The Cooper Point Journal Volume 5, Issue 6 (November 11, 1976)

Item

Identifier
Eng cpj0134.pdf
Title
Eng The Cooper Point Journal Volume 5, Issue 6 (November 11, 1976)
Date
11 November 1976
Description
Eng Pg 1: The Cooper Point Journal (Front Page);
Pg 1: Student Forum Discusses Goals (image: student with sign for Chautauqua (by Dowd);
Pg 1: How Did Evergreen Vote? (image: campaign signs (by Dowd);
Pg 2: Letters: Glow-in-the-Dark Garbage (image: by Shlim);
Pg 2: Letters: Thanks from ASH;
Pg 2: Letters: COG Article Not Strong Enough;
Pg 2: Letters: Evergreen Students Apathetic;
Pg 2: Letters: Chimpanzees Do It;
Pg 2: Comic: Professor Harvey and the Twins (by Owens);
Pg 2: Comic: By Connor;
Pg 2: Staff Credits;
Pg 3: Faculty Profile: Cruz Esquivel 'Who is the teacher and who is the student?' (image: Cruz Esquivel (by Dowd);
Pg 3: Two New Theatres to Open (image: future foreign film theatre (by Dowd);
Pg 4: Review: Experiment at Berkeley;
Pg 4: The Magnificent Men in their Roaring Machines (image: vacuuming Evergreen (by Dowd);
Pg 4: Did you know, Media Loan circulated over 2,650 pieces of media equipment last month! (illustration of media equipment);
Pg 5: Update: Hendricks and Kreidler;
Pg 5: Classifieds;
Pg 5: Coffeehouse Plans Simmer (image: side of proposed Coffeehouse (by Dowd);
Pg 5: (advertisement) EJ's Grocery and Tole Shop;
Pg 5: Announcements;
Pg 5: (advertisement) The Asterisk and Cheese Library;
Pg 5: (advertisement) Greenwood Inn;
Pg 6: Center for Literature in Performance "Poetry in all its Forms" (image: Bill Taylor (by Culbertson);
Pg 6: (advertisement) Peterson's Foodtown;
Pg 6: (advertisement) Crafts and Creations;
Pg 6: (advertisement) Chris' Ice Cream;
Pg 6: (advertisement) KAOS Entertainment Extravaganza Coming;
Pg 7: Review: The Power of Rape (image: Susan Brownmiller);
Pg 7: Arts and Events;
Pg 7: (advertisement) Dirty Dave's Pizza Parlor;
Pg 8: (advertisement) Chris' Ice Cream;
Pg 8: KAOS Mini-Marathon This Weekend;
Pg 8: (advertisement) m.b. audio;
Creator
Eng Shlim, Larry
Eng Owens, Dan
Eng Connor, Matt
Eng Culbertson, Russell
Contributor
Eng Stewart, Jill
Eng Groening, Matt
Eng Floren, Brooke Ann
Eng Dowd, Rick
Eng Wright, Jim
Eng Nixon, Aubrey
Eng Fleming, Lisa
Eng Pokorny, Brad
Eng Olson, Kirby
Eng Keogh, Tom
Eng Shore, Stan
Eng Judd, David
Eng Hansen, Jeanne
Eng Sutherland, Brock
Eng Siff Jason
Subject
Eng Student Involvement
Eng Thurston County Elections
Eng State Elections
Eng Evergreen Faculty
Eng Evergreen Programs
Eng Alcoholism among Native Americans
Eng Native American Studies
Eng Foreign Film Theatres
Eng Local Politics
Eng Student Health Services
Eng War and Sexual Assault
Eng Community Radio
Eng Community Radio Fundraising
Eng Student Housing
Eng TESC COG III
Eng Home Birth
Eng Women's Health
Eng Education Pholosophy
Eng Evergreen Grounds Maintenance
Eng Poetry Performance
Eng Mauksch, Larry
Eng Winden, Bill
Eng Winden, Joan
Eng Spellman, John
Eng Carter, Jimmy, 1924-
Eng Ford, Gerald R., 1913 - 2006
Eng McCarthy, Eugene
Eng Fink, Paul
Eng Ray, Dixy Lee
Eng Kelley, Red
Eng Bethard, Patricia A.
Eng Lemon, Jack
Eng Cherberg, John
Eng Griswold, Lucie
Eng Capman, Bruce
Eng McGinnis, Ruthie
Eng O'Brien, Robert
Eng Bermann, Karl
Eng Jackson, Henry M.
Eng Herrmann, Karl
Eng Marquardt, Richard
Eng Breslin, Archie
Eng Kreidler, Mike
Eng Hendricks, John
Eng Gray, Jerry
Eng Keller, Ron
Eng Bausch, Del
Eng Pettit, Del
Eng Esquivel, Cruz
Eng Arguelles, Jose
Eng Hillaire, Mary Ellen
Eng Duncan, Nancy
Eng Wheeler, Bob
Eng Finley, Randy
Eng Fellows, Rob
Eng Albrecht, Kate
Eng Stenberg, Lawrence
Eng Whiting, Dick
Eng Lidman, Russell M.
Eng Bowerman, Priscilla
Eng Silber, Irwin, 1925 - 2010
Eng Chan, Don
Eng Peterson, Jerome
Eng Buser, Chuck
Eng Brownmiller, Susan
Eng Cook, Carl L.
Eng Tussman, Joseph
Eng Kennedy, Bill
Eng Schillinger, Jerry
Eng Herman, Steven
Eng Strecker, Bob
Eng Taylor, BIll
Eng Ginsberg, Allen, 1926 - 1997
Eng Ashbery, John
Eng Robbins, Tom, 1932-
Eng Carlson, Craig
Eng Evergreen Student Forum
Eng Evergreen Information Center
Eng Thurston County Elections Office
Eng Republican Party
Eng Democrat Party
Eng Owl Party
Eng Socialist Worker's Party
Eng State Women's Political Caucus
Eng U.C. Berkeley
Eng U.S.C
Eng U.C. Davis
Eng Humboldt State
Eng St. Martin's College
Eng Neighborhood Youth Corps
Eng Princeton University
Eng Puyallup Indian Tribe
Eng Olympia Board of Adjustment
Eng Olympia City Commissioners
Eng The Evergreen Faith Center
Eng Evergreen Political Information Center
Eng Evergreen Health Services/Women's Clinic
Eng Prescott College
Eng Fraternal Order of Prescott Students
Eng KAOS-FM Studios
Eng Ash Tree Apartments
Eng The Sounding Board
Eng The Geoboard
Eng Evergreen Asian Coalition
Eng Evergreen Grounds Maitenance Department
Eng Center For Literature In Performance
Language
Eng eng
Place
Eng Olympia, WA
Eng Thurston County
Eng Colville Indian Reservation
Eng Berkeley, CA
Eng Seattle, WA
Eng Tacoma, WA
Eng Yelm, WA
Eng Tumwater, WA: Lacey, WA
Eng Washington D.C.
Eng Vancouver, B.C., Canada
Publisher
Eng The Evergreen State College Board of Publications and members of the Evergreen community
Extent
Eng 8 pages
Temporal Coverage
Eng 1976/1977
extracted text
Student Forum
Discusses Goals

Mini - Marathon
This Weekend

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by Jim Wright

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The new Wednesday Student Forum
met yesterday to discuss different mechanisms for disseminating campus information and soliCiting student involvement in
governance issues. Based on the assumption that "participa tion in gove rnance and
planning sho uld be an integral part of our
Evergreen experience," the forum is intended to serve as an informati onal liaison
between students and governance proc esses. To accomplish this objective, it
will provide students with a commun ications body (Student forum) "conducive to
decision-making activities," and consequently will enco urage student in vo lvement in decisions which affect them,
Essentially , the Student Forum will represent a "common space" for gove rnance,
through which issues can be exp lored and
discussed. It will utilize a grapevine approach in providing informat io n to programs through representatives and seminar delegates.
Discussion yes terday focused upon the
issue of represent a tion , as forum members
attempted to define to what degree they
should consider themselves as representa-

SANDWICHES
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mea f and fin e
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Dt'li c iou s combina tion o f luna , leHuee
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and

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Egg sa lad . a dev itis h blend a t s pices and mu s-

BANANA BONANZA
Thl' Top Banana - .. .. ... . , 81.20
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milk c h oculate, p in eapp le, s traw berry , fresh
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3 ge n ero u s scoops of

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• For your co n ·
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milk products,
fresh bread, s un ·
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A tossed sa lad in a sand wic h : lettuce, to mato ,
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CWHom ,') antiu 'iC'hes nIH·u)"."

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Campus StOrt

at ASH

Visiting the KAOS-FM studios
on the third floor of the College
Activities Building these days
can be a sobering experience.
KAOS staff workers and drones
bustle about with brows furrowed
in worry, their professional radio
cha tter often punctuated with
off-the-air giggles of nervousness
and genera l alienation , Sure,
they still joke : "This station is
so small we can only play 45's,"
says one, "I wouldn't say we're
poor, but we are getting CARE
packages from Korea," retorts
another, and "The only tape this
station can afford is masking,"
sm irks a third.
KAOS-FM is in frantic preparation for a non-stop, on-theair MARATHON to raise badlyneeded money to maintain and
improve the sta tion's programming and equipment. The MARATHON will begin at noon on
Friday, November 5, and will
continue 24 hours a day "until
we burn out sometime after midnight Sunday night." according
to Station Manager Carl L.

Cook. Fifteen hundred dollars is
the weekend goal, and in order
to lure listeners' money KAOS is
presenting "every form of live
music, including classical,"
throughout the MARATHON.
Further listener support is
hoped to be gained from big album giveaways, auctioning of
goods and services (including a
live sheep), radio theater, a special Saturday night showing of A
Star is Born in Lecture Hall One
(see Arts and Events column for '
further details), and live cableTV simulcasts of music from Evergreen's mini-studio, Artists
scheduled include Jorgen Kruse,
Cathy Cohen, David Boggs. Alchemy, the Peace. Bread, &
Land Band, and special surprise
guests on Saturday evening , Programming throughout the weekend will vary widely, as usual,
but KAOS is making an extra
effort to insure especially distinctive MARATHON sounds, from
the rarest 1950's singles of Kidd
Rhythm to recitations of strange
poetry and stories .

II

The Chautauqua coordinated studies sponsors weekly student performances on Fridays at noon in the Library lobby.
Guest "stars " are also invited. Opera singers Bill and Joan
Winden are this week 's stars.

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RNAL
NOV. 11, 1976

VOLUME V NUMBER 6

How Did Evergreen Vote?

Super Povver

SON~

Fina lly . the forum al so co nsidered se lec·
tion of student delegates to the Pre sidential Search co mmit tee, but postponed action o n this issue until nex t week due to
lack of inform a ti on o n crit eria fo r choosing stude nt s,

THE COOPER POINT

by Jill Stewart

AM / FM·STEREO RECEIVER
120 Watts per Channel, Minimum RMS into 8 ohms.
20·20k Hz, with no more than 0,1 % Total Harmonic Distortion

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The Evergreen State College· Olympia, Washington 98505

At m.b. audio

Reg ••760

tive of the student body, Larry Mauksc h
po inted out that , "The maj o rity of th e
student body isn't inte rested in politics.
We don ' t represent them ." With thi s in
mind. th e group explored different opti o ns
and leveis of activity. Several me mbers
felt the forum s hould make an eff o rt to
get to individua l seminars, w hil e others
fel t that it s hould rest rict itself to bein)\
merely "access ible." lea ving the respon~ i ­
bil ity for ac tion upon the students them ·
se lves . Seve ral ot her members saw the
forum as a means of " mak ing peopl e
aware of the worki ngs of the commu nit y
. As a next step, st udent s wou ld be
pa rticipat in g in th ose decisi ons ."
The group al so d isc ussed different mech·
anisms for presentin g the revised Cove ·
nant o n Governance (included ebewh ere
in th is issue) to the commu nit y, Hea ri ngs
o n COG a re curren tl y sc heduled for Weunesday . November 17, at 2 p . m. in CAB

I
t

If Evergreen's Plainview precinct had
decided the vote in this year's election.
Republican John Spellman would be governor and the nuclear safeguards initiative
would now be state law.
Other returns from the Thurston County
Elections Office show that Jimmy Carter
won the preSidential race in Evergreen's
precinct by almost a three to one margin ,
with 58 %. over President Gerald Ford's
21 %. As many expected, independent
candidate Eugene McCarthy made a hefty
showing at Evergreen with 11 % of the
vote in the Plainview precinct.
Plainview precinct encompasses the entire Evergreen campus, extending South to
Mud Bay Road and East to Kaiser Road .
It is bordered on the North and West by
Eld Inlet. ASH is not a part of Plainview
precinct.
Of the 454 voters who went to the poll
in this precinct, perhaps 50 % were Evergreen campus residences , and another
10 % to 15 % were off-campus Evergreen
students. Student Paul Fink. who drove
the Evergreen van that transported students to the polling place, said he took a
total of 96 people to vote. Student Larry
Mauksch of the Informatin Center estimated that 100 to 200 Evergreeners used
the Information Center to register to vote
this year .
If Evergreen had had its way the race
for governor clearly would have gone to
Republican John Spellman, who gar.nered
48 % of the Plainview vote, while statewide favorite Democrat Dixy Lee Ray
straggled behind with 32 %. This particular race was broken up into small pockets
of votes for third ' party candidates such as
Red Kelley of the Owl Party, with 6,6 %
of the vote, and Patricia A. Bethard of
the Socialist Worker's Party with 4.8 % .
It is likely that Plainview precinct vot ers. who elected 12 Democrats out of 15
races, steered away from gubernatorial
candidate Dixy -Lee Ray because of her
pro - nuclear power and supertanker5
stance, and her bolster-big- business atti·
tude towards the economy , Ray also received a blow to her chances in Ever-

green's precinct when th e press began
characterizing her as less than responsive
to women 's issues . According to a Seattle
newspaper. the State Women 's Pol itical
Caucus described Ray as "unfamiliar with
and unresponsive to" issues the caucus felt
were crucial to women, such as sex discrimination. affirmative action, and day
care.
Often running in third. and sometimes
second place, were the disqualified votes ,
These votes occurred when a person
punched more than one hole for a candidate or issue.
Over o ne hundred Plainview voters
punched out more than one hole when
voting for House Joint Resolution 64 , The
same problem occurred with State Treasurer, S tate Auditor, Supreme Court Judge
Position 4, Thurston County Commissioner and 22nd District Senator, All
double votes were invalidated .
An employee at the Thursto n Cou nty
Elections Office said he didn' t understand
how people manage to double-vote so frequently. "I don't understand how people
vote," he said, "We came across some
ballots that had every single hole punched
out, others that had every hole in the last
three columns punched. "
The third party candidates who pulled
in the most Plainview votes were from the
notorious Owl Party, created by Tum water restaurant owner Red Kelley and
friend·s.
Although Kelley himself made a poor
shOWing in his race for governor. the rest
of his Owl Party entourage overran the
second and third place categories in their
races. One candidate, Jack "the Ripoff"
Lemon, was first runner -up to Democrat
John Cherberg in the Lieutenant Governor
race. capturing 18.7 % of the vote to Cherberg's 39 .6%.
Owl candidate "Fast" Lucie Griswold
made a strong showing for third place
with 20.4 % of the vote in the Secretary
of State race against Republican winner
Bruce ChaFman. who received 33.7% of
Plainview's votes. Ruthie "Boom Boom"
McGinnis lost the State Treasurer race to
Democrat Robert O 'Br ien , 17 % to

51.3% ,
The Socialist Worker's Party ran a
steady fourth place in almost every race
they entered. U. S . Senate candidate Karl
Bermann attracted the most Plainview
votes for the party with 9.6% of thE vote .
Democrat incumbent Henry M. Jackson
received.47.7 % to win in this precinct.
In the Insurance Commissioner race,
Democrat incumbent Karl Herrmann ,
who was soundly beaten across the state,
lost to Republican challenger Richard Marquardt. 22 % to 37 %. In that race possible
Marquardt votes may have been lost to
Archie "Whiplash" Breslin of the Owl
Party, who received 14,9% of the Plainview vote.
In proposition contests Evergreen vot , ers gave overwhelming approval to Initia tive 325 , the nuclear safeg uard s act ,

which was strongly defeated in this state,
The Plainview vote was 70 .9 % "yes" and
25.4 % "no" - a lmost an exact turn around
of the vote statewide.
Referendum Bill 36 was the most popular prop osi tion in the Plainview precinct ,
where 81,4 % of th e voters agreed th at
certain appoin ted state officials shoul d be
bound by state public disclosu re laws.
Loca l races were a straight s hot for
Democrats in bo th Plainview precinct and
Thurston County. In Plainview Democrat
Mike Kre idl er o ut polled in cumbent Jo hn
Hendricks for State Representative by a
three to one margin . Republican Jer ry
Gray lost by o nly seven perce nt age poinh
to Democrat Ron Keller. a nd :Jemocrah
Del Bausch a nd Del Pettit ea rn ed seat~ on
the State Senate and Thurston County
Commission respec tively .

