The Cooper Point Journal Volume 9, Orientation Issue (August 1980)

Item

Identifier
cpj0232
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 9, Orientation Issue (August 1980)
Date
August 1980
extracted text
-

Saturday night dance

----

Frasu is King of the Cool Jerk
by Victor Shames
"Three years ago, there was a punky,
nasty attitude in rock music," claims
Marty Frasµ, lead guitarist and singer for
The Frazz. "You were supposed to be mad
at the world, piss beer and spit popcorn."
When Frasu (pronounced "Frazzoo") ~
gan to play such good-natured 1960's
standards as "Little Honda" by the
Hondelles and the Monkees' "Stepping
Stone," local audiences responded enthusiastically. This Saturday night, August 23,
his popular four-piece rock and roll band
brings its peculiar style of music, ranging
from surf-a-gogo to hippie psychedelic, tn
the fourth floor of the TESC Library
Building for a 9 p.m. dance.
Members of The Frau. describe their
repertoire as a hodgepodge of "60's songs
modifiN to 80's specifications." According to Marty, his specialty is "digging up
songs by bands that only had one hit."
Most ot these "classics" are given very
unique renditions by the group.
"Nobody else does them quite like we
do. So far!" states Shawna Holt. whose
standout keyboard work is featured on
several tunes, most notably "Runaway"
by Del Shannon. Shawna is a classicallytrained musician from Hamilton, Montana
(pop. 2500), who began playing at age

ARTS

"Mood Sea~ ... watt'rcolors. etc
Faltys can bt- wen at the Gnu Deli
ust 31
A coll«llon of .anllque be.ids
1ewelry by Mary Ros.1 Wt>1ss and
Palaia will ht-

1.m

display

until

. by Dons
unttl Au~•
;,nd be.;1d
Consl<mce

AuMuSI 30 at

Childhood's End G.1llery. 222 W 4th
Thur,-ih1y, Augusl ll
W1ldlift> batiks by Bri..in Munson will be
shown at ttw lodgt' 1n Pumt Dtf1ann· Park
1T.1com.al on Augusl 21 lrom 7-10 pm
~turday,
August 2.)
The C1v1t Arts Comm1~1on 1s planning the
Stroll to the Bowl.'' a peoplt> p,aradt-. h' takt'

pl<1ceon S.iturd.ay, August 23 at 2 p.m Tht'
pc1t.idt'. put of '"Art Bowl," an ,i1ll-<by«lebrat1on of lht- arb. w,11bf,g1n .it the foot of S1ad1um Way and f'nd al Stadium Bowl ,n T<1coma.
The w,nmng car from lhe S«ond Annual
Artists Soapbm Dt-rby will lead thf' way.
Evf'ryone LS welcome to partic1p.ite. lndiv,du;iils
•nd orl(aniz.itions are encouragird tn ma.ke
b;iinnt>n,and costumes. form a marchmjl band
or 1ust join m For furtM'r information call
5Q3-47S4

Saturday .ind Sunday, AuRuSt JO A JI
HarborFair, Olympia's arts and crafts fa,r.
takes place al Percivals Landing. 4th and
Water S1rttl
August JO through XptemNr I
H.irbor Days, tugboiiil racn, .anhque boats,
schooner r.acn, .ind much more
August 29 through S.ptnnNr 1
Bumbershoot arts and crafts fair takes pl.ace
at the Se.allle Cenler Fnday is frff lo all, Saiturday through Monday is S2.SO a day for
adults, Sl for children and wniors (S6 for thrtt
days, S2 child~n and seniors). All t'Yents are
inducted ,n tlw admission ftt.
Some of the musicians scheduled lo J)fffonn
are jau flutist Paul Horn (Friday night for
fr"ff:); Emmylou Harris and the Art Enwmb"°
of Chicago (Saturday). Jdf Lorber Fusion, Tlw
Blun Show with Paul ButterHekl and Martin
Mull (Sunday); and Chuck Berry (Monday).
For more information about ticke'b and
Innes, ca.11the Bumbershoot offia at 625◄275.
Xptffllber 16 throua,h l8
The international touring company production of the Broadway 10und and light otravaganu, "Beatlemania,"
comes to Seat1le'1
Moore Theatre for a two-wttk run ~nning
Tunday, ~tffl'lhff
16. Haikd for Its a.mbitiou, audio-vi,ual
production techniques,
"Butlnnania'' is a vehicle of 10n~ writtm by

three.
Also in the band are Lyn Paulson, the
very dependable bass player, and John the
drummer, who only joined The Frau in
the past year. 'We used to have a girl
drummer named Bridget," explains Marty.
"One night someone in the audience stole
her purse. and she quit the group."

John Lennon .ind Paul McCartDt')' .ind ~rlof'lnfO by four young impenonators in a collage of 1960's imaguy pro;e,cted in slides, film
chps ilnd words lh.it blttp headlines of lhe
period in moving lights.
Showtimes .are set for 8 p.m. Tuesday
through Sunday. September lb-UI. Matintts
an.- scheduled for 2 p.m. on Saturday, and
Sundays. Tichts for tht' Northwest Releasing
prl'S('nl.alion art' on sale .at Tlw Ticket Pl.ace
<1tthr downtown Bon and usual outlets.
MUSIC

Thursday, Auiust 21
Kerry Leuner, Marc B.arr«a and Stoe Petrrs
will perform '"After-Dinner Music'· Thursday,
Augusl 21 al 8:30 p.m. in the colftthouM,
th1rd floor CAB. Steve Peters. of Customtt
Serv1C't', will play ··non-juz" improvisations
tor electric guitar. Marc Barreca, of Young
Soenti,t, arid Kerry Leimer will perform oie«-5
h,r synthni~rs
and piacno. Admission frtt.
I riday, August 22
Friday·s noon concert in Sylvester Park features Obrador, Olympia's 7-piece Latin-jazz
t-ns,emble.
The downtown Olympi.i "Music in the Park"
-.t'nes is pf'f'Sented by Olympia RtUOAT and
tht- Capital A~a A'5(.'11Clation
for th. Perform'"~ Arts each Friday noon this summer.
Sill Horovitz Trio, modem jazz from Nn.
York, will be in concert al the Cnu Deli at
Q p.m. Admission is S2.
Monday, Augwt 25
Joan Annatnding will be playing at the
Paramount Northwest in Sean.._, Tickets att
S8.SOand S8 rnn-vird.
Frid.y, A29
Jan I; Dean will be appearing at the Paramount with Papa Doo Run Run. Tickeis are
S8.50 and S7.50 raerved.
Setunlay. Auplt 30
Jazz Cruise 80 with Obrador; 2-5 p.m .. SI,
8 p.m.•midnight,
Sl2. Tickets al Budget
Records and T apn,.
Thunday, Stptembff 4
Jan.man Count Basie and his Orchestra ~
tum to the Seattle Optta Home for a concert
at 8 p.m. Tickl!la for the Northwnt Releasins
t'Yfflt are on sa"° at th. Tkbt P1act at the
downtown Bon and the usual suburban outlets.
frN C0nCffb ln SutU.:
Fl'ftWay Park. Monday, Au.gust 25, 11 :JO
In the moming. Morrigan (British folk)
Occidmtal Park, Fridays, 11:lO a.m.
August 22- Tropic.al Rainstorm
Au.gust 29-lnntrdty
Jan QuJntrt

Frasu has performed with several local
bands, including Kid Chrysler and the
Cruisers, which also feat~
Randy
Hahsen. Hansen has since become wellknown for his mimicry of Jimi Hendrix
and his guitar work on the soundtrack of
Apocalypw Now. Marty's own energetic
brand of showmanship developed with

THEATRE
T unday, S.ptembrtt 9
"DA," the winner ol four Tony Awards including Bnt Play of 1978, coma to the Moore
Theatre for eight performances beginning
Tuesday, ~tffltber
9. "'DA," whkh pl.~
for two yean on Broadway. is a humane and
honest memory play which tells with gre:at
affrction and humor the story of a man who
comes home to Dublin to bury his falhff and
finds himself haunted by the 1pirits of the old
m.in. He then reliva the ~ from various
stagn of his early life.
Evening performancu are Mt for 8 p.m.,
Tunday through Sunday. Matinf/fti are 1eheduwd for 2 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday.
Ticket, for the play are on sarileat the Ticket
Place at the Bon downtown and the usual
oul~ts.

nLMs
Sunday, Augutt 24
'"Harold and Maude," a clasic film favorite,
will be shown Sunday u a bmdit for the
Crisis Clinic ol Thurston and Muon Countift.
The Olympia film Society and the Crisis Clinic
are working in cooperation to bring this refrnhlfll film b.ck to Olympia for thrir annual
fundraising nmt.
Showtimn for "Harold and Maudr" are
6:30 p.m. and again at 8:45 p.m. at the Old
Washington Junior High Auditorium on l..egk,n
and Eastlide Stlftts. frtt mrnhments will be
sen,ed at a l"«'t'ption brt:Wftfl shows. Ticket,
are available for a S6 donation at Rainy Day
R«ords. Budpt Tapn and Rl'COl'dsu well u
from Crisis Clink staff and board memben
and Olympia Film Society tMm.ben. Tickrts
will also be availablrt at the door.
"Harold and Ma\MM',
.. atarrina Ruth Gordon
and Bud Cort, is a funny, romantic and 10nwwhat absurd look at youth, wealth. the military, growina oLd, and love. Cat Slnftlf provides the musk for this drliahtfuJ film.
mMS ON CAMP\/S

Friday, AU
Friday Nile Film, prue:nt1 Fritz Lang'•
St.,l,t Stn.t (U.S.A .. 1945, 98 min.) 1Wrina
Edw.,.d C. Robinson, J... Bmnettand 0...
Duryea. Lana'• broodln1 rcmak~ of Jean
a.no;;, 1931 clusic t. 0.("TheBnch"I
about a loMly and ~ married man
who NI a diaastrouaaffair with a pn)ltihate
and frames her pimp for murder Wtwn.
Renoir wu more cona1 nfd with people's

Kid Chrysler. "I )~med to put on a
show, climb all over the audience and
don't give them a chan« to not like you."
When Pruu does "Cool Jerk," a song
originally tteonled by the Capitols that
eventually became a dance-craze, he du,).
lu,gu member, of the audience to a dance
contest-a "cool jerk-off." Saturday night,
the contest will be formally judged. "Ht
claims to be the best," says Peter Epperson, TESC Activities Coordinator, "so
we're going to put him on the stand."
Carl Cook, disc jockey for KGY, and
Thurston County Commissioner George
Barner will be on hand to judge the event.
Frasu is not to be intimidated: "I will
bring a trophy that reads, 'King of th•
Cool Jerk.' If the audi=
thinks there's
someone out there who is better than I
am, I'll give up the title and the trophy."
The Frau is expect<d to play "Tim•
Won't Let Me," "96 Tean," ''Expttssway
to Your Heart" and a television mftiley
that includes the theme songs from
"Hawaii Five-0" and "The Munsters,., u
weU as several othff tune from Frasu's
vast collection. Later this year, the band
will release its fint record.
Ticltets to Saturday night's dance will
be sold at the door beginning at 8: 30. The
price of admission is $2.

