poli cy was ca lcul ated, supported
by t he publi c (w ho often committed the worst atrociti es.

the a rmy) and nea rly successful.
It was ca rried out aga inst a n un equa l and steadily dim ini shing
military force. There were no
Sov iel or C h inese a lli es to supply
weapons and ideologica l support
to Ind ian tr ibes .
Per haps the most cru cid l difference is that there was a great
and u ltimatel y ef fe<..1:ive publi c
ou tcry over the wa r in Viet Nam
wh ic h r es ult ed in t he Unit ed
S t a tes pu llin g out its troops.
T here never was a ny su ch o ut cry
protesting the wars aga in st In d ia n people. T a th is day , those
wars con ti nue in a va ri ety of
ways , a nd there is no outcry .
The hi story of Eu ropean v .s.
Nativ e re la ti o ns in thi s hem ispher e is compli cated a nd invari ably mi s int erpr e ted A lthough
Ihe a llem iJt at para lleling t hi s
hi story wit h Viet Na m may be
useful for a rousi ng empathy : it
onl y serves to further confuse
the real issues at sta ke for In dia n
Tr ibes - surv iva l, treaty ri g hts
and land.
Karla Jackson
Wou ld anyo ne having access
to o r know ledge of copies of
the Journal of Primal Tllel'Cl}JY
please leave a message for Kim
in ca re of the Journal. They are
needed for a research project.

by Rick Strassner
A large crowd packed LH one Wednesday afternoon, February 11th, to see and
hear the exploits of four Evergreen students - plus one - who canoed across a
section of the barrens of North America.
The trip from Northern Alberta to Up~
per Hudson Bay took three months of intensive preparation and three months to .
comp lete.
Jeff Shushan and Burnell Hill, two Evergreen students, provided the audience
with a ll the lustrous deta ils of their experiences on the 1.400 mile journey . Also
present at the showing were fellow stu dents a nd traveling companions Chunky
Keith and Neil Pritz. The fifth member of
the canoeing team was Allen Pritz, Nei l's
brother.
A sixth person, Debbie Unsoeld, in volved in the three month preparation
was unable to make the journey due to an
injury suffered training on the Nisqually
River.
The canoers' journey began at Fort McMurray in Northern Alberta. Their final
destination was Baker Lake in the Upper
Hudson Bay region .
Traveling in rays of everpresent sunlight, th e river ra mbl e rs me a nder e d
thro ugh the ba rrens of North America
w ith little trouble. They Sighted many dif ferent forms of wi ldlife such as sea otters,
faxes, a rctic wolves, a nd a variety of
birds. A large herd of caribou crossed the
river directly ahead of them, a ntlers high .
Alone on a ridge, a huge, furry, dark
brown musk-ox ob served the travelers'
progress down river.

1

A Sum.m.er in Canoes

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Two ma jor "rE!fueling" stops were taken ,
as food often got dangerously low . At
times the canoers' irregular diet consisted
of as little as dried cheese and brea d for
severa l days. Then they wou ld strike it
rich by dipping into the sparkling waters
of the far north for a fine catch of fresh
fi sh . In one spot, the waters bubbl ed with
fish numerous enough to catch enough for

days in ten minutes, wit h bare hands.
The first stop was Stoney Rapids, an
Indi an village of 400 plus two white
people - a minister and the man who ran
the trading post. There they met Fred Riddell , an 80-year-old lifetime trapper w ho
directed the river ramblers by map to his
cabin where they made their second ma jor
stop. Filled up on groceries, the ca n oers

departed to the smiles and well wishings
of almost the entire village.
Fourteen days later, Jeff, Burnell , Allen .
Neil. a nd Chunky arrived at Trapper
Fred's cabin, greeted by Fred and his 65 yeaf- old Indian wife. There the canoers
feasted like at no other time on the journey on three meals a day of good homecooking by Fred's wife . The hi ghl ight
came when the caribou arrived in the area
of the cabin just when they were about to
embark o nward . One and a ll feas ted on
one of the fine delights of the barren
. north , fresh caribou.
However only four were able to continue on. Chunky Keith developed a
stomach illness serious enough to force
him to stay a t Fred's ca bi n. ' He stayed
three weeks before head ing home.
Jeff, Burnell , Neil. and Allen paddled
on loa ded with smoked caribou and many
o ther goodies, the second half of the ir
jou rney still ahead. They said goodb ye to
two unforgettable peo ple of the no rt hlands. Trapper Fred and his wife and
' Chunky too.
T he river ramblers' lone difficulty ca me
upon enter ing swift rapids where o ne
ca noe tipped over, putting several ho les in
th e bottom . Because of th eir ex tens ive
preparation, they had the necessary pa tching materi als to fi x the canoe and paddle
merrilyon.
Jeff, Burnell. Neil. a nd A llen reac hed
Baker Lake, their destination , on Septem ber first. Soon after, they fl ew home with
lit tle money in th eir pockets : but much
richer.

'OLYMPIA'S STANDING JOKE'

Claaaifiacl
Licensed day ca1"e-Tves tside , Conqe1" Ave .
Pa1"t time, dab' 01" e ve ning . nhone 357-9264 .

Saunas & Massage Parlors
from Fort Lew is. The o ld jokes abo ut the
profuse patronage of state legisla tors may
no t be tar from the truth , tho ugh . Jud y
Ga briel has ope nl y stated that she has
"friend s in th e sta te legisla ture."
Enforcement of laws prohibiting prostitut ion has been a ho t issue in recent
mont hs on the state , as well as the loca l,
leve l. Last month saw the overturning, by
Superior Co urt Judge Gerry L. A lexander,
of a June. 1975 state law providing for the
reg ul ation and licensing of ma ssage businesses. Inspections a nd enforceme nt under
this law we re to be carried ou t b y, of all
people, the Department of Motor Vehicles.
Judge A lexa nder's deci sio n declarin g th e
law uncon stitutional was b ased on
ground s that "unannounced , warran tless
searches" (mea nin g the surprise inspectio ns provid ed fo r in the code) were invasions o f privacy, This po ints up the difficult y in a rresting v iola to rs of sexua l conduct laws. So -called "bedroom crimes"
are extremely hard to prove, a nd involve
sticky legal iss ues such , as entrap ment.
Law enf orcemen t officers wo ul d rather de vo te the ir time and money to cr imes of
ot her sorts.

r tist or 1"J1"i te Y' I S
stud'i.o ro r 1"ent . Li gh t ,
l'oomy , qui et. PY'iv at e
space I.J/u}ooil.s t ove.
Clos e acc e ss to bath!'oom. $45 . 943-4299.

IS YOUR HERITAGE
BO'm OF rHf SUfFERIN G OF THE EARLY
AMER ICAN BLACK PEOPLE

rHE ONL Y TRUE AMERICA N A RT FORM
IT IS SPIR IT UAL AND HEALING TO THE SOUL
l1 STEN TO JAZZ WITH THE EARS OF YOUR HEART

AN D BE HEALED

KEEP JAZZ A LlV I"
CALL YOUR FAVORITE rV -RAD IO STATIONS
ANO RECORD STORES NOW, ,

SA VE JAZZ!!!

.. by Do n Case
The sa una / massage parl or business ha s
long been a standing joke in the O lympia
area. T hese estab li shmen ts, which bega n
to blosso m a long Martin Way some five
years ago, have often been po int ed to as
thinly -disguised fro nts fo r prosti tut ion. In deed, Thurston County Sheriff Don Redmond ha s gone so far as to describe local
sa una parlo rs (in a Daily Olympian article
of 4 / 8 / 75) as "nothing but a bunch of
whore houses. "
T he good sheriff's words are well taken,
but not entirely accurate . One can enter
these esta blishment s and pa rt ake of
nothing more than a sauna and / or massage, a nd a t least one of the businesses
listed under "Massage" in the Olympia
Yellow Pages is completely legitimate,
But beyond this, the sheriff's words ring
true: most of these places, and most of
their clientele, expect something more
than a good back-rub to take place when
customer meets masseuse . This was dem onstra ted in a striking manner w hen Gannett reporter Ken Ma tthews was treated
to "t he works," courtesy of the Daily
O lympian , at Judy 's Sauna (one of the
three Martin Way businesses of its type
which now ident ify them selves as " Da ting
Services")' In his a rt icle of April 8, 1975,
Matthews describes how he purchased
"fellati o and sexua l intercourse" from a
young prostitute whose " .. . chewing
gum never left her mouth during either
activity ." The price was $82,
A series of three in vestigat ive art icl es
which accompa nied Matthews' p iece in
the Dai ly O lymp ia n turned up some interesting facts abou t "Sauna Row ." Many of

the wo men working in these parlors, the
newspaper discovered, originall y came
from Korea , a land where prost ituti on is
a n accepted profession. Some of the registered owne rs are a lso of Korean origi n, a t
least o ne of these being a Korean nat iogai.
T he lines of ow nership are often tangled
a nd co mplex, with the la nd and sometimes the bu ilding itself being owned by
some other than the person licensed as
proprietor of tlie business. Several local
owners also own similar estab li shments in
other Washington cities:
w.:'C' ,

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most of their clientele expect something more than a good
back-rub to take place
vvhen customer meets
masseuse . .,

Not surpri singly , the sauna / massage
business is resoundingly profitable, with
ind ividual prem ises taking in an estimated
$250,000 per year each . And much of tha t
is tax-free. This kind of steady inco me
has enabled Judy Gabriel. owner of Judy' s
and The King and I Dating Services, to
purchase close to a ha lf-mi llion dollars'
worth of property wi thin Thu rston
County .
According to Daily 0 reporter Mike
Wa les, abo ut 70 % of the patrons are

One year ago this month T hurston
County passed a n ordinance which paralleled the state law by making massage
.and sa una parlors subj('ct to inspection
"at a ll times" by members of the T hurs-.
ton-Mason Hea lth District and the Sheriff's Office,
As yet this law still stands . Although
the Hea lth Distri ct officia ls make inspec tion o nl y when a new estab li s hment
opens, the Sheriff's Office con tinu es to
make inspecti ons "peri odically a nd as
necessary" in additio n to doing backgro und investi gatio ns of proprietors and
masseuses at lice nsing ti me.
But th e effectiveness of the Thurston
Count y ordi na nce it self is a matter of dispute . White the Daily Olympian has described the new ordinance as "tough ,"
th('y have a lso quoted County Comm issio ner Ken Stevens (in their February 18th
issue) as sayi ng that the law is "not worth
the paper it's wri tten on ." Time will tell if
the o rdi na nce is effective . Sau na a nd massage pa rlors often pack up a nd mo ve else w here in the face of unfavorab le legisla tion. In the meantime, the dollars roll in
like waves down o n Sa un a Row .

The purpose of education is not self- realization : The Evergree n philos op h y of edu cat ion proclaims that each st ud en t co ntains a receptive "self'
th at must b e realized.
Free students from their inhibitions, let t hem see themselves, and they'll
learn.
Learn what? Theoretically, a student cou ld easily bury his head in Evergreen's academic sand. In four years of study he could escape reading
S h akespeare, Darwin, Kant, Einstein , Marx or St. Luke. By avoiding
the Learning Resource Center (LRC), SPLU labs and mods, he could
never learn how to write well or clearly, the calcu lus, Western/Eastern/
American history, general biology or political science .
Still, h e could get an interdisciplinary "liberal arts/sciences" degree .
And he'll think he's pretty smart - and he might be, in his field of expertise .
But unless he is lu cky enough to have deliberately planned a wellrounded academic course, he'll be as lopsided as a Ph .D . who specializes
until h e knows every thing about nothing .
Why not a program for first- and second-year students where a "core"
of writing/ math Ihistory / science is taken for two credits, and a specialized
con tract in theater, media or psychology (for instance), for the other two
credits?
A basic program such as this wo ul d h elp overworked faculty by a llow ing them to teach at le ast one specia li zed cou rse in their own field .
It wo uld take the load off the, reiatively few people in the LR C Ihal
tutor basic s kjlls .
Mos t important ly, it would keep s tudent s from de luding them ~ e1 v t: s
that they've had a " liberal arts/sc iences" course of study .
Student s can "find themselve s" aJ they learn, but learning I S no t o nl y
findin oneself .

swimming, and equally enjoy the
relaxed atmosphere of free sa una s . Since the camp us is fa irl y
deserted o n Friday even ings and
the chances of someone being offended by nudit y wou ld be consid erably reduced, it see ms tha t
Friday evenings between 6 a nd
8:30 p.m. wo ul d be the most opportune t im e fo r those who ca re
to indu lge in ski nny dipping and
free sa un a, to do just th a t.
Evergreen is quit e di fferent
from o th er scho ols in it s liberal
t o le rance of radical political
gro ups a nd the gay co mmunit y,
alo ng wi th th e va ri ous ethni c organizations whi ch operate here
for the good of all the people.
Therefore, there is no reason
why nu d ists sho ul d feel un inv ited
to make an equal contrib ution in
see in g th a t Evergreen rea ll y be comes a un ique co mmunit y.
Gary Lakes

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Ed. Note: Apologies to I{ob
Sta uffer. We mad e an unfortu nal e error in hi s letter "Ba ha'i
and Women" in last week's
IllU rna I.
The firs' sentence o f the third
paragraph should read , "My
only question is: will a coalition
open on ly to wo men promote
the right s so long denied to
\,\'omen?"

LEARNING NEED
To the Ed itor :
There seems to me a great
need for lea rning , and ed ucatio n
i, the so urce of know ledge. To
quote Ab dul -Baha w ho exp la in s
furth er : "The primary, the most
urge nt requirement is the promoli o n of edu catio n . It is in CJnc(' iva ble that any nation sho uld
achieve prospe ril y and success
un less thi s pa ram ount , this fundam ental co ncern is carried for wa rd . The pr in cipa l reason for
th e decl ine a nd fa ll of peop le is
igno rance. " And agai n, "A scien ti fic man is a true index and repres ent a tive of hum a nit y, for
th ro ug h processes of inductive
reasonin g a nd research of all that
appertains to humanity, it s sta tus, co ndi tion s and happen ings.
11(' studies human body polit ic,
understa nd s soc ia l problems and
" 'caves the web and texture of
l/v ili za ti o n . In fact . sc ience ma y
111' lik ('ned to a mirror wherein
the in fini te form s and images of
e~ i s t ing Ihings are revea led and
refl ec ted . It is th e ve ry fo und a tion 0 1 a ll indi v idual and na ti<lna l tl eve lo pmenl. Without thi s
bJ , i, nf inves ti ga ti o n, dev elop ment is im puss ible . Ther e fo re
"'l'J.. with dili ge nt endeavour the
kn llw ledge a nd at ta inment of all
th~t I,('s within the po wer o f thi s
"'I'ndC' ri u l bestowal ."
To end on educa tion , unlim -

ited it be. I wi ll quote Ba ha - ulIah. " Firsl a nd foremost a mong
th esl' lavo r" whirh the Alm ight y
ha , co nferred upon man , is the
gill "I un derstan ding. Hi s pur I'''s(' in co nfe rring suc h a gift is
none oth er excep t to enab le Hi s
creature to know an d recogni ze
Ihe one true God - exal ted be
Hi s glory . T h is gifl giveth man
' t he power to disce rn the truth in
a ll things, leadeth him to th a t
whi ch is right , a nd helpet h him
to d iscover the secrets of creation. " '
Marc Ke ith Torrence

DISASTER
To th e Edi tor:
There is a d isas ter in our "la nd
- T he Guata ma la n eart hquake.
It shak es houses. It shakes
brick buil dings , a nd it runs the
lown int o the ground.
T here are a lot of people down
there who need you r he lp .
So, a ll you can give, give _
whet her it be food , clothing,
money , or o therwi se.
Susan Belcher

HOUSING NOT SO GLOWING
To the Editor:
[ not iced in an a rticle you ra n
las t week (Feb . 12) e ntitl ed
" WSU (Almos t ) Has Tuiti o n
St ri ke" a ce rtain pride in the reporter's tone as he glowingly desc ribed Housing here at Evergreen . "As most Geod ucks
know. o n-ca mpu s hou sing at Ev ergreen is a good thing when
compa red 10 other schools, etc."
Bravo. You got the point. Housing at Evergreen is definitely
among th e fin est around.
But that 's all the farth er com pli me nt s go around here. If you
haven 't heard by now, Hous in g
is experiencing budget cu tbacks
to th e tun e of $20,000 - $30,000 ,
They are ca tching criticism _
nol just from students, but admini strat io n as wel l. Residen ts
complain about uncomfortab le
livin g s ituation s . wh il e those
above us expect Hou sing to tu rn
a pmfit.
Well , now it's my turn to com plain . How in th e he ll can any on e gene rate reve nu e fo r im prov ements or profit when few
w ill stay beca use of poor condi ti o ns
a t cost just slightly too

' ~JOURNAL
:TOR

staff

I I I oc kl'

NEWS EDITORS
Iill )teI\'.lrl
l lClI" " li1 ton

fE ATURE EDITOR
I" hn Doclgp

PHOTOGRAPHY

NEWS STAFF
Joe Morawski
Moll y Wr ight
Le nore No rrgard
Chri s Cowge r
CJ th e rin e Ridde ll
Mat t Groe nin g

Do ug King
Do u'g Bus te r
PRODUCTION
Fo rd G ilbrea th
Ka th lep n Me igha n ' Joe Ge ndreau

hi gh ? Fo lk s, Ihey' re in a bind.
So nex t time you fee l in the
mood to throw Ho using a complim ent. save it fur th ose stu dent s or ce rtain members of th e
ad mini st ration (i.e., Jo hn Moss,
Dean Clabaugh , the Board of
Trustees, et al) who grumble
abo u t tho se guys over in
Housin g.
Sean Jones
Student Manager. Ho using

NUDE SWIMMING
To the Ed it o r :
There a re ma ny kinds of people sharing the Evergreen expe ri ence, T here is an asso rtment of
orga ni zations he re th at are not
tol erated in traditional surroundin gs . Eac h organ izat io n he re
seems to feel that it is mak ing a
co ntributio n to th is communit y
in their at tempts to enlighten
others and m ake the wo rld a little nicer place . Also there are
people here who are yet to rea lize th eir own potential, am o ng
ot hers wou ld include those who
share a nudist phil osop hy.
Many peo ple en joy the freedom that co mes fro m nud e
LETTERS POLICY
The Journal w elcomes all
sign ed letters to the Editor
(names will be withh eld on
req uest) and prints th em as
space permits . To be co nsidered for pub li ca tiol1 that
week, letters ' must be received
by 5 p. m . all the Tuesday be fore th e Thursday of publica tion. Le tt e rs received after
deadline will b e consid ered
for the n ex l issue , Letters
mus t be typ ed , double -spaced
and 400 wo rds o r less, T h e
Editor reserves the rigllt to
edit letters over 400 words.
Genera lly , a p ho to or original art is also run on th e let ters page . To be considered
for publicat ion . photos / art
from th e commun ity l17ust
also be s ubmitt ed by 5 p. m.
Tuesday befo re th e TlllIrsday
of }Jub licali o n. Submission
size : 5" x 7" o r 8 " x 10" al th o ugh o th er siz es are accept able . N am e. addres s arid
ph o n e musl be on all submis siolls and all o riginals will be
returned .