1

Faculty profile

GLOW-IN-THI::DARK GARBAGE
T o th e Editor:
I think [ speak for all who
work late at night in the College
Activities Building, including
KAOS disc spinners, Cooper
Po int Journal scribblers, and the
occasional loiterer or trespasser.
We want , w e need, a Canteenstyle food machine in the building 's basement. (You know the
kind [ mean - the ones with
scrumptious treats whirling by
on little shelves you can peek at
through clever p[astic windows.)
[ am sick of these slimy ZaG-nut
and Fifth Avenue candy bars. I
must have Perky Pies and Soggy
Sandwiches and Pliant Puddings
- you know, a choice . I've had
it with Cheda-Nuts and other assorted glow-in-the-dark garbage.
[ am not kidding. [ am peeved. [
am agitated . 1 am FED UPI
Sincerely,
Binky

THANKS
FROM ASH
To the Editor:
To the Faculty, Staff, and Students of Evergreen College, Earl
and I would [ike to express our
gratitude to everyone who has
helped us on our new adventure
as managers at ASH TREE
APARTMENTS. We have had
all the cooperation we have
asked for from Ken Jacob and
his staff in Housing, Judy Huntley and the staff in Registrar
Office, Brock Sutherland and
staff of The Cooper Point Journal
Above a 11 the students we

have here at Ash Tree have been
very pleasant to work with, they
have received us well and have
done everyth ing we have expected of them.
We never think it is wrong to
say thank you, so this is what
we are saying to everyone we
have been in contact with since
we have arrived here at ASH
TREE APARTMENTS.
THANKS:
Carole and Earl Swartz,
managers,
Ash Tree Apartments

COG ARTICLE NOT
STRONG ENOUGH
To the Editor:
Last week's article, "Demise of
the Sounding Board," was not
strong enough. The Geoboard
may take one of five votes: comment, confidence, no-confidence,
drop, and censure (read COG
III, this issue). These votes are
strong reactions to a decision,
group of decisions, or a· person
by the great majority of the Geoboard. That any issue could even
appear before the Geoboard
would first be determined by an
executive board whose function
is to determine the Board's
agenda. Hence, the board votes
on matters of concern. The CPJ
may have displayed an overly
simple attitude that COG may
consequently attract in the future.
C
Governance at TESC is a serious and effective business. That
people are afraid it is non-existent is largely a product of fear .
Fear comes from past experience.
We all have past experience to
justify fear, didactic dogma.
There are those who seem perpetually malcontent. They say
the administration is too powerful, the students are too apathet-

JOURNAL STAFF
EDITOR
CONTRIBUTORS
Jill Ste wart
Jim Wright
FEATURE/MANAGING ED Aubrey Nixon
Ma tt Groening
Lisa Fleming
PRODUCTION MGR.
Brad Pokorny
Brooke Ann Flore n
Kirby Olson
PHOTOGRAPHY
Tom Keogh
R.i c k Dowd
Stan Shore

BUSINESS MGR.
David Judd
SECRETARY
Jeanne Hansen
ADVERTISING MGR.
Brock Sutherland
AD SALES
Jason Sift

The Joumll i, i.>Cllted In the College Actlvltl.. Building (CAB) 308.

N_.

phones:

866-8214, -8213. AdvertIsing Ind businns: 888-8080. Lett_ Policy: Aillelt_ to
the editor Ind photogl'lph, 'or lettel'l pegs mUlt be .-iftd by noon Tuesday 'or
tNt week', publication. Lelt_ mUlt be .igned, typed, double·spIIC*I Ind 400
word, or I....

ic, or whatever. In four years at
Evergreen I have seen a lot of
people held accountable . Sometimes I agreed and sometimes
not . . . But I am left with respect for those who spoke their
minds. They felt the freedom to
do so and always received response.
Larry B. Mauksch

EVERGREEN
STUDENTS
APATHE"rIC
To the Editor:
One of the biggest problems
that exists at Evergreen is getting
students to attend meetings. Students at Evergreen seem very
apathetic about going to meetings yet each individual is ready
to complain if one does not get

one's requirements. When 1
students I mean majority
course there are exceptions).
A couple of meetings were
called by Stone Thomas and me
about next year's curriculum and
about the Asian Coalition budget. Only a few students showed
up. So Stone had to assume that
the courses offered for next year
for Third World studenfs were
agreeable to all.
The Asian Coalition has some
money for activities and a meeting was called for students to
suggest how to utilize the
money. And aga in only a few
students showed up . Most Asian
st udents fee l it is important to
make others aware of their position in this society, economically,
politically, and socially. And yet
when a chance is offered to
them , they do not take advantage of it/. This does not apply
only to Third World students it is true as far as any meetings
are concerned - such as Sounding Board, COG III, Board of
Trustees etc., etc. All I can say
FOLKS is that, opportunity never
knocks on your door. You have
to knock on opportunity's door.
By participating in these meetings you can know what you
have got and what you can get.
So let's take advantage of what
we have and learn to live fully
and deeply and without regrets.
Sutapa Basu

CHIMPANZEES
DO IT
T a the Editor :

1 am sick and tired of the recent plague of articles on "natural" pregnancy care, childbirth,
breastfeeding, and so on. The
Cooper Point Journal's two articles on horne birth merely added
to this plague. Admittedly, these
practices have obvious advantages to the cold, clinical manner
in which the problems of women

are usually h~ndled by the medical profession.
BUT it seems that your hip
'''back to nature" trip is a throwback to pre-feminist days. Why
not have some articles which relate to the people's control of
technology rather than putting
down the technology itself, or
glorifying its bungling?
What if serious medical problems arise which require immediate sophisticated care? Why
shou ld any chance be taken on
the health of the mother and
child?
Let's instead explore modern
alt ernat ives to the present system
wh ich combine what is natural
with what is technological. Why
not , for examp le, have special
maternity "hospitals," villages of
homey cottages where a woman
and her family and friends (IF
she w ishes) can come for the
birth? The woman would feel
more at ease than in a hospital
with "sick people," but doctors
and equipment wou ld be available in case of an emergency.
Why should women become
pregnant at all? Why do they?
Let's cut the romantic, mystical
crap and face the fact that pregnancy IS uncomfortable, childbirth IS painful and that no
woman should feel guilty for not
wanting to be a "natural earth
mother." The glorif ication of
motherhood and childbirth is
complacent nonsense. Any idiot
can have a baby. Chimpanzees
do it all the time. Thousands of
stupid humans do it unintentionally every year.
And let's also cut the motherhood propaganda and explore
the insecurities and lack of foresight which cause many people
who should never have kids
under any circumstances to feel
important and egot istical enough
to present the overpopulated
world with yet another mouth to
feed.
Good Wishes,
Maurine Hoffman

Cruz Esquivel:
"Who is the teacher and who is the 'student?'"
by lisa Fleming
Cruz Esquivel is a member of the taculty whose lifestyle, background and beliefs are an integral part of how and what
he teaches.
Cruz was educated in the Jesuit mission
schools on the Colville Indian Reservation
here in Washington. He moved with his
family to different parts of the Western
states while growing up . He was drafted
into the Korean war, and upon returning
from it, went into a Jesuit seminary for
several years. He left the seminary, and
studied at U.c. a t Berkeley, and U.S.c.
Before coming to Evergreen, he taught at
U. C. at Davis and Humboldt State. His
education and teaching experience was in
classical and romance languages, philosophy and music composition.
Cruz is a member of the "contract pool"
this year for the first time.
''I've carried contracts in the past., but
that was in addition to the program I was
with, " said Cruz.
''I've been condemned by many faculty
in the past for taking contracts that are
too diversified," he said. "I enjoy that.
Who is the teacher and who is the student? Being a sponsor can be a learning
experience for me as a teacher."
'Tm interested in teaching mainly
things that are Native American. I can
utilize what I've learned in Western Philosophy and apply it to Native American
thinking."
An example of a program Cruz was involved in, and one that he considered to
be extremely important, was Squash blossom. The Squashblossom is regarded as a
symbol of hope in Native Americ-an culture. The coordinated studies program
Squash blossom was a community of people involved in the raising of an organic
garden, the produce of which was to be
distributed to the needy in the community.
Squashblossom was not just a course in
organic agriculture. Recognizing the needs
and problems of local Native Americans,
Cruz sought and was granted permission
of the Benedictine Monks at St. Martin's
College, to start the project on some unused acreage.
Squashblossom was to be an outreach
into the community. In the program they
hired 21 youths referred by the Neighborhood Youth Corps. The program was concerned with the problems of the aged, alcoholics, juvenile delinquents, and the
handicapped.
As Cruz explained the program in a
paper, it was an attempt to consolidate all
activities. He wrote: "At the farm we get
our exercise in the garden; it is also an

,
1

Cruz Esquivel
ancient form of meditation to pick weeds
and till the soil. Our philosophy is implicit in the action of producing and giving
away food to needy people and in the
process we produce food for ourselves."
Students were to teach others in their
special field of knowledge, and learn from
each other.
To balance out the academic portion of
the program, many workshops were held
on such topics as yoga, Native American
mythology, herbal medicine, poetry and
literature, all phases of organic gardening,
traditional Native American farming techniques, Sufi breathing, and many more.
Squash blossom overcame such obstacles
as distrust and misunderstandings by the
community. The farm produced food,
even though a plominent agricultural consultant of Thurston County said that food
could not be raised on the land unless it
was ploughed and allowed to lie fallow
for two years. Cruz called the program
"A total success."
Cruz has a deep interest in the problem
of alcoholism among Native Americans.
This concern has led him to write a book,
Alcoholism and the Native American

Spirit, which will come out in January.
Cruz calls his book a "philosophical treatise," and "an exposure of the rotten politics in alcoholism."
"Drinking is the Native American's
number one problem," said Cruz. "It's oppression by addiction .
"It's not that Indians have a stronger
proclivity to drinking, but they've been
oppressed more.
"The present treatment of alcoholism is
totally irrelevant to Indian people," he
said . "The system doesn't work for its
own people. If non-Indians can't solve
their alcoholism, we as Indian people
should be allowed to use our own traditional methods.
"Alcoholism affects everybody. The
essence of American medicine ought to
encompass the best of every culture."
Despite the severity of the alcoholism
problem, Cruz can see some good coming
out of it.
"Through self-determination, our poison can become our medicine," he said.
"1 hope the book can help in helping all
the tribes to realize we all have a common
denominator; our oppression. We have to

seek the answers. If we all begin to work,
then we can discover the first thing we all
agree on."
The book is also the. reason Cruz will
be receiving a Ph.D .
"It's really been a good experience, "
said Cruz. ''I'd never admitted I had any
proclivity for writing.
"I've discovered I am a writer."
Cruz gives much of the credit to his
sponsor, Jose Arguelles . Arguelles is a for mer faculty of Evergreen and is now at
Prin ceton, and a core facu lty member at
Union Graduate school.
"He's very knowledgeable about every thing Native American," said Cruz. "He's
been a big encouragement and has given
me a lot of inspiration."
The recent takeover of Cascadia by th e
Puyallup Indian tribe is regarded by many
people as an example of an attempt by
Native Americans to take power, includ ing the right to care for their sick , back
into their own hands.
When asked about this, Cruz replied, "[
th ink the takeover was justified , but it is
a precarious style. This style of confronta tion is dangerous ."
"It could have gone the other way. A
lot of heads could have been busted. "
A source of violence against Native
Americans and other segments of the population is the Boldt decision on Indian
fishing rights.
"The Boldt decision is a legal decision
that pits one segment of the population
against the other," said Cruz. "It's another
example of divide and conquer."
"We're totally deadlocked in the socalled name of treaty rights."
"There will be more Cascadias," he
said. "I do see the philosophy of confrontation as inevitable."
Cruz talked about Evergreen, and his
future .
"Evergreen has been remiss in failing to
examine in depth concerns of Native
American studies," he said. "Evergreen
ought to allow Native American communities to structure their own education, nol
me or Mary Hillaire or anybody else. "
Cruz thinks he will probably stay wit!
individual contracts.
"Everything I've proposed has bee
pretty well shot down," he said. "1 can
fight this system. I'm tired of it. I'll t
bouncing around where I'm needed ."
What else is in his future 1
''I'm going to be writing," said Cruz. "I
think that's the only way to address our
problems. Counseling and social work are
passe. The only way to reach a wider
audience is through the pen."

Two New Theatres to Open
by Stan Shore
No more long drives to Seattle, or tiresome treks to Tacoma for an eyeful of
Wertmuller, Truffaut or Bergman: A foreign film theatre is opening in Olympia.
in fact, two are opening.
Nancy Duncan's theatre on Sawyer
street was approved two weeks ago at a
seven-hour Board of Adjustment meeting
by a unanimous vote. At, least a dozen
Evergreen students were iri attendance to
show their support for the project, which
had become bogged down after opposition
from the Olympia City Commissioners.
In their arguments for or against the
theatre both sides were equally articulate,
and the Board , in discu ssing the reason
fo r their votes, seemed to have made up
their minds before the painfully long meeting . Bob Wheeler of Bob's Big Burgers in
Westside Olympia was an outspoken
member of the panel, and he joked more
than once about the Evergreeners in attendance at the meeting. With good humor, he chided Evergreen students for being "rowdy. "
The opponents of the theatre were less
kind to Evergreen, describing the large
number of Evergreen students who would
probably attend the theatre as an "invasion ."
Now that the last hurdle to approval
has been passed, Duncan is busily remod-

eling the theatre in preparation tor opening later this month. The theatre will be
similar to the Harvard Exit, and the Moviehouse, well-known Seattle theatres. In
fact, Duncan used to work for Randy Finley, the owner of the Moviehouse. Finley
appeared at the Board of Adjustment

meeting October 27 to defend Duncan's
proposed theatre.
When the theatre opens, if all goes according to plan, 168 people at a time
should be able to watch classic foreign
and American films , while downstairs
drinking coffee and munching pastries ,

others will b,' able to view Cinema . Right
here. In Olympia.
Meanwhile, as they say in comic books,
across town another plot is being hatched .
Weli , in this case, another theatre is being
hatched. Surprising as it might sound, an other foreign film / art theatre is being
planned for Olympia, not more th an a ki [ometer away from Nancy Duncan's Al though the film fare will be simila r, thi s
o ther thea tre is goin g to be smaller and
hou sed in a n even mo re peculiar building
than Duncan's renov a ted Baptist church .
The other th ea tre wil l be loca ted in a 50 ·
fo o t geodes ic d o me, made to sea t 125 peo ple in large, semi- recli ning sea ts.
While Dun ca n's thea tre was bese iged by
one pl ague aft er a no ther, thi s o th er th ea ·
tre was able to pa rt the seas of red tape
and get its rezo nin g a pprova l a nd buil d ing
permit with o ut a hass le .
Anoth er difference between the two th e atres will be the smell. Duncan 's thea tre
will smell of freshl y- brew ed coffee, po p co rn, and delica tely- baked pastries . But
this other thea tre w ill have one overwhelming smell: PIZZA .
That's right. Pizza. The fam o us Jo Mama's Pizza restaurant is expanding into a
restaurant and theatre . The geodesic d o me
is going to be built in the lot behind the
restaurant and there should be movi es
flickering in the pizza-fumed room before
the end of 1977.

1

Faculty profile

GLOW-IN-THI::DARK GARBAGE
T o th e Editor:
I think [ speak for all who
work late at night in the College
Activities Building, including
KAOS disc spinners, Cooper
Po int Journal scribblers, and the
occasional loiterer or trespasser.
We want , w e need, a Canteenstyle food machine in the building 's basement. (You know the
kind [ mean - the ones with
scrumptious treats whirling by
on little shelves you can peek at
through clever p[astic windows.)
[ am sick of these slimy ZaG-nut
and Fifth Avenue candy bars. I
must have Perky Pies and Soggy
Sandwiches and Pliant Puddings
- you know, a choice . I've had
it with Cheda-Nuts and other assorted glow-in-the-dark garbage.
[ am not kidding. [ am peeved. [
am agitated . 1 am FED UPI
Sincerely,
Binky

THANKS
FROM ASH
To the Editor:
To the Faculty, Staff, and Students of Evergreen College, Earl
and I would [ike to express our
gratitude to everyone who has
helped us on our new adventure
as managers at ASH TREE
APARTMENTS. We have had
all the cooperation we have
asked for from Ken Jacob and
his staff in Housing, Judy Huntley and the staff in Registrar
Office, Brock Sutherland and
staff of The Cooper Point Journal
Above a 11 the students we

have here at Ash Tree have been
very pleasant to work with, they
have received us well and have
done everyth ing we have expected of them.
We never think it is wrong to
say thank you, so this is what
we are saying to everyone we
have been in contact with since
we have arrived here at ASH
TREE APARTMENTS.
THANKS:
Carole and Earl Swartz,
managers,
Ash Tree Apartments

COG ARTICLE NOT
STRONG ENOUGH
To the Editor:
Last week's article, "Demise of
the Sounding Board," was not
strong enough. The Geoboard
may take one of five votes: comment, confidence, no-confidence,
drop, and censure (read COG
III, this issue). These votes are
strong reactions to a decision,
group of decisions, or a· person
by the great majority of the Geoboard. That any issue could even
appear before the Geoboard
would first be determined by an
executive board whose function
is to determine the Board's
agenda. Hence, the board votes
on matters of concern. The CPJ
may have displayed an overly
simple attitude that COG may
consequently attract in the future.
C
Governance at TESC is a serious and effective business. That
people are afraid it is non-existent is largely a product of fear .
Fear comes from past experience.
We all have past experience to
justify fear, didactic dogma.
There are those who seem perpetually malcontent. They say
the administration is too powerful, the students are too apathet-

JOURNAL STAFF
EDITOR
CONTRIBUTORS
Jill Ste wart
Jim Wright
FEATURE/MANAGING ED Aubrey Nixon
Ma tt Groening
Lisa Fleming
PRODUCTION MGR.
Brad Pokorny
Brooke Ann Flore n
Kirby Olson
PHOTOGRAPHY
Tom Keogh
R.i c k Dowd
Stan Shore

BUSINESS MGR.
David Judd
SECRETARY
Jeanne Hansen
ADVERTISING MGR.
Brock Sutherland
AD SALES
Jason Sift

The Joumll i, i.>Cllted In the College Actlvltl.. Building (CAB) 308.