lKn, naturalism, and antkapitalltt
-themes.
Lang's vt'f'lion emphuiza
thtmn oi guUt
and paranoia with complex shadowy imagffy
in a Gl'ftnwkh VUJ.apwttfna. BecaUBeof cmsorship problems in Hollywood ln the 40'1.
Lang could only sugat what Rmoir could be
bu,tant •bout. but Sau-lot Stn.t lo ~
considered to l,,e orw of I.ans'•8nt,t Ammcan
Rims. Plu,f TIN "orialMI"
K,uy Kat In a 1917
cartoon. Lee. Hall OM, 7 and 9:JO. Only a
blatant about, but Scarlet Stred is p:nttally
considtted to be one ol Lang's finnt American
films. Pl\l.SlTiw "original'" Kruy Kat in a 1917
atrtoon, l.f'C Hall One, 7 and 9: 30. Only a
dollar still.
Friday, Aug111129
Friday Nitc Films prncnts Leo McCarey's
The Awful Trutll (U.S.A., 1937, 92 min.) starrins Cary Grant, lttM Dunne. and Ralph
0.11,my. M<Ca,,y (who mo diA<tedth< bat
ol the Marx Bros. films) won an Oscar for Bat
Director for this "'tcttwball'' comedy. Cnnt
and Dunne play a couple in the: pro<a11 ol
g,rttlng a- divoru who thm ubotqt
each
othen 1Ubo,quent alfaln. SuppoNdly, muchof
the film WU improvilKI with the dialogue
being written .u the: shootina went along. Plusl
Daffy Duck in To Duck or Nol to Duck
(19'3). L«. H•II Ono, 7 and 9,JO. Cuas
how much7
Fnd.y, Scptan..,_ 5
Friday Nite Film. pra,mta Carol Reed's
Odd Mon Out (BriW., 1947, 119 min.) otarring James Mason, Kathlttn Ryan, Cyril
Cuad<, •nd th<Abbey Thoat,. p1a,,..._ J•Muon lint pined inlffNtioNI
....,.,..lion
lo< hi, 1Ubllnw pafom,onco hen u on I.R.A.
1..,c1.,.who II woundld duringa honk robbe,y.
H, wandtn th""'lh the badc.u.ot, of e.u.,.
-i.Jng help from hi, xq,wnlancft,
but k
lttffll no one wants to pt lnvolftd. Though
the Wm own much ol Its stylrt to Lang's M
•nd Pabst', TIN ~ Ope,-. this is by
la, onr of the bat films by C..01 (11w TltlNI
Man) Rftrd. (It WU lffl\adc in 1969 M Tlte Lolll
Mon >rith Sidnoy Poti« in the Jam,s Muon
role and WU about a b1adtundnpound ludt,
in an Ammcan ghetto. lt c.amcnowhtn, do.
to matchina the emotional pc,wer and dinctoru,) llltill of llftd'1 oriaiNJ,) P!UII Mof
1M uaping IW,, a 1918 pa,ody of Shnlod,
Hol.,..
>rith Ooua)u Falrbonka a "Cob
Ennydoy" and .u ldndo of coaw Jobs. L«.
tt.D Ono. 7 and 9,JO. lut show of tho ,um.,.,. and the lut ON! lo, "still only • dolm .•
Fridiiy NI.. F'dms will be only a S1.l5 110rting

rtusfall.

-T.J.S.

-lNPUJl~NCE TBE CPJ ORIENT
INR.UENCE THE UPCOMING CPJ
ORIENTATION ISSUE!
To all interested Evergreen community
members, from the CPJ Editors:
Th• following list of proposed articles
for the orientation issue came out of a
large Olftting last week, and numerous
personal consultations. We urgently need
voluntttrs to help with writing, graphia,
photography, and production (but especi.tlly writer>). If you can help In any way,
please contact us at 866-6213 or lean a
message in the S&.A office or at our own
oHice.
Dudlina: Articles, 9 •.m., Monday,
Se-ptember 15; photos and ads, noon,
Wednesday, September 17; finish J.yout,
midnight, Friday, S.pt<mber 19.

ARTICLES
Oly Survival Gulde
-General housing guide
..Comp~ve
community services It
organiz.ations listing
•Review of clothes stores
-Revinv of food stores
-Review of laundromats

Governanceat TESC
-Governance, including 5.ttA, SIN,
Council, history of teach-ins, etc.

TESC Hutcwy • llacqround

TESC Survival Guldo
-Whue to go for resources

·EVOTp'ftlltrivla
-History of Evergreen issues and controversies, including p,-nt
-Review of last year's programs
-Sports at TESC
-General 10th annivena.ry history of
school

-Comprehensive listing of TESC's facilities,
building by building
-Student guide to TESC's curriculum including internships, contracts, etc.
-How to influence curriculum
-Map or campus
-Evergrttn A-Z: glosoary
-Library groups

Raaution
-Tourguido/map of steam tunnels
-MovieR·Local band reviews
-Outdoor recreation including ski areas,
hiking and climbing areu, swimming,
biking. etc.

News .. C..-al Int-Local politia; who and how
-Profilp and financjal histories of Truslfts
-Where does your tultion gol

RmMmbu, then are many ways to
contri~.
Many artlcla will require Input from many people, especially the
rt'Views. For inltancllt, you may not want
to review every restaqnnt In town, but
you could still contribute one or two. Or
convenely, you might be able to coordinate collecting mini-reviews from othon,
and putting them topther into a comp,.._
hensive whole. You could even limply
give us a call and offer to be • rftOWU
person, or put us in touch with a good
resource. The poui&illties att even more
endleN than this listi PloaMhelp!
-Ben .. Kathy

Orientationlssue..1980

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The Editor

is Appealing

by Kathy Davis
Hello New Students. Welcome to Evergreen. This orientation issue will probably be your first glimpse of the state of
·the press on this campus. Putting out the
school newspaper is a rather haphazard
affair, as I have discovered from my brief
apprenticeship over the summer.
Budget constraints mean little financial
incentive. Lack of direct academic support
means that my biggest and most importanl 10b as editor is to constantly appeal
to the Evergreen community to come and
get involved with the paper. Since there
are no real journalism programs here,
your campus newspaper is THE place to
be to learn news reporting, feature writing. editing, graphics and production. If
you have an interest in any or all of these
areas or if there is just one specific article
you have always wanted to write, (here
comes the first appeal of lhe year) PLEASE
come down and talk to me.

F

by Anne Richmond

I will be the editor through Fall Quarter, then the job may be available. I . I
would urge anyone who might t>e interested in taking on the position of editor to
get involved with the paper now. That is
the only way lo know what's in store for
you.
I have a head full 0£ ideas of ways to
improve the paper and our relations with
the Evergreen community. Perhaps the
most controversial is to give the paper a
brand-new name. My thoughts on why I
consider this a good idea are listed elsewhere on this page. 1 not only ask for but
plead for your response on this suggestion. If there is overwhelming opposition
to a name change, then we will remain
The Cooper Point Journal. However, if
the response is positive, the next step will
be to pick that new name and we will be
soliciting ideas from you.
I would also like to begin scheduling
weekly or biweekly open community
meetings to discuss the paJ)tr. This would
be your chanse to criticize (l hope,.

O

R

also providing suggestions of ways to improve what you don't like) or praise, offer
ideas, news tips or volunteer your
services. First meeting will be Wednesday,
Oc1ober 1. al 3 p.m. Galher at the CPJ
office, CAB 104, and we'll move elsewhere for space.
I'd like to get a wider variety of material in the paper. Why not poetry, short
(short) stories. reviews of not only movies
and books, but restaurants, events, art
shows, anything of interest? We want to
inform you about the candidates and
issues of the upcoming election. Local,
national and international issues could be
presented, as well as important campus
news.
These are just a few of the ideas I have
and I am always in need of more. Of
course. being still quite new at this job, I
am idealistic. I hope that this quarter will
mark a fresh and exciting new age for
Evergreen's newspaper. But it can't happen without help and encouragement from
the whole community.

S

b

feminist does not ·mean lesbian
by Anne Richmond
Feminism al Evergreen and Olympia is
inextricably associated with sexuality.
Most non-lesbian
feminist women at
Evergreen assume that the Women's Center is for lesbians only. The support
groups around town are labeled on the
basis of sexual preference-hetero, bi.
lesbian. etc. 1 am moved almost to advertising a support group for women who
feel oppressed by the demand that they
define and defend their sexual preferences.
It seems a pity that women's issues,
which should by definition be feminist,
are divided and labeled on the basis of
sexual preference. In too many people's
minds feminist equals lesbian. It doesn't.
Feminist should equal woman. A lesbian
is a woman, even if she chooses to spell it
womyn. It is depressing for me to realize
that the Only non-sexual-preferencedefined feminist group that I know of is a
men's group.
Until recent repainting, the women's
toilet at the Spar had a raging written

dialogue about the op~nness of the
Olympia lesbian community. It is a strong
and thriving one, with monthly meetings
that have been going on fQr almost two
years, and an excellent magazine, Matrix.
These are the positive aspects of the community. What isn't good is the emphasis
of the community on hegemony and conformity to a strongly political, separatist
and working-class revolutionary ethic.
Unfortunately, the monthly community
meetings and Matrix are the only ongoing
foci of feminism in Olympia. And although Matrix is a· Lesbian-Feminist
journal, the meetings, which are the only
congregating paints for women to talk
and exchange ideas, are UsbUffl. I eventually slopped going to them aher a friend
of mine was pointedly uked to leave for
her non-lesbian status, although she is a
feminist and woman-oriented.
This is the aux of the Evergreen/
Olympia crisis of mninism. Although
then, is a great deal of lip ...-via, paid to/
feminism at Evergreen, there is no strong
center whett women can gather u feminists. Because the lesbian communit)- of

Olympia has a strong commitment to
feminism but an equally strong desire for
lesbian separatism, a woman at Evergreen
or in Olympia is forced to make a decision about her ~ual
preference before
joining the appropriate group, and this is
the only way for her to be active as a
feminist.
This process is fatal. lf we, as women,
believe that feminism is the right, and the
hope, and the common bond between all
women, we must stop defining ounelves
as primarily sexual beings. and look lo
our common issues. As a fmi.lnist, and
lesbian of two years residence in Olympia.
I have seen more women disheartened by
the sexual-preference splits in the feminist
movement of Olympia than have been
won ovtt. Too much of our feminist
energy ha, been dissipated by this insane
concentration on our sexual cli.fferences.
In the end we find ounelves judging each
other by our n,lationships (or lack of
them) with men. I cannot imagine anything more contrary to the spirit of
mninism.

mud bay-pottery7'!i'i-7:21;1.

('/Jll'IS ;f'e,:fOIQ',

5'~ J 1.,hshir11,~tt 3/"~ t,/4 f151Jt

Stoneware Pottery
by Curtis Haefer&

'lite'BookStrne
~pea,.~~

106 l 4th

• Susan Rowell

Kathy Davis
Associat• Editor
Ben Alexander

Business Manager
Ken Silverstein
Production Manager
David Innes
Ad Sal..