BUSINESS MANAGER
Jim Feyk

ADVERTISING
Cra ig

LO lZ I

PRINTER

!!:;;]ourllal

I hl' Journal news and I;>usin ess offices ar" located in the Coll ege Activities Bui ldin g (C AB ) rm.
....Nt" " rlwll"" 866- 6214 and -6213 ; advertisin g and business 866-6080.
306,

'NAM /INDIAN
PARALLEL

To the Editor :
I would li ke to comment that
Matt G roening's rev iew o f Littl e
Big Man (CP J 2/ 11 / 76) was
qu ite good, and touched upon
two important aspects of the
movie: It is one of the fir st to
portray A meri ca n Ind ia ns in a
rea li sti c a nd pos itive li ght; and
the performa nces of the Indi an
actors a re super b
Howeve r , a lth o ugh I agree
that a maj o r portion of Littl e Big
Man I S a har sh sa tir e o n White
A merica, and not very relevant
to Indi ans per se, I wou ld lik e to
take issue with Groen ing's interpr etatio n of the theme. T he most
releva nt a nd moving parts of t he
mov ie are Indian a nd that is the
maj o r element of the theme. The
massacres do not signi fy simpl y
an end to a roma nt icized way of
li fe a nd the beginning of a new
page of hi story . T hey are a documentation of rea l events, per so n a l i zed through one man 's
eyes
It is not poss ib le to dr aw a di reet para ll e l between the even ts
that hapiJened du ring the soca ll ed "wi nning of t he W est" a nd
Viet Nam . As t he John Wayne
quote (" .
peop le needed la nd
."J expressed, the destructio n
of Indian peop les was over the
issue of la nd . Occupa ncy a nd
settl ement was never an issue in
the Viet Nam war. A lthough the
war in Viet Na m sha red atrocities wit h that in America, it rema ined a two-si ded wa r which
was eventua lly fought to a stand st ill . In this countr y the genocide
poli cy was ca lcul ated, supported
by t he publi c (w ho often committed the worst atrociti es.

the a rmy) and nea rly successful.
It was ca rried out aga inst a n un equa l and steadily dim ini shing
military force. There were no
Sov iel or C h inese a lli es to supply
weapons and ideologica l support
to Ind ian tr ibes .
Per haps the most cru cid l difference is that there was a great
and u ltimatel y ef fe<..1:ive publi c
ou tcry over the wa r in Viet Nam
wh ic h r es ult ed in t he Unit ed
S t a tes pu llin g out its troops.
T here never was a ny su ch o ut cry
protesting the wars aga in st In d ia n people. T a th is day , those
wars con ti nue in a va ri ety of
ways , a nd there is no outcry .
The hi story of Eu ropean v .s.
Nativ e re la ti o ns in thi s hem ispher e is compli cated a nd invari ably mi s int erpr e ted A lthough
Ihe a llem iJt at para lleling t hi s
hi story wit h Viet Na m may be
useful for a rousi ng empathy : it
onl y serves to further confuse
the real issues at sta ke for In dia n
Tr ibes - surv iva l, treaty ri g hts
and land.
Karla Jackson
Wou ld anyo ne having access
to o r know ledge of copies of
the Journal of Primal Tllel'Cl}JY
please leave a message for Kim
in ca re of the Journal. They are
needed for a research project.

by Rick Strassner
A large crowd packed LH one Wednesday afternoon, February 11th, to see and
hear the exploits of four Evergreen students - plus one - who canoed across a
section of the barrens of North America.
The trip from Northern Alberta to Up~
per Hudson Bay took three months of intensive preparation and three months to .
comp lete.
Jeff Shushan and Burnell Hill, two Evergreen students, provided the audience
with a ll the lustrous deta ils of their experiences on the 1.400 mile journey . Also
present at the showing were fellow stu dents a nd traveling companions Chunky
Keith and Neil Pritz. The fifth member of
the canoeing team was Allen Pritz, Nei l's
brother.
A sixth person, Debbie Unsoeld, in volved in the three month preparation
was unable to make the journey due to an
injury suffered training on the Nisqually
River.
The canoers' journey began at Fort McMurray in Northern Alberta. Their final
destination was Baker Lake in the Upper
Hudson Bay region .
Traveling in rays of everpresent sunlight, th e river ra mbl e rs me a nder e d
thro ugh the ba rrens of North America
w ith little trouble. They Sighted many dif ferent forms of wi ldlife such as sea otters,
faxes, a rctic wolves, a nd a variety of
birds. A large herd of caribou crossed the
river directly ahead of them, a ntlers high .
Alone on a ridge, a huge, furry, dark
brown musk-ox ob served the travelers'
progress down river.

1

A Sum.m.er in Canoes

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Two ma jor "rE!fueling" stops were taken ,
as food often got dangerously low . At
times the canoers' irregular diet consisted
of as little as dried cheese and brea d for
severa l days. Then they wou ld strike it
rich by dipping into the sparkling waters
of the far north for a fine catch of fresh
fi sh . In one spot, the waters bubbl ed with
fish numerous enough to catch enough for

days in ten minutes, wit h bare hands.
The first stop was Stoney Rapids, an
Indi an village of 400 plus two white
people - a minister and the man who ran
the trading post. There they met Fred Riddell , an 80-year-old lifetime trapper w ho
directed the river ramblers by map to his
cabin where they made their second ma jor
stop. Filled up on groceries, the ca n oers

departed to the smiles and well wishings
of almost the entire village.
Fourteen days later, Jeff, Burnell , Allen .
Neil. a nd Chunky arrived at Trapper
Fred's cabin, greeted by Fred and his 65 yeaf- old Indian wife. There the canoers
feasted like at no other time on the journey on three meals a day of good homecooking by Fred's wife . The hi ghl ight
came when the caribou arrived in the area
of the cabin just when they were about to
embark o nward . One and a ll feas ted on
one of the fine delights of the barren
. north , fresh caribou.
However only four were able to continue on. Chunky Keith developed a
stomach illness serious enough to force
him to stay a t Fred's ca bi n. ' He stayed
three weeks before head ing home.
Jeff, Burnell , Neil. and Allen paddled
on loa ded with smoked caribou and many
o ther goodies, the second half of the ir
jou rney still ahead. They said goodb ye to
two unforgettable peo ple of the no rt hlands. Trapper Fred and his wife and
' Chunky too.
T he river ramblers' lone difficulty ca me
upon enter ing swift rapids where o ne
ca noe tipped over, putting several ho les in
th e bottom . Because of th eir ex tens ive
preparation, they had the necessary pa tching materi als to fi x the canoe and paddle
merrilyon.
Jeff, Burnell. Neil. a nd A llen reac hed
Baker Lake, their destination , on Septem ber first. Soon after, they fl ew home with
lit tle money in th eir pockets : but much
richer.

'OLYMPIA'S STANDING JOKE'

Claaaifiacl
Licensed day ca1"e-Tves tside , Conqe1" Ave .
Pa1"t time, dab' 01" e ve ning . nhone 357-9264 .

Saunas & Massage Parlors
from Fort Lew is. The o ld jokes abo ut the
profuse patronage of state legisla tors may
no t be tar from the truth , tho ugh . Jud y
Ga briel has ope nl y stated that she has
"friend s in th e sta te legisla ture."
Enforcement of laws prohibiting prostitut ion has been a ho t issue in recent
mont hs on the state , as well as the loca l,
leve l. Last month saw the overturning, by
Superior Co urt Judge Gerry L. A lexander,
of a June. 1975 state law providing for the
reg ul ation and licensing of ma ssage businesses. Inspections a nd enforceme nt under
this law we re to be carried ou t b y, of all
people, the Department of Motor Vehicles.
Judge A lexa nder's deci sio n declarin g th e
law uncon stitutional was b ased on
ground s that "unannounced , warran tless
searches" (mea nin g the surprise inspectio ns provid ed fo r in the code) were invasions o f privacy, This po ints up the difficult y in a rresting v iola to rs of sexua l conduct laws. So -called "bedroom crimes"
are extremely hard to prove, a nd involve
sticky legal iss ues such , as entrap ment.
Law enf orcemen t officers wo ul d rather de vo te the ir time and money to cr imes of
ot her sorts.

r tist or 1"J1"i te Y' I S
stud'i.o ro r 1"ent . Li gh t ,
l'oomy , qui et. PY'iv at e
space I.J/u}ooil.s t ove.
Clos e acc e ss to bath!'oom. $45 . 943-4299.

IS YOUR HERITAGE
BO'm OF rHf SUfFERIN G OF THE EARLY
AMER ICAN BLACK PEOPLE

rHE ONL Y TRUE AMERICA N A RT FORM
IT IS SPIR IT UAL AND HEALING TO THE SOUL
l1 STEN TO JAZZ WITH THE EARS OF YOUR HEART

AN D BE HEALED

KEEP JAZZ A LlV I"
CALL YOUR FAVORITE rV -RAD IO STATIONS
ANO RECORD STORES NOW, ,

SA VE JAZZ!!!

.. by Do n Case
The sa una / massage parl or business ha s
long been a standing joke in the O lympia
area. T hese estab li shmen ts, which bega n
to blosso m a long Martin Way some five
years ago, have often been po int ed to as
thinly -disguised fro nts fo r prosti tut ion. In deed, Thurston County Sheriff Don Redmond ha s gone so far as to describe local
sa una parlo rs (in a Daily Olympian article
of 4 / 8 / 75) as "nothing but a bunch of
whore houses. "
T he good sheriff's words are well taken,
but not entirely accurate . One can enter
these esta blishment s and pa rt ake of
nothing more than a sauna and / or massage, a nd a t least one of the businesses
listed under "Massage" in the Olympia
Yellow Pages is completely legitimate,
But beyond this, the sheriff's words ring
true: most of these places, and most of
their clientele, expect something more
than a good back-rub to take place when
customer meets masseuse . This was dem onstra ted in a striking manner w hen Gannett reporter Ken Ma tthews was treated
to "t he works," courtesy of the Daily
O lympian , at Judy 's Sauna (one of the
three Martin Way businesses of its type
which now ident ify them selves as " Da ting
Services")' In his a rt icle of April 8, 1975,
Matthews describes how he purchased
"fellati o and sexua l intercourse" from a
young prostitute whose " .. . chewing
gum never left her mouth during either
activity ." The price was $82,
A series of three in vestigat ive art icl es
which accompa nied Matthews' p iece in
the Dai ly O lymp ia n turned up some interesting facts abou t "Sauna Row ." Many of

the wo men working in these parlors, the
newspaper discovered, originall y came
from Korea , a land where prost ituti on is
a n accepted profession. Some of the registered owne rs are a lso of Korean origi n, a t
least o ne of these being a Korean nat iogai.
T he lines of ow nership are often tangled
a nd co mplex, with the la nd and sometimes the bu ilding itself being owned by
some other than the person licensed as
proprietor of tlie business. Several local
owners also own similar estab li shments in
other Washington cities:
w.:'C' ,

..
most of their clientele expect something more than a good
back-rub to take place
vvhen customer meets
masseuse . .,

Not surpri singly , the sauna / massage
business is resoundingly profitable, with
ind ividual prem ises taking in an estimated
$250,000 per year each . And much of tha t
is tax-free. This kind of steady inco me
has enabled Judy Gabriel. owner of Judy' s
and The King and I Dating Services, to
purchase close to a ha lf-mi llion dollars'
worth of property wi thin Thu rston
County .
According to Daily 0 reporter Mike
Wa les, abo ut 70 % of the patrons are

One year ago this month T hurston
County passed a n ordinance which paralleled the state law by making massage
.and sa una parlors subj('ct to inspection
"at a ll times" by members of the T hurs-.
ton-Mason Hea lth District and the Sheriff's Office,
As yet this law still stands . Although
the Hea lth Distri ct officia ls make inspec tion o nl y when a new estab li s hment
opens, the Sheriff's Office con tinu es to
make inspecti ons "peri odically a nd as
necessary" in additio n to doing backgro und investi gatio ns of proprietors and
masseuses at lice nsing ti me.
But th e effectiveness of the Thurston
Count y ordi na nce it self is a matter of dispute . White the Daily Olympian has described the new ordinance as "tough ,"
th('y have a lso quoted County Comm issio ner Ken Stevens (in their February 18th
issue) as sayi ng that the law is "not worth
the paper it's wri tten on ." Time will tell if
the o rdi na nce is effective . Sau na a nd massage pa rlors often pack up a nd mo ve else w here in the face of unfavorab le legisla tion. In the meantime, the dollars roll in
like waves down o n Sa un a Row .

The purpose of education is not self- realization : The Evergree n philos op h y of edu cat ion proclaims that each st ud en t co ntains a receptive "self'
th at must b e realized.
Free students from their inhibitions, let t hem see themselves, and they'll
learn.
Learn what? Theoretically, a student cou ld easily bury his head in Evergreen's academic sand. In four years of study he could escape reading
S h akespeare, Darwin, Kant, Einstein , Marx or St. Luke. By avoiding
the Learning Resource Center (LRC), SPLU labs and mods, he could
never learn how to write well or clearly, the calcu lus, Western/Eastern/
American history, general biology or political science .
Still, h e could get an interdisciplinary "liberal arts/sciences" degree .
And he'll think he's pretty smart - and he might be, in his field of expertise .
But unless he is lu cky enough to have deliberately planned a wellrounded academic course, he'll be as lopsided as a Ph .D . who specializes
until h e knows every thing about nothing .
Why not a program for first- and second-year students where a "core"
of writing/ math Ihistory / science is taken for two credits, and a specialized
con tract in theater, media or psychology (for instance), for the other two
credits?
A basic program such as this wo ul d h elp overworked faculty by a llow ing them to teach at le ast one specia li zed cou rse in their own field .
It wo uld take the load off the, reiatively few people in the LR C Ihal
tutor basic s kjlls .
Mos t important ly, it would keep s tudent s from de luding them ~ e1 v t: s
that they've had a " liberal arts/sc iences" course of study .
Student s can "find themselve s" aJ they learn, but learning I S no t o nl y
findin oneself .

4

5

NO BLOOD, NO GOUINIER

INDOOR 'CYCLE MEET
up popcorn and quart of brew on the way
to their seats). the riders start their solo
qualifying runs. One lap to get up the
speed , a flyer, and then one to cool off as
the next rider takes to the floor. The
fa"'~"' lap was around 8 seconds. the
slowest 9 ,;' . From the solo times the
contestants are gridded into four groups
for the five-lap qualifying heats. A good
finish in one of these and you move up to
one of the two 10-lap Semi-Main heats.
The top five from eac h Semi-Main move
to the 15 lap Final. ..

bv Dou g Ta y lo r
:-' lu tu rp ,)rI prom o ters go to amazing
", tn'l1ll" tn put on a show that will
at t rdc t a prntitable crowd . International
RelCl·way I' ark s. operators o f seven West
e ll.! , t ra cin g iacilities (including Seattle
Intrrnatil)nal Ran·way . Puya llup Raceway
l'.lrk
<ind Portland 1ntprnational Raceway ) gut t oge t her with Rainier Beer and
put t,'gether a program of lunacy just
thi s side ot Rollerball. Thev ca lled it the
Ra in ier Indoor Motorcycle Flat - track
C hampionship and put it in the Seattle
C enter Cl)liseum February 4th .
T hat ', right , they rented the Coliseum
co mplete with hockey boards. The thick
p lexig las panes which last saw service
,,·hm t
defunct Seattle Totems hockey
club last played there served to keep
e rrant 'cvcles out of the stands.
The ~aintenance crew stripped the
Sl'nic's wooden basketball court off the
tI""r . laid some 2 X 4'5 to mark the inside
01 the corners at each end of the rink
(later reinforced by tires as the riders
g raduall y' shortened the course in pract ice ). created a start-finish line with duck
telpe and declared it a "flat-track" . . .
cl)mplete with American Motorcycle
Association sancti on.
The radio ads for the race were plenty
macabre with illusions of 90 mile per hour
cras hes . (nobody got over 50. if that)
\",I r nt death as hapless riders mangled
l'J ch o thf' r with their powerful machines,
. /- ' 1i 1/lS,' IIII /. Rea lize though , the man who
I'r" d u ce d t h e ad , once gra ced the
:~l" t h"'rq a in,'a\' es ma squerading a s

Ten hands nervously roll the throttles
of their bikes back and forth, each time
producing a thundering howl that blocks
out all other sound. The exhaust is too
much for the ventilation system to
handle, and each stab at the gas
intoxicates everyone with the residue of
over 500 horsepower.
This is the fifth try at starting the Final.
Three times somebody has jumped the
gun. The one good start was stopped with
a red flag after a first turn collision left a
Honda lying stricken in the middle of the
track, its front forks twisted crazily in the
air. Another competitor ran back to the
pits located behind the Cohseum and
raced back with a similar bike. Everbody
dismounted to help out and wrenches flew
in the hands of skilled mechanics. The
entire front end of the bike was changed
in less than two minutes.
The starter looks over the grid and
casts an inquiring glance at the Honda
rider who apprehensively wiggles the
handl ebars and flashes a quick thumbs-

ne

some pseudo deity, parading around what
he called the "Queen City" in drag as an
Emporer. He's never seen an indoor flattrack race either.
What was it like7 The AMA has
choreographed a thousand shows like this
one. a nd each one follows the same
script. As the spectator~ file in , (picking

----

APPLICATIONS NOW
BEING TAKEN FOR
ED'TORPR ING QUARTER

\970

.------



up. The starter takes three steps forward
onto a platform. raises the green flag, and
waits . ..
Suddenly the flag waves and the field
explodes into the first turn and flashes
down the short chute across the rink. The
leaders slider their bikes three abreast into
the second turn, oblivious to the only
Northwest. rider left in the field. He rips
past four bikes on the chute and muscles
his way past a fifth in the corner. Doner
himself is coming off his sellt as the crowd
screams its approval. Every four seconds
they throw their bikes sideways into the
corners, and suddenly a bike slides out of
the pack. It's the Honda. As his bike falls
from underneath him the rider stands up
and runs out of the way. At the wall he
turns to watch the final two laps.
The Northwest rider is riding way over
his head , performing a magnificent
maneuver catching the second place rider
by surprise and charging into the final
corner he makes a desperate attempt to
elbow his way into the lead, failing by the
length of his bike as the racing ends with
a final wave of the checkered flag.
There is a momentary silence, a
savoring of the orgasmic flow of energy,
and then the Coliseum erupts with the
thunderous cheers and applause of the
7000 spectators (and this time the
promoters did not multiply the gate by
1. 35 to get the announced attendance). Of
the fans, maybe a thousand came to see
blood. The rest carne to see racing and
they knew what they were watching, the
majority being racers themselves. What
they saw was some of the finest,
undeniably the most intense motor racing
ever seen in the Northwest. They knew it
and expressed it in their final ovation.
The gou ls went home disappointed.