N_.

phones:

866-8214, -8213. AdvertIsing Ind businns: 888-8080. Lett_ Policy: Aillelt_ to
the editor Ind photogl'lph, 'or lettel'l pegs mUlt be .-iftd by noon Tuesday 'or
tNt week', publication. Lelt_ mUlt be .igned, typed, double·spIIC*I Ind 400
word, or I....

ic, or whatever. In four years at
Evergreen I have seen a lot of
people held accountable . Sometimes I agreed and sometimes
not . . . But I am left with respect for those who spoke their
minds. They felt the freedom to
do so and always received response.
Larry B. Mauksch

EVERGREEN
STUDENTS
APATHE"rIC
To the Editor:
One of the biggest problems
that exists at Evergreen is getting
students to attend meetings. Students at Evergreen seem very
apathetic about going to meetings yet each individual is ready
to complain if one does not get

one's requirements. When 1
students I mean majority
course there are exceptions).
A couple of meetings were
called by Stone Thomas and me
about next year's curriculum and
about the Asian Coalition budget. Only a few students showed
up. So Stone had to assume that
the courses offered for next year
for Third World studenfs were
agreeable to all.
The Asian Coalition has some
money for activities and a meeting was called for students to
suggest how to utilize the
money. And aga in only a few
students showed up . Most Asian
st udents fee l it is important to
make others aware of their position in this society, economically,
politically, and socially. And yet
when a chance is offered to
them , they do not take advantage of it/. This does not apply
only to Third World students it is true as far as any meetings
are concerned - such as Sounding Board, COG III, Board of
Trustees etc., etc. All I can say
FOLKS is that, opportunity never
knocks on your door. You have
to knock on opportunity's door.
By participating in these meetings you can know what you
have got and what you can get.
So let's take advantage of what
we have and learn to live fully
and deeply and without regrets.
Sutapa Basu

CHIMPANZEES
DO IT
T a the Editor :

1 am sick and tired of the recent plague of articles on "natural" pregnancy care, childbirth,
breastfeeding, and so on. The
Cooper Point Journal's two articles on horne birth merely added
to this plague. Admittedly, these
practices have obvious advantages to the cold, clinical manner
in which the problems of women

are usually h~ndled by the medical profession.
BUT it seems that your hip
'''back to nature" trip is a throwback to pre-feminist days. Why
not have some articles which relate to the people's control of
technology rather than putting
down the technology itself, or
glorifying its bungling?
What if serious medical problems arise which require immediate sophisticated care? Why
shou ld any chance be taken on
the health of the mother and
child?
Let's instead explore modern
alt ernat ives to the present system
wh ich combine what is natural
with what is technological. Why
not , for examp le, have special
maternity "hospitals," villages of
homey cottages where a woman
and her family and friends (IF
she w ishes) can come for the
birth? The woman would feel
more at ease than in a hospital
with "sick people," but doctors
and equipment wou ld be available in case of an emergency.
Why should women become
pregnant at all? Why do they?
Let's cut the romantic, mystical
crap and face the fact that pregnancy IS uncomfortable, childbirth IS painful and that no
woman should feel guilty for not
wanting to be a "natural earth
mother." The glorif ication of
motherhood and childbirth is
complacent nonsense. Any idiot
can have a baby. Chimpanzees
do it all the time. Thousands of
stupid humans do it unintentionally every year.
And let's also cut the motherhood propaganda and explore
the insecurities and lack of foresight which cause many people
who should never have kids
under any circumstances to feel
important and egot istical enough
to present the overpopulated
world with yet another mouth to
feed.
Good Wishes,
Maurine Hoffman

Cruz Esquivel:
"Who is the teacher and who is the 'student?'"
by lisa Fleming
Cruz Esquivel is a member of the taculty whose lifestyle, background and beliefs are an integral part of how and what
he teaches.
Cruz was educated in the Jesuit mission
schools on the Colville Indian Reservation
here in Washington. He moved with his
family to different parts of the Western
states while growing up . He was drafted
into the Korean war, and upon returning
from it, went into a Jesuit seminary for
several years. He left the seminary, and
studied at U.c. a t Berkeley, and U.S.c.
Before coming to Evergreen, he taught at
U. C. at Davis and Humboldt State. His
education and teaching experience was in
classical and romance languages, philosophy and music composition.
Cruz is a member of the "contract pool"
this year for the first time.
''I've carried contracts in the past., but
that was in addition to the program I was
with, " said Cruz.
''I've been condemned by many faculty
in the past for taking contracts that are
too diversified," he said. "I enjoy that.
Who is the teacher and who is the student? Being a sponsor can be a learning
experience for me as a teacher."
'Tm interested in teaching mainly
things that are Native American. I can
utilize what I've learned in Western Philosophy and apply it to Native American
thinking."
An example of a program Cruz was involved in, and one that he considered to
be extremely important, was Squash blossom. The Squashblossom is regarded as a
symbol of hope in Native Americ-an culture. The coordinated studies program
Squash blossom was a community of people involved in the raising of an organic
garden, the produce of which was to be
distributed to the needy in the community.
Squashblossom was not just a course in
organic agriculture. Recognizing the needs
and problems of local Native Americans,
Cruz sought and was granted permission
of the Benedictine Monks at St. Martin's
College, to start the project on some unused acreage.
Squashblossom was to be an outreach
into the community. In the program they
hired 21 youths referred by the Neighborhood Youth Corps. The program was concerned with the problems of the aged, alcoholics, juvenile delinquents, and the
handicapped.
As Cruz explained the program in a
paper, it was an attempt to consolidate all
activities. He wrote: "At the farm we get
our exercise in the garden; it is also an

,
1

Cruz Esquivel
ancient form of meditation to pick weeds
and till the soil. Our philosophy is implicit in the action of producing and giving
away food to needy people and in the
process we produce food for ourselves."
Students were to teach others in their
special field of knowledge, and learn from
each other.
To balance out the academic portion of
the program, many workshops were held
on such topics as yoga, Native American
mythology, herbal medicine, poetry and
literature, all phases of organic gardening,
traditional Native American farming techniques, Sufi breathing, and many more.
Squash blossom overcame such obstacles
as distrust and misunderstandings by the
community. The farm produced food,
even though a plominent agricultural consultant of Thurston County said that food
could not be raised on the land unless it
was ploughed and allowed to lie fallow
for two years. Cruz called the program
"A total success."
Cruz has a deep interest in the problem
of alcoholism among Native Americans.
This concern has led him to write a book,
Alcoholism and the Native American

Spirit, which will come out in January.
Cruz calls his book a "philosophical treatise," and "an exposure of the rotten politics in alcoholism."
"Drinking is the Native American's
number one problem," said Cruz. "It's oppression by addiction .
"It's not that Indians have a stronger
proclivity to drinking, but they've been
oppressed more.
"The present treatment of alcoholism is
totally irrelevant to Indian people," he
said . "The system doesn't work for its
own people. If non-Indians can't solve
their alcoholism, we as Indian people
should be allowed to use our own traditional methods.
"Alcoholism affects everybody. The
essence of American medicine ought to
encompass the best of every culture."
Despite the severity of the alcoholism
problem, Cruz can see some good coming
out of it.
"Through self-determination, our poison can become our medicine," he said.
"1 hope the book can help in helping all
the tribes to realize we all have a common
denominator; our oppression. We have to

seek the answers. If we all begin to work,
then we can discover the first thing we all
agree on."
The book is also the. reason Cruz will
be receiving a Ph.D .
"It's really been a good experience, "
said Cruz. ''I'd never admitted I had any
proclivity for writing.
"I've discovered I am a writer."
Cruz gives much of the credit to his
sponsor, Jose Arguelles . Arguelles is a for mer faculty of Evergreen and is now at
Prin ceton, and a core facu lty member at
Union Graduate school.
"He's very knowledgeable about every thing Native American," said Cruz. "He's
been a big encouragement and has given
me a lot of inspiration."
The recent takeover of Cascadia by th e
Puyallup Indian tribe is regarded by many
people as an example of an attempt by
Native Americans to take power, includ ing the right to care for their sick , back
into their own hands.
When asked about this, Cruz replied, "[
th ink the takeover was justified , but it is
a precarious style. This style of confronta tion is dangerous ."
"It could have gone the other way. A
lot of heads could have been busted. "
A source of violence against Native
Americans and other segments of the population is the Boldt decision on Indian
fishing rights.
"The Boldt decision is a legal decision
that pits one segment of the population
against the other," said Cruz. "It's another
example of divide and conquer."
"We're totally deadlocked in the socalled name of treaty rights."
"There will be more Cascadias," he
said. "I do see the philosophy of confrontation as inevitable."
Cruz talked about Evergreen, and his
future .
"Evergreen has been remiss in failing to
examine in depth concerns of Native
American studies," he said. "Evergreen
ought to allow Native American communities to structure their own education, nol
me or Mary Hillaire or anybody else. "
Cruz thinks he will probably stay wit!
individual contracts.
"Everything I've proposed has bee
pretty well shot down," he said. "1 can
fight this system. I'm tired of it. I'll t
bouncing around where I'm needed ."
What else is in his future 1
''I'm going to be writing," said Cruz. "I
think that's the only way to address our
problems. Counseling and social work are
passe. The only way to reach a wider
audience is through the pen."

Two New Theatres to Open
by Stan Shore
No more long drives to Seattle, or tiresome treks to Tacoma for an eyeful of
Wertmuller, Truffaut or Bergman: A foreign film theatre is opening in Olympia.
in fact, two are opening.
Nancy Duncan's theatre on Sawyer
street was approved two weeks ago at a
seven-hour Board of Adjustment meeting
by a unanimous vote. At, least a dozen
Evergreen students were iri attendance to
show their support for the project, which
had become bogged down after opposition
from the Olympia City Commissioners.
In their arguments for or against the
theatre both sides were equally articulate,
and the Board , in discu ssing the reason
fo r their votes, seemed to have made up
their minds before the painfully long meeting . Bob Wheeler of Bob's Big Burgers in
Westside Olympia was an outspoken
member of the panel, and he joked more
than once about the Evergreeners in attendance at the meeting. With good humor, he chided Evergreen students for being "rowdy. "
The opponents of the theatre were less
kind to Evergreen, describing the large
number of Evergreen students who would
probably attend the theatre as an "invasion ."
Now that the last hurdle to approval
has been passed, Duncan is busily remod-

eling the theatre in preparation tor opening later this month. The theatre will be
similar to the Harvard Exit, and the Moviehouse, well-known Seattle theatres. In
fact, Duncan used to work for Randy Finley, the owner of the Moviehouse. Finley
appeared at the Board of Adjustment

meeting October 27 to defend Duncan's
proposed theatre.
When the theatre opens, if all goes according to plan, 168 people at a time
should be able to watch classic foreign
and American films , while downstairs
drinking coffee and munching pastries ,

others will b,' able to view Cinema . Right
here. In Olympia.
Meanwhile, as they say in comic books,
across town another plot is being hatched .
Weli , in this case, another theatre is being
hatched. Surprising as it might sound, an other foreign film / art theatre is being
planned for Olympia, not more th an a ki [ometer away from Nancy Duncan's Al though the film fare will be simila r, thi s
o ther thea tre is goin g to be smaller and
hou sed in a n even mo re peculiar building
than Duncan's renov a ted Baptist church .
The other th ea tre wil l be loca ted in a 50 ·
fo o t geodes ic d o me, made to sea t 125 peo ple in large, semi- recli ning sea ts.
While Dun ca n's thea tre was bese iged by
one pl ague aft er a no ther, thi s o th er th ea ·
tre was able to pa rt the seas of red tape
and get its rezo nin g a pprova l a nd buil d ing
permit with o ut a hass le .
Anoth er difference between the two th e atres will be the smell. Duncan 's thea tre
will smell of freshl y- brew ed coffee, po p co rn, and delica tely- baked pastries . But
this other thea tre w ill have one overwhelming smell: PIZZA .
That's right. Pizza. The fam o us Jo Mama's Pizza restaurant is expanding into a
restaurant and theatre . The geodesic d o me
is going to be built in the lot behind the
restaurant and there should be movi es
flickering in the pizza-fumed room before
the end of 1977.

4

Review: Experiment at Berkeley
by Aubrey Nixon

Many people entering the Evergreen
community (students, faculty and staff)
come with notions that this college is genuinely different from others - that students have the freedom to determine the
direction of their academic endeavors.

Our ideas about self-determination in
school , often frustrated in other institutions of learning, are given a chance to
develop and expand and bear fruit at Evergreen - or so we tend to believe reading the college catalog before we get here.
For many students, Evergreen delivers the
challenge and eventual satisfaction they

expected when they came. Other students
find their time here confusing in a vague
way, find themselves asking anyone who
will listen what is the educational theory
behind Evergreen, and is it working in
practice7
Joseph Tussman, director of the Experimental Program .at the University of Cal-

The Magnificent Men
in their Roaring Machines
by Jim Wright
The traditional collegiate practice of
criticizing the administration reaches an
all-time high level of refinement here at
Evergreen, where not even the Grounds
Ma intenance Department escapes the
withering scrutiny of cynical students, faculty and staff. In fact , Grounds Supervisor
Bill Kennedy feels that his department has
received more than its fair share recently.
Grounds Maintenance came under fire
early last summer for the pesticide-spraying of a week-choked drainage ditch ,
which killed several lupine flowers. Expl a ins Kennedy, "Two years ago, we
sprayed the ditch to kill the Alders. I got
my wrists slapped then. Last summer, I
fo rgo t - I pulled a big boo-boo and spotsprayed it again. " During this controversy,
a sign appeared over the ditch, proclaiming it to be the Schillinger Memorial Ditch
and posing the question , "Where Have
All the Lupines Gone? " (Jerry Schillinger
is the former director of the Facilities
Planning Office, of which Grounds Main'tenance is a part.)
Grounds personnel have since returned
the compliment by establishing the Herman Memorial Snag, named in honor of
Evergreen biology professor Steve Herman . The snag is 120 feet tall, is centerrotted , and leans out over the plaza parking loop at a 15 degree angle, according
to Kennedy.
Ever&reen has very little formal landscaping in comparison to its natural areas ,
acco rding to Director of F~ cilities

00

Bob
Strecker.
What
landscaping
has been done was done to provide a
" transition" from woods to rougher landscaping to campus itself, to avoid a "blunt
change" from one to the other, explains
Bill Kennedy. Strecker asserts that "Generally, the landscaping is in keeping with
the undeveloped area."
A controversial example of such "landscaping" is the recent spreading of bark
along the center median strips of campus
roads. This was done, says Kennedy, so
that newly planted shrubs would not be
strangled out by grasses and othe r weeds.