Doug Riddels
Hurr~y! Hurray! To All: Randy Hunting, Ken Stember'g, Liisa Eckenb,rg,
T. J. Simp!On. Mary Young, Anne
Richmond, Dave Coble, Roger Stritmaller, Thom Richardron, Ellen Kisoman. Alexis Jetter, Peter Eppenon,
Kym Trippsmith, Jeff Cochran. Malcolm Stilson, P•t• St•ilberg, Jan
Lambertz. Dan Fanner. Rob Fromm,
Leslie Oren, Bill Montague, Eugenia

' u
s,
Martin. Grace and Orville Philip!On,
Stuart Smith. Russell Colon, Chris
Sleams. Doris Faltys, Hugh Bridgeford,
Killy Broadbent, Jell Stewart, Van
Shafer. Ken Jacob. Mik• Big,low, UW
Daily. Charlen• Goldst,in and ,o
many other people who contributed
and provided encouragement. Finally,
a very. very special Thanks to Shirley
Grttne for htt work above and be.yond
the call of dulyl
The Cooper Point JoumaJ 1, pubtllhed weekly
the lludent1, Iliff and faculty of The Ever~

~ ettr..CSelJBRARY
A DEUCAffSSCN
~

Bought. Sold & Searched

10:00 to 5: 30

EDITOR.

fO{

754-7470

Used & Our of Print

N\on -Sat

As a recent arrival to this, the secondmellowest state of the Disunity, you are
doubtless lttling somewhat al sea. Llke
any foreign place, Evergreen has customs
of dress. and language and action, that al
lint aim to discover the habits of the
rlatives, that you may in time be able to
becom• one of them. I realiu that this
may at first Sttm impossible, owing to the
complexities of Evergre,en behavior, but I
am confident that with lhe help of the following simple rules, you too may become
an Evergreen Person.
SECTION I, The external you. To
facilitate your assimilation into society. it
is essential that you tackle the externals
first. This way, you can pass, as long as
you keep your mouth shut, and observe
authentic Evergreen Penons in their
na1ural habitats, aiding you in the development of your own speech patterns
and customs.
L Wear hiking boots al all limes (except in saunas).
2. Favor funky lanner's longjohns,
either with pants or skirts.
3. Nevtr wear a rain po,ncho unless it's
raining hard enough that you actually
cannot se,e more than two feet.
4. Wear a small rucksack (the more
expensive the better) at aU times. Extremely l'thnic purses are also acceptable, but

NOlffll DIVIIION Sl1lUT
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g,.., State College. View• HPNIMd .,. not
_,ly
thoH of tho College or of lho
Journal', llaff. Advertl1lng metertel contained
hrlteln 00..

not lmpfy endof NfMOl by Ihle
loc.ted In the conege
Actlvlll.. &ulld1"11(CAB)104. Phone: lltl&-6213.
All contrlbuUon1 mu,, bl tlgned, typed,
dOublHand of -•
longth.
NamN will be wlthhtld on' requeet. The tcUtOl'I rNWW the r~ht to edit i.ttMW and wtlcl• f length, content, #Ml 1tyte.

newspaper.

omc. ...

only for males.
5. Ride a bike. or drive a pickup (1958
or earlier), in either case, the vehicle must
have socially-conscious bumperstickers.
6. Wear woolen things with checks or
plaids.
7. Coats, hats, gloves, etc., must come
from rummage sales, and look it.
8. Wear socially-conscious buttons.
SECTION II, The internal you. ..you
are what you eat" goes the old cliche. and
nowhere is this more true than at Evergreen. The eating-places, ban and coffeehouses you frequent, even the supermarket you patronize, are telling factors.
9. If you must smoke, smoke only
Indian Bidis, or Indonesian love cigarettes.
Home-rolled Drum is marginally acceptable, providing that you are suitably
apologetic.
10. NEVER use white sugar. If you see
someone using jt, tell them how bad it is
for them~
11. Use either honey. or sprouts, or
both, on or in everything you eat.
12. Drink herb teas. This is most effective ii you picked th• herbs yourself. If
you want to make an impression, but
know nothing of botany, get some,hay
from a farmer, chop it fine and make tea
out of that. Or. you can use dried
sprouts. Either way. call it Alfalfa.
13. E:tt in places that have hand-thrown
pottery and/or decor leaning heavily

towards bare wood. Carpets on the walls
(Pakistani or Persian) are a good bet also.
14. Drink imporled beer.
15. Be a strict form of vegetarian.
SECTION Ill, Language and behavior.
Nothing is as difficult to master as this.
Don't try to master these all at once.
Work them in slowly, otherwise you run
the risk of looking like a fool and a
phoney, two things that true Evergreen
Persons never are.
16. Have a sauna every day. If you are
female, refer to saunas taken with one or
more female friends as "sister sweats."
17. "Mellow" is one of the most important words in your Of!\,\,' vocabulary.
Strive Jo be mellow at all times. Have
mellow friends. mellow times, listen to
mellow music. Mellow often means boring, so if you find you have nothing to
say, mention that you are feeling "real
mellow."
18. When expressing extremes. use the
adverb "real," e.g .. "real good," "real
bad." Do not say "reatly." It is Eastern.
uptight, and un-mellow.
19. Hug people constantly.
20. When talking to one other person.
stanc.! fa'ce-to-face, each person lightly
holding the other's anns just above 1he
elbow. This is especially g()('ld if it blocks
traffic, pedestrian or vehicular. Look
fixedly into each other's eyes.
With these basic 20 rules. you will be

indistinguishable from most of the other
Evergreen Persons. For those who wish to
pursue their conversion further, I have
appended a brief list of advanced rules,
which may be expanded at a later date. if
there is sufficient demand. However, the
basic course should be sufficient for at
least three Evergreen quarters.
ADVANCED RULES AND THINGS I
FORGOT, These things may be attempted
at any time. mastery of the 20 rules is not
obligatory before you try these. A good
grasp of "mellow" and the hug may be
useful, howeYer.
A) Hike, or climb mountains. at every
opportunity.
B) Get up al 5,30 A.M. to watch the
sun rise while you are out running: tell
everyone about it.
C) Live in a tipi or a handmade shack
tor an entire winter
D) Spend the year in Alaska.
E) Join Greenpeace, Crabshell, Amnes:y
International. Radical~bians, etc. etc.
F. Read '·Another Roadside Allrartior •
"hotopia."
'Illumina1us" and anything by
Ken·Kesey. Believe everything they say.
G) Develop hypoglycemia
H) Mell(lwness is slowly being replacrd
by New Waveishness. At this point, any
pn..,ilinn on a line drawn from Jackson
Br11wneto the B-52's is acceptable, but btawJre nf current trends. and update your
aclivit,c,;; <teu1rdinKIY

The following positiont are available
on the staff of the Cooper Point Journal:
Bu!dness Manager: The business
manager is responsible for the financial
health of the CPJ. This includes hiring
an advertising staff, approving ad conSeveral people involved with the
who have worked on the CPJ for as
tracts and all liabilities that the paper
Cooper Point Journal. past and present.
lonR as two years will be moving on
may incur, preparing billing statements,
have been contemplating the idea of
and a group of brand-new editors and
maintaining a file system and preparing
changing the name of the paper. The
writers will be taking over. These
quarterly budget statements. The busiCPJ got its name about seven years
people are going to have fresh new
ness manager is responsible for the disago. It was a decision made entirely by
ideas concerning what the paper is all
tribution of the paper and maintaining
the staff of that time and there are a about.
3. Finally, why not1H Evergreen as
the archives. Applicants should be
variety of stories, of varying believan institution is supposed to encourage
familiar with basic accounting skills,
ability, as to how the name was chosen
change and growth. The school has
typing and budg~ting and have ability
and why. This time we would prefer
changed and grown considerably in tht>
to supervise ad persoMel. Pay is $3.35
that IF a name change occurs, it be by
last few years and so has the paper
per hour for 15 hours per week. Applithe general concensus of and with a
Why not a new name to renect the
cants should contact Ellen Kissman in
good deal of input from the whole
progress1
CAB 305. The business manager will
student body.
We request and encourage response
be hired by the Publications Board.
Here are some reasons why a name
to this suggestton from any and all
AMociate Editor (2 positions): The
change might be appropriate at this
member-s of the Evergreen community
associate editors assist the editor with
time:
Come in and talk. call up or write a
editing, writing, proofreading, typing
1. Cooper Point is actually a peninletar to the t>ditor. In fact, we are so
and editorial decisions. Skills required
sula jutting out between Eld and Budd
are those just stated. Also required art'
inlets. On a map. it seems that Ever- anxious to hear from you that we have
included a ballot. with room for elabomotivation; dedication and reliability
green is south and west of that piece of
o urerk Ieng --hotttos-u~~.a--..1ana__.cau11e,cr_Jlu:b
...
alllDL-,Lpart
of it ....Ihe___CP.Jration, for your conven:ence. If ou
feel more comfortablemaking
an
These art' institutional positions; anyis sometimes Sttn as representing the
anonymous response. fill it out and
one may apply. Pay is SJ.35 per hour,
residential Cooper Point community
drop it in the box outside the office.
for 15 houn per week. Applicants
rather than the Evergreen community,
CAB 104, or mail it in to Cooper Point
should bring an informal !ffume and
which is-quite a differfflt thing.
Journal, CAB .305, The Evergreen State
examples of their writing to Kathy
2. This fall will mark a major tumCollege. Olympia. WA 98501.
Davis at the CPJ office, CAB 104.
over in the staff of the paper. Students
Individual interviews will be scheduled
Tuesday, September 23 1hrough Thursday, Seplember 25.
S~o■14 tlleCPJtet a MW nae?
Production Asoistant, The producyes
no
tion assistant will assist tht production
■ape, if
managei; with graphic coordination, ad
design and production and layout.
Skills n,quired are photography. illustration and layout. This is a works ■11Htions
study position; you must be workstudy qualified lo apply. Pay is S3.35
per hour, for 15 hours per wttk. Applicants should bring an informal
mume and examples of their work
(photos and illustrations) to David
Innes al the CPJ office, CAB 104.

Cooper Point Journal

D

D

Page 5 CPJ Orientation Issue

Page 4 CPJ Orientation Issue

Staffers build home by themselves
bv Kathy Davis

They were concerned that, with the
housing crunch on ancf interest rates high,
young people today would not be able to
own their own homes. "How can a young
strong couple ever be property owners
and gel $12-15,CXX)together for a down
payment on a houser he wondered aloud.
Grace and Orville Philipson have
worked at Evergreen since 1972. For the
past three years, their weekend project
has been to build a log cabin, by themselves. "We wanted to see if two people
could do it alone," said Grace, and Orville
added t~at they al,j() wondered about such
things as "what interference there would
be with codes and how tKhnical the skills
are.
"But," she said, ·'it's been a fun project
too."
If any two people are qualified for such
an undertaking, it is Crace and Orville.
She works in Interlibrary Loan, where she
(as well as the rest 0£ us) has access to
almost any book in any library in the
country. He instructs students in metalworking skills in the Metal Shop in Lab II
annex. He also has a degree in education
and one in industrial technology.
Both were born in Canada to American
parents and grew up in Spokane. Before
moving to western Washington 8 years
ago, Orville spent some time as a carpenter and then, for 32 years, he was a superinlendent of aircraft maintenance. Grace
worked at the library of Eastern Washmgton State College in Cheney.
"When we were living in Cheney," said
Grace, "I saw the blueprint drawings for
the college here and I said, 'Someday I
want to go to Olympia and work at Evergreen!' •• When Orville received a medical
retirement, the time seemed right for a
change. so to Olympia and Evergreen
they came.