15%
DISCOUNT

TO STUDENTS
Effective on all merchandise now through Feb. 29,
1976 at -

BAP
OLYMPIA, LTD.
620 E. Legion Way

SUBM IT APPLICATIONS
To PRE:), Me Cann'S offic.e.
Ll B .3/01
Marc.h IS

357-7700

By

.. ------ ------ - .

PUBUCATlON5

HEARING

BOARD

MA /1CH

5

last Friday (1st pla ce , men's and women's divisions):
Medley Relay-T. Whiting, M. Witz, L. Mauksch. J.

Benkoozv. 100 yd. ~reestvle-T. Whiting. 100 yd. Ind.
Medley-T. Whiting. 50 yd. Freestyle-C . Holtz, T .
Whiting. 50 yd. Butterfly-C. Holtz, Glenn Fithian .

TUITION HIKE
BILLS RE.JECTED
College students around the
state breathed a collective sigh of
rei ief la s t week after House
Higher Education Committee
C hairwoma n Peggy Maxie rejected two proposals to increa se
tuition at the state's colleges and
universities .
Representative Maxie, a Seatt le Democrat, concluded debate
last Friday on the two bills over
objections from minority Republic~ns on the Higher Ed Committee.
One bill, HB - 1536, would
have increased tuition ] 1 % at
Evergreen and the three other
state colleges, 21 % at the two
state universities and 33 % a~ the
community co ll eges around the
state. The second bill, HB - 1522,
would have charged the student
20 - 25 % of the actual cost of
their education. Evergreeners
now pay on ly 10 - 15 % of the
cost of their education.
A resolution to establish a citizen ta sk force was instead submitted by Representative Maxie.
The citizen group would explore
tuit ion problems, establish a policy and report to the 1977 legislative session.
Although college students and
labor lobbyists support Maxie's
resolution. some Republicans are
accusing her of simply "buyi ng
time': until the legislature convenes next vear.

EVERGREEN ART :

Will SELECT THE

YOU HELP DECIDE

WEW EDlTOR.

200 yd. Freestyle-J. Schmidt, Bob Jacobs. Feet F1rsc
Race-B . Jacobs. 50 yd. Backstroke-J, Schmidt, ~.
Hann. 50 yd. Breaststroke-H. Osborne, 8. Peters.
Sweatshirt Re l ay-G. Fithian, S. Wasner, L. Mauksch.

Results of the Evergreen Community Swim Meet held

Evergreen ' s Visual Environment Group (VEG) is holding
the purse strings for a $37,000
budget to be spent on art.
The Washington Legislature
recently passed a law that
reserves one-half of one percent
of the total monies budgeted for
state projects for art. Lab Phase
II and the Comm uni cations
Building currently under con-

T. Morrill. Longest Unde r ... ater Swim-So Rohde (2.6
lengths) .

struction qualify for these monies.
Together, they supply about
$70,000 to be used for art on
campus. About half of the fund
was presented to the Washington
Arts Commission. The ot h er
half - that $37,000 - was
given to the VEG.
VEG hopes to use the money
to purchase an Evergreen art
collection, which could potentially become a travelling show.
However, criteria for chosing art
objec ts has not been established.
The first of a series of meetings
to determine that criteria will be
held Wednesday, Feb . 27, in the
Lib. 2200 lounge at 3 p.m. All
additional meetings will be held
on Wednesday, at the same p lace
and time .

BIOCIDES
ON CAMPUS
The use of biocides to control
the campus weed population has
been up for discussion before the
Sounding Board during recent
meetings. The Sounding Board
approved a resolution Feb. 11
requesting Dean Clabaugh to
bring together facilities personnel, concerned faculty and the
Environment Advisory Commit-

tee (EAC) for the purpose of
hold in g policy discussions on the
use of the biocides.
The issue of the weed contro l
c he micals was first brought
before the SB by Chris Dlugokenski. He reported Feb. 11 that
the biocides chlordane, diazinon,
KXL and sevin were found tn hp
in use on campus . Penatrol ~
2-4-d , 2-4-5-t, 25t, peroquat,
amatro l T and caceron were also
found to be lurking on the
she lves.
The substances are hazardous
to humans and an im als in
varyi ng degrees. Some are known
carcinogens, while one, 2-4-d,
has\. been shown to act like
X-ra.JIs in damaging chromosomes. According to D lugokenski, the chemicals are used to
control weeds on all the campus
road sides, turf areas, divider
strips and near the buildings.
The resolution adopted recognizes "that a policy of utilizing

ELD

EQUIPMEN

FLEXIBLE FIBERGLASS
FRAME BACKPACKS
FREE
BROCHURE

P. O. BOX 914
OLYMPIA. WA 98507

RENT COULD BE AS LOW

s39

00
~ER

-MONTH

ASHTREE APTS.
3138 overhulse rd
866-8181

COMPARE THE
EXTRAS
WE OFFER!

the campus as an outdoor
classroom exists" and asks the
Board of Trustees to ban the use
of the biocid~ without specific
approval on a case by case basis
from the EAC.
Facilities officials, the EAC
and other co ncerned persons
have been discussing the prob lem, trying to arrive at some
solutions. Dlugokenski has ca lled
for formal procedures "with
teet h in them" to be established.
Director of Faci lities Jerry
Schillinger has been at the
Sounding Board meetings twi ce,
including this week's mee ting, to
discuss and explain the college's
use of biocides . One of the big
stumbling blocks, Schillinger
says, in establishing a formal
policy, is that he never ta lks to
the same. group of people twice.
S tudent intere st wanes, the
co mposit ion of var ious campus
groups changes and he finds that
agreeme nts he made with one
group of people isn't acceptable
to the next group which has
replaced them .
No final so lut ion appears
forthcoming at the present time,
but concerned persons are continuing to work towards the
estab li shmen t of gu idelines for
the use of biocides at Evergreen.

<:::> c::;) ~ ~
C") cC::~l;» <;?
C ) c:> c> <?

OLYMPIA SPORT SHOP
New Shipment
of
White Stag Fiberfill 2
Sleeping Bags.

NOW AVAILABLE
AT 1975 PRICES

719 E. 4th

357-7580

ERUCH STATIONERS
• otftce ........
.• Drafting Eqilip.
• Date boob

·F,.. .......

PAUL'S MOBIL SERVICE

Automotive
Repair Specialists

120 OLYMPIA AVE.
143-1344

Diesel
Stove Oil

CAPITAL HON DA

Kerosene
RebateJ up to $80 on any new
motorcycle

Solvent

2727 West moor Ct.
Olympia. Washington 98502
Phone 943-4960
PARTS-Sales and Service

"LOWEST LABOR RATE
IN TOWN"

357-6245
2401 W. Harrison

Raudenbush
Motor·Supply
~.

BRIDGE

STONE
'TI1l~~

STEEL RADIALS

NOW

:~!~N: $4 6~:~T!~
SIZE 155 5a12

--

S ANDIf; ' S

SALES-SERVICE
PARTS-ACCESSORIES

9fu. Y3i991!~t and !B1!11t
For more information, come up and see us in CAB 306
or call -6213 or -6214.

Death was dealt to fi sh and
other aquatic life in Lacey 's Littl e
Woodland Creek last weekend in
the form of a toxic re, in "p il l
from the Lac ey Co -Pl y In c.
located at the intersect ion pf
Lacey Boulevard and Pac ifi c
Cf tlti l1 il t " l l fl ~ d ,,-!f C

That big, klunky , imported
yarn you just bought to · knit a
sweater may be loaded with
deadly anthrax.

COOPE'~ POlNT JOORNAL

Cii) •

TOXIC SPILL KILLS

ANTHRAX IN
IMPORTED YARNS

• no long term fease
• recreation rooms
·community food co-op
• carpets and drapes
•• pets are welcome
. ·complete laundry
• furnished apts available

RESERVE

The Health Department has
been confiscat ing all yarns im ported into this country from
Pakistan under the brand names
Tahki and Crea tive Hand Weav ers . The yarns were sold in the
Seattle area at Weaving Work s.
M3g nolia Weaving. La Tienda .
Millard - Po ll ard and Fiber to
Fabr ic.
One weaver in C a liforni a
reportedly died after co ntracting
ant hr ax from ' the yarn. Th e
yarn s are being confiscated anu
burned. If you have an y yarn
from those brand names whi ch
you think ma y be infe c te d .
co ntact the Health Department
immediately.

OPENING
SOON
207

f;

4th

Ave.

352-4777

FACTQRY
TRAINED
MECHANIC
BLACK LAKE BVD.

STEEL RADIAL
(RD 170V)
Inc._ed mileage. Saves
consumption
Wide.
tread, exceUent weo.. ImprOYed traction.

fuel

412 S.

TIRE
SIZE
155511 I 3
165S.13
17551113
lUS.13
1755111.
1.45111.
1955111.
2055111.
2255111.
15551115
16551115
11551115
19551115
2055115
21551115
2255115

DISCOUNT
"ICE
$51..1
55 .97
57.37
59.95
60.0.
63 . I 2
65 .70
77. 12
90.73
60.57
60.10
66.11
69. 13
79.00
16.1.
H .70

EXCISE
TAX
S1.65
1.13
1.96
1 . 11

2 .09
1 .37
1 .64
2 .72
3.04
1.12
1 .07
1 .65
3 .11
306
3 . 16

3.n

943-3650

Cherry

Opw 8 to 8 Daily and Sunday

4

5

NO BLOOD, NO GOUINIER

INDOOR 'CYCLE MEET
up popcorn and quart of brew on the way
to their seats). the riders start their solo
qualifying runs. One lap to get up the
speed , a flyer, and then one to cool off as
the next rider takes to the floor. The
fa"'~"' lap was around 8 seconds. the
slowest 9 ,;' . From the solo times the
contestants are gridded into four groups
for the five-lap qualifying heats. A good
finish in one of these and you move up to
one of the two 10-lap Semi-Main heats.
The top five from eac h Semi-Main move
to the 15 lap Final. ..

bv Dou g Ta y lo r
:-' lu tu rp ,)rI prom o ters go to amazing
", tn'l1ll" tn put on a show that will
at t rdc t a prntitable crowd . International
RelCl·way I' ark s. operators o f seven West
e ll.! , t ra cin g iacilities (including Seattle
Intrrnatil)nal Ran·way . Puya llup Raceway
l'.lrk
<ind Portland 1ntprnational Raceway ) gut t oge t her with Rainier Beer and
put t,'gether a program of lunacy just
thi s side ot Rollerball. Thev ca lled it the
Ra in ier Indoor Motorcycle Flat - track
C hampionship and put it in the Seattle
C enter Cl)liseum February 4th .
T hat ', right , they rented the Coliseum
co mplete with hockey boards. The thick
p lexig las panes which last saw service
,,·hm t
defunct Seattle Totems hockey
club last played there served to keep
e rrant 'cvcles out of the stands.
The ~aintenance crew stripped the
Sl'nic's wooden basketball court off the
tI""r . laid some 2 X 4'5 to mark the inside
01 the corners at each end of the rink
(later reinforced by tires as the riders
g raduall y' shortened the course in pract ice ). created a start-finish line with duck
telpe and declared it a "flat-track" . . .
cl)mplete with American Motorcycle
Association sancti on.
The radio ads for the race were plenty
macabre with illusions of 90 mile per hour
cras hes . (nobody got over 50. if that)
\",I r nt death as hapless riders mangled
l'J ch o thf' r with their powerful machines,
. /- ' 1i 1/lS,' IIII /. Rea lize though , the man who
I'r" d u ce d t h e ad , once gra ced the
:~l" t h"'rq a in,'a\' es ma squerading a s

Ten hands nervously roll the throttles
of their bikes back and forth, each time
producing a thundering howl that blocks
out all other sound. The exhaust is too
much for the ventilation system to
handle, and each stab at the gas
intoxicates everyone with the residue of
over 500 horsepower.
This is the fifth try at starting the Final.
Three times somebody has jumped the
gun. The one good start was stopped with
a red flag after a first turn collision left a
Honda lying stricken in the middle of the
track, its front forks twisted crazily in the
air. Another competitor ran back to the
pits located behind the Cohseum and
raced back with a similar bike. Everbody
dismounted to help out and wrenches flew
in the hands of skilled mechanics. The
entire front end of the bike was changed
in less than two minutes.
The starter looks over the grid and
casts an inquiring glance at the Honda
rider who apprehensively wiggles the
handl ebars and flashes a quick thumbs-

ne

some pseudo deity, parading around what
he called the "Queen City" in drag as an
Emporer. He's never seen an indoor flattrack race either.
What was it like7 The AMA has
choreographed a thousand shows like this
one. a nd each one follows the same
script. As the spectator~ file in , (picking

----

APPLICATIONS NOW
BEING TAKEN FOR
ED'TORPR ING QUARTER

\970

.------



up. The starter takes three steps forward
onto a platform. raises the green flag, and
waits . ..
Suddenly the flag waves and the field
explodes into the first turn and flashes
down the short chute across the rink. The
leaders slider their bikes three abreast into
the second turn, oblivious to the only
Northwest. rider left in the field. He rips
past four bikes on the chute and muscles
his way past a fifth in the corner. Doner
himself is coming off his sellt as the crowd
screams its approval. Every four seconds
they throw their bikes sideways into the
corners, and suddenly a bike slides out of
the pack. It's the Honda. As his bike falls
from underneath him the rider stands up
and runs out of the way. At the wall he
turns to watch the final two laps.
The Northwest rider is riding way over
his head , performing a magnificent
maneuver catching the second place rider
by surprise and charging into the final
corner he makes a desperate attempt to
elbow his way into the lead, failing by the
length of his bike as the racing ends with
a final wave of the checkered flag.
There is a momentary silence, a
savoring of the orgasmic flow of energy,
and then the Coliseum erupts with the
thunderous cheers and applause of the
7000 spectators (and this time the
promoters did not multiply the gate by
1. 35 to get the announced attendance). Of
the fans, maybe a thousand came to see
blood. The rest carne to see racing and
they knew what they were watching, the
majority being racers themselves. What
they saw was some of the finest,
undeniably the most intense motor racing
ever seen in the Northwest. They knew it
and expressed it in their final ovation.
The gou ls went home disappointed.

15%
DISCOUNT

TO STUDENTS
Effective on all merchandise now through Feb. 29,
1976 at -

BAP
OLYMPIA, LTD.
620 E. Legion Way

SUBM IT APPLICATIONS
To PRE:), Me Cann'S offic.e.
Ll B .3/01
Marc.h IS

357-7700

By

.. ------ ------ - .

PUBUCATlON5

HEARING

BOARD

MA /1CH

5

last Friday (1st pla ce , men's and women's divisions):
Medley Relay-T. Whiting, M. Witz, L. Mauksch. J.

Benkoozv. 100 yd. ~reestvle-T. Whiting. 100 yd. Ind.
Medley-T. Whiting. 50 yd. Freestyle-C . Holtz, T .
Whiting. 50 yd. Butterfly-C. Holtz, Glenn Fithian .

TUITION HIKE
BILLS RE.JECTED
College students around the
state breathed a collective sigh of
rei ief la s t week after House
Higher Education Committee
C hairwoma n Peggy Maxie rejected two proposals to increa se
tuition at the state's colleges and
universities .
Representative Maxie, a Seatt le Democrat, concluded debate
last Friday on the two bills over
objections from minority Republic~ns on the Higher Ed Committee.
One bill, HB - 1536, would
have increased tuition ] 1 % at
Evergreen and the three other
state colleges, 21 % at the two
state universities and 33 % a~ the
community co ll eges around the
state. The second bill, HB - 1522,
would have charged the student
20 - 25 % of the actual cost of
their education. Evergreeners
now pay on ly 10 - 15 % of the
cost of their education.
A resolution to establish a citizen ta sk force was instead submitted by Representative Maxie.
The citizen group would explore
tuit ion problems, establish a policy and report to the 1977 legislative session.
Although college students and
labor lobbyists support Maxie's
resolution. some Republicans are
accusing her of simply "buyi ng
time': until the legislature convenes next vear.

EVERGREEN ART :

Will SELECT THE

YOU HELP DECIDE

WEW EDlTOR.

200 yd. Freestyle-J. Schmidt, Bob Jacobs. Feet F1rsc
Race-B . Jacobs. 50 yd. Backstroke-J, Schmidt, ~.
Hann. 50 yd. Breaststroke-H. Osborne, 8. Peters.
Sweatshirt Re l ay-G. Fithian, S. Wasner, L. Mauksch.

Results of the Evergreen Community Swim Meet held

Evergreen ' s Visual Environment Group (VEG) is holding
the purse strings for a $37,000
budget to be spent on art.
The Washington Legislature
recently passed a law that
reserves one-half of one percent
of the total monies budgeted for
state projects for art. Lab Phase
II and the Comm uni cations
Building currently under con-

T. Morrill. Longest Unde r ... ater Swim-So Rohde (2.6
lengths) .

struction qualify for these monies.
Together, they supply about
$70,000 to be used for art on
campus. About half of the fund
was presented to the Washington
Arts Commission. The ot h er
half - that $37,000 - was
given to the VEG.
VEG hopes to use the money
to purchase an Evergreen art
collection, which could potentially become a travelling show.
However, criteria for chosing art
objec ts has not been established.
The first of a series of meetings
to determine that criteria will be
held Wednesday, Feb . 27, in the
Lib. 2200 lounge at 3 p.m. All
additional meetings will be held
on Wednesday, at the same p lace
and time .