He said grasses become a problem in that
they become "hay-fields" if not mowed
frequently.
Grounds Maintenance receives an approximate $187,000 this year, which is
about 2.2 % of the total operating budget
of the college. Its responsibilities include
67 acres of blacktop, five miles of sidewalks, 12 miles of curbs, and an estimated
300 street lights, in addition to the actual
campus grounds themselves. The Grounds
crew is even charged with maintaining the
nature trail down to the beach. In sum,
"We' re responsible for anything that's not
hooked up to a building," says Kennedy.
Grounds does employ some loud, obnoxious, and seemingly ridiculous machines, including leaf blowers and vacuums, branch choppers, and sidewalk
sweeper machines. These machines are
"The easiest, quickest way," says Kennedy,
who adds that it would take six men with
rakes to do the work of one leaf-blowing
machine on the campus plaza, l}e' also
boasts that his Grounds crew -of-r$ix people are accomplishing work that would
supposedly require 26 people if figured according to the employment formula contained in Evergreen's Administrative
Code.
Meanwhile , the battle continues.
Grounds crew personnel continue to ponder the fate of 28 unplanted trees which
disappeared under mysterious circumstances last summer, only to appear in a
nearby resident's back yard weeks later .
What next7

Update: Hendricks and Kreidler

ifornia, has written a book entitled, "Experiment at Berkeley," published in 1969.
The book is a report of the experimental
lower-division program that began in the
fall of 1965 on the Berkeley campus . The
book has special meaning for Evergreeners, since it is the primary reading used
by the planning faculty of The Evergreen
State College back in 1969. The book is a
succinct review of the program designed
specifically for use during the first two
years of college,
The ~mphasis of the experimental program (and the major point where it differs
from most college courses) is upon spending a substantial amount of time studying
a few classical works of literature in depth.
Why, one might ask, study books written
several hundred years ago? What relevance can those books have to our life in
the 1970's? As Tussman says, " ... the
purpose of the first program is to lead the
student into a broad and sustained examination of the 'moral' dimensions of the
situation in which he and we find ourselves." Tussman feels this purpose best
served by deep study of classics. "Quite
simply," he says, "a classic escapes from
or transcends its generative context. It retains its intelligibility and significance
when it is taken out of context."
The curriculum of the Berkeley experiment includes reading of a common book
list, writing papers in response to those
books, seminar / discussion meetings, and
lectures about the books being studied.
Sound familiar, Evergreeners? It could be
a description of many basic coordinated
studies programs at Evergreen.
About his experimental program, Tuss man explains, "We try, as far as possible,
to avoid crisis, haste, and pressure. We
have eliminated a ll examinations and tests;
assignments are quantitatively light;
grades are effectively out of the picture."
He also notes, "What a pupil learns, if he
learns at all, is that the world does most
of the work, and that his job is to learn
how to cooperate with it ... "
The book is an excellent source of explanation for people who wonder where
Evergreen is coming from - and where
we could go from here.

The news story two weeks ago
o.n the race between John Hendncks and Mike Kreidler contamed an astonishing number of
factual errors and distortions

by Brad Pokorny
. Plans ~or a coffeehouse operatIng evenings on the lower floor
of the CAB building are Incubating in the minds of some students
and staff around campus. A desire for conversation, comfortable a~mosphere, some low-key
entertainment, and, of course
coffee, lurk as the motives for ~
loose aggregate of students who
hope to have a coffeehouse running in the SAGA foods area by
Thanksgiving.
"We'd like it to be a combination lounge and coffeehouse - a
place where people can come
and meet each other in the evening. A place to break from latenight study in the library," said
Rob Fellows, one of about 25
students working to get the coffeehouse started.
"It'll probably be located in
the back lunch room, the 'No
Smoking' section," said Kate A lbrecht, another student. "We
hope to paint it, move some
couches in, maybe bring in some
plants and tapestries, and make
it a nice place to be."
"It's rea.IlY hard to say exactly
what It Will be like yet. A lot of
things won't be decided until it
happens," voiced Fellows.
A meeting was held last week

• The Faith Center would like to
invite any persons interested in
exploring spirituality through
sack lunch discussions to join us
Thursdays in Lib 3227 at noon.
Presen tly we are exploring life
through story. Telling one's
story or myth is to become conscious of the greater reality that
surrounds and sustains life.

~~~,--------~~~~

• FOOD STAMP interviews are
once again being conducted on
campus . The FOOD STAMP
Interviewer is here on Tuesdays
and Wednesdays, the first three
weeks of each month. You need
an appointment to get an interview. Call 866-6205 and / or drop
by the Office of Financial Aid to
make a FOOD STAMP appoint ment and pick up a FOOD
STAMP application. No Food
Stamp interviews will be held in
December.

~. rlf(z
AND t'LL..

rr.

II,
,

I
I,

1

~

!

We can usually loan you equipment for the period you need to complete a job :
three days for most equipment, 'one day for high demand items like camera
lenses, video, and l6mm projectors , a week for mono cassette recorders . You
can stop by (do not phone) to renew your equipment twice more. However, if you didn' t
bring the equipment with you, you need to fetch it if someone has asked for it and we
can' t rene~ it. You see , we also have a reservation system. You need to provide your
own battenes and recording t a pe except for 35mm camera light meter batteries.
CA U~10N : You are totally responsible for equipment loaned to you . If you are filming
mlgratmg geoducks and drop your video recorder into Puget Sound, you get to give us
the $1600 to buy another. If you bring that 200mm lens back a day late it will
COSt you $3 overdue, cost us a headache, and cost the person who reserved it
pictures of their wildlife retreat.

ii::::l;aiiibthe

The probable site of the proposed Coffeehouse.
to discuss general plans for the
coffeehouse, and so far all invo lved areas of the administration have given it the green light.
Larry Stenberg, Dean of Enrollment Services, said, "I know I'm
an~ious to get th ings moving as
qUIckly as possible . I think we
might have something going by
Decem ber 1."
Although coffeehouses have
been tr~ed here in the past, and
have faded, Stenberg is optimistic
about this attempt. "Over the

/"

liN 0V'4 , M£O'A LOAN ('R[UlATEO OVER
2,b50 prEEE5 OE MOHA EUUIPMENT lA5T MGNTH!

Me di a Loa n is o pe n M onday throu g h Friday 8:30 to 4 :00 for staff, fa culty
a nd students . Be ready to present an Evergreen ID card (stamped by the
Registrar's Offi ce thi s quarter if you are a student) before checkout . Peop le wi shing [0 u se 35mm ca mer as , 16mm projec tors , or video must make
ar r a ngements in adv a nce fo r our PROficiency certification program , so
th at we know you know how to handle this more delicate s tuff . If you
don't know but want to , we have a bunch of nice taped lectures and hand o ut s you can teac h yourself or bone up with, or we can set up workshops
in some cases . So ... ta ke us seriously, but by all means take our equip me n t away.

tation to print the truth and
nothing but the truth, so help us.
So : there were two errors in
that election article by careless
St~n Shore. At that time, it was
written that the 22nd legislative

Coffeehouse Plans Simmer

~I]U

FAt'£

Since the election is over and the
harm - if you want to call it
that - has already been done, it
may seem pointl~s to issue a
co~rection. But The Cooper
POint Journal stands on its repu-

l

I
I

I
I
,

(



• Are you interested in exploring
your dreams and the images they
hold? Then come to the Wed.
morning dream workshop. No
fee; just bring a dream and be
prepared to talk about it. Time :
10 a.m . Place: lib. 1507. Led b'y
Ed McQuarrie.
• Students interested in the advanced coordinated studies pro gram, Wealth and Power, (W,
Sp 1977) are encouraged to at tend the planning meeting to be
held Tues. Nov. 16, Noon to 1
p.m ., Lib. 2101. Russell lidman
and Priscilla Bowerman are the
instructors.
• The Hunger Action Center is
accepting applications and pro p~sals from persons and groups
With experience in economic
studies, market research tech niques: and report writing inter ested In preparing a report on
community food preservation
centers. Level of payment is negotiable. Contact The Hunger
Action Center, Sem . Bldg. 3122.

• On Tuesday, November 16 Irwin Silber, the executive editor
of the Guardian newspaper will
be speaking at Evergreen.' The
Guardian is a national news
weekly published in New York ,
City. Irwin Silber, who will be
closing his tour of the Northwest
in Olympia, will give a lecture
on "The Pol itics of Film." Silber
is sponsored by several academic
pr~grams and The Evergreen Po Iltlcallnformation Center (EPIC).
The event is free and open to all
in Lecture Hall One at 7:30 p .m .
• In 1885 the Chautauqua Press
was born . It issued pamphlets on
poetry , art. h istory, philosophy,
theol ogy, fiction, astronomy
fo lk arts and many othe~
subjects a nd modes.
In 1976 Auquatauch invites
you to con tribute to its first
issue. In keeping with the Chau tauquan tradit ion we want to
represent a wide spectrum of
printed forms.
Write us your myths, weave
~s your tales, draw us your
Images. We are the mirror reflecting your creative im~ulse
I. Give us your new words to a~
old song.
The deadline for submission is
November 19 so get it in soon .
Bring your material to lib . 2614 .
There will be a box for your
work marked Auquatauch or
come Tuesday 4 - 6 and Thurs day 12 - 2 when members of our
staff will be on hand to advise
you.
• The "Chamber Singers" need
more voices. We're an informal
group that meets twice a week to
rehearse a wide variety of music
for a concert Dec. 7th . Anyone
who likes to sing is welcome to
come and join. The only require ments are that you like to sing
and that you come to all of the
rehearsals (Mon.s and Wed.s at
4 p.m. on the 4th floor Sem .
bldg.). If you're interested con tact Don Chan 866-6669, or just
show up .

past five years some of us have
tried annually to get something
gomg. But because ' of the increased modules, the number of
people on campus in the evenings
has exploded, and I think a coffeehouse can be successful now"
Dick Whiting, manager ~f
SAGA foods, has pledged his
s~pport, and feels such an operation could be profitable now
More meetings are to be 'held
this week and next to set coffeehouse hours and other details .

• There will be a meeting for
those students inter.ested in '
joining the winter quarter Shakespeare and Writing group contract on Wednesday, Nov. 17 at
1 p.m. in the 2600 lounge of the
Library bui lding .
• Health Services is pleased to
announce the selection of the
campus physician team for academic year 1976-77. Drs. Jerome
Peterson and Chuck Buser will
be serving the Health Services /
Women's C linic on a part-time
baSIS, effective November 8
1976 through June 10, 1977.
'
Drs. Jerome Peterson and
Chuck Buser gradua ted from the
University of Minnesota Medical
School and the University of
Wisconsin Medica l School respectively. Both are presently
practiCing emergency medicine at
the Mason General Hospital in
Shelton , Washington . Dr. Peterson is also working with the
Family Planning Clinic in Shelton. They will assume the positons at The Evergreen State College Health Services / Women's
Clinic in addition to their posts
in Shelton .
• Natural healing study group
meets Monday In the Library 3rd
Floor Lobby at 5 : 30 p.m.
• Come to the first annual Pres cott College alumni party North west diVision on Sat. Nov. 13 at
7 p.m. Meet at the tennis courts
at Modular Housing for further
transportation. Must have authentic Prescott College artifact
or notar ized letter from Hal
Lenke. Call all Prescott College
people here and at Western
Wash . State. Bring something
musICal. This event is sponsored
by FOPS (Fraternal Order of
Prescott Students). For more info
call 866-5205 or 866-5185 . An other PRESCO production produced by Ted Rosenberg - Bib
David - Day De LA Hunt _
Peter Neilsen .

district encompassed all of Thurston County. Of course, that
was an outright lie. In fact, it encompasses only approximately
80 percent of Thurston County.
To the West, Delphi Road marks
the boundary between the 22nd
and 24th legislative districts. As
a result, those living on Steamboat Island are not part of the
22nd.
To the Southwest, the 20th
legislative district takes a bite
out of Thurston County just below littlerock. To the Southeast
the 2nd dis!rict snatches u;
Yelm, whICh IS also in Thurston
County. The rest of Thurston
County: O lympia, Tumwater
Lacey, . Tenino, littlerock, Eas;
Olympia, and Maytown are in
the 22nd district .
Another' idiotic error in Shore's
poorly-written article was the
statem~nt that in the primary
race MIke Kreidler beat his Democratic opponents as well as
Hendricks. In a sense it is true
since Kreidler had no Democrati~
Party opponents. In fact, the pri mary race was a one-on-one between Kreidler and Hendricks
with the pharmacist taking 9 826
votes to his opponent's 12,356.
And, in case you haven't
heard, the optometrist, Kreidler,
won the final election on November 2. The final vote was Hendricks 14,797 to Kreidler's 19,053.
Watch this space for more corrections in future issues of The
Cooper Point Journal, the newspaper that cannot tell a lie.
Stan Shore

*

*

CLASSIFIEDS
Riders needed to go to S'ltl
Francisco Sunday , NOI' . Nth
Call Ted at 866-5205. Hap.,
van will travel.
LOST PUppy, Eight week
old female pup lost while 011
campus on Friday. Oct. 29.
She is white and furry with a
brown stripe across her back
brown markings on her fac~
and a curly tail . Please call
943-7092 . Ask for Scott,
Penny, or Doug. We miss
her.
"Y,ANTED - Your opinion
of Publzc Interest" for student research program .
(Please) mail to 2141 66th
Ave . N . W. Olympia, 98502.
VIVIT AR Series 1 70-210
F3.5 Macrozoom with case
and 85 A filter (Can on FD
mount). $225 firm . Call after
5: 30, 456-5928.
MARANTZ 1120 Amp .
$350. 352-4941. ask for Kathy.
Anyone interested in des(~ nlll g
and bulidmg an mexpensive energy conservative , low te ch
owner -built horn e for the No rth :
]Yest call John 866-2757.

*

EJ's Grocery
and Tole Shop

*

Hours: 8 a.m . - 11 p.m.

Tole painting.
Supplies • Classes
• Party, block ice.
Slushy • Beer. Wine
• Picnic,
party supplies
1821 Harrfaon . 357-7133

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

• .. •••••••• ••••••••••• u ...............................................................................................

The Asterisk" and Cheese Libra1
WESTSIDE CENTER 357-7573

(233 N _ DIVISION STREET )

I

4

Review: Experiment at Berkeley
by Aubrey Nixon

Many people entering the Evergreen
community (students, faculty and staff)
come with notions that this college is genuinely different from others - that students have the freedom to determine the
direction of their academic endeavors.

Our ideas about self-determination in
school , often frustrated in other institutions of learning, are given a chance to
develop and expand and bear fruit at Evergreen - or so we tend to believe reading the college catalog before we get here.
For many students, Evergreen delivers the
challenge and eventual satisfaction they

expected when they came. Other students
find their time here confusing in a vague
way, find themselves asking anyone who
will listen what is the educational theory
behind Evergreen, and is it working in
practice7
Joseph Tussman, director of the Experimental Program .at the University of Cal-

The Magnificent Men
in their Roaring Machines
by Jim Wright
The traditional collegiate practice of
criticizing the administration reaches an
all-time high level of refinement here at
Evergreen, where not even the Grounds
Ma intenance Department escapes the
withering scrutiny of cynical students, faculty and staff. In fact , Grounds Supervisor
Bill Kennedy feels that his department has
received more than its fair share recently.
Grounds Maintenance came under fire
early last summer for the pesticide-spraying of a week-choked drainage ditch ,
which killed several lupine flowers. Expl a ins Kennedy, "Two years ago, we
sprayed the ditch to kill the Alders. I got
my wrists slapped then. Last summer, I
fo rgo t - I pulled a big boo-boo and spotsprayed it again. " During this controversy,
a sign appeared over the ditch, proclaiming it to be the Schillinger Memorial Ditch
and posing the question , "Where Have
All the Lupines Gone? " (Jerry Schillinger
is the former director of the Facilities
Planning Office, of which Grounds Main'tenance is a part.)
Grounds personnel have since returned
the compliment by establishing the Herman Memorial Snag, named in honor of
Evergreen biology professor Steve Herman . The snag is 120 feet tall, is centerrotted , and leans out over the plaza parking loop at a 15 degree angle, according
to Kennedy.
Ever&reen has very little formal landscaping in comparison to its natural areas ,
acco rding to Director of F~ cilities

00

Bob
Strecker.
What
landscaping
has been done was done to provide a
" transition" from woods to rougher landscaping to campus itself, to avoid a "blunt
change" from one to the other, explains
Bill Kennedy. Strecker asserts that "Generally, the landscaping is in keeping with
the undeveloped area."
A controversial example of such "landscaping" is the recent spreading of bark
along the center median strips of campus
roads. This was done, says Kennedy, so
that newly planted shrubs would not be
strangled out by grasses and othe r weeds.

He said grasses become a problem in that
they become "hay-fields" if not mowed
frequently.
Grounds Maintenance receives an approximate $187,000 this year, which is
about 2.2 % of the total operating budget
of the college. Its responsibilities include
67 acres of blacktop, five miles of sidewalks, 12 miles of curbs, and an estimated
300 street lights, in addition to the actual
campus grounds themselves. The Grounds
crew is even charged with maintaining the
nature trail down to the beach. In sum,
"We' re responsible for anything that's not
hooked up to a building," says Kennedy.
Grounds does employ some loud, obnoxious, and seemingly ridiculous machines, including leaf blowers and vacuums, branch choppers, and sidewalk
sweeper machines. These machines are
"The easiest, quickest way," says Kennedy,
who adds that it would take six men with
rakes to do the work of one leaf-blowing
machine on the campus plaza, l}e' also
boasts that his Grounds crew -of-r$ix people are accomplishing work that would
supposedly require 26 people if figured according to the employment formula contained in Evergreen's Administrative
Code.
Meanwhile , the battle continues.
Grounds crew personnel continue to ponder the fate of 28 unplanted trees which
disappeared under mysterious circumstances last summer, only to appear in a
nearby resident's back yard weeks later .
What next7

Update: Hendricks and Kreidler

ifornia, has written a book entitled, "Experiment at Berkeley," published in 1969.
The book is a report of the experimental
lower-division program that began in the
fall of 1965 on the Berkeley campus . The
book has special meaning for Evergreeners, since it is the primary reading used
by the planning faculty of The Evergreen
State College back in 1969. The book is a
succinct review of the program designed
specifically for use during the first two
years of college,
The ~mphasis of the experimental program (and the major point where it differs
from most college courses) is upon spending a substantial amount of time studying
a few classical works of literature in depth.
Why, one might ask, study books written
several hundred years ago? What relevance can those books have to our life in
the 1970's? As Tussman says, " ... the
purpose of the first program is to lead the
student into a broad and sustained examination of the 'moral' dimensions of the
situation in which he and we find ourselves." Tussman feels this purpose best
served by deep study of classics. "Quite
simply," he says, "a classic escapes from
or transcends its generative context. It retains its intelligibility and significance
when it is taken out of context."
The curriculum of the Berkeley experiment includes reading of a common book
list, writing papers in response to those
books, seminar / discussion meetings, and
lectures about the books being studied.
Sound familiar, Evergreeners? It could be
a description of many basic coordinated
studies programs at Evergreen.
About his experimental program, Tuss man explains, "We try, as far as possible,
to avoid crisis, haste, and pressure. We
have eliminated a ll examinations and tests;
assignments are quantitatively light;
grades are effectively out of the picture."
He also notes, "What a pupil learns, if he
learns at all, is that the world does most
of the work, and that his job is to learn
how to cooperate with it ... "
The book is an excellent source of explanation for people who wonder where
Evergreen is coming from - and where
we could go from here.

The news story two weeks ago
o.n the race between John Hendncks and Mike Kreidler contamed an astonishing number of
factual errors and distortions

by Brad Pokorny
. Plans ~or a coffeehouse operatIng evenings on the lower floor
of the CAB building are Incubating in the minds of some students
and staff around campus. A desire for conversation, comfortable a~mosphere, some low-key
entertainment, and, of course
coffee, lurk as the motives for ~
loose aggregate of students who
hope to have a coffeehouse running in the SAGA foods area by
Thanksgiving.
"We'd like it to be a combination lounge and coffeehouse - a
place where people can come
and meet each other in the evening. A place to break from latenight study in the library," said
Rob Fellows, one of about 25
students working to get the coffeehouse started.
"It'll probably be located in
the back lunch room, the 'No
Smoking' section," said Kate A lbrecht, another student. "We
hope to paint it, move some
couches in, maybe bring in some
plants and tapestries, and make
it a nice place to be."
"It's rea.IlY hard to say exactly
what It Will be like yet. A lot of
things won't be decided until it
happens," voiced Fellows.
A meeting was held last week

• The Faith Center would like to
invite any persons interested in
exploring spirituality through
sack lunch discussions to join us
Thursdays in Lib 3227 at noon.
Presen tly we are exploring life
through story. Telling one's
story or myth is to become conscious of the greater reality that
surrounds and sustains life.