Grace has worked at different positions
but always in the library because she said,
'That's the kind of work I like." Orville
worked for maintenance his first two
years at Evergreen. His curre:nt job in the
metal shop involves maintaining the
equipment there md teaching all types of
crafts and trades like welding, sheet metal.
casting and use of metal tools. Sometime-.
he teaches modules; sometimes his instruction is part of an art, science or
energy program. He also helps musicians
repair their instruments and does repairs
for media services.
In the past eight years, the Philipsons
have seen Evergreen go through many
developmental changes. "Evergreen has
changed a lot in its whole aspect," said
Grace. "It's become more traditional, but
the ways in which it's become more traditional have been all for the better. And
other schools have become more like

Evergreen, so there's a meeting ground in
the middle," Neither thinl<s th•t the college is going to sell out and conform more
and more to a traditional educational
system. "I think Evergrttn now is a pretty
wonderful place: and other schools are
going to try to copy it," added Grace.
In their travels, especially in eastern
Washington, they have run into many
people who have misconceptions about
Evergreen. 'There: is nothing more competitive for the states' money than education," said Orville. 'They see our funds
and say, Well, you've got this that we
haven't' and you can tell they're: jealous.
Of course, Evergreen costs more: for each
student and they feel some resentment of
that." But he doesn't mind when others
start to criticize because he said, 'Then I
can sell Evergreen. I don't think we have
to defend it, all we have to do is state the
facts."

Study options unique at TESC
by Rob Fromm
There are actually six modes of study
poc;s1bleat Evergreen: Basic Programs.
Coord1naled Studies, Group Contracts,
Individual Learning Contracls, Internships
anJ Par1-t1me Studies. Another option 1s
to put together a learnmg package which
1s some combination of the above. Two
ot the most dislmguishmg characteristics
ol education al Evergreen are the interd1'>c1plinaryapproach and the emphasis
on self-motivation, or as ii is usually ref<-rred to. students taking responsibility
for their own roucation.
The best in-depth data available on the
slructure of learning at Evergreen can be
found in the college catalog or obtained
from Academic Advising, Library 1221,
866-6312. Also refer to the Welcome
J
News and the Audemic Programs
supplement.
BASIC PROGRAMS are designed to
help students 1ust beginning college. They
emphasize interdisciplinary study, writing,
reading and seminaring skills-all revolving around a central lheme or issue. They
consist of 60-100 students and 5-6 faculty
from different fields. Basic Programs
offered this year are Society and the
Cumputer, Health, Individual and the
Community, Political Economy; Outdoor
Education; Re-Introduction to Education;
Great Books of the Western World:

activitie-;, lt>arningobjectives, type and
frequency of academic support' and indudes such details as previous experience
in the field ol study, and date of completion of all evaluations.
Being as concrete and specific as pos~ible is important when doing reconnais-.anct>for your con.tract, so be sure lo
clarify your educational desires to your",('lfbefore attempting to negotiate with a
prospective sponsor. Fall contract faculty
~ponsors are Lee Anderson, Tom Foote,
Wmi Ingram, Paul Sparks, Sid White an<.
Earle McNeil. Staff members Of they are
.igreeable) can also sponsor stud~nt contracts. Finding the right sponsor for your
nttds ts paramount to the success of your
contract, so hunt around until all possible
resources have been explored before making a decision. SoTTletimesfaculty already
teaching a Group Contract or other pro~rams can take a few Individual Contracts
on the side-, so check around.
INTERNSHIPS are similar to the Individual Leaming Contract in that they
both require sponsors. Internships provide
practical experience in the ~o-c..lled ''real"
world in a variety of work situations.
You may incorporate internships into
Coordinated Studies, Croup Contracts or
Individual Contracts Internship opportun1t1esare posted on bulletin boards
around campus and listed in the CPJ from
time-to-time but for the full picture, make

Humanism and Science; and Explorations
in Perceptions. Additional programs. if
any, are posted at Admissions and at the
Academic Fair.
COORDINATED STIJOIES •tt similar
in make-up to Basic Programs but are: intended for intermediate level students.
GROUP CONTRACTS •tt • mode of
study in a specialized field, with 20-40
students and one or two faculty members
entering into a learning contract together
(essentially a written agreement concerning learning objectives and program procedures which all members must sign).
In all of the above-mentioned types of
programs, a· typical week of study will
include some large group lectures and/or
workshops and seminars in small groups
with one faculty member facilitating each
seminar.
INDIVIDUAL LEARNING
CONTRACTS enable students to design
their own course of study. Contracts are
the product of negotiation between a
contract sponsor and a student. Academic
Advising has guidelines available: for
writing Leaming Contracts. You should
obtain this sheet (which wiU be included
in the new Academic Resource Guide, or
ARC. Every student should have one of
these.) and a copy of the contract form
from the Registrar's Office before beginl"Unga search for a sponsor. Basically, the
contract defines specific materials and

On Evergreen's 10th anniversary
Crace added, "We've been able to do
tlia1 a lot of times, change people's
criticism of the school comes from within
Washington State. 'We hear a lot of good
comments about Evergreen when we meet
somebody £ram back East. They always
say 'Oh, we know about Evergreen.' They
Mow better things about it than people in
our state do. I think Evergreen has a big
job ahead of it in promoting Evergrttn to
the W,shington people."
,
About students at Evergreen, Orville
said, "They're easy to talk to. It's .di oneto-one, it's individual. It isn't a lord and
master type of thing. Working together, I
think, is the best way." He also said that
he appreciates the frankness of stude:nts
here when they don't understand something or disagree with their instructor. "It
isn't like they're being abusive or arbitrary, they just don't unden;tand whett
you're coming from-'Explain yourself.'"
About faculty, Orville says he has a lot
of contact with them and called them
"just great people." Grace said, 'There are
some really great ones here," then she
added, "and a few that are snobs.'' No
names were: mentioned.
The Philipson's cabin out on Carlyon
Be,ch at the end of Steamboat Island
Road is almost complete. The stove,
plumbing and wiring are all in and just
,ome finishing work remains. Orville
thinks that someday Grace should write a
book on cabin building.
When they're not toiling away on their
second home, they are traveling. Last year
they went through the Panama Canal and
on for a Carribean cruise. Before that
there was their trip down the inside passage through Alaska and the trailer trip
around the perimeter of the United States.
Where to nexn They are thinking about
Hawaii "before it's too over-visited,'' said
Orville. And I'm sure that won't be the
last of the Philipson's travels or energetic
projects.

an appoinlment with a counselor at the
Cooperative Education office, LAB I 1020,
866-6391. They are THE resource center
for Internships.
PART-TIME STUDY is a series of
evening classes, also known as modules,
designed for people who cannot avail
themselves to full-time programs. Students
in programs or Group Contracts may be
able to take one or two modules, although
often this is not advisable because of the
substantial requirements of the main program. Students with Individual Contracts
or Internships, however, can include
evening classes in their total credit
packagir more easily.
Students are symbolicaUy encouraged
every year to participate in the curriculum
planning process, although in practice,
this has not always bee.tisuc:ces.sfuUy
accon)Plished. Academic Advising·,
"Guidelines for use in submitting program
proposals to the Deans." is the best place
to start if you have an idea for a course
not met by the current curriculum. First,
write a clear, well~ined
proposal. Then,
get some faculty support in writing and
tu.e your proposal to Barbara Smith, the
curriculum dean, before the aMual academic planning retreat held during spring
quarter.
Curriculum planning procedures are
lengthy and complicated, so be prepared
for a long voyage when making initial
rontacts about your proposal.

History by an original greener

college fight song ever.
Evergreen's opening proved as unique
as its programs. The buildings were: not
completed on time. The college opened
with the first instructional programs
beginning on October 4, 1971, off
campus. Off campus ttttt•ts, which had
been planned for one week, wett extended. Study groups also met in a variety
of setting., around Olympia in faculty
homes, churches ard the State l.egulative Building, which considering some of
our first students, is probably why the
legislatun, has given us such • bad time

the ambiguity that accompanies exploration. Some coordinated studies succeeded.
admirably. Other, failed and wer, clissolved. But despite success or failure, the
students adapted to a different, more
challengingw•y of learning. Everyone
gave more of themselves, and bum-out
became a common problem for faculty,
students and staff.
A college paper, by name The Weekly
Drag, wa.s briefly begun as a mimeographed sheet. It soon became more professional with a new title as The Paper.
These were the direct ancestors of our
current Cooper Point Journal.
The first year also saw the beginnings
of the troubles th•t wen, to plague the
college through the following yean;;
budget cutbacks, lay-offs, a g,neral unhappiness with the college by the surrounding community, bad publicity, and
more students from outside the state than
from southwest Washington, the are:a the
college was supposed to serve.
The annual tragedy also began occurring in November, 1971, when Donald
Heard, one of the new faculty members in
art, died in an auto-truck accident. And
every year since, tragedy in some form
has struck amongst students, staff or faculty. The latest was the heart attack of
Dean Clabaugh. Perhaps we notice them
more because we are still a small community.
And every spring new crises arise. The
students gather to complain that they are
r\ot involved in curriculum planning. The
faculty has a session in which it castigates
eve:rything in sight, and calls for changes.
The staH has potlucks. In the spring of
1972, Rudy Martin and David Marr

ever sinoe.
~ the Library Buildmg w•s completed, the programs mowd onto campus
to find that 40 tons of books had been
!NI on the library shelves. It was •ccomplished by the llbrary stall, students, ,nd
voluntan from the community under the
diroction of Jim Holly, Dean of Library
Servica
The lint year w• one full of joys
countered by tribulations, of dreams rectified by ru.lity, of commitment to a cau,e
accompanJed by personal sacrifice, •nd of

issued the M & M Manifeotowhich called
for the redress of such probl•ms as underenrollment, (in which the legislature: later
took an interest) the refusal to a~t
the
fragmentation of knowledge as legitimate,
and faculty ev,lu,tiOI\$. They also
attacked the governance problem and said
the Committee on Govemancr had. t0 ·goThat the same problems were present in
1975, was •ttested by • reissued M & M
Manlfeotoby the same ,uthon. And
annually, then, •tt calls to change the
curriculum to re.lieve the pressures on