BIOCIDES
ON CAMPUS
The use of biocides to control
the campus weed population has
been up for discussion before the
Sounding Board during recent
meetings. The Sounding Board
approved a resolution Feb. 11
requesting Dean Clabaugh to
bring together facilities personnel, concerned faculty and the
Environment Advisory Commit-

tee (EAC) for the purpose of
hold in g policy discussions on the
use of the biocides.
The issue of the weed contro l
c he micals was first brought
before the SB by Chris Dlugokenski. He reported Feb. 11 that
the biocides chlordane, diazinon,
KXL and sevin were found tn hp
in use on campus . Penatrol ~
2-4-d , 2-4-5-t, 25t, peroquat,
amatro l T and caceron were also
found to be lurking on the
she lves.
The substances are hazardous
to humans and an im als in
varyi ng degrees. Some are known
carcinogens, while one, 2-4-d,
has\. been shown to act like
X-ra.JIs in damaging chromosomes. According to D lugokenski, the chemicals are used to
control weeds on all the campus
road sides, turf areas, divider
strips and near the buildings.
The resolution adopted recognizes "that a policy of utilizing

ELD

EQUIPMEN

FLEXIBLE FIBERGLASS
FRAME BACKPACKS
FREE
BROCHURE

P. O. BOX 914
OLYMPIA. WA 98507

RENT COULD BE AS LOW

s39

00
~ER

-MONTH

ASHTREE APTS.
3138 overhulse rd
866-8181

COMPARE THE
EXTRAS
WE OFFER!

the campus as an outdoor
classroom exists" and asks the
Board of Trustees to ban the use
of the biocid~ without specific
approval on a case by case basis
from the EAC.
Facilities officials, the EAC
and other co ncerned persons
have been discussing the prob lem, trying to arrive at some
solutions. Dlugokenski has ca lled
for formal procedures "with
teet h in them" to be established.
Director of Faci lities Jerry
Schillinger has been at the
Sounding Board meetings twi ce,
including this week's mee ting, to
discuss and explain the college's
use of biocides . One of the big
stumbling blocks, Schillinger
says, in establishing a formal
policy, is that he never ta lks to
the same. group of people twice.
S tudent intere st wanes, the
co mposit ion of var ious campus
groups changes and he finds that
agreeme nts he made with one
group of people isn't acceptable
to the next group which has
replaced them .
No final so lut ion appears
forthcoming at the present time,
but concerned persons are continuing to work towards the
estab li shmen t of gu idelines for
the use of biocides at Evergreen.

<:::> c::;) ~ ~
C") cC::~l;» <;?
C ) c:> c> <?

OLYMPIA SPORT SHOP
New Shipment
of
White Stag Fiberfill 2
Sleeping Bags.

NOW AVAILABLE
AT 1975 PRICES

719 E. 4th

357-7580

ERUCH STATIONERS
• otftce ........
.• Drafting Eqilip.
• Date boob

·F,.. .......

PAUL'S MOBIL SERVICE

Automotive
Repair Specialists

120 OLYMPIA AVE.
143-1344

Diesel
Stove Oil

CAPITAL HON DA

Kerosene
RebateJ up to $80 on any new
motorcycle

Solvent

2727 West moor Ct.
Olympia. Washington 98502
Phone 943-4960
PARTS-Sales and Service

"LOWEST LABOR RATE
IN TOWN"

357-6245
2401 W. Harrison

Raudenbush
Motor·Supply
~.

BRIDGE

STONE
'TI1l~~

STEEL RADIALS

NOW

:~!~N: $4 6~:~T!~
SIZE 155 5a12

--

S ANDIf; ' S

SALES-SERVICE
PARTS-ACCESSORIES

9fu. Y3i991!~t and !B1!11t
For more information, come up and see us in CAB 306
or call -6213 or -6214.

Death was dealt to fi sh and
other aquatic life in Lacey 's Littl e
Woodland Creek last weekend in
the form of a toxic re, in "p il l
from the Lac ey Co -Pl y In c.
located at the intersect ion pf
Lacey Boulevard and Pac ifi c
Cf tlti l1 il t " l l fl ~ d ,,-!f C

That big, klunky , imported
yarn you just bought to · knit a
sweater may be loaded with
deadly anthrax.

COOPE'~ POlNT JOORNAL

Cii) •

TOXIC SPILL KILLS

ANTHRAX IN
IMPORTED YARNS

• no long term fease
• recreation rooms
·community food co-op
• carpets and drapes
•• pets are welcome
. ·complete laundry
• furnished apts available

RESERVE

The Health Department has
been confiscat ing all yarns im ported into this country from
Pakistan under the brand names
Tahki and Crea tive Hand Weav ers . The yarns were sold in the
Seattle area at Weaving Work s.
M3g nolia Weaving. La Tienda .
Millard - Po ll ard and Fiber to
Fabr ic.
One weaver in C a liforni a
reportedly died after co ntracting
ant hr ax from ' the yarn. Th e
yarn s are being confiscated anu
burned. If you have an y yarn
from those brand names whi ch
you think ma y be infe c te d .
co ntact the Health Department
immediately.

OPENING
SOON
207

f;

4th

Ave.

352-4777

FACTQRY
TRAINED
MECHANIC
BLACK LAKE BVD.

STEEL RADIAL
(RD 170V)
Inc._ed mileage. Saves
consumption
Wide.
tread, exceUent weo.. ImprOYed traction.

fuel

412 S.

TIRE
SIZE
155511 I 3
165S.13
17551113
lUS.13
1755111.
1.45111.
1955111.
2055111.
2255111.
15551115
16551115
11551115
19551115
2055115
21551115
2255115

DISCOUNT
"ICE
$51..1
55 .97
57.37
59.95
60.0.
63 . I 2
65 .70
77. 12
90.73
60.57
60.10
66.11
69. 13
79.00
16.1.
H .70

EXCISE
TAX
S1.65
1.13
1.96
1 . 11

2 .09
1 .37
1 .64
2 .72
3.04
1.12
1 .07
1 .65
3 .11
306
3 . 16

3.n

943-3650

Cherry

Opw 8 to 8 Daily and Sunday

u

FISH
[(",t ,>llI cd from pag e 5

A venue.
Stan Springer of the State
Ecology Department identified
t hI' water soluble pollutant as

1"t'
ARTICHOKE
MODE
Presents:

A Sunday Dinner
This and eve ry Sunday
T ue - Fri 11 - 9

Sun 5 - 9 p.m.
203 W. 4th

phenolic glue, a caustic resin
used in the manufacturing of
plywood.
Some two miles of the four
mile creek was polluted; from
directly below its headwaters at
Lois Lake to an area downstream
near the Woodland Village
subdiv ision. The State Game
Department is in the process of
assess ing the extent of the fish
kill. The creek's fish population
includes trout, salmon and
steelhead.
Officials from the Ecology
Department traced the spill to a
55 gallon sump pump which
drains into the city's storm sewer
system. It is sill unknown how
the toxic glue entered the holding
tank used for storm drainage

IT'S A RUNNERS WORLD
Running is an
exhilarating experience

It is a
joy
w hen doing it
with the right
shoes.







---.. !.... = .

WILLIE'S SPORTS
ENTERPRISES

overflow.
The pump was in operation
from 10 a.m. Sunday morning
until 4:30 p.m . Sunday afternoon. The su mp pump has been
disconnected from the storm
sewer system until the investigation is completed.
The Lacey Co-Ply Inc. , a
worker-owned cooperative, faces
possible enforcement action under civil penalty procedures of
up to $5,000 per day that
polution occurs.

GREGORY TO SPEAK
IN OLYMPIA MAR. 1
Comedian and civil rights
activist Dick Gregory will discuss '
the "Social Crisis in America" in
an address in Capitol Pavilion at
SI. Martin's March 1.
Gregory, who began his career
as a comedian at Chicago's
Playboy Club in 1961, h as
consistant ly made headlines for
more than a decade - not only

as a comedian, but as a
participant in civil rights demonstra t ions , as a lecturer who
travels to more than 300 college
campuses a year, and even as a
write·in candidate for the Presidency of the United States and
for the Mayor of Chicago.
Brought to Thurston County
by a number of academic
programs and the Third World
Coalition at Evergreen, Gregory
will appear at 7: 30 p.m . in the
Lacey pavilion . Tickets, available
at the door, are $1 for students;
$2 for others. For more information, call the Third World
Coalition at -6034 .

A SPECIAL
INTERNSHIP
An internship p lacing ex-felons
in jobs or school is available
through "Friendship Inc."
The program was put together
over the past 11 months by Evergreen students Bruce and Colleen
Yost and involves all phases of

Tiger
Nike
Converse
Pony
Puma

3530 Martin Way
491-8240

Sttldellt discount with Discount card from Willies

On~ofth~

most Important
thil\gs Y9U can
achl~v~ In the

AirForc~is
ind~pend~nc~•••
th~ lasting kind.
If you decide on on Air Force job, you'll receive competitive
pay with regular raises.
You'll be gaining job experience. You'll be developing a
marl"etable sl"ill.
With a sl"ill, job experience, the possibility of community
college credits behind you, and the Veteran's Administration
to help you finance a home of your own, you'll have some
tools that will help you to achieve your goal in life.
Thinl" about it.
Then, tal"e advantage of it.

work, from filing and typing to
counseling and the business end
of counse ling. Community resources for the project have already been coordinated by the
Yosts.
The intern would not be working with ' just one state department , but several - Welfare,
Dept. of Vocational Rehabilitation, the BIA, Employment Security, Probation/Parole, the Alcohol Referral Center, etc.
There were openings for both
a woman and a man, but a
woman has been hired. Yost
stated that both a man and a
woman were needed for balance.
Yost can, be contacted at 8663521 (homel. 866-6192 (campus
VA office) or 357-8024 (Friendship, Inc. office).
Someone needs to be hired
immediately!

ASIAN CAMPS
by Robin West
In the following article is a
condensation of the Executive
Order 9066, and sources for
more information on its use in
World War II against Japanese
residents of the United States.
EXECUTIVE ORDER 9066
signed Feb. 19, 1942 by Pres.
Roosevelt says "by virtue of the
authority vested in me, I hereby
authorize and direct the Secretary of War, and the Military
Commanders whom he may ...
designate, to prescribe military
areas in such places ... as he ...
may determine, from which any
or all persons may be excluded,
and .. . the right of any person to
enter, remain in, or leave shall
be suject to whatever restriction
the Sec. of War. .. may impose
in his discretion.
HI hereby further authorize
and direct the Sec. of War. .. to
take such steps as he .. . may
deem advisable to enforce compliance with the restrictions
applicable to each Military area
authorized to be des ignat ed,
including the use of Federal
troops and Federal Agencies ... "
To find out more about
America's concentration camps,
the Evergreen library has books
on the subject in section EI84.J3.
There will also be two films on
the subject shown; "Subversion?"
on Feb. 24 and "Guilty by
Reason of Race" on March 2 at
LH 4 at 7:30 p.m.
On the 34th anniversary of the
signing of Ex. Order, Feb. 19,
PBS will show a documentary
on the subject at 10:30 p.m.
ca lled "Justice Overdue." Also,
there are petitions going around
to demand that Pres . Ford
rescind Exec. Order 9066 . If you
have any questions, contact the
Asian Coalition or EPIC.

Call:

U.S.Air Forc~

A
9'30-12'~.m.

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6,3Q-7.}Op.m.

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NOWOPENI

Closed Sundays
4th And Wathington
Downtown OI~

Ph. 352-1666

1-4p.m.

Lee Chamber., On-the-air announcer workshop.

Lee Riback, mainstream jazz and classical pieces, stories.
Joe Murphy, "Ether Classic.", explore. the music of established
jazz masters such as Coltrane, Rollins & Coleman as well as
European "free music" and modern classical composers.
Greg Hutcheson, "Reflections", the radio mirror, a news magazine
designed to brirl8 the world into focus.

9.30-midnight

Chris Holden, "Roots a: Beyond", the best in new releases, vocal,
soul, & jazz with album or artist featured.

Midnight-?

John S. Foster, "In Amerika, They Call Us Americans", a
socio-cul tural look at Americans and their music, featurill8
obscure jazz and readill8s, equal time for outcasta ...

Da7id Blunt, "Anything May Happen", Evergreen news & coomruni ty
affairs, interviews and music.
7-9p.m.

Brad FurlOll8, "Power to the People", The KAOS News Director takes
an in depth look at the issuss concerning Puget Sound and its
residents.

9-12a.m.

Jivan Ivan, best of the new releasee, progressive rock and some
jazz aa well as stabs from the past & comedy. "It seems to work
okay when r'm okay".

12-2a .m.

Dan DePrez. "The History of Recorded Comedy", Dan delves onto his
vaults of comedy . Mike Nichols & Elaine May, the 2000 year old
man, Bob & Ray, Lenny Bruce and others for an often hilarious and
' always educational program.

Friday
Monday
7-10a.m.

Brad Furlong, "Baroque for Beginners", start your week off with
a two hour Baroque concert followed b,. a Haydn symphony at 9.
News and other handy information.

10-1p.m.

Diane Hess, p~rily woman vocalists, readill8s from Collette,
informative looks at specific themes.
Cindy Stewart, the sweetheart of Texas brings you the sounds of
armadillos invading Olympia'. airways. Women's music, vocalists
and fine times.

4-7p.m.
7-9p.m.

Lee Meister, "Audio Ointllj,ent", give ear to varied jazz &: other
assorted jokes.

James Moore, "Morning Classics", light classical, vocal & rock.
"Easy to bed, easy to ria!!, makes a person lazy, crs-z.y and blind".

10-1 p.m.

Carla Knoper, brings culture to the community with classics from
Baroque to Modern. Peatures a John Obetz organ recital at noon.
Shirley Schaffer, an hour of Greek muSiC, (it's all ' Greek to me ••• )
and other inspirations.

4-7p.m.

Time here devoted to speCial affairs programs.
welcomed.

7-9p.m.

Michael "Toes " Tiranoff, "The Supper time Blues Show". the history
of the Blues. Toes, local Blues expert, knows that Robert Johns on
never died.

9-12a.m.

Mike Griggs, "The Prime Time Show", jazz and soul corDin' at you

wall to wall.

Laura Mae, "People to People", talks with friends from Olympia,

"JasBIl"
9-1s.m.

7-10a.m.

wi

W.D.

12- ?

"Real slick" the daily shuck & jive.

Greg Hutcheson, "Straightshooter's Magilacc", Rock, new releases,
surprises galore. Rock In Roll lives !

Rob Macht, "JazZlll&tazz", mostly jazz (all types) with tasty bits
of vocals, rock &: soul &: contemporary classical thrown in. Plus
jazz profiles.
Tom Hood, "Radar Range" audio fre nzy ......

Ideas and tape.

Rob

Robert~on,

greet the rain or go to sleep to mellow rock.

10-1p.m.

Stephen Rabow, "The KAOS Saturday Morning Cartoon Show",
positively diverse.

1-4p.m.

J ohn S. Foster, "Reruns for Late Risers", t u rn it uP. Soul

7-9a.m.

Aaron Sonege , "Music to slowly wake UP by", jaz z l,n a 90ft vein.

9-12p.m.

Kim, ·'Jazzz", plua Northwest Music Calender, &: earth music.

12-1p.m.

Tom Russell, "Brief Panorama of Italian Music", educ ational fran
RAI Italian Radio-TV Sy.tern.

4-7p.m.

Tom Gil l, spins vocals, country-rock and straight-out rock & roll.

7-10p.m.

Randy Harrison, "The Gleeper Hours", a vaporous j ourney thru
the music of the 60's. Hysterical, historical and educational.

10-4a.m.

Carl L. Cook, "The All Ni te Jamn", a program where everything
can happen or nothing can happen. Listeners are invited to

Michael Everett, flAIl You Can Eat" •••• of fine rock, folk and

vocal music for only 89.3 cents (PM).

Jananne Gaver, mostly jazz with other good music as well.

7-8p.m.

After Dinner RAdio Theater, the theater group contract at play.

8-9P.m.

Aubrey Dawn, "Art Central Lecture Series" see "Happenings" weekly.

9-12a.m.

Doue: Rice, "Abercrombie to Zawinul", jazz A to Z.

. . * * * * * * * * * * * * ... ** ....... * . * * * *

12-2&.m.

Stephen Winiger, Jazz music ? the Blanco y Negro s how is jazz.
unique Jazz, from Mozart to Airto, counterpointed with comedy
and funk •

By way of informative programming, KAOS radio features throughout each broadcast
day Evergreen College happenings, community billboard, In the Public Interest ( IPI )
commentary. public affairs from Radio Canada International, Zodiac and Earth
News, and s hort news summariea at 10a.m., 12, 2, 4, 6, and Sp.m., plus
occasional live coverage of special events at the college and the Olympia
community at large.

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Carl L. Cook, "Coffee, Toast & Janm", .. program to wake up with,
light the fire, and go back to sleep. Mellow jazz, light rock,
folk and comedy plus Shoddyaudio experimental radio. Perfect for
that morning airbreak •••

1D-1P.m.

John Bickelhaupt, "Mid-weekday Classic.", a .pontaneous airill8 of
claSSical, orchestral and experimental music emphasizing that
which isn't heard much.
.

1-4p.m.

4-7p.m.

Greg Krall, "From Baroque to Beethoven and Beyond", cl .. ssical
music through the agea. Features a Beethoven symphony at 2p.m.
What can one play after that? Listen •••
Brent Ingram, political music and readings with a humanistic theme.
Much of this music is not widely available as it is produced by
independent alternative companies or the artists themselves.
Catch it while you can, graduating Brent will be leavill8 our
hallowed halls next month.
Elluage, "Clowns of the Uncarved Block". weavill8 poetry with jazz.

I

9-11p.m.

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Aubrey Dawn, "Essence of Delight", tne pendulum ewill8s from yin
to yang.

11-2a.m.

Andrea and Shirley, the pendulum swings from yang to yin.

~-----

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and rock 'n roll that will get you out of bed and onto t he s t reets.

5-7p.m.

7-10a.m.

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Saturday
7-10a.m.

1Q Wonderland.

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participate: sing. dance, show films, act, read poems.
Noncommercially oriented art is espeCially wel~omed. The show's
mainstay is jazz, comedy, and home grown experimental programming
by Shoddyaudio.

Wednesday

VILLA IOMA

SAT. SPECIAl. - I '.....ttIall y~ can ... - $2.25

Reward Burrows, "Folk &: Country Show", I was raised in Georg;a
and grew up around the music so it seems "natural" for me to
share it with people.

Rhoda Fleishman, reads from Alice

491-8988

From 11 a.m'.

10-1p.m.

Tuesday

.CENrER

MERCHANt'$'LUNCH

Anne Stone, "Julie Jukebox's Morning Spree", deals with health
issues in America. Special (total) emphasis on women's vocals.

New York Philharmonic Radio Broadcast Series, with commentator
Martin Eookspan •

1-7

• =
"Here or to go"

Brent Ray, "The Golden Birdies", music and spoken word for
imagination and movement.

7.3Q-9:30p.m.

ONLY$9.9S

• PIZZA. · PASTA

7-1Oa.m.

I

2 - 10 CUP COFFEE MAKER

PHONE

Aaron Clear, plays vocals, instrumental, light classioal. "Maybe
it's good for my soul or something to get up this early".


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Thursday

12:30-3:30p.m. Kidd Rhythm, "What It Is", music in and out of the SO's, Eo Diddley,
Chuck Berry, Moorl8lows etc. Kidd' s partner, Robin Crook, drops
by occaSionally with the latest rap on prison reform.
3,}D-6'30p.m.