~~~,--------~~~~

• FOOD STAMP interviews are
once again being conducted on
campus . The FOOD STAMP
Interviewer is here on Tuesdays
and Wednesdays, the first three
weeks of each month. You need
an appointment to get an interview. Call 866-6205 and / or drop
by the Office of Financial Aid to
make a FOOD STAMP appoint ment and pick up a FOOD
STAMP application. No Food
Stamp interviews will be held in
December.

~. rlf(z
AND t'LL..

rr.

II,
,

I
I,

1

~

!

We can usually loan you equipment for the period you need to complete a job :
three days for most equipment, 'one day for high demand items like camera
lenses, video, and l6mm projectors , a week for mono cassette recorders . You
can stop by (do not phone) to renew your equipment twice more. However, if you didn' t
bring the equipment with you, you need to fetch it if someone has asked for it and we
can' t rene~ it. You see , we also have a reservation system. You need to provide your
own battenes and recording t a pe except for 35mm camera light meter batteries.
CA U~10N : You are totally responsible for equipment loaned to you . If you are filming
mlgratmg geoducks and drop your video recorder into Puget Sound, you get to give us
the $1600 to buy another. If you bring that 200mm lens back a day late it will
COSt you $3 overdue, cost us a headache, and cost the person who reserved it
pictures of their wildlife retreat.

ii::::l;aiiibthe

The probable site of the proposed Coffeehouse.
to discuss general plans for the
coffeehouse, and so far all invo lved areas of the administration have given it the green light.
Larry Stenberg, Dean of Enrollment Services, said, "I know I'm
an~ious to get th ings moving as
qUIckly as possible . I think we
might have something going by
Decem ber 1."
Although coffeehouses have
been tr~ed here in the past, and
have faded, Stenberg is optimistic
about this attempt. "Over the

/"

liN 0V'4 , M£O'A LOAN ('R[UlATEO OVER
2,b50 prEEE5 OE MOHA EUUIPMENT lA5T MGNTH!

Me di a Loa n is o pe n M onday throu g h Friday 8:30 to 4 :00 for staff, fa culty
a nd students . Be ready to present an Evergreen ID card (stamped by the
Registrar's Offi ce thi s quarter if you are a student) before checkout . Peop le wi shing [0 u se 35mm ca mer as , 16mm projec tors , or video must make
ar r a ngements in adv a nce fo r our PROficiency certification program , so
th at we know you know how to handle this more delicate s tuff . If you
don't know but want to , we have a bunch of nice taped lectures and hand o ut s you can teac h yourself or bone up with, or we can set up workshops
in some cases . So ... ta ke us seriously, but by all means take our equip me n t away.

tation to print the truth and
nothing but the truth, so help us.
So : there were two errors in
that election article by careless
St~n Shore. At that time, it was
written that the 22nd legislative

Coffeehouse Plans Simmer

~I]U

FAt'£

Since the election is over and the
harm - if you want to call it
that - has already been done, it
may seem pointl~s to issue a
co~rection. But The Cooper
POint Journal stands on its repu-

l

I
I

I
I
,

(



• Are you interested in exploring
your dreams and the images they
hold? Then come to the Wed.
morning dream workshop. No
fee; just bring a dream and be
prepared to talk about it. Time :
10 a.m . Place: lib. 1507. Led b'y
Ed McQuarrie.
• Students interested in the advanced coordinated studies pro gram, Wealth and Power, (W,
Sp 1977) are encouraged to at tend the planning meeting to be
held Tues. Nov. 16, Noon to 1
p.m ., Lib. 2101. Russell lidman
and Priscilla Bowerman are the
instructors.
• The Hunger Action Center is
accepting applications and pro p~sals from persons and groups
With experience in economic
studies, market research tech niques: and report writing inter ested In preparing a report on
community food preservation
centers. Level of payment is negotiable. Contact The Hunger
Action Center, Sem . Bldg. 3122.

• On Tuesday, November 16 Irwin Silber, the executive editor
of the Guardian newspaper will
be speaking at Evergreen.' The
Guardian is a national news
weekly published in New York ,
City. Irwin Silber, who will be
closing his tour of the Northwest
in Olympia, will give a lecture
on "The Pol itics of Film." Silber
is sponsored by several academic
pr~grams and The Evergreen Po Iltlcallnformation Center (EPIC).
The event is free and open to all
in Lecture Hall One at 7:30 p .m .
• In 1885 the Chautauqua Press
was born . It issued pamphlets on
poetry , art. h istory, philosophy,
theol ogy, fiction, astronomy
fo lk arts and many othe~
subjects a nd modes.
In 1976 Auquatauch invites
you to con tribute to its first
issue. In keeping with the Chau tauquan tradit ion we want to
represent a wide spectrum of
printed forms.
Write us your myths, weave
~s your tales, draw us your
Images. We are the mirror reflecting your creative im~ulse
I. Give us your new words to a~
old song.
The deadline for submission is
November 19 so get it in soon .
Bring your material to lib . 2614 .
There will be a box for your
work marked Auquatauch or
come Tuesday 4 - 6 and Thurs day 12 - 2 when members of our
staff will be on hand to advise
you.
• The "Chamber Singers" need
more voices. We're an informal
group that meets twice a week to
rehearse a wide variety of music
for a concert Dec. 7th . Anyone
who likes to sing is welcome to
come and join. The only require ments are that you like to sing
and that you come to all of the
rehearsals (Mon.s and Wed.s at
4 p.m. on the 4th floor Sem .
bldg.). If you're interested con tact Don Chan 866-6669, or just
show up .

past five years some of us have
tried annually to get something
gomg. But because ' of the increased modules, the number of
people on campus in the evenings
has exploded, and I think a coffeehouse can be successful now"
Dick Whiting, manager ~f
SAGA foods, has pledged his
s~pport, and feels such an operation could be profitable now
More meetings are to be 'held
this week and next to set coffeehouse hours and other details .

• There will be a meeting for
those students inter.ested in '
joining the winter quarter Shakespeare and Writing group contract on Wednesday, Nov. 17 at
1 p.m. in the 2600 lounge of the
Library bui lding .
• Health Services is pleased to
announce the selection of the
campus physician team for academic year 1976-77. Drs. Jerome
Peterson and Chuck Buser will
be serving the Health Services /
Women's C linic on a part-time
baSIS, effective November 8
1976 through June 10, 1977.
'
Drs. Jerome Peterson and
Chuck Buser gradua ted from the
University of Minnesota Medical
School and the University of
Wisconsin Medica l School respectively. Both are presently
practiCing emergency medicine at
the Mason General Hospital in
Shelton , Washington . Dr. Peterson is also working with the
Family Planning Clinic in Shelton. They will assume the positons at The Evergreen State College Health Services / Women's
Clinic in addition to their posts
in Shelton .
• Natural healing study group
meets Monday In the Library 3rd
Floor Lobby at 5 : 30 p.m.
• Come to the first annual Pres cott College alumni party North west diVision on Sat. Nov. 13 at
7 p.m. Meet at the tennis courts
at Modular Housing for further
transportation. Must have authentic Prescott College artifact
or notar ized letter from Hal
Lenke. Call all Prescott College
people here and at Western
Wash . State. Bring something
musICal. This event is sponsored
by FOPS (Fraternal Order of
Prescott Students). For more info
call 866-5205 or 866-5185 . An other PRESCO production produced by Ted Rosenberg - Bib
David - Day De LA Hunt _
Peter Neilsen .

district encompassed all of Thurston County. Of course, that
was an outright lie. In fact, it encompasses only approximately
80 percent of Thurston County.
To the West, Delphi Road marks
the boundary between the 22nd
and 24th legislative districts. As
a result, those living on Steamboat Island are not part of the
22nd.
To the Southwest, the 20th
legislative district takes a bite
out of Thurston County just below littlerock. To the Southeast
the 2nd dis!rict snatches u;
Yelm, whICh IS also in Thurston
County. The rest of Thurston
County: O lympia, Tumwater
Lacey, . Tenino, littlerock, Eas;
Olympia, and Maytown are in
the 22nd district .
Another' idiotic error in Shore's
poorly-written article was the
statem~nt that in the primary
race MIke Kreidler beat his Democratic opponents as well as
Hendricks. In a sense it is true
since Kreidler had no Democrati~
Party opponents. In fact, the pri mary race was a one-on-one between Kreidler and Hendricks
with the pharmacist taking 9 826
votes to his opponent's 12,356.
And, in case you haven't
heard, the optometrist, Kreidler,
won the final election on November 2. The final vote was Hendricks 14,797 to Kreidler's 19,053.
Watch this space for more corrections in future issues of The
Cooper Point Journal, the newspaper that cannot tell a lie.
Stan Shore

*

*

CLASSIFIEDS
Riders needed to go to S'ltl
Francisco Sunday , NOI' . Nth
Call Ted at 866-5205. Hap.,
van will travel.
LOST PUppy, Eight week
old female pup lost while 011
campus on Friday. Oct. 29.
She is white and furry with a
brown stripe across her back
brown markings on her fac~
and a curly tail . Please call
943-7092 . Ask for Scott,
Penny, or Doug. We miss
her.
"Y,ANTED - Your opinion
of Publzc Interest" for student research program .
(Please) mail to 2141 66th
Ave . N . W. Olympia, 98502.
VIVIT AR Series 1 70-210
F3.5 Macrozoom with case
and 85 A filter (Can on FD
mount). $225 firm . Call after
5: 30, 456-5928.
MARANTZ 1120 Amp .
$350. 352-4941. ask for Kathy.
Anyone interested in des(~ nlll g
and bulidmg an mexpensive energy conservative , low te ch
owner -built horn e for the No rth :
]Yest call John 866-2757.

*

EJ's Grocery
and Tole Shop

*

Hours: 8 a.m . - 11 p.m.

Tole painting.
Supplies • Classes
• Party, block ice.
Slushy • Beer. Wine
• Picnic,
party supplies
1821 Harrfaon . 357-7133

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

• .. •••••••• ••••••••••• u ...............................................................................................

The Asterisk" and Cheese Libra1
WESTSIDE CENTER 357-7573

(233 N _ DIVISION STREET )

I

{,

Center for Literature in Performance
1/
by i(iroy Olson
This is the second year for the
Center For Literature In Performance. Last year its title was The
Center For Poetry In Performance, but it still provides essentially the same function. The
only difference is the focus of
readings has expanded to include
writers of prose as well as of poetry. This expansion is good, because it gives the Center a
chance to bring in a greater variety of authors, and also because
the Evergreen community will
have the chance to experience
more varied forms of literature.
Last year I wondered why the
Center's Coordinator, Bill Taylor, did not bring in peop le like
Allen Ginsberg or John Ashbery,
two poets whose work is very
good and who I wou ld really appreciate being able to hear. So I
asked Bill, and he told me. The
Center For Literature In Performance has been given $2,800
to bring in a uthors for the school
year 1976-1977. Allen Ginsberg
wou ld cos t one-half of that. So
instead of bringing in famous
names 'fike Ginsberg, Bill Taylor
is interested in finding quality
w riters of prose and poetry who
live in the Northwest. One famous writer that he has contacted
who lives in the Northwest is
Tom Robbins. He is the author
of Another Roadside Attraction

• Open every day •

10·7 Sunday
9 - 9 Daily

Poetry in all its Forms"

one's own writing. When faculty
I asked Bill if he would name
member Craig Carlson read last
some of the authors he would
.
week, one of his lines that did
like to have read if he had access
something strange to me was ,
to any writers in the world. He
"The sun is as hot as a radish." I
named five. "Adrienne Rich,
was
grabbed by it, because it
Clarence Major, Ishmael Reed,
took
me from the visual sensaAi, and Mark Strand."
tion
of
a brilliant sun, as well as
What can people gain from listening to poetry or prose? Again ' the tactile impression of the sun's
warmth on my skin, suddenly to
I quote Bill Taylor. "Poetry in
the 'burning of a radish inside my
all its forms is instructive. So
mouth. To relate the two senses
much of it has its roots in love
in this way was brilliant. When I
and knowledge, that it can't help
got home I tried to make up senbut be a catalyst for the people
sual puns, metaphors that crossed
listening. Poems create sparks."
senses, and came up with noth. The Center sponsors readings
ing that I really thought would
the first three Thursdays of every
go very far. This proved the difmonth. Notices are placed on
ficulty of discovering such rare
bulletin boards, above the entry
fire, and I was glad to have exto the Library lobby, in the cafeperienced it.
teria, and in many other places
The non-writing listeners gain
these notices can be found. Two
also . Not only are they enterreadings each month are by autained, hut they are given the
thors who are invited through
chance to relax and view the
the Center. The third is an open
world through another person's
reading. This means that anyone
eyes, maybe someone whose viwho wants to read their work
sion is very similar to their own,
can bring it and do so. Short
in which case they can relate and
stories, poetry, or journal writfeel vision be confirmed and
ing are all encouraged.
clarified. But what is more valBill Taylor, coordinator of The Center fOT Literature in Performance.
uable is to hear a writer who
Readings are held in the Lithere were people creating fine
sees the world in an entirely difand Even Cowgirls Get The
brary's Board Room at 7 p .m.
literature here in the mist. "Just
ferent way from the way the
Blues. Here is his response to Bill
Thursdays. Nov. 11, the day this
because it's raining does not
reader is used to seeing it. To be
Taylor's query .
paper is published, will be the
mean that people still aren't writtaken
into unknown spaces is
night
of
an
open
reading.
Open
Dear Bill Taylor,
ing great poems. It's all a matter
what makes poetry readings exreadings are a great chance for
Your letter found its way to
of finding out what your neightraordinary. For this reason the
writers to have their work heard.
this distant outpost. Many thanks
bors are really up to." If you
writers I would like to see comIt's a chance to experience the
for the invitation. I truly apprewould like to give a reading,
ing to the Center are writers
flow between you, your work,
ciate your thinking of me.
bring ten of your poems - or
whose
vision is different from
and your audience. It seems esHowever ...
three of your short stories from
mine. Writers whose W<!fk conpecially good because most
I have gone into seclusion to
the material which you plan to
tains concepts and images I've
writers who read their work will
begin making another of my
read, and place them in the CAB
never dreamed of before, so I
not know their audience, so the
combination pizzas. That usually
305 mailbox. It would be helpful
can have the opportunity to
reader and listener can experience
takes about two years . In the
also if you left a note at LIB
share their vision.
the work itself, without seeing it
meantime, not even drugs or sex
3216, the Center's office, to the
There are a lot of writers
as an extension of the writer's
can lure me into the public arena.
effect that you have left your
around campus. I meet new ones
personality. To view poems
But I wish you luck with your
manuscript in the mail slot.
every time I go walking. To all
naked is a good way to spot
program. And thanks again.
you whom I've met and to
those
flabby
lines,
so
that
later
What in particular is Bill TayIn Joy,
others
too I suggest the Center
you
can
tone
them
up.
lor looking for? "Manuscripts
Tom Robbins
may
be
a good place to meet
at
these
readings
is
Listening
that reflect what the writer would
other writers and discuss writing.
also
valuable
for
the
writer.
You
Who else is Bill interested in
read." Anything in prose or poThe readings are free. Later on
are not only helping other writers
having come? Well, Evergreen
etry, as long as the writer feels
.
in the year, after everything starts
by being a sophisticated response
students, staff and faculty, for
good about the work. It is defgetting real smooth, there will be
mechanism,
but
you
get
the
one. I asked him if he thought
inite that he would like to . have
a place in LIB 3216 for writers to
chance
to
see
'
what
works
in
anEvergreen students read,,if possitalk, drink coffee, and scribble
other wri ter' s writing, and to inble, alongside more famous auaway
towards the light.
corporate those new ideas into
thors at the same reading.