by Malcolm Stilson
When the Washington State L,gislatutt
authorized the establishment of The Evergreen State Coll~• in March, 1967, it
issued • mandate: that the college not be
a carbon copy of other existing institutions, but that it seek new approaches,
offer new options, generate productive
responses to the problems confronting
higher educ,tion and the larger society,
To meet the challeng, of th• time, the
Board of Trustees Rlected Charles J.
McCann to be pr,sident of th• college.
Serving with the pnosident wer, D•vid G.
Barry, vice president and provost; Edward Jooeph Shaben, Jr., Executive Vice
President; and Dean E. O,baugh, Vice
President for Business. Mervyn Cadwallader, Don,ld G. Humphrey ,nd Charle,
B. Teske were appointed de,ns, ,nd they,
in tum, selected the fin;t faculty, all male.
Ten yHrs ago, the planning faculty
arrived and began a quest for excellence
in education. The planning year was a
jumble of smoke-filled lle!'NJUn, brown
bag lunches, •nd touch football. From the
intense discussions and offside plays
arose Evergreen's unique instructional
program. A contest was sponsored to
develop a name for the programs, and
''coordinated studies" was the winner. The
prize was a bottle bf whiskey.
The deans and planning faculty selected
additional faculty, including females, who
formed the college's initial instructlonal
team. The e.ntire £acuity and many mm,•
ben of the colleg, •t•ll usombled for a
nearly wee.k-long retreat at the P,ck
Forest in June 1971. H°"' the new faculty
._,,. introduced to coordin,ted studleo.
They wm, •lso introduced to outdoor education in the penon of Willi Unsoeld,
who subjected thffll to rope climbs, cliff
swinging, and hikes of v,ried lengths.
When fully exhausted, they wm, indoctrinated by Al Wiodemann and Byron
Youtz to the glories of the g,oduck u •
mascot for the new college. Amid the sul>sequent bttr drinking and heavy diocu►
slons, th• techniques for the lint year of
tnching coordinated studies Wffl! developed. 1nort WH mott touch football,
SClne batkotball, l>Meball,
and in an unin&pittd moment, the "Gooduck Fight
Song" was born as the moot unsingable

faculty and students.
The curriculum has changed, and did so
even before the legislature called for an
increase in the student population and
better services for southwest Washington.
Coordinated studies began with the idea

that no program would be repeated. New
programs would be designed each year
presenting the students with new and
challenging ways to become educated.
The practicalities of redesigning programs,
faculty bum out, and time and budget
pressures took over. The successful coordinated studies began to be repeatrd.
Contracted studies evolved into group
contracts, individual contracts, and internships, while modules were developed
for part-time late afternoon and evening
students. A Bachelor of Science degree
was added after much outcry over Evergreen graduates nol being able to get th~
professional positions which call for the
B.S. and a Master's program m Public
AdminlSlration was added as the fi.rst four
master's programs.
Every year all were caught up in
budgeting. For in Washington State, as
soon as one budget is completed, the
budget for the next year or the next
biennium must be started. And this hydraheaded budget monster only contributed
to the general malaise and fatigue,
especially in the spring. For who wants to
figure out how many supplies will be
needed next year when the sun is shinmg
on the green outside and the swallows are
darting and dipping through a bright blue
sky.
In spite of all lhe pressures among the
faculty and staff, many or the original
pioneers are still here. Charles McCann,
the first president, was re:placed by Dan
Evans. Charles remains as a faculty member. Of the original three deans, two,
O,arles Teske and Don Humphrey. remained and rotated into the faculty. Fourteen of the planning faculty still teach at
Evergr,en.
And, like the swallows returning to
Capistrano, or the buzzards to Hinclcley,
O'lio, the graduate:s return yearly to Evergreen to renew friendships, to hHr of new
developments, or to see if any nrw buildings have sprung up like mushrooms in
the forest.

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MEG OiRISTIAN
ATTESC
An evening of women's

music wil1

ti.raid the beginning ol public concerts
at The Ev•rgreen State Colleg• this foll
when re-cording star Meg Christian appears for one performance only beginning at 8 p.m. Sunday, Septombor 28
in the second floor lobby of th• Evans
Library.
A founder of Olivia Recording Company of CaJifomia, Christian has produc~ two albums and collaborated
with other women musicians on additional records, most of which have
been, like her own works, devoted to
politicaJly and artistically exploring
women's culture and feminist struggles.
Tickets for her Septem~r 28 concert
are on sale now in Olympia at Rainy
Day Records and Budget Tapes and
Records. They're also available at the
Evergreen Women's Center and will be
!:.oldat the door for $4.50 each.
Meg Christian's Evergreen appearance is being presented by Tides of
Change, a TESC women's production
collective. Further information on the
concert-and on child care availability
and work exchange possibilities-a~
available through the Women's Center,
866-6162.

EVERGREEN

two professional dance com~rs.
two
local theatrical troupos, and a Canadian th•ator company, all ol whom will
present evening performanca in Evergreen's Communications Building.
Tickets for each of th• oovm productions will bo avail.obi• aftor Septombor 15 at The EvOJglftn Bookston, and
al Yenney's Music in downtown
Olympia. Reservations may be made
by calling 866-6070 wookdays during
regular working hours.

STIJDY ROOMS
AVAILABLE
Applications will bo accepted until
5 p.m. Septembor 30 (90eond day of
Fall Quartor) from students n,qu .. ting
study rooms for the Fall Quartor. Application forms are available in Library
Room 2306. Apply only if your noed is
extremely urgent to do serious re&eM'Ch
and program~affiliated study requiring
library resources. Invariably many applicants are disappointed due to a rash
of roquests. The committ .. (DTF) who
read the ~uests will mttt during the
first wttk of school and mako their
final assignments as rapidly as possible.
The assignees' names will be posted
outside the Library Administrative
olfices, Library Room 2306, by October 3.

A COURSE
FOR WOMEN

EXPRESSIONS
Seven professional shows, offering
20 performances of music, dance and
theater, have been announced for the
1980-81 Evergreen Expressions, the
second annual performing a,:ts series
spon!tored by The EvHgreen State College and slated to begin nexl month.
Jazz musicians Cal Tjader and Art
Pepper headline the series, along with

Women interested in returning to the
classroom after several years away
from school are invited this fall to enroll in a program especially designed
to meet their needs called "Reintroduction lo Education." The class,
which is open to both full- and parttime students, will be taught by Evergreen faculty. member Nancy Allen on

Tuesdays and Thursdays,' with sessions
avaiJable in the mornings or evenings.
Purpose of th• yoar-long study program, formerly known as Ajax, will bo
to "help women make the transition
from home or work to tchool," says
All•n. Registration for all Fall Quart,r
classos at Evorgn,on begins on campus
Septembor 24 and continues Septombor
26-0ctober 3 in tho Registrar's Offia,.

YOUilfGRANfS NOW
AVAILABLE
The Youthgrants program ol th•
National Endowment for the Humani•
tios will offer ovor 100 cash awards
across the nation this foll to young
people in their tftN and urly !wen·
tios, including many college and university students, to pursue non-credit,
out-of-the-classroom
projects in the
humanities. Th• deadline for submasion ol completed applications is No""mbor 15. The grants, which offer up
to $2,500 to individuals and up to
$10,000 for groups J$15, 000 for Cff·
tain high-cost media projecb) an, int,,nded primarily for thooe botweon the
ages ol 15 to 25 who have a ways to
19>before compl•ting academic or professional training. This is th• only fed..
"'al program which awards money
directly to young peopl• for indopmdent work in tho humaniti... The
humanitj .. include such subject an,as
as history, ethnic studies, follclon,,
anthropology,
linguistics, and the
history of art.
lf you are interested in the program,
a copy of the guidelines should bo on
file at the campus Plac:m,_entOffice or
the Office of Contracts and Grants. U
not, please write before October 15 if
you wish to meet this year's deadline.
Write to Youlhgrants Guidelines, Mail
Stop 103-C, National Endowment for
the Humanities, Washington, O.C.
:1D.506

HARVESTFAIR
llilSSUNDAY
~

Productive farmers and creative
artislS and craftsmen are invited to
participate in th• fint Organic Harv .. t
Fair slated Sunday, Septombor 28 at
Th• Evorgn,on Stat• Collego's oightacr• farm on Lewis Road. Daigned to
c,lebrat• th• farm's fall harvHt and to
acqUaint the public and new and ff'tuming studmts with Evorgreon's farm
oporation, the Harvnt Fair begins at
11 a.m. with s1x free, o~hour worlc.shops, sevoral houn ol free ontortainmont and toun of the newly completed
two-story fannhouso built largely by
Ev•'11ttffl students.
Fresh produce from th• farm will bo
on sale, as will baked salmon, nowly
harvnted cqm-on-the-cob, frnh praaed
appl• cider and pastry itotns from the
Blu• Heron Balc.•ry. Complot• delalls
on th• Harvest Fair-including information on ways farm~ and artists can
participate-are
avaUable from the
Organic Farm catttak•rs, 866-6161.


TOM RAINEY
TO SPEAK
On Tuosday, Sept. 23 at 7:30 p.m ..
th, Thunton County Citizens' Party
will bo holding their monthly informational meeting in th• Boan! Room of
the Washington Middl• School (Eastsid• and Legion in Olympia). Th• featured sp•akor will bo Prolossor Tom
Rainey of The Evorgreon Stat• Collego.
Professor Rainey will bo speakingon
The Riso of th• Right. 'Following his
presentation there will be a short dis,.
cussion o/ th• Citizens' Party. All those
wishing to find out about the nation's
nowest political party are urged to
attend.

SOENCEFELLOWSHIPS
FOR MINORITIES
Th• National R... arch Council will
again advise the. National Science
f.oundation in the selection of candidates for the Foundation's program of
Minority Graduate Fellowships. Final
seloction of F•llows will bo made by
the Foundation, with awards to be
announced in March 1981.
Th• NSF Minority Graduat• Fellowship Program is open only to persons
who are citizens or nationals of the
Unit•d Stat.. at the time of application, and who are members oE an
ethnic minority group unclen-.pl'Olfflted
in th• advanced lev•la ol the Nation's
science talent pool-i.e.,
American
Indian, Alaskan Nativ• (Eskimo or
Aleut), Black, Mexican American/
Oiicano, or Puerto Rian.
Eligibility is limited to thoseindividual,, who, at th• tlm• ol application,
have not completed more than 20
sem~tor houn/30 quartor houn, or
equlval•nt, of study In any of the
sciena, fiolds listed bobw following
completion of their first baccalaureate
degrtt in ICima,.
Th... fellowships will bo awarded
for study or work leading to master's
or doctoral degn,es in the mathematical, phy1tcal, biological, mglneoring,
and social scioncn, and in the history
and philosophy ol sciontt. Awards will
not bo made in clinical, law, education, or buainHS fields, in history or
social work, for work loading to medical, dental or publlc health degn,es, or
for study in joint-.ci,na, profeseional
degr.. programs. Applicants will bo
judged on th• basis of ability. Tho
annual stipend for Minority Graduate
Fellows will bo $4,800 for a 12-month
tmure with no dependency allowances.
Applicants will bo ~uired to take
the Graduate Record Examinations
designed to 1.. 1 aptitude and Kimtific
achievement. The examinations, administ•red by th• Educational T .. ting
Service, will bo givm on Oecm,ber 13

at designated centers throughout the
United States and in certain foreign
countries.
The deadline date for the submission
of applications for NSF Minority Graduate Fellowships is November 26. Further information and application materials may bo obtain«! from the Fellowship Office, National Research
Council, 2101 Constitution Avenue,
Washington, D.C. 20418.

HAUNTED HOUSE
The Olympia Jay Cees an, sponsoring a haunted houso October 28 to 31.
A significant pora,ntag,, of th• proceeds will bo donated to th• Womm's
Sh•ltor program. Voluntttr11 an, needed
to set up the- house: actors and actresses, make up, costume sewers,
~nery
painters, and people to sell
food and tickets. U you'd Iii« to ti.Ip
out call James Rolland at 753-6823 or
the YWCA. Tho fint meeting for those
int•rested will bo Wednaday, Septembor 24 at 400 E. State Street. Th• moeting begins at 7 p.m.