I

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Sunday

NEW I
CHEMEX CM - 210

IUI,IfII'••
S/Sgt. Alden C. Hampton
323 South Sound Center
Locey, WA 98503
(206) 456·1475

r---------------------------------------------------------------------,
Program Guide
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u

FISH
[(",t ,>llI cd from pag e 5

A venue.
Stan Springer of the State
Ecology Department identified
t hI' water soluble pollutant as

1"t'
ARTICHOKE
MODE
Presents:

A Sunday Dinner
This and eve ry Sunday
T ue - Fri 11 - 9

Sun 5 - 9 p.m.
203 W. 4th

phenolic glue, a caustic resin
used in the manufacturing of
plywood.
Some two miles of the four
mile creek was polluted; from
directly below its headwaters at
Lois Lake to an area downstream
near the Woodland Village
subdiv ision. The State Game
Department is in the process of
assess ing the extent of the fish
kill. The creek's fish population
includes trout, salmon and
steelhead.
Officials from the Ecology
Department traced the spill to a
55 gallon sump pump which
drains into the city's storm sewer
system. It is sill unknown how
the toxic glue entered the holding
tank used for storm drainage

IT'S A RUNNERS WORLD
Running is an
exhilarating experience

It is a
joy
w hen doing it
with the right
shoes.







---.. !.... = .

WILLIE'S SPORTS
ENTERPRISES

overflow.
The pump was in operation
from 10 a.m. Sunday morning
until 4:30 p.m . Sunday afternoon. The su mp pump has been
disconnected from the storm
sewer system until the investigation is completed.
The Lacey Co-Ply Inc. , a
worker-owned cooperative, faces
possible enforcement action under civil penalty procedures of
up to $5,000 per day that
polution occurs.

GREGORY TO SPEAK
IN OLYMPIA MAR. 1
Comedian and civil rights
activist Dick Gregory will discuss '
the "Social Crisis in America" in
an address in Capitol Pavilion at
SI. Martin's March 1.
Gregory, who began his career
as a comedian at Chicago's
Playboy Club in 1961, h as
consistant ly made headlines for
more than a decade - not only

as a comedian, but as a
participant in civil rights demonstra t ions , as a lecturer who
travels to more than 300 college
campuses a year, and even as a
write·in candidate for the Presidency of the United States and
for the Mayor of Chicago.
Brought to Thurston County
by a number of academic
programs and the Third World
Coalition at Evergreen, Gregory
will appear at 7: 30 p.m . in the
Lacey pavilion . Tickets, available
at the door, are $1 for students;
$2 for others. For more information, call the Third World
Coalition at -6034 .

A SPECIAL
INTERNSHIP
An internship p lacing ex-felons
in jobs or school is available
through "Friendship Inc."
The program was put together
over the past 11 months by Evergreen students Bruce and Colleen
Yost and involves all phases of

Tiger
Nike
Converse
Pony
Puma

3530 Martin Way
491-8240

Sttldellt discount with Discount card from Willies

On~ofth~

most Important
thil\gs Y9U can
achl~v~ In the

AirForc~is
ind~pend~nc~•••
th~ lasting kind.
If you decide on on Air Force job, you'll receive competitive
pay with regular raises.
You'll be gaining job experience. You'll be developing a
marl"etable sl"ill.
With a sl"ill, job experience, the possibility of community
college credits behind you, and the Veteran's Administration
to help you finance a home of your own, you'll have some
tools that will help you to achieve your goal in life.
Thinl" about it.
Then, tal"e advantage of it.

work, from filing and typing to
counseling and the business end
of counse ling. Community resources for the project have already been coordinated by the
Yosts.
The intern would not be working with ' just one state department , but several - Welfare,
Dept. of Vocational Rehabilitation, the BIA, Employment Security, Probation/Parole, the Alcohol Referral Center, etc.
There were openings for both
a woman and a man, but a
woman has been hired. Yost
stated that both a man and a
woman were needed for balance.
Yost can, be contacted at 8663521 (homel. 866-6192 (campus
VA office) or 357-8024 (Friendship, Inc. office).
Someone needs to be hired
immediately!

ASIAN CAMPS
by Robin West
In the following article is a
condensation of the Executive
Order 9066, and sources for
more information on its use in
World War II against Japanese
residents of the United States.
EXECUTIVE ORDER 9066
signed Feb. 19, 1942 by Pres.
Roosevelt says "by virtue of the
authority vested in me, I hereby
authorize and direct the Secretary of War, and the Military
Commanders whom he may ...
designate, to prescribe military
areas in such places ... as he ...
may determine, from which any
or all persons may be excluded,
and .. . the right of any person to
enter, remain in, or leave shall
be suject to whatever restriction
the Sec. of War. .. may impose
in his discretion.
HI hereby further authorize
and direct the Sec. of War. .. to
take such steps as he .. . may
deem advisable to enforce compliance with the restrictions
applicable to each Military area
authorized to be des ignat ed,
including the use of Federal
troops and Federal Agencies ... "
To find out more about
America's concentration camps,
the Evergreen library has books
on the subject in section EI84.J3.
There will also be two films on
the subject shown; "Subversion?"
on Feb. 24 and "Guilty by
Reason of Race" on March 2 at
LH 4 at 7:30 p.m.
On the 34th anniversary of the
signing of Ex. Order, Feb. 19,
PBS will show a documentary
on the subject at 10:30 p.m.
ca lled "Justice Overdue." Also,
there are petitions going around
to demand that Pres . Ford
rescind Exec. Order 9066 . If you
have any questions, contact the
Asian Coalition or EPIC.

Call:

U.S.Air Forc~

A
9'30-12'~.m.

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6,3Q-7.}Op.m.

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NOWOPENI

Closed Sundays
4th And Wathington
Downtown OI~

Ph. 352-1666

1-4p.m.

Lee Chamber., On-the-air announcer workshop.

Lee Riback, mainstream jazz and classical pieces, stories.
Joe Murphy, "Ether Classic.", explore. the music of established
jazz masters such as Coltrane, Rollins & Coleman as well as
European "free music" and modern classical composers.
Greg Hutcheson, "Reflections", the radio mirror, a news magazine
designed to brirl8 the world into focus.

9.30-midnight

Chris Holden, "Roots a: Beyond", the best in new releases, vocal,
soul, & jazz with album or artist featured.

Midnight-?

John S. Foster, "In Amerika, They Call Us Americans", a
socio-cul tural look at Americans and their music, featurill8
obscure jazz and readill8s, equal time for outcasta ...

Da7id Blunt, "Anything May Happen", Evergreen news & coomruni ty
affairs, interviews and music.
7-9p.m.

Brad FurlOll8, "Power to the People", The KAOS News Director takes
an in depth look at the issuss concerning Puget Sound and its
residents.

9-12a.m.

Jivan Ivan, best of the new releasee, progressive rock and some
jazz aa well as stabs from the past & comedy. "It seems to work
okay when r'm okay".

12-2a .m.

Dan DePrez. "The History of Recorded Comedy", Dan delves onto his
vaults of comedy . Mike Nichols & Elaine May, the 2000 year old
man, Bob & Ray, Lenny Bruce and others for an often hilarious and
' always educational program.

Friday
Monday
7-10a.m.

Brad Furlong, "Baroque for Beginners", start your week off with
a two hour Baroque concert followed b,. a Haydn symphony at 9.
News and other handy information.

10-1p.m.

Diane Hess, p~rily woman vocalists, readill8s from Collette,
informative looks at specific themes.
Cindy Stewart, the sweetheart of Texas brings you the sounds of
armadillos invading Olympia'. airways. Women's music, vocalists
and fine times.

4-7p.m.
7-9p.m.

Lee Meister, "Audio Ointllj,ent", give ear to varied jazz &: other
assorted jokes.

James Moore, "Morning Classics", light classical, vocal & rock.
"Easy to bed, easy to ria!!, makes a person lazy, crs-z.y and blind".

10-1 p.m.

Carla Knoper, brings culture to the community with classics from
Baroque to Modern. Peatures a John Obetz organ recital at noon.
Shirley Schaffer, an hour of Greek muSiC, (it's all ' Greek to me ••• )
and other inspirations.

4-7p.m.

Time here devoted to speCial affairs programs.
welcomed.

7-9p.m.

Michael "Toes " Tiranoff, "The Supper time Blues Show". the history
of the Blues. Toes, local Blues expert, knows that Robert Johns on
never died.

9-12a.m.

Mike Griggs, "The Prime Time Show", jazz and soul corDin' at you

wall to wall.

Laura Mae, "People to People", talks with friends from Olympia,

"JasBIl"
9-1s.m.

7-10a.m.

wi

W.D.

12- ?

"Real slick" the daily shuck & jive.

Greg Hutcheson, "Straightshooter's Magilacc", Rock, new releases,
surprises galore. Rock In Roll lives !

Rob Macht, "JazZlll&tazz", mostly jazz (all types) with tasty bits
of vocals, rock &: soul &: contemporary classical thrown in. Plus
jazz profiles.
Tom Hood, "Radar Range" audio fre nzy ......

Ideas and tape.

Rob

Robert~on,

greet the rain or go to sleep to mellow rock.

10-1p.m.

Stephen Rabow, "The KAOS Saturday Morning Cartoon Show",
positively diverse.

1-4p.m.

J ohn S. Foster, "Reruns for Late Risers", t u rn it uP. Soul

7-9a.m.

Aaron Sonege , "Music to slowly wake UP by", jaz z l,n a 90ft vein.

9-12p.m.

Kim, ·'Jazzz", plua Northwest Music Calender, &: earth music.

12-1p.m.

Tom Russell, "Brief Panorama of Italian Music", educ ational fran
RAI Italian Radio-TV Sy.tern.

4-7p.m.

Tom Gil l, spins vocals, country-rock and straight-out rock & roll.

7-10p.m.

Randy Harrison, "The Gleeper Hours", a vaporous j ourney thru
the music of the 60's. Hysterical, historical and educational.

10-4a.m.

Carl L. Cook, "The All Ni te Jamn", a program where everything
can happen or nothing can happen. Listeners are invited to

Michael Everett, flAIl You Can Eat" •••• of fine rock, folk and

vocal music for only 89.3 cents (PM).

Jananne Gaver, mostly jazz with other good music as well.

7-8p.m.

After Dinner RAdio Theater, the theater group contract at play.

8-9P.m.

Aubrey Dawn, "Art Central Lecture Series" see "Happenings" weekly.

9-12a.m.

Doue: Rice, "Abercrombie to Zawinul", jazz A to Z.

. . * * * * * * * * * * * * ... ** ....... * . * * * *

12-2&.m.

Stephen Winiger, Jazz music ? the Blanco y Negro s how is jazz.
unique Jazz, from Mozart to Airto, counterpointed with comedy
and funk •

By way of informative programming, KAOS radio features throughout each broadcast
day Evergreen College happenings, community billboard, In the Public Interest ( IPI )
commentary. public affairs from Radio Canada International, Zodiac and Earth
News, and s hort news summariea at 10a.m., 12, 2, 4, 6, and Sp.m., plus
occasional live coverage of special events at the college and the Olympia
community at large.

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Carl L. Cook, "Coffee, Toast & Janm", .. program to wake up with,
light the fire, and go back to sleep. Mellow jazz, light rock,
folk and comedy plus Shoddyaudio experimental radio. Perfect for
that morning airbreak •••

1D-1P.m.

John Bickelhaupt, "Mid-weekday Classic.", a .pontaneous airill8 of
claSSical, orchestral and experimental music emphasizing that
which isn't heard much.
.

1-4p.m.

4-7p.m.

Greg Krall, "From Baroque to Beethoven and Beyond", cl .. ssical
music through the agea. Features a Beethoven symphony at 2p.m.
What can one play after that? Listen •••
Brent Ingram, political music and readings with a humanistic theme.
Much of this music is not widely available as it is produced by
independent alternative companies or the artists themselves.
Catch it while you can, graduating Brent will be leavill8 our
hallowed halls next month.
Elluage, "Clowns of the Uncarved Block". weavill8 poetry with jazz.

I

9-11p.m.

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Aubrey Dawn, "Essence of Delight", tne pendulum ewill8s from yin
to yang.

11-2a.m.

Andrea and Shirley, the pendulum swings from yang to yin.

~-----

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and rock 'n roll that will get you out of bed and onto t he s t reets.

5-7p.m.

7-10a.m.

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Saturday
7-10a.m.

1Q Wonderland.

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participate: sing. dance, show films, act, read poems.
Noncommercially oriented art is espeCially wel~omed. The show's
mainstay is jazz, comedy, and home grown experimental programming
by Shoddyaudio.

Wednesday

VILLA IOMA

SAT. SPECIAl. - I '.....ttIall y~ can ... - $2.25

Reward Burrows, "Folk &: Country Show", I was raised in Georg;a
and grew up around the music so it seems "natural" for me to
share it with people.

Rhoda Fleishman, reads from Alice

491-8988

From 11 a.m'.

10-1p.m.

Tuesday

.CENrER

MERCHANt'$'LUNCH

Anne Stone, "Julie Jukebox's Morning Spree", deals with health
issues in America. Special (total) emphasis on women's vocals.

New York Philharmonic Radio Broadcast Series, with commentator
Martin Eookspan •

1-7

• =
"Here or to go"

Brent Ray, "The Golden Birdies", music and spoken word for
imagination and movement.

7.3Q-9:30p.m.

ONLY$9.9S

• PIZZA. · PASTA

7-1Oa.m.

I

2 - 10 CUP COFFEE MAKER

PHONE

Aaron Clear, plays vocals, instrumental, light classioal. "Maybe
it's good for my soul or something to get up this early".


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Thursday

12:30-3:30p.m. Kidd Rhythm, "What It Is", music in and out of the SO's, Eo Diddley,
Chuck Berry, Moorl8lows etc. Kidd' s partner, Robin Crook, drops
by occaSionally with the latest rap on prison reform.
3,}D-6'30p.m.

I

S 8Q.3 f·m

Sunday

NEW I
CHEMEX CM - 210

IUI,IfII'••
S/Sgt. Alden C. Hampton
323 South Sound Center
Locey, WA 98503
(206) 456·1475

r---------------------------------------------------------------------,
Program Guide
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. -------- -------------------------------------------------------

OLDER WOMEN AND HEALTH CARE

Emmylou Harris

NEWS FROM CAREER
PLANNING/PLACEMENT
by Molly Wright

LP Only
Through 2 / 21176
MG list price $6.98

One way to brea k into the rea l job
marke t. before yo u graduate is to get
appli cab le held ex peri e nce. Real (o r
hi dden ) job market implies those open
pos ition , that are advert ised on ly to

Ano ther example: ENTERTAINERS
fo r the D isney En t e rtainment Work
Exper ience Program will be audit ion ing
this sp ring to participate in li ve summer
periormances he ld at D isney Land and

certa in gro u p~ or individuals. Many
emp loyers sim ply d on't have time to
eva luate great numbers of applications
and do not use emp loymen t agencies,
newspapers, or co ll ege placement offices.

Walt Disney World. TJ1e program , which
awards eight un it s of co ll ege credit and
includ es a week ly sti pend of $175 cou ld
benefit the asp iring performer in theater,

Emp loye rs a re able to fill job vacancies by
contacting people they knolV of. Strong
field experience can demonstrate sk ill s,
knowledge and interest not always
associated with a co llege degree . It also

Elvin Bishop
Struttin' My Stuff

created the opport unit y to make professional co ntacts and to become known by
spec ifi c employers.
In addition to Evergreens' internship
program, various agencies and inst itut ions
offer cred it generat ing work programs .
For example: Washington State Summer
Intern Program provides junior and sen ior
s tud ents wit h practica l experie nce in
governmental fields related t o th ei r
acade mi c trai ning or profeSSional interes ts.
These adm ini stra tiv e and research positions are a t the sa lary level of $612-709
per month . Par ti cipati ng agenc ies are

106 Y2 E. 4th

Westside Center

357-7358

357-4755

are made in the expec tatio n that st udents
wi ll give se ri ous consideration to pursuing
careers in governmen t or publ ic service in
Washi ngton.

var ied , ranging from the Department of
Game, the Office of Commu nity Development , to the Washington State Women's
Co uncil and the State Patrol. App licat ion
deadline is March 1, 1976. In respect to
future employment , program placements

dance, and music. The emphasis of thi s
unu sua l program is on professional
train in g. It is aimed at bridging the ga p
between acade mic background and the
realities of the profess ional show business
world . Performance work opportunities
include the All-American College Marching Band, a un ique seven piece band
comprisi ng rock a nd ma rching music w ith
a Ca ribbean flavor , and the Kids of the
Kin gdom, a dance voca l e nsemb le, backed
by an eight piece instrumental pop-rock
group. In add it ion to rehearsals and
performance work , there are classroom
se minars and workshops th at deal
primarily with the practical aspects facing
a yo ung performe r in entertainment. The
la st week of August stu dent s perform
their own final show which is conceived,
written, staged and directed by participants .
Fo r more information about e'ither of
the above program s con t ac t Career
Planning and Placement, Library rm.
1220, 866-6193.

HOUSE OF

by Chris Cowger
"We live in a society that
devalues women as they get
older. .. Menopause in contemporary America is treated as a
disease rather than a normal
bodi ly function."
So state a group of women
from Evergreen and the surrounding community who are
orga nizi ng a two-day conference
called "Older Women and Health
Care. " The meeting, to be held
April 10th a nd 11th at the
Olympia Community Center,
1314 E. 4th SI. , is slated to
address the issues of menopause,
age-ism, and the health problems
of o ld er women - nursing
homes, the financing of health
care, and mental health.
"We want young women to
bu il d strong communicat ions
with o lder women," says Laura
Zeidenstein, a member of the
Evergreen program "Politics of
Health Care" and one of the
founders of the conference .
Zeidenstein fee ls Evergreen wo-men, 10 of whom are helping
esta blish the meeting, shou ld
understand the relevance and
immediacy of o lder women's
problems, since these problems
"concern us all."
Organizers of the conference
are meeting every other week at
the YWCA. They plan a mailing

of about 600 to acquaint
potential participants with their
aims.
Through a format of panel
discussions, lectures and workshops, those who attend are
scheduled to explore such topics
as the physiologica l and psychologica l effects of menopause, the
extent of perscription drug use
among older women, and alternatives to nursing homes. A
panel of experts will discuss wise
use of federal benefits such as
Medicare and National Health
Insurance.
"Our culture has a rigid
definition of a woman's place,"
say the conference organizers.
Women who don't confonn to
that definition are made to feel
"guilty, anxious and bitter." One
focus of the meeting will be the
standards for women's mental
health and who determines them .
Speakers at the conference will
include: Ruth Haefner, spokesperson for the Portland chapter
of the Grey Panthers, a national
organization dedicated to furthering the causes of the elderly;
Helen Ansley, member of the
Senior Actualization and Growth
Exploration (SAGE) of California, a yoga and movement
group; Erma Levine of the
Seattle Menopause Study Group;
and Caroline Prestion, a profes-

• Bill Elston ... your sweatshirt
has been found and is awaiting
you in Security.