cRalls anb CR€atlons
Craftwork and Supplies






batik
macrame
candlemaking
beads, feathers
woodcarving: tools

and wood!

by Matt Groening
This is the second of two articles exploring some of the topics
dealt with in Susan Brownmiller's Against Our Will: Men,
Women and Rape (Bantam
Books paperback, 541 pages,
$2.75).
It is genera lly agreed among
experts in the subject - including victims, police officers, psychiatrists, and feminists - that
rape is not really a crime of sex,
but a crime of aggression. It is
commonly a brief expression of
physical intimidation, and the
forced sex is only another weapon . used to humiliate, degrade,
defile, and gain mastery . Susan
Brownmiller in Against Our Will
shows that contempt for women
is the main attitude in the rapist
mentality, and that all rape is an
exercise in power. "Women are
trained to be rape victims, " she
wr it es. "To simply learn the
word 'rape' is to take instruction
in the power relationship between
males and females ."
Brownmiller believes the historical fact of rape is augmented
by cultural indoctrination on all
levels, starting in infancy, and
resulting in the rapist and victim
mentalities. Fairy tales, she
points out, are full of catastrophes which seem to befall only
littl e girls. Little Red Riding
Hood, for example, is a parable
of rape. The message· is simple:
Stick close to the path, don't be
adventurous . Evil lurks in the
woods . Struggle is useless. If you
are lucky, a good, friendly male
may be able to help you . From
such mild stories a whole series
of distorted myths of rape have
been formed. The most basic of
these are :
"ALL WOMEN WANT TO
BE RAPED"
"NO WOMAN CAN BE
RAPED AGAINST HER WILL"
"SHE WAS ASKING FOR IT"
"IF YOU'RE GOING TO BE
RAPED, YOU MIGHT AS
WELL RELAX AND ENJOY IT "

KAOS Entertainment
Extravaganza Coming

Brownmiller dismisses the notion that "all women want to be
raped" by saying it is a belief in
the supreme rightness of male
power: because rape is done in
the name of masculinity, some
men and women have been led
to believe women want it done
to them, in the name of femininity. This is further boosted by
the claim that "No woman can
be raped against her will," or as
Balzac put it, "You can't thread
a moving needle." The implications of this are belied by the estimated 400 rape-murders per
year in the U .S., and the large
percentage of gang rapes found
in many crime studies' statistics.
"She was asking for it" is a
particularly cruel reaction of the
smug and thoughtless because it
shifts the blame .from rapist to

by Matt Groening

Jean and Del Womer
Westside Center across from the bowling alley

FOUNTAIN
~
~

.

SALADS

""....

The Power of Rape

~

''R4~

Recovering from its recent
weekend Mini-Marathon which
raised $709, KAOS-FM is now
planning a BIG BENEFIT PARTY
to take place on Monday, November 15, at Captain Coyote's,
a local tavern.
.
Musicians scheduled to perform (all of whom have freely
donated their services) include:
FIRST LIGHT, a five-person jazz
group, with vibraphone; JAMIE
HOLLAND, a female jazz vocalist from Seattle; BRIAN BUTLER. a folk / blues guitarist;
MOONLI T E RIDE, a countryrock band; and OBRADOR. a
seven-member Latin/jazz/funk
group.
KAOS-FM staff members said
the last time KAOS had a benefit at Captain Coyote's (May,
1974), they had to close the
doors within a half-hour because
the tavern was filled to capacity.
They expect thi& benefit to be
equally successful. "We have to
be successful:' one staff member
lamented. "This station is so
small all we can play are 45's."
In the general delirium and exhaustion from last weekend's
marathon, KAOS workers often
don't even realize they are repeating jokes tl}at have been .

victim . The belief that women
"tease" or seduce men into rape
through immodest behavior
dress, or looks is popular, but
again the evidence shows otherwise. The ages of rape victims in
a study of the Washington D.C.
General Hospital ranged from 15
months to 82 years, and inter views with rapists give further
evidence that the act is a show
of power, not merely a triggering
of lust.
The last maxim, "If you're going to be raped, you might as
well relax and enjoy it," is a trivialization of the trauma and violence accompanied by rape. It is
predicated on the ' ugly assumption of the ineVitability of male
triumph; and leads us back to
the first idea: "All women want
to be raped."
Brownmiller describes" the AIlAmerican rapist" as a 19-yearold lower class or ghetto male by
relying on the FBI's Uniform
Crime Reports. Sixty-one percent are under the age of 25; the
largest concentration are in the
16-to-24-year age range. According to the FBI, 51 percent are
white, 47 percent are black
and "all other races comprised
the remainder." Statistics show
that most of those who engage in
extreme criminal v iolence (murder, assault, rape, and robbery)
come from the lower socioeconomic classes. "Because of their
historic oppression," Brownmiller
wri.tes, "the majority of black
people are contained within the
lower socioeconomic classes and
contribute to crimes of violence
in numbers disproportionate to
their population ratio but not
disproportionate to their position
on the economic ladder."
Brownmiller explains the prevalence of the lower social classes
in violent crime with the self-admittedly oversimplified theory
that within the dominant value
system of our culture a subculture of the poor and black exists,
and its values run counter to the
people in charge. "The dominant
culture can operate within the
laws of civility," she says, "because it has little need to resort
_to violence to get what it wants.
; The subculture, thwarted, inar-

Save 50 cents
f

GAY
SO'S

l

Pl%.t.A
PAlI.L01\

Ready fOT party-time at the upcoming KAOS benefit.
used in earlier articles.
The music and drinking begin
. at 8 p.m. and last until 2 a .m.
Identification, of course, is essential, and the radio station warns

its friends that the tavern will
provide the I. D. checker, so
don't plan to sneak in. The cover
charge is $1.50, all of which goes
to the KAOS operating budget.

4046 PACIFIC
468-1580

I

50 cents

off

any size pizza

ticulate and angry, is quick to
resort to violence; indeed, violence and physical aggression become a common way of life.
Particularly for young males."
Some rapists have an edge that
is more than physical. They operate within an institutionalized
setting and put the power of the
institution they represent behind
them to coerce their victims psychoogically and emotionally into
what amounts to a slightly more
subtle rape. The hierarchical , authoritarian structure of many institutions helps foster a dependent relationship in which a victim can be confused a nd manipulated. In recent years the problem of the therapist "seducing"
and rap in g his patients has become notorious, but the same
dangerous potential exists in any
professional / client
relationship
and should be investigated more
carefully. On Monday,· November 8, a federal judge ruled that
sexua l coercion of employees by
their employers must be prosecuted under extortion laws rather
than the Civil Rights Act, mainly
because the courts would be
swamped with complaints if the
laws were opened up. Colleges
and other educational institutions
are also full of sexual manipulation which are rarely prosecuted
except in extreme cases. (The
ethics and problems of student /
faculty sexual relationships at
Evergreen will be explored in an
upcoming issue of the Cooper
Point Journal.)
Brownmiller ends her deprl!ssing history of rape with a chapter called "Women Fight Back."
She documents the backwards
rape laws still on the books in
most states, which in effect place
the female victim on trial for her
own morality instead of dealing
with the crime itself. Brownmiller suggests a simple, genderfree, non-activity-specific law
governing all types of sexual assaults as a first step in reform.
She believes prison sentences are
good retributive justice, but
draws the line at the slogan "Castrate Rapists," as some feminists
and certain conservatives, including Billy Graham, have recommended. Sentences ranging from
six months to 20 years, depend ing on the severity of the crime,
seem fair to Brownmiller, who
notes at present that the average
jail sentence of the convicted
rapist is 44 months. She ' also
condemns anti-woman pornography, particularly as exemplified by the movies Straw Dogs
and A Clockwork Orange, but
her solutions in this area are unclear.
Brownmiller ends her book on
a note of optimistic individual
strength. "I learned how to fight
dirty," she brags, "and I learned
that I loved it." She comments
on "the metaphysical justice" in
the vulnerable anatomical placement of the male sex organ, passing on the suggestion of her selfdefense class for what to do
when threatened: "Kick him in
the balls, it's your best maneu ver."
Brownmiller understands that
rape cannot be wiped out or controlled on an individual basis.
She says, " the approach must be
long-range and cooperative, and
must have the understanding and
good will of m:my men as well
as women.
"My purpose in this book has
been to give rape its history ,"
she d:mclud.es . "Now we must
deny it a future. "

Arts and
FILMS
ON CAMPUS
Friday, November 12
LAST DAYS OF MAN ON EARTH
(88 min .) A science fiction film
about a computer which is fed Ihe
tot.al c:f all human knowledge,
which In turn is programmed into
the minds of two human beings.
The print to be shown is ten min ute~ longer than the theatrical version rel ~ased in the United States.
With NO. 00173,_ a short, and SUPERMAN, a 1945 Max Fleischer
cartoon. Presented by the Friday
Nite Film Series. LH One, 3, 7, and
9:30 p.m. 75 cents.
Monday, November 15, and Tuesday, November 16
TIMBER TIGERS (23 min .) An
analysis of 'the devastation of natural resources by the lumber and
paper industries. And : THE EARTH
BELONGS TO THE PEOPLE (17
min.) A movie about the environmental cris is. Presented by EPIC
(Evergreen Political Information
Center). LH One, Monday, 7 :30
p.m . ; Tuesday, noon . FREE .
Wednesday, November 17
SINGIN' IN THE RAIN (1952) One
of the best movie musicals ever
made, with Gene Kelley, Debbie
Reynolds, and Donald O'Connor.
O'Connor's tangle-dance with a
face less dummy is astonish in g,
and should not be missed. Presented as part of the Academic
Film Series. LH One, 1 :30 and
7:30p.m. FREE.
IN OLYMPIA
THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES, the old Sherlock Holmes
movie with Basi l Rathbone as the
great detective and Nigel Bruce as
Doctor Watson. OlympiC Theatre, '
357-3422.
THE RETURN OF A MAN
CALLED HORSE Richard Harris
stars in this slimy sequel, fu ll of
torture and general sadism, with a
PG rating. Capitol Theatre, 3577161.
HARRY AND WALTER GO TO
NEW YORK with Eliot Gould and
James Caan. And TAKE THE
MONEY 'AND RUN, a Woody Allen
movie. State Theatre, 357-401 O.

LECTURES AND RECITALS
Thursday, November 11
OPEN READING sponsored by
the Center for Literature in Performance. Board Room (Lib. 3112),
7 p.m. FREE.
Monday, November 15
CHILDREN'S LITERATURE TODAY, a discussion with Olympia
Children's librarian Mary Ann Shaffer. Olympia Public Library noon.
FREE.
'
Thursday, November 18
W,M. RANSOM and BOB McGINLEY read from their works. Presented by the Center for Literalure
in Performance. The Board Room
(Lib. 3112), 7 p.m. FREE.

~

ON CAMPUS
Thursday, November 11
SQUARE DANCE with live bend
and caller. Library 4004, 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, November 14
FOLK DANCING With teaching .
Beginners welcome. CAB Mall,
7:30 to 10 p.m. , or later. FREE.
Wednesday, November 17
FOLK DANCING once again.
CAB Mall, noon to 2 p.m. FREE.
IN OLYMPIA
Friday, November 12
GYPSY GYPPO STRING BAND
Mandolin, fiddles, guitar, and banjo
contribute to "footstomping bodaciousness." The five-person combo
claims "The program is morally
good." Applajam Folk Center, 220
East Union . Doors open 8 p.m . $1 .
Saturday, November 13
MARY LITCHFIELD plays guitar
and sings, Including compositions
by Malvina Reynolds, with whom
she has s ung . Also : PAUL JENNY,
a s inger I guitarist with orig inal
songs. (Jenny will give a songwrlting workshop at 10 a.m. in addi,tion to the evening performance.)
Applejam Folk Center, doors open
8 p.m. $1.
.
Wednesday , November 17
FORD HILL, pianist from Western
Washington State Coliege, will play
a concert of music by Schubert,
Chopin, Brahms, and Glnastra. Pr&sented as part of the Capital Music
Club Artist Series. First Baptist
Church, 9th Ave. and Washington
St., B p.m. $3.

Events.&rE~~
CONFERENCES
IN OLYMPIA
Saturday, November 13
GAY MEN'S GATHERING Small
group workshops and presentations
on gay people's history , open housing and job protection for gays In
the Olympia area, organizing in the
gay movement , and (lavs in the mil itary. Potluck dinner too - bring
utensi ls. Sponsored by the Olympia Men's Collective, 3433 Boulevard Road. Noon to 4 p.m .
ELSEWHERE
WORLD SYMPOSIUM ON HUMANITY An 8-day gathering 01 12
celebrities in the" New Age" movement , including Buckminster Fuller,
Theodore Roszak, Pir Vil ayat Khan ,
Michio Kushi, Yogi Bhajan , Swami
Kriyananda. Lister Sinclair , and
Rollin g Th under . Spon sored by
3HO Foundation, a group of Sikh
students and teachers of kundali ni yoga. Hyatt Regency Hotel,
Vancouver, B.C .. Canada , Novem ·
ber 27 through December 4. A
group of Evergreen studen ts is
planning to attend and videotape
the symposium . Students inter ·
ested in participating should con·
tact the Information Center at 866 ·
6300 for further details.
ON STAGE
IN OLYMPIA
Friday, November 12, and Saturday, November 13
THE MIKADO, a comic opera by
Gilbert and Sullivan, presented by
the Olympia Chorale. Included in
the cast is Evergreen student Julie
Stewart. The Luther Hall of , the
Gloria Dei Lutheran Church, 1515
Harrison, B p.m. Tickets available
at Yenney's or the Music Bar :
Adults $2, student s $1. Information : 357-7105 .
Friday, November 12
AN EVENING WITH WILLIAM
SHAKESPEARE AND SOME OF
HIS FRIENDS A presentation by
John Tyson and Kath leen Worley ,
actors from the Oregon Shakespeare
Festival. Choral Room at Capital
High School, 8 p.m. $1.