LEISURE ED
~isun, Education workshops, which
are offered to enrich leis~ time activities, not for academic crec:lit, provide
instruction in art, movement, sports,
martial arts and an array of activities
ranging from mushroom hunting to
teepee making, organic gardening to
auto mechanics, aerobic fitness to wildemHS survival.
Whil• most of the eight-week workshops begin th• fint week of Octobor,
registration has aln,ady started and
~ntinun
woekdaysfrom 10 a.m. to
6 p.m. thro~
Octobor 10 in the Recreation Center office. Special evening
~strations
will also be conducted
from 6 to 8 p.m., Octobor 1, 6, 7, and
8. All instructors for the ~isure Ed
... sions. will bo availabl• to describo
their snsions and demonstrate their
work in a frtt evening orientation ses-

unique contributions to the classroom.
A connection is stressed. between a
child's world and learning reading,
math. social studies and science. True
understanding happens when children
can apply their experiences 10 academics learned at schooL
Parents play a large role in helping
to maintain the school. Good communication between parents and teachers
allows school to be a natural extension
of a child's life at home.
We are still open for enrollment for
the 80-81 school year. For more information call Ana at 866-8304 or Mickey
at 866-4118 or the Olympia Community School at 357-6068.

sion Wednesday, September 24, from
6 to 9:30 p.m. on the fourth Aoor of
the Evans Library.
Fees for the workshops range from a
free session in radio programming
offered by campus community radio
station KAOS ™- to $65 for sport
parachuting. Details on the Fall Quarter workshops may be obtained from
the Recreation Center, 866-6530.

FIRST-AID COURSE

PLANNED
Health Services will sponsor a 10week course on "Advanced First Aid
and Emergency Care" during Fall
Quarter. Lon Franz of the campus fire
department will be instructor for the
dassos which will begin on Monday,
Octobor 6, at 7:15 p.m. Th• classes
will bo held each Monday and Thursday from 7:15 p.m. to 9:45 p.m. Cost
for the course will bo$25 to covor the
instructor's fee and this will include all
books needed for the course. Two college credits can be received for completion of the course with prior a~
proval through faculty mombor York
Wong. This will cost each student enrolled tuition plus the $25 instructor's
ftt. Location of th• classes will bo determined at a later date. Please contact
Health Services at 866-6200 for further
information.

Commoner Coming

to Seattle
Barry Commoner, presidential candi
date of the Citizen$ Party and author of
The Closing Circle, The Poverty of Powor
and The Politics of Energy, will bospoaking in Seattle on Sunday, Octobor 5. Details are not yet available on the time and
place that Commoner will be appearing.
For mo~ information call 943-8077 or
stop by th, CPJ and ask for Ken.

ANNOUNCEMENT -A meeting for people interested in coordinator positions in
the Environmental Resource Center will
hf' October 1, Wednesday at noon in the
E.R~ office, CAB 103.

COMMUNITY SOIOOL
OPENS
The Olympia Community School is
beginning its eighth year of provi~
children with an alternative learning
situation.
Children bring to school their own
notions, ideas and questions about the
world they see. At O.C.S .. we croate
an environment to foster and stimulate
the natural curiosity all children have .
These experiences are shared with
other children and acknowledged as

..

STUPIDITY

Stupidity is not something that is
isolated in one part of an individual's
brain. A person who is stupid in one
direction is generally stupid in other
directions.
Manchester Union Leader 12-3-7

Northw<'st

C:ontt•1uporary

C:r.,rt,

Student Convenience!!
The last kind of hassle you'll need during your stay
at The Evergreen State College is banking! That's why
we're here. We're South Sound National Bank. We're conveniently
located on campus to make it easy for you to get
your banking done quickly and efficiently.

MEMBER

We're here to help you make banking less of a hassle!

FDIC

Buck

N\Jsic will get you through times of no
money better than money will get you
through times of no music.

Off
TESC Campus Activities

Remember... We Make Banking Easy

Who needs pencils anyway?

Hours: Monday - Friday

Building #205

11 :00 a.m. • 2:30 p.m.

Coupon

Greatselection of oowrecords
and tapes at low prls:a,
We buy and 11811
usooalbums
Most oomplete ticket 1181'Vioe
In town

POTTERY
MONl>AY

22l

WEST

· SATl
♦ lh

1Rl>AV

TABLEWARE
10::10 · h:fN)

Sl 'Nl>A Y I .l:fKl

."i,:00

No more saladscrapers
£~om SAGA
by Roger Stritmatter

Paar 9 CPJ Orimtation lsouo

J

Housing still
available •·

By the time you arrive in Olympia,
scrounge a place to rent: stow your belongings, register for a program, and em-bark on a whirlwind tour of the campus-

th• 97< salad will be gon• from SAGA
Food Service. With th• advent of faU
classes this yur, SAGA is adopting a n,w
pricing formula to charge customen by
tho ounco for th•ir p,rsonaliud salads.
The pria,: lOt p,r ounce. SAGA Manager
Vonda Drogmund says the move is not
for 97t.
One person who isn't too pleased with
the price change is David Ciest. Giest, a
summer student at TESC, made a video
tape about the salad bar for his Intensive
Video Course. Th, tap, fulfill,d his
project assignment to make a "how to do
ii'' tape. What doe-sit show how to do7

"How to mak• th• most of th• SAGA

Starting with an almost full bowl of

RAUDENBIBH
MOTORSUPPLY

one, because some people were taking
instructs in the m«hania of salad building. Giest builds a colossal saJad in one of

the small bowls provid,d for th, <kfunct
97t salad at Saga. The trick seems to b,
in the proper placeme.nt of the cucumber
slia,s and pickJ,d be.ts.
largo salads, Orogmu"d says Saga dtcid.d
to let p,ople pay for what they eat. Sh,
pointed out that the heavier things like
potato salad are mo~ expensive to prepare, so the new pricing accurately reflects
the cost variations among salad ingndients. She also said that Saga did som• t'5t
weighing before setting the price in order
to match the new prices with an ave.rage
sizo 97t salad. When ask.d if the pricing
dlange was a result of Giest's tape, she
said no, and indicated that the decision to

943-3650

•12 S. Cherry

Open 7 days a week

8a.m.- 8p.m.



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Welcome fall in 100%
Natural fibtrs clothing for men

II wome!'

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getting there is almost never easy.
ThoBw

Starling with Olympia, then ... lnt,rcity Transit (IT) ruru buses botween

number of two-penon studios to thos,
wanting private rooms. The cost of a triquarter unit lease of two-penon studio.
ls $155 p,r month.
Modular duplexa consist of two doubl•
bKrooms with a &eparateliving rcom,
k; .her., and bathroom within th, unit.
-'ommon areas are ,hared by four
•. i,nts. Com;,l•t•ly furnish.d, they rent
for $95 p,r month on .a tri-<iuM!•r rental
contract. Th..., prices include ,all-utilit,s
with the exception of the telephon• ($15
for hook-up and $6.40 p,r month).
Some advantages to on--campus living
-irll:lude mail deliv•ry, bike shelters, storage lock,rs, TV /FM cabl,, color TV
loung,, pool tables, ping pong and foosb.,11 tables, laundry facilities, bus ,ervice,
and ttcreational, cultural, and sp,cial
events and activities~ six nights a week in
Th, Corner Cafe (socond floor of Building "A"). Whole food snacks and light
moals an, for sale four nights a wttk in
implement the change came as early as
last sprillf!. Giest mad, his tap, in August. Th• Corner Cafe also.
Apparently, how~er, thm, is a long•
Off-Campus Options
standing tradition of building saladscrapers among some Saga consumers.

Drogmund said that the .price ~ is
only one ,lement of.a SAGA projKt to
"upgrade" th• salad blar oerviae. She plans
to install a new salad bar itself, complde
With icing capacity to keep th~ cherry
tomatoes and garbanzo beans cooler.

Scales for wtighing tho salad under the
new syste!!" will be pre-set for cancelling
the weight of various plata or bowls

availabl• for th• foundation undtr your
vegetable masterpiece.

Take h,art, salad loven. Th, 97t Saga
salad is not d,ad, but raurrect.d. It's
9.7 ounces.

n

CDIS

WE BUY
pocket watches, gold rings
sterling, diamonds,
silver
dental gold
scrap gold
1619 Harrison

352-8848

side ("A") route goes to town via Cooper
Point and Division, and the Capitol

Hill ("8") rout• h,ads down Overhul,e
and Mud Bay. Th ... cost a quarftt, but
IT passes aren't valid on Evergn,e,I Vans.
Evergreen is buying a ttal bus, which
IT will use in the daytime and we wilJ use
instead of a van, starting some time this

fall.
Hitching
If you are hitching, you can have fine

luck g,tting between school and town provided you stay to the acc~pted routes

at the right times of day. Going to school
from town, that means standing just ea.st

)

other rental houses or apartments, check,

the following and other·resourtaJ --·
Off-Campus Listing Board, Second
Aoor of Building •A"
College ActivitiH Building, Second
Aoor Housing Board (across from
Bookstore)
Th• Olympia Food Co-Op Bullotin
Board (comer of Bowman and Rog,n,
West Olympia)
The Daily Olympian-local n,wspap,r.

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of th, 4th Av,. bridge, by tho exit of
Mark-it's parking lot. This unofficial stopping spot was rec,er,tlyfonnaliud into an
official yellow-<urbod bu, stop, ilgn and
all. The bat times to hitch hero are betw.. n 8 and 10 a.m. and betwom noon
and 1 p.m. Lator in the alt,moon, you
could vory well md up walking or waiting
for the bus •• ,,
U you att leaving from Wostsidt, the
bat placo to hitch is acroa·from Rainy
Day Records on Division, by tho exit
from the Rod AJ>ple,though anywhere
along Division is usually protty good at
the samo times as above. Hitching down
Coop,r Point from the Mall lo the Parkway there is about a SO~ chance you will
walk. Going out Mud Bay to the Park•
way. which is what the signs tell you to
do, is just plain stupid Oastravelled and
longer) unless, of coune, you want to
stop for a be.rat the Two Mile House.
However, thumbing to .schoo'
from out
!I
on Coo_peTPoint is u'iually fairly easy at
the aforementioned times., •
Goinj home from school, you simply
have to think in reverse. The bat hitching
is from 4 to 6 p.m., and it makes little
difference whether you le.ave from the
dorms and ASH or from the front of
campus. Eithor way, walk down to the
Par~way and tjlke a ltft, not towards the
freeway. One of the worst mistakes you
can make (I did this wheril First arrived
here in '76) is lo try to get to school or
home by taking the Interstate (exit 104)

and th( freeway fS the hij!hway signs
direct you to do. You will undoubtedly
el,d u~ on th• pay phono in th• WHtwattr Inn's lobby, watching double-knit
di~o dancors,get ,y.d-up by bi,sinesom•n
in suitcoats while you urgently, try to

locate a friend Who has moved thrff times
since you last saw him.
At in anything, common sense can tell

von a lot about the*. hlnapgtcntial For
1----e~,....~~~--~~~-~~h~l~-~k~-,"'""