• Gay Cen ter regular members hip meeting will be h e ld
Wednesday, February 25th at 6
p.m. in Lib. 3219 . All interested
women and men a re invited to
attend .

• Sha rron Coontz / Young Socialist A lliance offers two more
Th ur sday N ight C lass Series
presentations. They include The
Fight Again st Racism in the U.S.
on February 19 an d The Mideast
Crisis on February 26. The class
meets at 7:30 in Lib. 2129.
• T hose interested in the summer '76 g roup contract in
Medieval a nd Renaissa nce Art
History sho uld attend a sli de
show and mee ting Monday ,
February 23rd a t 4 p.m. in the
2100 lounge of the Library . For
more informatio n see Gordon
Beck, 1401 Library, -6073 or
-6605,

115 East 5th
Olympia, WA
98501

352 - 7527

STUDENT
DISCOUNT

SALE
NORMAL
STOCK
CLEARANCE
RECORDS
Amazinlj prices
on remainders

"'AZZ\

• Driftwood Day Care Center is
having a bake sale from 11: 30 to
1 : 30 February 26th. We would
welcome baked goods to be
contributed to the sa le. Baked
goods can be brought directly to
our table, which will be located
in the CA B lobby . Help us help
ourselves. And bring a n empt y
stoma ch.

...
Z

III

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ON

-:I -...

'<

"

III

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• There will be a meet in g of the
com mittee to organ ize the women 's coalition th is Tuesday at 7
p.m . in Lab 3033 . The commit tee
is open and a ll interested women
a re encouraged to a ttend. The
primary task at this meeting will
be con tinuin g writing wha t the
coalition's program w ill be .

EVERGREEN COIN.S
AND
'-,
INVESTMENTS _,
BUYING
SIL VER Ie GOLD COINS
OOLLARS

RARE COINS
COMPLFfE

COLLECTIONS

__ 8:00 - 4:30 Daily

• For those people who missed
the meeting of next year's Outdoor Education class (Hoboken
to Humptulips) - there will be
another meeting , The meeting
will be held Tuesday, Feb . 24 at
noon in library 2204.

• Mary Moorehead in Academic
Advising encourages all continuing students needing adv ising for
Sp ring Quarter to contact her .
Her office is in LAB 1012, phone
-6312. Don't wait until the last
minute - especial ly if you're
co nside rin g an individual contract.
• The seco nd half of the
WashP IRG article cou ld not be
printed this week due to non avai lability of research mate rials .
Note: please bring back books
when the Library reca lls them please!

1722 Wf'St Buildil\A 1722 Harrison
(~CI'O$S from Bob's Big Burpnl

352 - 8848

BAILEY CRITIOUES
LEGAL SYSTEM

by Cathy Riddell
"One of us always must lose.
It isn't how you play the game,
but whether you win or lose," F.
Lee Bailey said of the lawyer's
role in our trial system . "Ethical
standards have too long been ignored."
Bailey spoke Friday night at
University of Puget Sound to an
estimated 2,800 people - including many young law students.
As much a celebrity as his latest
client, Patty Hearst, Bailey appeared dressed tastefully in grey
a nd confidently in control of the
situation,
An ex-Mar ine pilot, Bailey
made many piloting metaphors.
In law as much as flying, mistakes ca nn o t be tolerated. Too
much is left up to chance. He asserted for a certain type of criminal, it is common to consult a
lawyer to determine the odds of
co nviction before the criminal
act. Whoever can hire- the better
lawyer will "win" a case, rather
than people receiving "ju stice. "
Bailey praised the British lega l
system , say in g England has comparat iv ely fewer "barristers," b ut
they have served an apprenticesh ip , and are uniforml y excellent
instead of as in th e United Sta tes
where when a new lawyer prac·
tices, "he practices on you! "
The lawyer's job is to control
crim e, Ba iley believes. In refer -

MED SCHOOL ADMISSIONS
To advise students on the particulars of Medical School
requirements and application procedures, Appropriate
for students wanting academic advice about what to
study at TESC in preparation for Medical School.
SOME INFORMATION ABOUT VETERINARY MEDICINE AVAILABLE.
When:
Feb. 20
12:00 - 1:00 p.m. '
Where: CAB 110
Speaker: Don Humphrey

ence to Watergate, he said to
,rely on any part of government
including the executive to "regulate itself" is "stupid."
Bailey concluded his speech by
saying when the imbalances of
the system are eliminated, "this
will be a nicer place to liv('. "
Having impressed the audience
with a kind of pugilistic gladiator
image, he left the podium .
Though he made scarcely any
comment on the Hearst case in
his talk , in the press conference
he did . Of the prosecutor's claim
that they have the case "wrapped
up ," he said , he "would expect
them to say that since they have
run o ut of evidence ." He ha s no
quest ion that Hea rst will be ac·
quitted because of be ing brain·
washed, but "she is rich and
famou s, th erefore she mu st be
tried, " If not , he ha s gro und s for
appeal.

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Dave's

Gay 90's
Bring this coupon ,
Buy two
spaghetti dinners
For Only

$350

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45 6-15 ::0
Expires 2/25/76
_________
-~\

International
Hair Designers

Qd
501 CAPITOL WAY • OLYMPIA, WASH . • 943·8916

BLUES \
CLASSICAL
30% .Iflvings

• Additional work-study funds
have made it possible for Media
Loa n to ex te nd its operating
hours . New hours , effective
Tuesday , Feb. 17 are: 8:30 a . m .
to 6 p.m. on Monday, Tuesday,
Thursday and Friday. On Wednesdays Media Loan will close at
3: 30 for staff meetings.

• The Center for Poetry in
Performance con tinu es to present
its Thursday night series of outsta nding Northwest area poets .
Tonight, February 19, the ce nter
hosts a reading by Pamela
Jennings and Gladys Cardiff.
Pame la Jennings is a poet writing
out of Seattle. G ladys Cardiff,
a lso from Seattle, is a Cherokee
Indian whose poems have recent ly appeared in Carriers of the
Dream Wheel , '1 new American
Indian anthology . The reading
takes place tonight in the Board
Room, Library 3112.

sor in the University of Washing"
ton psychology department who
will talk about elderly women
and mental health. Field trips to
nursing homes are planned.
Some of the claims of the
women behind the conference:
• A myth exists that "a woman
has comp leted her purpose in life
when her children are grown and
she reached menopausal age. In
our youth-centered society, her
knowledge, skills and experience
are not valued."
• "Traditionally women are not
treated with respect by medical
personnel. Our physical complaints are often diagnosed as
hypochondrism or manifestations
of mental illness."
• Societal indifference hits particularly hard at elderly minority
women.
Bake sales and women's poetry
readings will continue to be
staged to help fund the conference. Transportation to and
from the different conference
act ivities will be arranged,
"Age-ism segregates women in
our society," say Zeidenstein and
the group she represents. 'Women are taught to value youth
rather than confront and learn
about aging and women's health
concerns. Young women and
older women must develop stron
communication channels to inform . , ,each other."

'K'7lens tbeJast tUne](Ju'

~~Wd1.fi'

-I

OLDER WOMEN AND HEALTH CARE

Emmylou Harris

NEWS FROM CAREER
PLANNING/PLACEMENT
by Molly Wright

LP Only
Through 2 / 21176
MG list price $6.98

One way to brea k into the rea l job
marke t. before yo u graduate is to get
appli cab le held ex peri e nce. Real (o r
hi dden ) job market implies those open
pos ition , that are advert ised on ly to

Ano ther example: ENTERTAINERS
fo r the D isney En t e rtainment Work
Exper ience Program will be audit ion ing
this sp ring to participate in li ve summer
periormances he ld at D isney Land and

certa in gro u p~ or individuals. Many
emp loyers sim ply d on't have time to
eva luate great numbers of applications
and do not use emp loymen t agencies,
newspapers, or co ll ege placement offices.

Walt Disney World. TJ1e program , which
awards eight un it s of co ll ege credit and
includ es a week ly sti pend of $175 cou ld
benefit the asp iring performer in theater,

Emp loye rs a re able to fill job vacancies by
contacting people they knolV of. Strong
field experience can demonstrate sk ill s,
knowledge and interest not always
associated with a co llege degree . It also

Elvin Bishop
Struttin' My Stuff

created the opport unit y to make professional co ntacts and to become known by
spec ifi c employers.
In addition to Evergreens' internship
program, various agencies and inst itut ions
offer cred it generat ing work programs .
For example: Washington State Summer
Intern Program provides junior and sen ior
s tud ents wit h practica l experie nce in
governmental fields related t o th ei r
acade mi c trai ning or profeSSional interes ts.
These adm ini stra tiv e and research positions are a t the sa lary level of $612-709
per month . Par ti cipati ng agenc ies are

106 Y2 E. 4th

Westside Center

357-7358

357-4755

are made in the expec tatio n that st udents
wi ll give se ri ous consideration to pursuing
careers in governmen t or publ ic service in
Washi ngton.

var ied , ranging from the Department of
Game, the Office of Commu nity Development , to the Washington State Women's
Co uncil and the State Patrol. App licat ion
deadline is March 1, 1976. In respect to
future employment , program placements

dance, and music. The emphasis of thi s
unu sua l program is on professional
train in g. It is aimed at bridging the ga p
between acade mic background and the
realities of the profess ional show business
world . Performance work opportunities
include the All-American College Marching Band, a un ique seven piece band
comprisi ng rock a nd ma rching music w ith
a Ca ribbean flavor , and the Kids of the
Kin gdom, a dance voca l e nsemb le, backed
by an eight piece instrumental pop-rock
group. In add it ion to rehearsals and
performance work , there are classroom
se minars and workshops th at deal
primarily with the practical aspects facing
a yo ung performe r in entertainment. The
la st week of August stu dent s perform
their own final show which is conceived,
written, staged and directed by participants .
Fo r more information about e'ither of
the above program s con t ac t Career
Planning and Placement, Library rm.
1220, 866-6193.

HOUSE OF

by Chris Cowger
"We live in a society that
devalues women as they get
older. .. Menopause in contemporary America is treated as a
disease rather than a normal
bodi ly function."
So state a group of women
from Evergreen and the surrounding community who are
orga nizi ng a two-day conference
called "Older Women and Health
Care. " The meeting, to be held
April 10th a nd 11th at the
Olympia Community Center,
1314 E. 4th SI. , is slated to
address the issues of menopause,
age-ism, and the health problems
of o ld er women - nursing
homes, the financing of health
care, and mental health.
"We want young women to
bu il d strong communicat ions
with o lder women," says Laura
Zeidenstein, a member of the
Evergreen program "Politics of
Health Care" and one of the
founders of the conference .
Zeidenstein fee ls Evergreen wo-men, 10 of whom are helping
esta blish the meeting, shou ld
understand the relevance and
immediacy of o lder women's
problems, since these problems
"concern us all."
Organizers of the conference
are meeting every other week at
the YWCA. They plan a mailing

of about 600 to acquaint
potential participants with their
aims.
Through a format of panel
discussions, lectures and workshops, those who attend are
scheduled to explore such topics
as the physiologica l and psychologica l effects of menopause, the
extent of perscription drug use
among older women, and alternatives to nursing homes. A
panel of experts will discuss wise
use of federal benefits such as
Medicare and National Health
Insurance.
"Our culture has a rigid
definition of a woman's place,"
say the conference organizers.
Women who don't confonn to
that definition are made to feel
"guilty, anxious and bitter." One
focus of the meeting will be the
standards for women's mental
health and who determines them .
Speakers at the conference will
include: Ruth Haefner, spokesperson for the Portland chapter
of the Grey Panthers, a national
organization dedicated to furthering the causes of the elderly;
Helen Ansley, member of the
Senior Actualization and Growth
Exploration (SAGE) of California, a yoga and movement
group; Erma Levine of the
Seattle Menopause Study Group;
and Caroline Prestion, a profes-

• Bill Elston ... your sweatshirt
has been found and is awaiting
you in Security.

• Gay Cen ter regular members hip meeting will be h e ld
Wednesday, February 25th at 6
p.m. in Lib. 3219 . All interested
women and men a re invited to
attend .

• Sha rron Coontz / Young Socialist A lliance offers two more
Th ur sday N ight C lass Series
presentations. They include The
Fight Again st Racism in the U.S.
on February 19 an d The Mideast
Crisis on February 26. The class
meets at 7:30 in Lib. 2129.
• T hose interested in the summer '76 g roup contract in
Medieval a nd Renaissa nce Art
History sho uld attend a sli de
show and mee ting Monday ,
February 23rd a t 4 p.m. in the
2100 lounge of the Library . For
more informatio n see Gordon
Beck, 1401 Library, -6073 or
-6605,

115 East 5th
Olympia, WA
98501

352 - 7527

STUDENT
DISCOUNT

SALE
NORMAL
STOCK
CLEARANCE
RECORDS
Amazinlj prices
on remainders

"'AZZ\

• Driftwood Day Care Center is
having a bake sale from 11: 30 to
1 : 30 February 26th. We would
welcome baked goods to be
contributed to the sa le. Baked
goods can be brought directly to
our table, which will be located
in the CA B lobby . Help us help
ourselves. And bring a n empt y
stoma ch.

...
Z

III

.

o W

~

U'I

ON

-:I -...

'<

"

III

~

U'I

....

• There will be a meet in g of the
com mittee to organ ize the women 's coalition th is Tuesday at 7
p.m . in Lab 3033 . The commit tee
is open and a ll interested women
a re encouraged to a ttend. The
primary task at this meeting will
be con tinuin g writing wha t the
coalition's program w ill be .

EVERGREEN COIN.S
AND
'-,
INVESTMENTS _,
BUYING
SIL VER Ie GOLD COINS
OOLLARS

RARE COINS
COMPLFfE

COLLECTIONS

__ 8:00 - 4:30 Daily

• For those people who missed
the meeting of next year's Outdoor Education class (Hoboken
to Humptulips) - there will be
another meeting , The meeting
will be held Tuesday, Feb . 24 at
noon in library 2204.

• Mary Moorehead in Academic
Advising encourages all continuing students needing adv ising for
Sp ring Quarter to contact her .
Her office is in LAB 1012, phone
-6312. Don't wait until the last
minute - especial ly if you're
co nside rin g an individual contract.
• The seco nd half of the
WashP IRG article cou ld not be
printed this week due to non avai lability of research mate rials .
Note: please bring back books
when the Library reca lls them please!

1722 Wf'St Buildil\A 1722 Harrison
(~CI'O$S from Bob's Big Burpnl

352 - 8848

BAILEY CRITIOUES
LEGAL SYSTEM

by Cathy Riddell
"One of us always must lose.
It isn't how you play the game,
but whether you win or lose," F.
Lee Bailey said of the lawyer's
role in our trial system . "Ethical
standards have too long been ignored."
Bailey spoke Friday night at
University of Puget Sound to an
estimated 2,800 people - including many young law students.
As much a celebrity as his latest
client, Patty Hearst, Bailey appeared dressed tastefully in grey
a nd confidently in control of the
situation,
An ex-Mar ine pilot, Bailey
made many piloting metaphors.
In law as much as flying, mistakes ca nn o t be tolerated. Too
much is left up to chance. He asserted for a certain type of criminal, it is common to consult a
lawyer to determine the odds of
co nviction before the criminal
act. Whoever can hire- the better
lawyer will "win" a case, rather
than people receiving "ju stice. "
Bailey praised the British lega l
system , say in g England has comparat iv ely fewer "barristers," b ut
they have served an apprenticesh ip , and are uniforml y excellent
instead of as in th e United Sta tes
where when a new lawyer prac·
tices, "he practices on you! "
The lawyer's job is to control
crim e, Ba iley believes. In refer -

MED SCHOOL ADMISSIONS
To advise students on the particulars of Medical School
requirements and application procedures, Appropriate
for students wanting academic advice about what to
study at TESC in preparation for Medical School.
SOME INFORMATION ABOUT VETERINARY MEDICINE AVAILABLE.
When:
Feb. 20
12:00 - 1:00 p.m. '
Where: CAB 110
Speaker: Don Humphrey

ence to Watergate, he said to
,rely on any part of government
including the executive to "regulate itself" is "stupid."
Bailey concluded his speech by
saying when the imbalances of
the system are eliminated, "this
will be a nicer place to liv('. "
Having impressed the audience
with a kind of pugilistic gladiator
image, he left the podium .
Though he made scarcely any
comment on the Hearst case in
his talk , in the press conference
he did . Of the prosecutor's claim
that they have the case "wrapped
up ," he said , he "would expect
them to say that since they have
run o ut of evidence ." He ha s no
quest ion that Hea rst will be ac·
quitted because of be ing brain·
washed, but "she is rich and
famou s, th erefore she mu st be
tried, " If not , he ha s gro und s for
appeal.

----------,I
II Dirty
I

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I

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I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Dave's

Gay 90's
Bring this coupon ,
Buy two
spaghetti dinners
For Only

$350

I

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45 6-15 ::0
Expires 2/25/76
_________
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International
Hair Designers

Qd
501 CAPITOL WAY • OLYMPIA, WASH . • 943·8916

BLUES \
CLASSICAL
30% .Iflvings

• Additional work-study funds
have made it possible for Media
Loa n to ex te nd its operating
hours . New hours , effective
Tuesday , Feb. 17 are: 8:30 a . m .
to 6 p.m. on Monday, Tuesday,
Thursday and Friday. On Wednesdays Media Loan will close at
3: 30 for staff meetings.

• The Center for Poetry in
Performance con tinu es to present
its Thursday night series of outsta nding Northwest area poets .
Tonight, February 19, the ce nter
hosts a reading by Pamela
Jennings and Gladys Cardiff.
Pame la Jennings is a poet writing
out of Seattle. G ladys Cardiff,
a lso from Seattle, is a Cherokee
Indian whose poems have recent ly appeared in Carriers of the
Dream Wheel , '1 new American
Indian anthology . The reading
takes place tonight in the Board
Room, Library 3112.

sor in the University of Washing"
ton psychology department who
will talk about elderly women
and mental health. Field trips to
nursing homes are planned.
Some of the claims of the
women behind the conference:
• A myth exists that "a woman
has comp leted her purpose in life
when her children are grown and
she reached menopausal age. In
our youth-centered society, her
knowledge, skills and experience
are not valued."
• "Traditionally women are not
treated with respect by medical
personnel. Our physical complaints are often diagnosed as
hypochondrism or manifestations
of mental illness."
• Societal indifference hits particularly hard at elderly minority
women.
Bake sales and women's poetry
readings will continue to be
staged to help fund the conference. Transportation to and
from the different conference
act ivities will be arranged,
"Age-ism segregates women in
our society," say Zeidenstein and
the group she represents. 'Women are taught to value youth
rather than confront and learn
about aging and women's health
concerns. Young women and
older women must develop stron
communication channels to inform . , ,each other."