ART
IN OLYMPIA
SIX WOMEN Stoneware casseroles by Marianne Kenady ; jewelry
by Penny Grist; paintings by Linda
Waterfall, Jean Harrington , Susan
Ch rist ian , and Haruko Moniz .
Through November 24, Childhood's
End Gallery, 507 South Capitol Way.
Monday - Saturday , 10 a.m. to 5:30
p.m.
THE STUFFED ALBfNO SQUIRREL ONE-MINUTE MYSTERY It
was after midnight and Roxanne
Weinman's birthday party was almost over. Most of the 'Ques ts had
dwind led off, but remaining behind
were shapely Angela GIOck ler, the
diamond heiress; Prof. Milo Deveenus, a sly intellectual; Aldo Anderson, a two-timing car thief; and
the host, kindly old Joseph Bemis,
ex-boxer. They were admiring the
stuffed albino squirrel which Roxanne had received anonymously
that afternoon , and 8S Joseph Bemis picked up the furry figurine for
a closer look, it sudde"ly exploded
n his filce, killing him instantly.
Squirrel shards shot into the other
unwary guests' casually-adorned
bodies, maiming most of them for
life. Only Aldo escaped unharmed ,
having darted behind the sofa when
the stuffed albino squirreo l was first
fondled by the unfortunate Mr.
Bemis.
Who murdenKI Joseph Bemla?
(Answer below)
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Center for Literature in Performance
1/
by i(iroy Olson
This is the second year for the
Center For Literature In Performance. Last year its title was The
Center For Poetry In Performance, but it still provides essentially the same function. The
only difference is the focus of
readings has expanded to include
writers of prose as well as of poetry. This expansion is good, because it gives the Center a
chance to bring in a greater variety of authors, and also because
the Evergreen community will
have the chance to experience
more varied forms of literature.
Last year I wondered why the
Center's Coordinator, Bill Taylor, did not bring in peop le like
Allen Ginsberg or John Ashbery,
two poets whose work is very
good and who I wou ld really appreciate being able to hear. So I
asked Bill, and he told me. The
Center For Literature In Performance has been given $2,800
to bring in a uthors for the school
year 1976-1977. Allen Ginsberg
wou ld cos t one-half of that. So
instead of bringing in famous
names 'fike Ginsberg, Bill Taylor
is interested in finding quality
w riters of prose and poetry who
live in the Northwest. One famous writer that he has contacted
who lives in the Northwest is
Tom Robbins. He is the author
of Another Roadside Attraction

• Open every day •

10·7 Sunday
9 - 9 Daily

Poetry in all its Forms"

one's own writing. When faculty
I asked Bill if he would name
member Craig Carlson read last
some of the authors he would
.
week, one of his lines that did
like to have read if he had access
something strange to me was ,
to any writers in the world. He
"The sun is as hot as a radish." I
named five. "Adrienne Rich,
was
grabbed by it, because it
Clarence Major, Ishmael Reed,
took
me from the visual sensaAi, and Mark Strand."
tion
of
a brilliant sun, as well as
What can people gain from listening to poetry or prose? Again ' the tactile impression of the sun's
warmth on my skin, suddenly to
I quote Bill Taylor. "Poetry in
the 'burning of a radish inside my
all its forms is instructive. So
mouth. To relate the two senses
much of it has its roots in love
in this way was brilliant. When I
and knowledge, that it can't help
got home I tried to make up senbut be a catalyst for the people
sual puns, metaphors that crossed
listening. Poems create sparks."
senses, and came up with noth. The Center sponsors readings
ing that I really thought would
the first three Thursdays of every
go very far. This proved the difmonth. Notices are placed on
ficulty of discovering such rare
bulletin boards, above the entry
fire, and I was glad to have exto the Library lobby, in the cafeperienced it.
teria, and in many other places
The non-writing listeners gain
these notices can be found. Two
also . Not only are they enterreadings each month are by autained, hut they are given the
thors who are invited through
chance to relax and view the
the Center. The third is an open
world through another person's
reading. This means that anyone
eyes, maybe someone whose viwho wants to read their work
sion is very similar to their own,
can bring it and do so. Short
in which case they can relate and
stories, poetry, or journal writfeel vision be confirmed and
ing are all encouraged.
clarified. But what is more valBill Taylor, coordinator of The Center fOT Literature in Performance.
uable is to hear a writer who
Readings are held in the Lithere were people creating fine
sees the world in an entirely difand Even Cowgirls Get The
brary's Board Room at 7 p .m.
literature here in the mist. "Just
ferent way from the way the
Blues. Here is his response to Bill
Thursdays. Nov. 11, the day this
because it's raining does not
reader is used to seeing it. To be
Taylor's query .
paper is published, will be the
mean that people still aren't writtaken
into unknown spaces is
night
of
an
open
reading.
Open
Dear Bill Taylor,
ing great poems. It's all a matter
what makes poetry readings exreadings are a great chance for
Your letter found its way to
of finding out what your neightraordinary. For this reason the
writers to have their work heard.
this distant outpost. Many thanks
bors are really up to." If you
writers I would like to see comIt's a chance to experience the
for the invitation. I truly apprewould like to give a reading,
ing to the Center are writers
flow between you, your work,
ciate your thinking of me.
bring ten of your poems - or
whose
vision is different from
and your audience. It seems esHowever ...
three of your short stories from
mine. Writers whose W<!fk conpecially good because most
I have gone into seclusion to
the material which you plan to
tains concepts and images I've
writers who read their work will
begin making another of my
read, and place them in the CAB
never dreamed of before, so I
not know their audience, so the
combination pizzas. That usually
305 mailbox. It would be helpful
can have the opportunity to
reader and listener can experience
takes about two years . In the
also if you left a note at LIB
share their vision.
the work itself, without seeing it
meantime, not even drugs or sex
3216, the Center's office, to the
There are a lot of writers
as an extension of the writer's
can lure me into the public arena.
effect that you have left your
around campus. I meet new ones
personality. To view poems
But I wish you luck with your
manuscript in the mail slot.
every time I go walking. To all
naked is a good way to spot
program. And thanks again.
you whom I've met and to
those
flabby
lines,
so
that
later
What in particular is Bill TayIn Joy,
others
too I suggest the Center
you
can
tone
them
up.
lor looking for? "Manuscripts
Tom Robbins
may
be
a good place to meet
at
these
readings
is
Listening
that reflect what the writer would
other writers and discuss writing.
also
valuable
for
the
writer.
You
Who else is Bill interested in
read." Anything in prose or poThe readings are free. Later on
are not only helping other writers
having come? Well, Evergreen
etry, as long as the writer feels
.
in the year, after everything starts
by being a sophisticated response
students, staff and faculty, for
good about the work. It is defgetting real smooth, there will be
mechanism,
but
you
get
the
one. I asked him if he thought
inite that he would like to . have
a place in LIB 3216 for writers to
chance
to
see
'
what
works
in
anEvergreen students read,,if possitalk, drink coffee, and scribble
other wri ter' s writing, and to inble, alongside more famous auaway
towards the light.
corporate those new ideas into
thors at the same reading.

cRalls anb CR€atlons
Craftwork and Supplies






batik
macrame
candlemaking
beads, feathers
woodcarving: tools

and wood!

by Matt Groening
This is the second of two articles exploring some of the topics
dealt with in Susan Brownmiller's Against Our Will: Men,
Women and Rape (Bantam
Books paperback, 541 pages,
$2.75).
It is genera lly agreed among
experts in the subject - including victims, police officers, psychiatrists, and feminists - that
rape is not really a crime of sex,
but a crime of aggression. It is
commonly a brief expression of
physical intimidation, and the
forced sex is only another weapon . used to humiliate, degrade,
defile, and gain mastery . Susan
Brownmiller in Against Our Will
shows that contempt for women
is the main attitude in the rapist
mentality, and that all rape is an
exercise in power. "Women are
trained to be rape victims, " she
wr it es. "To simply learn the
word 'rape' is to take instruction
in the power relationship between
males and females ."
Brownmiller believes the historical fact of rape is augmented
by cultural indoctrination on all
levels, starting in infancy, and
resulting in the rapist and victim
mentalities. Fairy tales, she
points out, are full of catastrophes which seem to befall only
littl e girls. Little Red Riding
Hood, for example, is a parable
of rape. The message· is simple:
Stick close to the path, don't be
adventurous . Evil lurks in the
woods . Struggle is useless. If you
are lucky, a good, friendly male
may be able to help you . From
such mild stories a whole series
of distorted myths of rape have
been formed. The most basic of
these are :
"ALL WOMEN WANT TO
BE RAPED"
"NO WOMAN CAN BE
RAPED AGAINST HER WILL"
"SHE WAS ASKING FOR IT"
"IF YOU'RE GOING TO BE
RAPED, YOU MIGHT AS
WELL RELAX AND ENJOY IT "

KAOS Entertainment
Extravaganza Coming

Brownmiller dismisses the notion that "all women want to be
raped" by saying it is a belief in
the supreme rightness of male
power: because rape is done in
the name of masculinity, some
men and women have been led
to believe women want it done
to them, in the name of femininity. This is further boosted by
the claim that "No woman can
be raped against her will," or as
Balzac put it, "You can't thread
a moving needle." The implications of this are belied by the estimated 400 rape-murders per
year in the U .S., and the large
percentage of gang rapes found
in many crime studies' statistics.
"She was asking for it" is a
particularly cruel reaction of the
smug and thoughtless because it
shifts the blame .from rapist to

by Matt Groening

Jean and Del Womer
Westside Center across from the bowling alley

FOUNTAIN
~
~

.

SALADS

""....

The Power of Rape

~

''R4~

Recovering from its recent
weekend Mini-Marathon which
raised $709, KAOS-FM is now
planning a BIG BENEFIT PARTY
to take place on Monday, November 15, at Captain Coyote's,
a local tavern.
.
Musicians scheduled to perform (all of whom have freely
donated their services) include:
FIRST LIGHT, a five-person jazz
group, with vibraphone; JAMIE
HOLLAND, a female jazz vocalist from Seattle; BRIAN BUTLER. a folk / blues guitarist;
MOONLI T E RIDE, a countryrock band; and OBRADOR. a
seven-member Latin/jazz/funk
group.
KAOS-FM staff members said
the last time KAOS had a benefit at Captain Coyote's (May,
1974), they had to close the
doors within a half-hour because
the tavern was filled to capacity.
They expect thi& benefit to be
equally successful. "We have to
be successful:' one staff member
lamented. "This station is so
small all we can play are 45's."
In the general delirium and exhaustion from last weekend's
marathon, KAOS workers often
don't even realize they are repeating jokes tl}at have been .

victim . The belief that women
"tease" or seduce men into rape
through immodest behavior
dress, or looks is popular, but
again the evidence shows otherwise. The ages of rape victims in
a study of the Washington D.C.
General Hospital ranged from 15
months to 82 years, and inter views with rapists give further
evidence that the act is a show
of power, not merely a triggering
of lust.
The last maxim, "If you're going to be raped, you might as
well relax and enjoy it," is a trivialization of the trauma and violence accompanied by rape. It is
predicated on the ' ugly assumption of the ineVitability of male
triumph; and leads us back to
the first idea: "All women want
to be raped."
Brownmiller describes" the AIlAmerican rapist" as a 19-yearold lower class or ghetto male by
relying on the FBI's Uniform
Crime Reports. Sixty-one percent are under the age of 25; the
largest concentration are in the
16-to-24-year age range. According to the FBI, 51 percent are
white, 47 percent are black
and "all other races comprised
the remainder." Statistics show
that most of those who engage in
extreme criminal v iolence (murder, assault, rape, and robbery)
come from the lower socioeconomic classes. "Because of their
historic oppression," Brownmiller
wri.tes, "the majority of black
people are contained within the
lower socioeconomic classes and
contribute to crimes of violence
in numbers disproportionate to
their population ratio but not
disproportionate to their position
on the economic ladder."
Brownmiller explains the prevalence of the lower social classes
in violent crime with the self-admittedly oversimplified theory
that within the dominant value
system of our culture a subculture of the poor and black exists,
and its values run counter to the
people in charge. "The dominant
culture can operate within the
laws of civility," she says, "because it has little need to resort
_to violence to get what it wants.
; The subculture, thwarted, inar-

Save 50 cents
f

GAY
SO'S

l

Pl%.t.A
PAlI.L01\

Ready fOT party-time at the upcoming KAOS benefit.
used in earlier articles.
The music and drinking begin
. at 8 p.m. and last until 2 a .m.
Identification, of course, is essential, and the radio station warns

its friends that the tavern will
provide the I. D. checker, so
don't plan to sneak in. The cover
charge is $1.50, all of which goes
to the KAOS operating budget.

4046 PACIFIC
468-1580

I

50 cents

off

any size pizza

ticulate and angry, is quick to
resort to violence; indeed, violence and physical aggression become a common way of life.
Particularly for young males."
Some rapists have an edge that
is more than physical. They operate within an institutionalized
setting and put the power of the
institution they represent behind
them to coerce their victims psychoogically and emotionally into
what amounts to a slightly more
subtle rape. The hierarchical , authoritarian structure of many institutions helps foster a dependent relationship in which a victim can be confused a nd manipulated. In recent years the problem of the therapist "seducing"
and rap in g his patients has become notorious, but the same
dangerous potential exists in any
professional / client
relationship
and should be investigated more
carefully. On Monday,· November 8, a federal judge ruled that
sexua l coercion of employees by
their employers must be prosecuted under extortion laws rather
than the Civil Rights Act, mainly
because the courts would be
swamped with complaints if the
laws were opened up. Colleges
and other educational institutions
are also full of sexual manipulation which are rarely prosecuted
except in extreme cases. (The
ethics and problems of student /
faculty sexual relationships at
Evergreen will be explored in an
upcoming issue of the Cooper
Point Journal.)
Brownmiller ends her deprl!ssing history of rape with a chapter called "Women Fight Back."
She documents the backwards
rape laws still on the books in
most states, which in effect place
the female victim on trial for her
own morality instead of dealing
with the crime itself. Brownmiller suggests a simple, genderfree, non-activity-specific law
governing all types of sexual assaults as a first step in reform.
She believes prison sentences are
good retributive justice, but
draws the line at the slogan "Castrate Rapists," as some feminists
and certain conservatives, including Billy Graham, have recommended. Sentences ranging from
six months to 20 years, depend ing on the severity of the crime,
seem fair to Brownmiller, who
notes at present that the average
jail sentence of the convicted
rapist is 44 months. She ' also
condemns anti-woman pornography, particularly as exemplified by the movies Straw Dogs
and A Clockwork Orange, but
her solutions in this area are unclear.
Brownmiller ends her book on
a note of optimistic individual
strength. "I learned how to fight
dirty," she brags, "and I learned
that I loved it." She comments
on "the metaphysical justice" in
the vulnerable anatomical placement of the male sex organ, passing on the suggestion of her selfdefense class for what to do
when threatened: "Kick him in
the balls, it's your best maneu ver."
Brownmiller understands that
rape cannot be wiped out or controlled on an individual basis.
She says, " the approach must be
long-range and cooperative, and
must have the understanding and
good will of m:my men as well
as women.
"My purpose in this book has
been to give rape its history ,"
she d:mclud.es . "Now we must
deny it a future. "

Arts and
FILMS
ON CAMPUS
Friday, November 12
LAST DAYS OF MAN ON EARTH
(88 min .) A science fiction film
about a computer which is fed Ihe
tot.al c:f all human knowledge,
which In turn is programmed into
the minds of two human beings.
The print to be shown is ten min ute~ longer than the theatrical version rel ~ased in the United States.
With NO. 00173,_ a short, and SUPERMAN, a 1945 Max Fleischer
cartoon. Presented by the Friday
Nite Film Series. LH One, 3, 7, and
9:30 p.m. 75 cents.
Monday, November 15, and Tuesday, November 16
TIMBER TIGERS (23 min .) An
analysis of 'the devastation of natural resources by the lumber and
paper industries. And : THE EARTH
BELONGS TO THE PEOPLE (17
min.) A movie about the environmental cris is. Presented by EPIC
(Evergreen Political Information
Center). LH One, Monday, 7 :30
p.m . ; Tuesday, noon . FREE .
Wednesday, November 17
SINGIN' IN THE RAIN (1952) One
of the best movie musicals ever
made, with Gene Kelley, Debbie
Reynolds, and Donald O'Connor.
O'Connor's tangle-dance with a
face less dummy is astonish in g,
and should not be missed. Presented as part of the Academic
Film Series. LH One, 1 :30 and
7:30p.m. FREE.
IN OLYMPIA
THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES, the old Sherlock Holmes
movie with Basi l Rathbone as the
great detective and Nigel Bruce as
Doctor Watson. OlympiC Theatre, '
357-3422.
THE RETURN OF A MAN
CALLED HORSE Richard Harris
stars in this slimy sequel, fu ll of
torture and general sadism, with a
PG rating. Capitol Theatre, 3577161.
HARRY AND WALTER GO TO
NEW YORK with Eliot Gould and
James Caan. And TAKE THE
MONEY 'AND RUN, a Woody Allen
movie. State Theatre, 357-401 O.

LECTURES AND RECITALS
Thursday, November 11
OPEN READING sponsored by
the Center for Literature in Performance. Board Room (Lib. 3112),
7 p.m. FREE.
Monday, November 15
CHILDREN'S LITERATURE TODAY, a discussion with Olympia
Children's librarian Mary Ann Shaffer. Olympia Public Library noon.
FREE.
'
Thursday, November 18
W,M. RANSOM and BOB McGINLEY read from their works. Presented by the Center for Literalure
in Performance. The Board Room
(Lib. 3112), 7 p.m. FREE.

~

ON CAMPUS
Thursday, November 11
SQUARE DANCE with live bend
and caller. Library 4004, 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, November 14
FOLK DANCING With teaching .
Beginners welcome. CAB Mall,
7:30 to 10 p.m. , or later. FREE.
Wednesday, November 17
FOLK DANCING once again.
CAB Mall, noon to 2 p.m. FREE.
IN OLYMPIA
Friday, November 12
GYPSY GYPPO STRING BAND
Mandolin, fiddles, guitar, and banjo
contribute to "footstomping bodaciousness." The five-person combo
claims "The program is morally
good." Applajam Folk Center, 220
East Union . Doors open 8 p.m . $1 .
Saturday, November 13
MARY LITCHFIELD plays guitar
and sings, Including compositions
by Malvina Reynolds, with whom
she has s ung . Also : PAUL JENNY,
a s inger I guitarist with orig inal
songs. (Jenny will give a songwrlting workshop at 10 a.m. in addi,tion to the evening performance.)
Applejam Folk Center, doors open
8 p.m. $1.
.
Wednesday , November 17
FORD HILL, pianist from Western
Washington State Coliege, will play
a concert of music by Schubert,
Chopin, Brahms, and Glnastra. Pr&sented as part of the Capital Music
Club Artist Series. First Baptist
Church, 9th Ave. and Washington
St., B p.m. $3.