Tom & Connie Riter

513 Washington
Olympia, Wash.

I

and installs huge platforms with miittresses on them, dispensing with the need
for chairs. One bus even has built-in
dinettt' tables that seat four and convert
into bunk beds at night. The buses have
tape decks which o11re
usually playing
Grateful Dead. Things are pretty loose on
the bus, although they are more discrete
since a whole bus got busted in Georgia
about a year and a half ago.
Grey Rabbit also has two buses a week
between S.F. and Boston, that cost $89 to
get all the way across lhe country.
This takes about 3112 days. and ihe
Seattle t.o S.F. trip liik~ under a day,
which is about as quick as you can drive.
unless you are speeding all the way.
To go across t hr cnunl ry at a more
leisurely pace, check into Green TortoiSt.',
which slop"- lo go swimming, have picnics, .ind t'Ven take side trip5 10 Mexico.
f;,1r m11rt>mformalion about Crey Rabhit. or 10 make reservations. call 324-6317
in Seattle. 484-0658 1n Eugene. or 4:!8-2905
in S.F Flac;,h the bJ,; from S.F north
mw.- \loP"- c1t hot sr mxs in Ore~on 0n tht>
w,1y

th• Evorgreon Van runs hourly to th• top,
of Eastside and Capitol hills. The East-

There are usuaUy som, student h~
holds in the Olympia aroa with anywhen!·
0
from two to eight penons p,r ho~d'.
For infotnlatlol\ about '«Im<! of 1thbo and

,-----------,
I '§~~

Grey Rabbit buys old Greyhound bu,.,

campus and downtown on weekdays be,..
twttn 7 a.m. and 6 p.m. This y,ar they
have a new schedule with buses leaving
every 40 minutes, which is a hew twist in
ways to confuse riders; you now need to
carry a schedule around with you to
know when to catch the bus. The cost is
25t for on• rid• or 50t for an all-day pau.
During the evenings and on weekends,

contract. If vacancia remain on Sepbmtber 23, w• will unit lease a limit,d

salad bar," Giest grins.
In quite vivid detail. the three-minute
color documentary, titled "Salad Bar,"

convincing. You usually ha~veto put
down a small deposit, but it is often
worth it, as you might be able to get a
very economical car, and they usually
provide you with a semi-full tank of gilS.
This is easier than many people think.
U you can't afford to drive, Grey Rabbit is cheap and fun. They leave Seattle
for LA. on Tuesday and Friday, stopping
in Eugene, S.F., and just about anywhere
you want to stop. if it is on 1-5. Cost is
$40 to the Bay, S60 to L.A. Start.d in the
late '60s as an alternative to Greyhound,

_'Watch the polla, and th, taxman miss
mo, I'm mobile!"
•The Who
For p,ople from back east who have
never been h•tt befott, gotting around on
th• W,st Coast can be quite an 'J'P,rimce. Whether your destination is Chehalis
or Los Angeles, unless you own a car.

Two-penon otudiot are locat.d in Residence Hall "A" and consistofone"studio"
room for two peopl•. Each room coma •
with two full sets of furnitutt and a
private sink. Bathrooms are shattd between adjacent studio rooms, and then,
are community kitchens for each floor to
use. These kitchens an, shared by 10 to
25 p,ople. Rent for the two-penon studios
it $85 p,r month for a tri-<iuarter rental

inflationary and that SAGA customers
will still get a reasonably large salad

salad, place cucumber and beet slices
around the edge and you can continue
building, doubling or tripling the capacity
of the bowl. You are in poor man's paradise: piling potato salad, garbanzo beans,
croutons, lettuce, cherry tomatoes, sunflower seeds, onions and blue cheese
dressing-building to your heart's content.
All for 971.. After paying, as the tape instructs, you can dump your overflowing
salad onto a paper plate for more efficient
consumption.
In August. Giest was showing his video
tape outside the Saga Cafeteria. He said
he was upset over the impending price
change and that this was his way of protesting it.
But Vonda Drogmund says the pricing
change is a result of people doing just
what Giest's film depicts. Of course, she
doesn't put it quite that bluntly. The purpose of the pricing change, Drogmund
says, is to provide more equity in the
price of the salads. Salad construction is
an drt with many individual variations.
Some Saga customers like 'em large and
some like 'em small. Some like croutons.
others prefer potato salad.
Rather than raise the price for every-

by Ben Alexander

A1l rumon aside, jU1ta few days befott
the official Housing ch,dc-in, thm, aro
still over 85 vacant b,ds left. lnett is currently spaa, availabl• in both the tw<>:';;'.:O:tudios and in the modular ,

943-9538

instance, on Friday • t oft e ast wee
of clas~. it will be a cinch to get to the
Two Mile House: for a ga.Uonof Oly
Dark. However, your chances aren't so

groat of g,tting anywhero by thumb in tho
middle of the wttk at 1 a.m. Also,
Murphy's Rulo and aU its corollaries
should novor b, forgotten.
How your luck goa and what you.,..
perie!IC1'att largely dtterminod by your
appearance. U you·hav, long hair and
carry a badtpack, you are obviously 11
Gttener and can expect to have a dorogatory ttmarks-at the least-hurled at you.
Howov,r, if you havo abovo tho shouldulength hair and don't look blatantly
hippie-liko, you may even g•t an occa•
sional ride from a local, and you will cortainly havo fewor bad ,xp,ri,ncn with
them. I am not advocating running out
and cutting your hair; I am only attempting to lay out the reality of the situation.
Once your face becomes familiar on
campus, or if you just have a backpaek.
Grttners will usually pick you up, at
any rate.
Unfortunately, this section would not
be complete without a warning to women
This summer, at least thl'ft women hitchhikers were raped in or nor Olympia.
Two of these were gang rapes, and in one
of these, the woman took the ride because she thought it was safe with another
woman alrudy on board. Description!, of
the vehicles are posted on campus and
around town. I cannot overemphasize
caution to all women hitching around
town. It is probably the best policy to refuse a ride from anyone who's face is not

familiar, and to stay on 1he accept.d
major routes, which are also the least

deserled ones.
Biking
Many people use bicycles for transportalion around the local area. The bike
path on Division is very convenient, but
full of bumps and potholes (which could
.___
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I comp Iameo
· ~
,,.,..,aTl"nll
to the Oly street dep.1rtment). Cooper
Point Road is in good shape most of the
way, and has a nice wide shoulder. There
is a beautiful bike path that starts on

It Yl'U art' hrdded s.oulh. ry not to take
ride ,hNter than Portland which i~
o1boul 100 mil.es away. The onl)· g01\CI
a meadow across to the Parkway right
place h1 hitch out of Olymria ,s. the
whtte the divider ends. It is a ni« ride.
JowntPwn Plum Sire-et entro1nce-gt• ·ti
even if it dOHn't really go anywherr. Be
Tumwaler and vou could be stuck tht.'re
~warned
though-this summer I was
all d.1y. Once yt,u ~el to Oreion y, ,u ran
nearly run off the path by two motorhitch hassle-lrtt on the highwo1y anti
cycles and a minibikt.
thinJ,tSan• prelty good rill you get :1•
To get lo town, frfflC'h Ro.ad and Crt"Slsouthern Oregon. Around Grant°s r ....... it
line lo West Bay Drive is a beautiful,
you havm't gt,t a ride all the way I<' l.alialbeit nerve-wracking ride. Coming b.ick
lomia. ridt>sget mi~hty slow. and tht•
fmm town, if you cut over on Sherman
nixhts i,,;rt 1.old ec1rlyin lhe soulhem (..J!Y
instead of going up Harrison hill. it i!cack-s. Hi1ching tin lhe highway ir C<1l1•
quieter, less trafficked and a shallower
fornia i~ OK. ahhou~h 1 flere is a hi,,:ht·r
slope. Another ni« ride is Delphi Road h,
p...rcentage of as~h,,I~ ;,1r, 1ht-mad th.in ,,
Mclane Creek Nature Trail. and there arr
OrC'J,(on Cops will olh-n kick vo~ olt •~.
~enty of others just wailing tc, be disroad. but they don'I uc;,ually~;ve t1Ckt.1,
covered. And it your bike needs work.
Tht• CClastalhighway 1s ,. gorge<,u'- rNld 1
the Evergreen Bike Shop in the CAB bo11.st•- you have lhe limt" but if )·ou ha, t' tn b(,
ment offers free use of IO<llsand frN'
therf' in lt'ss than thrtt days, -.tid 'l' :-s.
advice.
Thert(are twg major highwavs lrl,n, thcIf all else fails and you must hitch, all
northwf'SI to the northeast: lnter"-l.tlt' QO
~ not lost. Hitching on the Interstates in
out of Seattle is .1 much prettier ride, hut
-Vashington is slow but not impossible.
a little lhs traveled. 1-80 troJTl P('lrt/,md
Mashington State had a major breakis probably quicker hitching. as ii is th('
through for hitchhik•rs whtn they legalmajor trucking corridor However ,1s
ized hitching in '76. At that time they
anyone knows who has ever dont' tl
erected signs on all interstate ramps, stal•
coast to coast hitching 1s a very t'rrat·. ,,,.
ing ''No Hitchhiking Beyond This Point,"
penence, and it could tc1ke thrtt dJv, ;,,1
and as long as you remain in fronl of
two weeks. Of course, 11 is bound t,• t'<'
those signs, cops won'I bother y<,u. For
interesting. For such a long trip, it j,
this reason though, it is best not to get off
always nice lo have comr.mv around ll.l
the highway unless you are near some
talk to when things get borinj,:.
sign of civilization, such as a gas station
The possibilities for freight hopping art>
or a truck stop.
infinite, but here I am getting r1ut of my
territory. Then· .ue many trains up and
Hitting the Road
down the West Coast. but Cheh.ilis CenSo much for Olympia. let's say that
tralia has J much larger freight yard thJn
you want, as I do, to be in San Francisco
Olympia's. I havr heard much about a
by the day after tomorrow. You have a
freight that goe-5all thl• way from Everell
number of options besides paying for a
to Chicago, through a 1 J /2 mile long
plane or Greyhound, or driviilg: You can
tunnel in the Cascade-5. It SL,unds go0d,
hitch, take Grey Rabbit, or get a drivebut try it at your own risk. The big thin~
away. There are driveaway places in
about freight hopping is to always be surt>
Sntt:le and Pm tland listed i11 thryei
you now e
hna11on o I e lrain ynu
pages under "Auto Transport" and they
are about to hop. Otherwise you are
are often easy to get a vehicle from. You
liable to end up in the middle of nowhere,
need to possess a valid driver's license, be
and it reall)' will be "a long time wmin
21 or older, have a good record, and acl
.rnd a long lime gone.°

Overhulse Rd. just before Mud Bay Rd..
and KOOS through the woods and throuRh

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Page 11 CPJ Orientation Issue

END OF SUMMER

Page 10 CPJ Orientation Issue

<

McDermott vs. Spellman for Gov.