'K'7lens tbeJast tUne](Ju'

~~Wd1.fi'

-I

10

ENTERTAINMENT

EPIC and the Women's Center proudly present in concert

HOLLY NEAR AND "'EFFREY LANGLEY
Saturday Feb. ?8 -

8 p . m.

-

4th Floor Library

BEAUTY PAGEANTS .. '

by John Dodge
ON CAMPUS

SUCCULENTS
by Da vid Judd

Cact i and succu lents make excellent hass le- free house p lants
by thriving on neglect . All that's
required is a bright spot in a
home, good air c ir cu lation, a nd
an understanding of their infrequent need for water.
A Imost a ll s u ccu lents store
water in their leaves so they
don ' t require large amounts of
water. In fact, they will do well
if the soil is a llowed to dry out
in between waterings. It is a
good idea to a llow succu lents to
go semi-dormant during thew in ter, by giving the plant very littl e
water and providing cool temperatures (50 0 '5)
Succulents and cacti seem to
do better potted in a clay pot
a nd porous soi l that drains well.
T hey grow better when they a re
semi-root bound, so ref)otting is
not necessary until the restricted
roots inhibit the plant's growth
Th e best t ime to ref}ot is in the
spr ing a nd slimmer months when
the roots are most active and are
ab le to ad just to a new pot.
" Bromeliads"
(Bromeliaceae)
are anot her type of house plant
that rarely needs water. Though

Tickets available 12 noon M - F next week in CAB and at
Rainy Day Records, the Artichoke Mode. Rainbow Grocery. and the Music Bar. $2 advance. $2_50 at the door_

ANOTHER

SPECIAL

LP Only

through 2/21/76

Westside Center

106 Y:1 E. 4th

357-4755

357-7358

it is not a succulent, it does have
the ability of storing water in its
center crown. Some Bromeliads
have rough - tex tured blossoms in
bright colors that form in the
crow n of the p lant.
Some of the b looming succulents like the "Ka lanchoe" (daigremo ntiana ), "C hristmas cactus"
(Schlumberger a bridgessi 1. and
"T hank sg iving cactus" (Zygocactus truncactus) produce very im pressive pink , red, orange, and
yellow blossoms during the winter months. The " Jade plant"
(C rassuia argentea) is one of the
more popular succu lents. It has
thi ck green leaves and produces
clusters of star- shaped pink and
white blossoms. The "Aloe" (Liliaceae) is a stenlless plant with a
sp iked blossom that someti mes
stays in bloom year-round.
Some cact i can be grafted on
top of other ones, which enables
a sma ll er cact i to a ttach itself to
a larger one, prodUCing an un usual ,hape a nd tex tur e. A side
from grafting, succulents can be
propagated by divi sion of one
p la nt into several potted sma ller
plants; stem and leaf cutt ings
Jillaced in a porous so il and by
seed.

FOOD/WESTERMAN
Awakening to ' rain aga in , and
only the thought of breakfast
provides the motivatiOl for that
big step into the cold. What to
eilt for breakfast? So l\'in g the
proble m ,cis the pattern for the
day; the need for crea tivity is
sl ron g. T ,\king len mInutes for
breakla,1 will all(lw Y(l U time to
prepare [\. lnmi,1)! M ullin s. TI'",t
and butter ,,~ :,1).,li,h mullin.
While it', tl',I-I"'g , thinl y ,lice
and CI'IT h,til dn apple. T urn on
the broiler . I'ul the app le , Ii ces
o n th e buttered mufti'" dnd top
w ith c hed dar cheese , thinl y .
, I iced or grated . l'ul the mutt in s
under the broiler until Ihe cheese
melt,. You can pal Ihem as you
leav e, o ne in eac h hand .
Eggs are another br ea kfa s t
basic. They can be so ft - boiled ,
poached, fri ed, scramb led alone,
or scrambled with herbs and veg etables. For elegance in eggs,
serve Eggs a la Suisse. Melt a ta b lespoon of butter in a pan.
Gent ly break four eggs into the
butter. Top the eggs with abOl.t
a ha lf cup 'of grated cheese, and
seaso n with sa lt , white pepper
and a few grains of paprika or
nutmeg. Pour over the eggs and
cheese one ha lf cup cream, and
bake in a 350 degree oven until
Ihe white is set and the yo lks are
firm . Serve the eggs on buttered
toast, pouring the cream on top.
Pancakes are also a customary
brea kfast which can be made
more exciti ng with some imagi nation. Besides wheat cakes,
'corn and oats make good pancakes. The cakes can be thick or
thin, and served with fruit ,
yogurt , honey or syrup. Finely
diced apples, chopred nuts, cin namon or 01 her spices , seeds, or
sour cream can be added to the
batter fm flavor.
To make bdsic corn cakes, stir
one cup boiling water into a
bowl co ntaining one cup co rn meal. one leaspoon sa lt , and
abou t a lables poon of sweetener.
Let it stand ten minutps. Mean while. mix loget her a n egg, one
half cup milk , and two table~ po(ms melted buller or oil . Sift
tl'geth er on£' half C IlP 1i ,1lIr and

two and one half tab lespoons
baking powdC'f . After len min utes . mix th e liquid ingredients
into "the co rnmeJI . Ihen stir in
th e dry ingredient s witr. a lew
sw ilt slrokes. Bake th e cakes on
a se aso ned or light ly greased
griddle (if a few drops of waler
jump a nd sp ut'er on the heated
griddle, it' s hot enough l. T urn
th em w hen bubbles appear on
th e su rface Eal them up , and get
ready to face t hp day.
Another variab le in proper
breakfast comtru ction is the effect of the previous night 's act iv ities. On certain occasio ns,
people have been known to
swear by a cold beer as the on ly
possible means of starting the
day. In a similar situation, one
friend has been known to crave
a Mexican TV dinner as his only
hope of survival.
Then th ere are days , usually
Sunday mornings, when circumstances undeni ably point toward
a Champagne and Waffle"breakfast. It has to be a morning with
plenty of time. and much convivial companionship. The event
can be preplanned, but spontaneity has produced the same results. The basis of the meal is
Waffles Deluxe, wh ich are deluxe
even outside a champagne breakfa st. To make them, sift together
in a large bowl one cup fine
whole wheat flour , one half cup
wheat germ , one fourth cup soy
flour. one half teasp :Jon salt, one
tablespoon baking powder, one
t a bles poon brown sugar (or
honey mixed with the liquid ingredients), one teaspoon cinnamon, one half teaspoon each
nutmeg and ginger, and one half.
cup finely chopped pecans or
walnuts. In a se parate bowl ,
blend one and one half cups
milk , three or four eggs, and two
to seve n tabl espoo ns melted but ter or oil. (The more o il used ,
the crisper the waffles will be .)
Mix the liquid ingredients into
the dry unlil thoroughly mixed
but not smooth . Bake in a waffle
iron until done to your waffle
preference .

TAKE ONE
by Ti Locke
On February 14th, a 24-yearold professional model was
chosen "Miss Washington-Universe" at Olympia's Greenwood
Inn.
She won out of a field of 21
tall, long-legged, glossy-haired
women who had a remarkable
uniformity in bust size.
The Miss Washington-Universe
pagent wa s strict ly a beauty
pagent - no scholarships were
offered and no talent competition
was held . Most of the contestants
wanted to be models and were at
the contest seeking the grand
prize - a modeling contract. If
not the contr~ct, then to be seen,
and maybe to be hired .
There was no lack of possible
employers. Florence Humble, the
gra nde dame of the event. owns
the modeling agency that offered
the grand prize. The PR man is
involved in advertising and
frankly ad mitted to using the
contes t to find new faces.
To help encourage the new
faces, ex-beauty queenswhohad
"made it" served as hostesses for
the event. The hostesses were
primarily in the fashion business - models, buyers and commercial artists. There were also
aging queens there who fit a
sterotype - too blonde. too
made-up, too-t ight dresses over
a well-trussed body.
The women in the contest had
molded themselves into a stereotype, and in doing so, had
bought new clothes, new shoes ,
a swimsuit, a n evening gown ,
and high boots to go with the

"hot pants" ensemb les the contest
promoters provided. Meanwhile,
they had to submit to such
indignities as a schedule that
read "beddy - bye time is optional
"
The pagent begins . The contestants parade and stand in the
most incongruous combination
ever to be invented by the
beauty contest - swim suits and
high heels.
Most of the women are swaybacked from the effort of trying
to stand straight in high platform
shoes on carpeting. Later, they
walk down a runway in evening
gowns, their posture greatly
enhanced by flowing chiffons.
A woman wins. Neither she
nor the other contestants look
surprised, but they smile and
look pleased for the runners-up.
Afterward, one woman says
she's glad that no "Libbers"
picketed the contest. Another
said s he was glad nothing
controversial like "Women's Lib
or poor people" had been asked
about during their personality
interviews.
These women are aware of the
position that they're in. Yet, for
many, it may be the first chance
they get to interact with other
women . For others, it may be
their first chance to assert
themselves and become comfortab le with themselves.
They may have fallen prey to
their own myths, but the women
in the Miss Washington-Universe
pagent were people. People who
used the beauty pagent as a step
up, a way to be recognized as a n
individual.

Looks like a full slate of activities
this week :
Thursday, Feb. 19 - The
ASH Coffeehaus features 'The
New Blue Devils" and friends for
a free evening of free-flowing
music. Music from 8 p.m. to 11
p.m.
Friday, Feb. 20 - Friday
Nighl Films brings us two 1930's
heavies: "Little Caesar" starring
Edward G. Robinson as the irre pressible gangster boss and
"Shanghai Express" with Marlene Dietrich as the leggy, notor ious Shanghai Li ly. Showtimes
are 7 and 9 p .m. in LH one. All
for fifty cen ls.
Saturday, Feb. 21 - The Evergreen Coffeeha us offers for
your viewing pleasure "Private
Life of Henry Life of Henry VIII"
(Eng land
1933) starr in g
Charles Laughton as Henry VIII.
Charles bellows. burps and cries
his way through seven wives
wh il e simu ltan eous ly making
war on his foes and hassling
churc h clergy. See it for yourself
at 7 or 9: 30 p.m. in LH one.
Also on Saturday - Africa
and the U.S. presents "The Matlock Jug Band" for an evening of
foot -s tomping , good - danCin g
music. I ca ught their la st set
downtown at the Pub Tavern
last Wednesday night and I was
impressed. They're versatile (jug
band music, bluegrass, country
rock and variations thereof ... ).
, Head up to the 4th floor of the .
library about 8: 30 p. m. Bring
your own juice (7). Admission is
$1.50.
Sunday, Feb. 22 - The Evergreen Coffeehaus is sponsoring a
benefit to aid the victims of the
devastating Guatemalan earthquake. Music begins on the 4th
floor of the library a t 4 p.m.
with the main action running
from 6 p.m. to midnight . Some
of the performers donating their
talents to the cause are: Jack
Percivel - jazz piano virtuoso,
John Grace Keys - piano, The
Terremoto Relief Band - improvisational jazz, The New Blue
Devils - jazz, Psalms of Pharohs and Conch both jazz
groups and Dumi Maraire, The
Rainbow Deli will cater the benefit and donate their profits to the
relief fund too. Admission $2 .00
with all money going to the Save
the Children Federation. Do attend. I can' t think of a worthier
cause.
Monday, Feb. 23 - EPIC returns to LH one at 7:30 p.m. to
discuss the effects of the Equal
Rights Amendment on Protective
Legislation for women. Guest
speakers are Cindy Gipple and
Susan Docekal who have been
working with the Coalition for
Protective Legislation.
Tuesday, Feb. 24 - The Faculty Film Series presents "Something Different" a Czechoslovakian movie directed by one of the
leading film directors in the

TAKE TWO
by Lenore Norrgard
Beauty pageants offer a blatant
view of the daily sexual objectification of women and our
bodies. The women , or "girls" as
they are taught to view themselv es, strut down the ais les,
showing off "all that women
hav e to offer." And indeed ,
when it comes to selling one's
labor to make a li ving, th e
highest price women can bring in
is throu gh selling their bodies _
in one way or another.
Beauty pageants are defined
under several guises, but it all
comes down to money : one big
se ll. Th ose who s pon sor th e
contests make a bundle, the
women ge t a lillIe cas h, but most
of all the corpora ti o ns who are

world - Vera Chytolova. This
feminist fi lm deals with the particular pressures placed on women in modern society, 2 and 7: 30
p.m. in LH one, Everyone's wel come for this free presentation.
Also on Tuesday - Wayne
and Dorothy Bloomingdale will
return to Evergreen for a free
noon concert in the main lobb y
of the library. Their concert will
fea ture the work of invent ive
America n composer Charles lves .
Wednesday, Feb. 25 - The
Sherlock Holmes Film Festival
con tinues with two of the master
sleuth 's films
" Sherlock
Holmes Faces Death " (and comes
out the victor no doubt) and
"Terror by Night." LH one at 7
p.m . No charge .
Also on Wednesday - The
Craftsmen Lecture Series presents
Del McBride, cura tor of the
State Capi tol Museum and
member of the Quinault Tribe .
Del presen ts a sl id e f leet u re
show ing various projects underway to revive Iraditi o nal arts
and crafts among Indian tribes in
Washington , Alaska and British
Columbia. Starts at 7:30 p .m. in
LH five . No admission and the
community is welcome.
Coming soon to Evergreen Singer / composer and political
feminist Holly Near returns to
Evergreen for a one-woman con cert Saturday, Feb. 28. Her performance, sponsored by EPIC
and the Women's Center, begins
.1t 8 p.m. on the 4th floor of the
library. Tickets for this concert
are available in advance for
$2.50 at: The Music Bar in
Lacey, Rainy Day Records ,
Rainbow Grocery and the Artichoke Mode Restaurant in Olympia. Three dollars for tickets at
the door the night of the show.
OLYMPIA
The State Capitol Museum
(211 W. 21st , Olympia) extends
an invitation to the opening of
the annual Governor's Invitational - "Two Centuries of Art
in Washington." Beginning on
Feb. 22, the exhibit runs through
March 31.
And on Monday, Feb. 23, the
State Capitol Museum features a
lecture by noted author and Kinsey collector, David Bohn, en tit led "The Life and Work of
Darius and Tabitha May Kinsey." Starts at 7:30 p.m.
Applejam
presents
their
monthly Open mike Night on
Friday. Feb. 20 with doors opening at 8 p.m. Applejam · Folk
Center will be closed Saturday,
Feb . 21.
CHEHALIS
Saturday, Feb. 21 - The
Sunny Side Folk Arts Center and
the Washington State Arts Commission Sponsor the Royal Lichtenstein Circus a t R. E. Bennet t
School, 1271 Market Street in
Chehalis. This three-man, quar ter ring circus features tightrope
walking , pantomime , clowns,
magi c, escapism and juggling.
co nnect ed v,;ith th e fashion
industry rake in a bundle. In the
fina l analysis, it is the entire
capitalist ruling class that benefits from the im ages and roles
that sex-sells li ke beauty pagea nts reinforce and propagate.
Beauty pageants are a manifestation of the femi nine my stique requisite to keeping women
" in their places:' in the hom e
and out of the job ma rket. As
lo ng as women consider it
gla morou s to strut their "wares"
Jown an aisle of gawk ing men ,
women will not achieve equality.
in the job market o r elsewhere .
"Why get a job? Why nol ju st
lose some weight, ge t a nose job,
and enter a beauty pageant?"
Through reinforcing these attitudes in both women and men
the ruling cl ass is able to keep ~

Great fun for the entire famil v.
Two dollars adults, $l.00 . ch;l dren under 12.
SldrtS at 8:30 p .m .
SEATTLE
Concert comedienne Anna
Russell , acclaimed by interna tional critics as the "world' s fun ni est woman :' comes to Seatt le s
Moore Egyptian Theatre for a
concert Tuesday, Feb. 24 at 8 :.10
p . m. Anna is a one-woman
musical in stitu ti on who tel ls slor iI'S al the piano, plays bagpIpes
and the French horn and sing <;
her mockery of opera and folk
music . Tickels for this NorthweS I
ReleaSing concert are available at
the Bon Marche and suburban
outlets.
Adios

WOMEN'S
POETRY READING
by Lenore Norrgard
The lights dimmed as Jean Vi
Lenthe bega n reading poems that
are like fanta s ies. The p oet
Lenthe wa s the mover as well a,
the observer in poems soaked
thr ough w ith alliteration and
assonance. Lenthe read her
poems with a quiet , light. and
eve r-expressive voice. liltin g or
choppy as th e lines required.
Loudness and softness, weighty
or quick, her voice jumped from
word to word or stuck on a tew
to give each line. each word , the
distinct impression the poet had
found a nd expressed. Subtle
gasps interspersed made the
poems move. and made il clear
that the poet was ever-present
and directing the action.
Mary Moorehead began her
readings with a poem on
hysterectomy , an experience she
portrayed as full of men who
were insensitive to her experience
as a woman. Moorehead's poems
were weighty and dealt directly
and plainly with her own life
experiences as a woman . A voice
that often st uck portrayed the
poems well.
Marilyn Frasca started with a
poem about "painting or writing - which is it?", a conversation with the "teacher" within
herself. Many of her poems
sounded like a storybook, often
taken from journals . There was a
story done with a child' s voice,
witty and business-like, full of
word play . Frasca read with a
warbly voice .
After the readings were fin ished , a woman brought flowers
to the performers. The poetry
read ing was given as a benef It
for the coming Older Women
and Health-care Conference that
will be held April 10th and 11th
(see story Ihis page) . Wom en
workin g on the conference
thanked the poets and the
aud ience for their contributions
and invited all to attend the
conference. Someone commenting on the readin g yelled from
the audience, "We'll have to do
this again! "
grea l majority of women perform ing free labor in each
American hom e. rea rin g anJ
s u slai ning each generation of
exp loited workers . And s in ce
women's labor has hi stori ca ll y
been free this is u se d as
just ifica tion to pay a woman
nexl to nothing on Ihe job .
Women enter beauty conies:,
because the y need money , and
(llten people defend the contr,"
as d way for women 10 mdI-.,
mo ney. But the facl is t h ai
beauly pageants a re just anolher
for m 01 t he age-old sa le 01
wonwn's bodies from traJing
cdtt le for wives It) prmtilutiQl1 ,
from slripping 10 ma,sagl' pa r
lors, from fa shllln ml,de l, 10 Ihl'
forced sexua l litrt ation lor mdf raige of an unlrained WOIT1~n
with no job .