Events.&rE~~
CONFERENCES
IN OLYMPIA
Saturday, November 13
GAY MEN'S GATHERING Small
group workshops and presentations
on gay people's history , open housing and job protection for gays In
the Olympia area, organizing in the
gay movement , and (lavs in the mil itary. Potluck dinner too - bring
utensi ls. Sponsored by the Olympia Men's Collective, 3433 Boulevard Road. Noon to 4 p.m .
ELSEWHERE
WORLD SYMPOSIUM ON HUMANITY An 8-day gathering 01 12
celebrities in the" New Age" movement , including Buckminster Fuller,
Theodore Roszak, Pir Vil ayat Khan ,
Michio Kushi, Yogi Bhajan , Swami
Kriyananda. Lister Sinclair , and
Rollin g Th under . Spon sored by
3HO Foundation, a group of Sikh
students and teachers of kundali ni yoga. Hyatt Regency Hotel,
Vancouver, B.C .. Canada , Novem ·
ber 27 through December 4. A
group of Evergreen studen ts is
planning to attend and videotape
the symposium . Students inter ·
ested in participating should con·
tact the Information Center at 866 ·
6300 for further details.
ON STAGE
IN OLYMPIA
Friday, November 12, and Saturday, November 13
THE MIKADO, a comic opera by
Gilbert and Sullivan, presented by
the Olympia Chorale. Included in
the cast is Evergreen student Julie
Stewart. The Luther Hall of , the
Gloria Dei Lutheran Church, 1515
Harrison, B p.m. Tickets available
at Yenney's or the Music Bar :
Adults $2, student s $1. Information : 357-7105 .
Friday, November 12
AN EVENING WITH WILLIAM
SHAKESPEARE AND SOME OF
HIS FRIENDS A presentation by
John Tyson and Kath leen Worley ,
actors from the Oregon Shakespeare
Festival. Choral Room at Capital
High School, 8 p.m. $1.

ART
IN OLYMPIA
SIX WOMEN Stoneware casseroles by Marianne Kenady ; jewelry
by Penny Grist; paintings by Linda
Waterfall, Jean Harrington , Susan
Ch rist ian , and Haruko Moniz .
Through November 24, Childhood's
End Gallery, 507 South Capitol Way.
Monday - Saturday , 10 a.m. to 5:30
p.m.
THE STUFFED ALBfNO SQUIRREL ONE-MINUTE MYSTERY It
was after midnight and Roxanne
Weinman's birthday party was almost over. Most of the 'Ques ts had
dwind led off, but remaining behind
were shapely Angela GIOck ler, the
diamond heiress; Prof. Milo Deveenus, a sly intellectual; Aldo Anderson, a two-timing car thief; and
the host, kindly old Joseph Bemis,
ex-boxer. They were admiring the
stuffed albino squirrel which Roxanne had received anonymously
that afternoon , and 8S Joseph Bemis picked up the furry figurine for
a closer look, it sudde"ly exploded
n his filce, killing him instantly.
Squirrel shards shot into the other
unwary guests' casually-adorned
bodies, maiming most of them for
life. Only Aldo escaped unharmed ,
having darted behind the sofa when
the stuffed albino squirreo l was first
fondled by the unfortunate Mr.
Bemis.
Who murdenKI Joseph Bemla?
(Answer below)
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Student Forum
Discusses Goals

Mini - Marathon
This Weekend

r--_~.'/---:::::~~-~;----'KAOS

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by Jim Wright

I

, ~

The new Wednesday Student Forum
met yesterday to discuss different mechanisms for disseminating campus information and soliCiting student involvement in
governance issues. Based on the assumption that "participa tion in gove rnance and
planning sho uld be an integral part of our
Evergreen experience," the forum is intended to serve as an informati onal liaison
between students and governance proc esses. To accomplish this objective, it
will provide students with a commun ications body (Student forum) "conducive to
decision-making activities," and consequently will enco urage student in vo lvement in decisions which affect them,
Essentially , the Student Forum will represent a "common space" for gove rnance,
through which issues can be exp lored and
discussed. It will utilize a grapevine approach in providing informat io n to programs through representatives and seminar delegates.
Discussion yes terday focused upon the
issue of represent a tion , as forum members
attempted to define to what degree they
should consider themselves as representa-

SANDWICHES
~lIb",uri" .. Spe"ill l

FOUNTAIN
I(·t· Crt'urn -

10 tJ ll tJl l.lI n g fbvllr ... .

. 29 l '

1 ~l~Hl r

.. .S2 C
76 C

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.I

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Shu",'. &. Mult •.. , . .. . .. . . , , . . . 81
10 tlJ"or ....

frl'!\h

C
mill.. (o mhinnl with yo ur

• We li se 12%
dair Y fres h but ·
terfa t cream a nd
th e fines f ex ·
tr ac t s , fla vo rs,
rea l fruit & nut s .

Ill' l"rc::J lll . fi llY an d fr esh .

SunrtlU~!oi

-

Rq !.u l:u, l ~ gc- nl'To us s\.' oo p s o f k~ (r.:a m wI th
l'ho i(l' of top l1in ~1.
76C

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t- J n \.' y I fr ~s h w hip ped crea m & TO,lSl cd nul ::.)
fu dgl', milk dl o \.' o l a ll' . strawberry,
b u l t.:r sl·o l l' h. l' drJll1t~ l , ma rs hmal low,
II l)t

Hum HIlu/!:ie .... . , . ....... . .. $1. 59

• We se rve Ger ·
man sty le c ut s of
mea f and fin e
domestic & im ·
ported c h eeses .

86 C

p, n"' ppl c. bl3ckbc rr y.

Mlld~ d:Ji ly. read y for Ih ( ls l" n il thl' fUll , J
co mbinati o n o f :1 nll';t ! .. , "2 l' hccscs, Icllu c c &
t Oll1dl O o n whole w h ~a l o r so urd o ugh brea d .
Dd ct.: la bk Slll o kcd sir lu in lip ac c ompa nied by
ll1ild Norvc gia di ces\.' & co ndimen ts.

", .. ,', . ....... .... . 6:J('

CIL!'>t n l1l l' L' " dll.lj((, 01 p op W1lh ~ " lIl all s ~:oo p s
(I f

Hllfl(h' man .. .. .... , ... . ..... 81.35

Buvuriufl B .. ('[ . . . .. , ......... $1.35

fJ\ ~l n ll' L ~' l' (~l'JI1l

FloHI. -

$1.79 ';' sile 99 C

"" lo ng , 3" high . ;J s llr p risi n~ L:o lllbin ali on o f
5al:llni. iad w ursi . veil I loa f. bolog na , Jarls b crg
Sw i-. s ~ h l: L""c , Nt... rv cgia , c h eddar , le lluce,
1u 111 ..11 0 , dn: ~s in g & !> ... ... ~n nillg..'i - all u n il fres h
French ro ll.

" rull V.I lb . o f impor lccJ Danis h ham , with
Jarlsb crg Swiss & c ris p !cttu Cl' o n a c rus fY
so urd o ugh bread .

Tuna Salad, , , .

, . , , 51.35

Dt'li c iou s combina tion o f luna , leHuee
cht'E'::'l' wi th (o ndimt'nt s se rved on rye

and

.89

Devil .. d Egg Delight .

Egg sa lad . a dev itis h blend a t s pices and mu s-

BANANA BONANZA
Thl' Top Banana - .. .. ... . , 81.20
Lho~o ta te, st rawhe rry &
va nilla nes ted e n a ripe bana n a. t o pped with
milk c h oculate, p in eapp le, s traw berry , fresh
wh i pped crea m , nlll S & c h e rri e s

3 ge n ero u s scoops of

The Small Splil - .. ........... 80 C
Idenlira l 10 the Top Banana , but with
tas (t! r 's po rti o n o f ice cream & topp in gs,

• For your co n ·
venience we have
snac ks, co ld pop,
milk products,
fresh bread, s un ·
dri es, c a n d y and
gum .

ta rd o n w h o le wheat.

.79

The Salad Sandwich ..

A tossed sa lad in a sand wic h : lettuce, to mato ,
cUlumber , gree n peppers with dressing .

Vegi Virtuoso

.89

:'\ vaca d o, bean s prout s, c risp le ttu ce a nd gar nishes on sourdou gh .
CWHom ,') antiu 'iC'hes nIH·u)"."

a

ul 'ui/uf,h.. ,

Hours :

SALADS

Friday 4 p,m, . midnight
Sotllrdoy & Su n duy 9 O.m ." midnight
Monday ·

( :hef'. Salad ...... $1.49
Made re ady to go! Assorted
meats & cheeses on a bed of
c ris p Ic1tuL:e, garnished with
fresh t o malO & cu cumber,
yo ur c h o ice o f dress inF.

Party ortiers
(Jl'ailnble.
('1111 ah pl/{/ .

tuoH'h .... n Salad .... 39C

(almost) ON CAMPUS

Light

&

lusc ious b o wl 0 1
h:ltu~c & t o m;Jt o, g;Jrn is h cd
with C ll ~ lImb c r. y o ur I: h o ic e
of dressing ·

Campus StOrt

at ASH

Visiting the KAOS-FM studios
on the third floor of the College
Activities Building these days
can be a sobering experience.
KAOS staff workers and drones
bustle about with brows furrowed
in worry, their professional radio
cha tter often punctuated with
off-the-air giggles of nervousness
and genera l alienation , Sure,
they still joke : "This station is
so small we can only play 45's,"
says one, "I wouldn't say we're
poor, but we are getting CARE
packages from Korea," retorts
another, and "The only tape this
station can afford is masking,"
sm irks a third.
KAOS-FM is in frantic preparation for a non-stop, on-theair MARATHON to raise badlyneeded money to maintain and
improve the sta tion's programming and equipment. The MARATHON will begin at noon on
Friday, November 5, and will
continue 24 hours a day "until
we burn out sometime after midnight Sunday night." according
to Station Manager Carl L.

Cook. Fifteen hundred dollars is
the weekend goal, and in order
to lure listeners' money KAOS is
presenting "every form of live
music, including classical,"
throughout the MARATHON.
Further listener support is
hoped to be gained from big album giveaways, auctioning of
goods and services (including a
live sheep), radio theater, a special Saturday night showing of A
Star is Born in Lecture Hall One
(see Arts and Events column for '
further details), and live cableTV simulcasts of music from Evergreen's mini-studio, Artists
scheduled include Jorgen Kruse,
Cathy Cohen, David Boggs. Alchemy, the Peace. Bread, &
Land Band, and special surprise
guests on Saturday evening , Programming throughout the weekend will vary widely, as usual,
but KAOS is making an extra
effort to insure especially distinctive MARATHON sounds, from
the rarest 1950's singles of Kidd
Rhythm to recitations of strange
poetry and stories .

II

The Chautauqua coordinated studies sponsors weekly student performances on Fridays at noon in the Library lobby.
Guest "stars " are also invited. Opera singers Bill and Joan
Winden are this week 's stars.

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RNAL
NOV. 11, 1976

VOLUME V NUMBER 6

How Did Evergreen Vote?

Super Povver

SON~

Fina lly . the forum al so co nsidered se lec·
tion of student delegates to the Pre sidential Search co mmit tee, but postponed action o n this issue until nex t week due to
lack of inform a ti on o n crit eria fo r choosing stude nt s,

THE COOPER POINT

by Jill Stewart

AM / FM·STEREO RECEIVER
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tive of the student body, Larry Mauksc h
po inted out that , "The maj o rity of th e
student body isn't inte rested in politics.
We don ' t represent them ." With thi s in
mind. th e group explored different opti o ns
and leveis of activity. Several me mbers
felt the forum s hould make an eff o rt to
get to individua l seminars, w hil e others
fel t that it s hould rest rict itself to bein)\
merely "access ible." lea ving the respon~ i ­
bil ity for ac tion upon the students them ·
se lves . Seve ral ot her members saw the
forum as a means of " mak ing peopl e
aware of the worki ngs of the commu nit y
. As a next step, st udent s wou ld be
pa rticipat in g in th ose decisi ons ."
The group al so d isc ussed different mech·
anisms for presentin g the revised Cove ·
nant o n Governance (included ebewh ere
in th is issue) to the commu nit y, Hea ri ngs
o n COG a re curren tl y sc heduled for Weunesday . November 17, at 2 p . m. in CAB

I
t

If Evergreen's Plainview precinct had
decided the vote in this year's election.
Republican John Spellman would be governor and the nuclear safeguards initiative
would now be state law.
Other returns from the Thurston County
Elections Office show that Jimmy Carter
won the preSidential race in Evergreen's
precinct by almost a three to one margin ,
with 58 %. over President Gerald Ford's
21 %. As many expected, independent
candidate Eugene McCarthy made a hefty
showing at Evergreen with 11 % of the
vote in the Plainview precinct.
Plainview precinct encompasses the entire Evergreen campus, extending South to
Mud Bay Road and East to Kaiser Road .
It is bordered on the North and West by
Eld Inlet. ASH is not a part of Plainview
precinct.
Of the 454 voters who went to the poll
in this precinct, perhaps 50 % were Evergreen campus residences , and another
10 % to 15 % were off-campus Evergreen
students. Student Paul Fink. who drove
the Evergreen van that transported students to the polling place, said he took a
total of 96 people to vote. Student Larry
Mauksch of the Informatin Center estimated that 100 to 200 Evergreeners used
the Information Center to register to vote
this year .
If Evergreen had had its way the race
for governor clearly would have gone to
Republican John Spellman, who gar.nered
48 % of the Plainview vote, while statewide favorite Democrat Dixy Lee Ray
straggled behind with 32 %. This particular race was broken up into small pockets
of votes for third ' party candidates such as
Red Kelley of the Owl Party, with 6,6 %
of the vote, and Patricia A. Bethard of
the Socialist Worker's Party with 4.8 % .
It is likely that Plainview precinct vot ers. who elected 12 Democrats out of 15
races, steered away from gubernatorial
candidate Dixy -Lee Ray because of her
pro - nuclear power and supertanker5
stance, and her bolster-big- business atti·
tude towards the economy , Ray also received a blow to her chances in Ever-

green's precinct when th e press began
characterizing her as less than responsive
to women 's issues . According to a Seattle
newspaper. the State Women 's Pol itical
Caucus described Ray as "unfamiliar with
and unresponsive to" issues the caucus felt
were crucial to women, such as sex discrimination. affirmative action, and day
care.
Often running in third. and sometimes
second place, were the disqualified votes ,
These votes occurred when a person
punched more than one hole for a candidate or issue.
Over o ne hundred Plainview voters
punched out more than one hole when
voting for House Joint Resolution 64 , The
same problem occurred with State Treasurer, S tate Auditor, Supreme Court Judge
Position 4, Thurston County Commissioner and 22nd District Senator, All
double votes were invalidated .
An employee at the Thursto n Cou nty
Elections Office said he didn' t understand
how people manage to double-vote so frequently. "I don't understand how people
vote," he said, "We came across some
ballots that had every single hole punched
out, others that had every hole in the last
three columns punched. "
The third party candidates who pulled
in the most Plainview votes were from the
notorious Owl Party, created by Tum water restaurant owner Red Kelley and
friend·s.
Although Kelley himself made a poor
shOWing in his race for governor. the rest
of his Owl Party entourage overran the
second and third place categories in their
races. One candidate, Jack "the Ripoff"
Lemon, was first runner -up to Democrat
John Cherberg in the Lieutenant Governor
race. capturing 18.7 % of the vote to Cherberg's 39 .6%.
Owl candidate "Fast" Lucie Griswold
made a strong showing for third place
with 20.4 % of the vote in the Secretary
of State race against Republican winner
Bruce ChaFman. who received 33.7% of
Plainview's votes. Ruthie "Boom Boom"
McGinnis lost the State Treasurer race to
Democrat Robert O 'Br ien , 17 % to

51.3% ,
The Socialist Worker's Party ran a
steady fourth place in almost every race
they entered. U. S . Senate candidate Karl
Bermann attracted the most Plainview
votes for the party with 9.6% of thE vote .
Democrat incumbent Henry M. Jackson
received.47.7 % to win in this precinct.
In the Insurance Commissioner race,
Democrat incumbent Karl Herrmann ,
who was soundly beaten across the state,
lost to Republican challenger Richard Marquardt. 22 % to 37 %. In that race possible
Marquardt votes may have been lost to
Archie "Whiplash" Breslin of the Owl
Party, who received 14,9% of the Plainview vote.
In proposition contests Evergreen vot , ers gave overwhelming approval to Initia tive 325 , the nuclear safeg uard s act ,

which was strongly defeated in this state,
The Plainview vote was 70 .9 % "yes" and
25.4 % "no" - a lmost an exact turn around
of the vote statewide.
Referendum Bill 36 was the most popular prop osi tion in the Plainview precinct ,
where 81,4 % of th e voters agreed th at
certain appoin ted state officials shoul d be
bound by state public disclosu re laws.
Loca l races were a straight s hot for
Democrats in bo th Plainview precinct and
Thurston County. In Plainview Democrat
Mike Kre idl er o ut polled in cumbent Jo hn
Hendricks for State Representative by a
three to one margin . Republican Jer ry
Gray lost by o nly seven perce nt age poinh
to Democrat Ron Keller. a nd :Jemocrah
Del Bausch a nd Del Pettit ea rn ed seat~ on
the State Senate and Thurston County
Commission respec tively .
Source
Eng US-WaOE.A.1973-01
Media
cpj0134.pdf