10

ENTERTAINMENT

EPIC and the Women's Center proudly present in concert

HOLLY NEAR AND "'EFFREY LANGLEY
Saturday Feb. ?8 -

8 p . m.

-

4th Floor Library

BEAUTY PAGEANTS .. '

by John Dodge
ON CAMPUS

SUCCULENTS
by Da vid Judd

Cact i and succu lents make excellent hass le- free house p lants
by thriving on neglect . All that's
required is a bright spot in a
home, good air c ir cu lation, a nd
an understanding of their infrequent need for water.
A Imost a ll s u ccu lents store
water in their leaves so they
don ' t require large amounts of
water. In fact, they will do well
if the soil is a llowed to dry out
in between waterings. It is a
good idea to a llow succu lents to
go semi-dormant during thew in ter, by giving the plant very littl e
water and providing cool temperatures (50 0 '5)
Succulents and cacti seem to
do better potted in a clay pot
a nd porous soi l that drains well.
T hey grow better when they a re
semi-root bound, so ref)otting is
not necessary until the restricted
roots inhibit the plant's growth
Th e best t ime to ref}ot is in the
spr ing a nd slimmer months when
the roots are most active and are
ab le to ad just to a new pot.
" Bromeliads"
(Bromeliaceae)
are anot her type of house plant
that rarely needs water. Though

Tickets available 12 noon M - F next week in CAB and at
Rainy Day Records, the Artichoke Mode. Rainbow Grocery. and the Music Bar. $2 advance. $2_50 at the door_

ANOTHER

SPECIAL

LP Only

through 2/21/76

Westside Center

106 Y:1 E. 4th

357-4755

357-7358

it is not a succulent, it does have
the ability of storing water in its
center crown. Some Bromeliads
have rough - tex tured blossoms in
bright colors that form in the
crow n of the p lant.
Some of the b looming succulents like the "Ka lanchoe" (daigremo ntiana ), "C hristmas cactus"
(Schlumberger a bridgessi 1. and
"T hank sg iving cactus" (Zygocactus truncactus) produce very im pressive pink , red, orange, and
yellow blossoms during the winter months. The " Jade plant"
(C rassuia argentea) is one of the
more popular succu lents. It has
thi ck green leaves and produces
clusters of star- shaped pink and
white blossoms. The "Aloe" (Liliaceae) is a stenlless plant with a
sp iked blossom that someti mes
stays in bloom year-round.
Some cact i can be grafted on
top of other ones, which enables
a sma ll er cact i to a ttach itself to
a larger one, prodUCing an un usual ,hape a nd tex tur e. A side
from grafting, succulents can be
propagated by divi sion of one
p la nt into several potted sma ller
plants; stem and leaf cutt ings
Jillaced in a porous so il and by
seed.

FOOD/WESTERMAN
Awakening to ' rain aga in , and
only the thought of breakfast
provides the motivatiOl for that
big step into the cold. What to
eilt for breakfast? So l\'in g the
proble m ,cis the pattern for the
day; the need for crea tivity is
sl ron g. T ,\king len mInutes for
breakla,1 will all(lw Y(l U time to
prepare [\. lnmi,1)! M ullin s. TI'",t
and butter ,,~ :,1).,li,h mullin.
While it', tl',I-I"'g , thinl y ,lice
and CI'IT h,til dn apple. T urn on
the broiler . I'ul the app le , Ii ces
o n th e buttered mufti'" dnd top
w ith c hed dar cheese , thinl y .
, I iced or grated . l'ul the mutt in s
under the broiler until Ihe cheese
melt,. You can pal Ihem as you
leav e, o ne in eac h hand .
Eggs are another br ea kfa s t
basic. They can be so ft - boiled ,
poached, fri ed, scramb led alone,
or scrambled with herbs and veg etables. For elegance in eggs,
serve Eggs a la Suisse. Melt a ta b lespoon of butter in a pan.
Gent ly break four eggs into the
butter. Top the eggs with abOl.t
a ha lf cup 'of grated cheese, and
seaso n with sa lt , white pepper
and a few grains of paprika or
nutmeg. Pour over the eggs and
cheese one ha lf cup cream, and
bake in a 350 degree oven until
Ihe white is set and the yo lks are
firm . Serve the eggs on buttered
toast, pouring the cream on top.
Pancakes are also a customary
brea kfast which can be made
more exciti ng with some imagi nation. Besides wheat cakes,
'corn and oats make good pancakes. The cakes can be thick or
thin, and served with fruit ,
yogurt , honey or syrup. Finely
diced apples, chopred nuts, cin namon or 01 her spices , seeds, or
sour cream can be added to the
batter fm flavor.
To make bdsic corn cakes, stir
one cup boiling water into a
bowl co ntaining one cup co rn meal. one leaspoon sa lt , and
abou t a lables poon of sweetener.
Let it stand ten minutps. Mean while. mix loget her a n egg, one
half cup milk , and two table~ po(ms melted buller or oil . Sift
tl'geth er on£' half C IlP 1i ,1lIr and

two and one half tab lespoons
baking powdC'f . After len min utes . mix th e liquid ingredients
into "the co rnmeJI . Ihen stir in
th e dry ingredient s witr. a lew
sw ilt slrokes. Bake th e cakes on
a se aso ned or light ly greased
griddle (if a few drops of waler
jump a nd sp ut'er on the heated
griddle, it' s hot enough l. T urn
th em w hen bubbles appear on
th e su rface Eal them up , and get
ready to face t hp day.
Another variab le in proper
breakfast comtru ction is the effect of the previous night 's act iv ities. On certain occasio ns,
people have been known to
swear by a cold beer as the on ly
possible means of starting the
day. In a similar situation, one
friend has been known to crave
a Mexican TV dinner as his only
hope of survival.
Then th ere are days , usually
Sunday mornings, when circumstances undeni ably point toward
a Champagne and Waffle"breakfast. It has to be a morning with
plenty of time. and much convivial companionship. The event
can be preplanned, but spontaneity has produced the same results. The basis of the meal is
Waffles Deluxe, wh ich are deluxe
even outside a champagne breakfa st. To make them, sift together
in a large bowl one cup fine
whole wheat flour , one half cup
wheat germ , one fourth cup soy
flour. one half teasp :Jon salt, one
tablespoon baking powder, one
t a bles poon brown sugar (or
honey mixed with the liquid ingredients), one teaspoon cinnamon, one half teaspoon each
nutmeg and ginger, and one half.
cup finely chopped pecans or
walnuts. In a se parate bowl ,
blend one and one half cups
milk , three or four eggs, and two
to seve n tabl espoo ns melted but ter or oil. (The more o il used ,
the crisper the waffles will be .)
Mix the liquid ingredients into
the dry unlil thoroughly mixed
but not smooth . Bake in a waffle
iron until done to your waffle
preference .

TAKE ONE
by Ti Locke
On February 14th, a 24-yearold professional model was
chosen "Miss Washington-Universe" at Olympia's Greenwood
Inn.
She won out of a field of 21
tall, long-legged, glossy-haired
women who had a remarkable
uniformity in bust size.
The Miss Washington-Universe
pagent wa s strict ly a beauty
pagent - no scholarships were
offered and no talent competition
was held . Most of the contestants
wanted to be models and were at
the contest seeking the grand
prize - a modeling contract. If
not the contr~ct, then to be seen,
and maybe to be hired .
There was no lack of possible
employers. Florence Humble, the
gra nde dame of the event. owns
the modeling agency that offered
the grand prize. The PR man is
involved in advertising and
frankly ad mitted to using the
contes t to find new faces.
To help encourage the new
faces, ex-beauty queenswhohad
"made it" served as hostesses for
the event. The hostesses were
primarily in the fashion business - models, buyers and commercial artists. There were also
aging queens there who fit a
sterotype - too blonde. too
made-up, too-t ight dresses over
a well-trussed body.
The women in the contest had
molded themselves into a stereotype, and in doing so, had
bought new clothes, new shoes ,
a swimsuit, a n evening gown ,
and high boots to go with the

"hot pants" ensemb les the contest
promoters provided. Meanwhile,
they had to submit to such
indignities as a schedule that
read "beddy - bye time is optional
"
The pagent begins . The contestants parade and stand in the
most incongruous combination
ever to be invented by the
beauty contest - swim suits and
high heels.
Most of the women are swaybacked from the effort of trying
to stand straight in high platform
shoes on carpeting. Later, they
walk down a runway in evening
gowns, their posture greatly
enhanced by flowing chiffons.
A woman wins. Neither she
nor the other contestants look
surprised, but they smile and
look pleased for the runners-up.
Afterward, one woman says
she's glad that no "Libbers"
picketed the contest. Another
said s he was glad nothing
controversial like "Women's Lib
or poor people" had been asked
about during their personality
interviews.
These women are aware of the
position that they're in. Yet, for
many, it may be the first chance
they get to interact with other
women . For others, it may be
their first chance to assert
themselves and become comfortab le with themselves.
They may have fallen prey to
their own myths, but the women
in the Miss Washington-Universe
pagent were people. People who
used the beauty pagent as a step
up, a way to be recognized as a n
individual.

Looks like a full slate of activities
this week :
Thursday, Feb. 19 - The
ASH Coffeehaus features 'The
New Blue Devils" and friends for
a free evening of free-flowing
music. Music from 8 p.m. to 11
p.m.
Friday, Feb. 20 - Friday
Nighl Films brings us two 1930's
heavies: "Little Caesar" starring
Edward G. Robinson as the irre pressible gangster boss and
"Shanghai Express" with Marlene Dietrich as the leggy, notor ious Shanghai Li ly. Showtimes
are 7 and 9 p .m. in LH one. All
for fifty cen ls.
Saturday, Feb. 21 - The Evergreen Coffeeha us offers for
your viewing pleasure "Private
Life of Henry Life of Henry VIII"
(Eng land
1933) starr in g
Charles Laughton as Henry VIII.
Charles bellows. burps and cries
his way through seven wives
wh il e simu ltan eous ly making
war on his foes and hassling
churc h clergy. See it for yourself
at 7 or 9: 30 p.m. in LH one.
Also on Saturday - Africa
and the U.S. presents "The Matlock Jug Band" for an evening of
foot -s tomping , good - danCin g
music. I ca ught their la st set
downtown at the Pub Tavern
last Wednesday night and I was
impressed. They're versatile (jug
band music, bluegrass, country
rock and variations thereof ... ).
, Head up to the 4th floor of the .
library about 8: 30 p. m. Bring
your own juice (7). Admission is
$1.50.
Sunday, Feb. 22 - The Evergreen Coffeehaus is sponsoring a
benefit to aid the victims of the
devastating Guatemalan earthquake. Music begins on the 4th
floor of the library a t 4 p.m.
with the main action running
from 6 p.m. to midnight . Some
of the performers donating their
talents to the cause are: Jack
Percivel - jazz piano virtuoso,
John Grace Keys - piano, The
Terremoto Relief Band - improvisational jazz, The New Blue
Devils - jazz, Psalms of Pharohs and Conch both jazz
groups and Dumi Maraire, The
Rainbow Deli will cater the benefit and donate their profits to the
relief fund too. Admission $2 .00
with all money going to the Save
the Children Federation. Do attend. I can' t think of a worthier
cause.
Monday, Feb. 23 - EPIC returns to LH one at 7:30 p.m. to
discuss the effects of the Equal
Rights Amendment on Protective
Legislation for women. Guest
speakers are Cindy Gipple and
Susan Docekal who have been
working with the Coalition for
Protective Legislation.
Tuesday, Feb. 24 - The Faculty Film Series presents "Something Different" a Czechoslovakian movie directed by one of the
leading film directors in the

TAKE TWO
by Lenore Norrgard
Beauty pageants offer a blatant
view of the daily sexual objectification of women and our
bodies. The women , or "girls" as
they are taught to view themselv es, strut down the ais les,
showing off "all that women
hav e to offer." And indeed ,
when it comes to selling one's
labor to make a li ving, th e
highest price women can bring in
is throu gh selling their bodies _
in one way or another.
Beauty pageants are defined
under several guises, but it all
comes down to money : one big
se ll. Th ose who s pon sor th e
contests make a bundle, the
women ge t a lillIe cas h, but most
of all the corpora ti o ns who are

world - Vera Chytolova. This
feminist fi lm deals with the particular pressures placed on women in modern society, 2 and 7: 30
p.m. in LH one, Everyone's wel come for this free presentation.
Also on Tuesday - Wayne
and Dorothy Bloomingdale will
return to Evergreen for a free
noon concert in the main lobb y
of the library. Their concert will
fea ture the work of invent ive
America n composer Charles lves .
Wednesday, Feb. 25 - The
Sherlock Holmes Film Festival
con tinues with two of the master
sleuth 's films
" Sherlock
Holmes Faces Death " (and comes
out the victor no doubt) and
"Terror by Night." LH one at 7
p.m . No charge .
Also on Wednesday - The
Craftsmen Lecture Series presents
Del McBride, cura tor of the
State Capi tol Museum and
member of the Quinault Tribe .
Del presen ts a sl id e f leet u re
show ing various projects underway to revive Iraditi o nal arts
and crafts among Indian tribes in
Washington , Alaska and British
Columbia. Starts at 7:30 p .m. in
LH five . No admission and the
community is welcome.
Coming soon to Evergreen Singer / composer and political
feminist Holly Near returns to
Evergreen for a one-woman con cert Saturday, Feb. 28. Her performance, sponsored by EPIC
and the Women's Center, begins
.1t 8 p.m. on the 4th floor of the
library. Tickets for this concert
are available in advance for
$2.50 at: The Music Bar in
Lacey, Rainy Day Records ,
Rainbow Grocery and the Artichoke Mode Restaurant in Olympia. Three dollars for tickets at
the door the night of the show.
OLYMPIA
The State Capitol Museum
(211 W. 21st , Olympia) extends
an invitation to the opening of
the annual Governor's Invitational - "Two Centuries of Art
in Washington." Beginning on
Feb. 22, the exhibit runs through
March 31.
And on Monday, Feb. 23, the
State Capitol Museum features a
lecture by noted author and Kinsey collector, David Bohn, en tit led "The Life and Work of
Darius and Tabitha May Kinsey." Starts at 7:30 p.m.
Applejam
presents
their
monthly Open mike Night on
Friday. Feb. 20 with doors opening at 8 p.m. Applejam · Folk
Center will be closed Saturday,
Feb . 21.
CHEHALIS
Saturday, Feb. 21 - The
Sunny Side Folk Arts Center and
the Washington State Arts Commission Sponsor the Royal Lichtenstein Circus a t R. E. Bennet t
School, 1271 Market Street in
Chehalis. This three-man, quar ter ring circus features tightrope
walking , pantomime , clowns,
magi c, escapism and juggling.
co nnect ed v,;ith th e fashion
industry rake in a bundle. In the
fina l analysis, it is the entire
capitalist ruling class that benefits from the im ages and roles
that sex-sells li ke beauty pagea nts reinforce and propagate.
Beauty pageants are a manifestation of the femi nine my stique requisite to keeping women
" in their places:' in the hom e
and out of the job ma rket. As
lo ng as women consider it
gla morou s to strut their "wares"
Jown an aisle of gawk ing men ,
women will not achieve equality.
in the job market o r elsewhere .
"Why get a job? Why nol ju st
lose some weight, ge t a nose job,
and enter a beauty pageant?"
Through reinforcing these attitudes in both women and men
the ruling cl ass is able to keep ~

Great fun for the entire famil v.
Two dollars adults, $l.00 . ch;l dren under 12.
SldrtS at 8:30 p .m .
SEATTLE
Concert comedienne Anna
Russell , acclaimed by interna tional critics as the "world' s fun ni est woman :' comes to Seatt le s
Moore Egyptian Theatre for a
concert Tuesday, Feb. 24 at 8 :.10
p . m. Anna is a one-woman
musical in stitu ti on who tel ls slor iI'S al the piano, plays bagpIpes
and the French horn and sing <;
her mockery of opera and folk
music . Tickels for this NorthweS I
ReleaSing concert are available at
the Bon Marche and suburban
outlets.
Adios

WOMEN'S
POETRY READING
by Lenore Norrgard
The lights dimmed as Jean Vi
Lenthe bega n reading poems that
are like fanta s ies. The p oet
Lenthe wa s the mover as well a,
the observer in poems soaked
thr ough w ith alliteration and
assonance. Lenthe read her
poems with a quiet , light. and
eve r-expressive voice. liltin g or
choppy as th e lines required.
Loudness and softness, weighty
or quick, her voice jumped from
word to word or stuck on a tew
to give each line. each word , the
distinct impression the poet had
found a nd expressed. Subtle
gasps interspersed made the
poems move. and made il clear
that the poet was ever-present
and directing the action.
Mary Moorehead began her
readings with a poem on
hysterectomy , an experience she
portrayed as full of men who
were insensitive to her experience
as a woman. Moorehead's poems
were weighty and dealt directly
and plainly with her own life
experiences as a woman . A voice
that often st uck portrayed the
poems well.
Marilyn Frasca started with a
poem about "painting or writing - which is it?", a conversation with the "teacher" within
herself. Many of her poems
sounded like a storybook, often
taken from journals . There was a
story done with a child' s voice,
witty and business-like, full of
word play . Frasca read with a
warbly voice .
After the readings were fin ished , a woman brought flowers
to the performers. The poetry
read ing was given as a benef It
for the coming Older Women
and Health-care Conference that
will be held April 10th and 11th
(see story Ihis page) . Wom en
workin g on the conference
thanked the poets and the
aud ience for their contributions
and invited all to attend the
conference. Someone commenting on the readin g yelled from
the audience, "We'll have to do
this again! "
grea l majority of women perform ing free labor in each
American hom e. rea rin g anJ
s u slai ning each generation of
exp loited workers . And s in ce
women's labor has hi stori ca ll y
been free this is u se d as
just ifica tion to pay a woman
nexl to nothing on Ihe job .
Women enter beauty conies:,
because the y need money , and
(llten people defend the contr,"
as d way for women 10 mdI-.,
mo ney. But the facl is t h ai
beauly pageants a re just anolher
for m 01 t he age-old sa le 01
wonwn's bodies from traJing
cdtt le for wives It) prmtilutiQl1 ,
from slripping 10 ma,sagl' pa r
lors, from fa shllln ml,de l, 10 Ihl'
forced sexua l litrt ation lor mdf raige of an unlrained WOIT1~n
with no job .
Source
Eng US-WaOE.A.1973-01
Media
cpj0110.pdf