BICYCLE

Dixy dumped in primary upset
by Bill Montague

ln what has to be one of the most surprising upsets in Washington Stat•
history, Stat• Senator JamesMcDermott
defeated incumbent Covemor Obey Ltt
Ray in tM Democratic primary last Tuesday.
The victory was impr~ive. Senator
McDermott was a late entry in the race,
beginning his campaign in mid-March
after another gubernatorial hopeful, exSpeaker of the House John Bagnariol was
indicted in the much publicized FBI
Gamsc.am investigation. McDermott
seemed to trail through most of the campaign, but polls taken in the last wttk
before the election showed the 43-year-old
child psychiatrist dosing quickly on Governor Ray, a 66-year-old former professor

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Wht ·n vrn1 0rcler mv 14 inch or
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oi Biology at the University of Washington and chairwoman of the Atomic
Energy Commission under the Nixon
administration.
Observen had predicted a very clo"'
nK:e, calling it a toss-up. But in the end,
Senator McDermott's victory margin was
a massive one. The Senator garnered 41 %
oi the votes, compared to Ray's 191/,'ll,,
insuring that McDemott will be his
party's standard bearer in the November
showdown with Republican John Spellman, who narrowly def.. ted his two
chaltengen in the COP runoff.
McDermott's victory is a vindication
for th• liberal wing of the stat• D<moaatic party, a group for which Governor
Ray never disguised her antipathy. Centered for the most part in Seat~• and surrounding King County, the liberals rallied
around Senator Md>umott, providing
him with the kind of graa roots volunteer
support he desperately needed to counter
Dixy's massive campaign bankroll, a
bankroll nearly three times tht size of
the Senator's.
Liberal opponents of the Covtmor like
to point to her ampl, funding as proof
that, despite her party affiliation, she is
rm.Uy much more at home with her dose
circle of Republican advisors, men such
as George Weyerhaeuser, Taul Watanabe
and campaign mastrrmind C. Montgomery Johnson.
Even DiJ(y's conservative Democratic
supporters didn't entirely trust Johnson,
or "Gummy" as he is known in state political circles. Gummy is a past chairman
of the state Republican apparatus and is
better known for his worlr. for lnxy's immedi.atr prod<cnsor, Ropublican th.tn"mer Daniel Evans, now whiling away
the houn as Prnidtnt of The Evtrgrttn
State College. Gummy jumped on board
the Covanor's wagon lut December and
with hlm al the wt-I, Ray had no
troqble gaining the considerable financial
bockingof the "Big Plve"-thooe live
major inte,locking busintoe inttrests
(Bo«ing Aircraft. Weyvhaeurer Lumber.
~r
Aluminum, Puget POWtt and the

Bu/linatonNorthernRailroad) that tsoen·
tially control the ■tale. Along with ouch
lesserlights as RainierBank, the Washing-

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ell 11,t-f')x,f"r.old fbmP'lllV

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Olympia 270 Capital Mall 754-3711
J..cey 94 South Sound Center 491-231 I

weaker of the two Democrats in a general
election showdown or perl,aps drawn
only by their loathing for Governor Ray.
Whether or not Senator McDermott
will go down to blazing defeat at the
hands of a centrist opponent is not
known. It seems virtually certain that
moderate John Spellman will pick up the
bulk of Governor Ray's "Fortune" 500
campaign contributors and if primary
elections favor left and right wingers.
seneral elKtions most definitely favor the
<:enter. McDermott may have to move
very quickly towards that political center
lo remain a contender.
But no matter what happens on November 4th, nnt January will see a new face
in the Governor's mansion.

Prlnlsl SlldN

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And we'll slice our prices when
you hand us these coupons.
So come to Pizza Haven.
And get some good
square deals on some great
round meals.

But it has become somewhat of a political axiom in this post-Watergate era thal
voters do not vote for candidates they
like; they vote against those they hate.
And Oixy has made quite a few enemies
in her four years in office.
Her thinly disguised loathing for the
press has been quite publicized, her love
of nuclear power and disdain for "bleeding heart liberals" and "people-hating"
environmentalists is common knowledge.
Several scandals have reached almost to
the Governor's doorstep in the past year.
Her involvement in the FBI investigation
of two major political opponents is unclear, as is her connection to the attempt
to legalize gambling which initiated the
probe. More srerious is the case of top Ray

ColorOI' 8lact • White

Rea8onable
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a big bite out of the rising cost
of eating.
Just grab a pair of scissors
and ~t out for Pizza Haven.
We'll serve you some of
the best pizza you've ever laid

powerful and quite conservative building
and construction trade unions even more;
pleased them to the tune of almost
550,(X)().Since these unions provide most
oi the high-power financing available to
Democratic candidates, McDmnott had
to rely (with few exceptions) almost entirely on small, individual contributions.
While this was perhaps laudable, it put
McDermott at a severe disadvantage
given the importance of expensive media
propaganda in a campaign for state office.
But despite her financial advantage,
Governor Ray had to deal with a number
of problems and in the end these problems outweighed her swollen campaign
bank account. One obstacle was her ongoi~ feud with the press. Ray has never
concealed her dislike for the media, particularly for the small group of newspaper
people who cover the Olympia beat. Her
antagonism has in the past reached the
depth of naming the pigs on her Fox
Island farm after several of her more
vocal critics. For well over a year, the
Governor refused to meet with the Capitol press corps, following instead the traditional military tactic of meeting the
enemy on her own ground and on her
own terms. To this end she took her act
on the road, to the smaller, more sympathetic newspapers, radio and TV stations
in her eastern Washington strongholds.
This allowed her to field questions from
reporters who lacked tht day-t<Hlay
familiarity with her, with state government and with her numerous misstatements and contradictions.
But this tactic has its limits. Over 60%
of the state's population is located in
Seattle and King County. It is with this
area, its generally liberal Democratic
machine and its antagonistic press that
Dixy had to come to terms to nail down
the nomination. This she failed to do.
Di>cyhad a lot of trouble with the party
regulars. They handed her some rough
treatment when she attended the state
party convention last June. The Governor
came away badly mauled from that confrontation. Joe Murphy, her handpkked
choice for state chairman, was rejected by
the delegates. her opponent Jim McDermott was informally endorsed, and

Ztl.

...

YUltA111.(DUO!

aide, Taul Watanabe, who has been
accu::,ed by ex-Olympia power broker
Robert Perry of accepting bribes from a
Japanese import-export firm.
But perhaps Dixy's most serious handicap was her image as an arrogant, obnoxious, physically unattractive bully.
Whether this image was accurate (as her
opponents hold) or created by a hostile
media (as her supporters claim) is a moot
point. The problem was there and her
campaign managers never overcame 11.
In the end, the expected Dixy crossover
vole never materialized. At least one
Republican candidate, Speaker of the
Staie House Duane Berentson, was conservative enough to keep Republicans
within the boundaries of their own party
Those that did cross over, voted for
McDermotl, possibly seeing him as the

SALE

MLEICIHIUPB
COUIISE35'.00

REG.

when Senator Warren Magnuson attacked
her alleged attempts to barter away his
job to State Senator Gordon Walgren,
(also under indictment in the Gamscam
investigation) the Governor stalked from
the convention noor in a blue funk.
Dixy's campaign managers tried to
downplay her difficulty in controlling the
party regulars. They pointed out that conventions are always more extreme than
the body of voters. This, they said, is
particularly true in Washington, which
holds "open primaries" -elections in
which anyone, regardless of party affiliation, may vote for any candidate. Oixy's
team hoped that crossover votes from
Republicans who recognized the Governor's basic conservatism would override
her opponents appeal lo more liberal
Democrats.

m.

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1115.00 115.

350.00

ton Brewers Ass.ocition, Western Hotels
and a variety of out-of-state contributors
(S1andard Oil of California. Northern
Tter Pipeline, Chem-Nuc Inc. and others)
these corporate citizens helped to drive
Dixy's warchest up near $750,(X)O.
This tidy sum put the Governor well
ahead of both her Democratic and Republican opponents, none of which has yet to
break the $500,000 mark. Indeed. Oixy's
Republican candidates found that virtually
all of th• ample funding that usually accompanies a COP candidate was lockedup tight by the Governor long before the
campaign even began.
The winning effort of Democratic hopeful Jim McDermott had a particularly
hard time raising money. For if Dixy·s
strong pro-nuclear, pro-development
stance pleased Big Business, it pleased the

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by Ken Silverstein
The Washington state primary was held
Tuesday, September 16. Below is a brief
summary of who the winners were and
the matchups for the general election to
be held November 4 (last day to register
to vote is October 4). More extensive
coverage on all the races will be coming
up in future CPJ's.
In the governor's race, liberal State
Senator Jim McDermott (Democrat), who
swamped Dixy Lee Ray in the primary,
will square off against King County Executive John Spellman (Republican). Spellman lost the 1976 gubernatorial election
to Ray.
Slade Corton (R), three-Jim• ,tat•
Attorney General. will try to end Warren
Magnuson's 44-year ~ign as U.S. Senator.
Corton beat Reagan-clone, Lloyd Coonty,
in the primary lo advanu to the general
election.
It's a three--man fight for state Attorney
Cern,ral. John Rossellini (D) and Ktn
Eikenberry (R) won their party's respective nominations, while independent candidate, John Miller, garnered enough
votes to win himself a spot on the
November ballot, as well. MUler, former
president of the Seattle City Council and
lobbyist for the Washington Environmental Council, is expected to be a major

factor in the election.
Incumbent Don Bonker easily won the
Democratic nomination £or U.S. Representative. He'll face Rod Culp, a former
state trooper and ultra-conservative
Republican in the general election.
Puget Sound law professor Dick Hem•
.-;tad beat fellow Republican Jack Brennan
in the primary and will face Democrat
Del Bausch in the run for state senator.
This is expected to be a close one.
In what's expected to be a tight race for
county commissioner (District 1), incuml,ent George Barner, a progressive Democrat (and former Evergreen student). is
being challenged by Republican Auditor
Sam Reed. Further comp1icating matters
is the independent candidacy of conservative Ken Michael who gathered 12% of
the vote in the primary.
In the contest for the 2nd district's
county commissioner seat (left vacant by
Del Petitt), Lacey mayor Karen Fraser (0)
will' face Jerrilee Petersen. a resident of
I
Yelm.
In the two House races in the 22nd
legislative district (of which Olympia is a
part) incu111bentDemocrat Mike Kriedler, :
a Group Health optometrist, will face
Republican Don Trosper. Another incumbent Democrat, Ron Keller will be
running against Bill Garson {R) in the
other House race.

I

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Student governance based on irony
by Ellen Kissman

Board of Trustees: Five people ap-

Evergreen, in many ways, is constructed on irony. Student1-iare actively
encouraged 10 develop th~wn
ideas
and talents in a non-hierarchical. noncompetitive environment. This encouragement is based on tht following theorem:
that each student must take full responsibility for the content of his or her education through helping to plan the curriculum, careful consideration of which
academic option to choose, helping to
plan the content of his or her program
and taking r~ponsibility for decisionmaking outside strictly academic concerns.
Yet the administrative workings of the
collE>ge,academic and not, roll on. The
channels for student participation in all
aspects of decision-making were designed
mto the college governance system from
the beginning. However, the student body
!becau~t" it's encouraged to regard itself as
a group of individuals) is an elusive lot.
Administrati0n and faculty members often
develop policies that havf' a fundamental
impact on the educational environment
with ,mly token student involvement,
bt-Laust' finding the students to get in·
volv('d is so time-consuming and difficult.
This glossary is designed to help new
ind old! students find tbe administrators
~,h{1aTLlook in~ for them.

pointed by the Governor to oversee the
internal workings of the college. They are
responsible for all expenditures and policies and ultimate decision-ma.king responsibility lies with them. They meet on the

ploration and discussion needs to happen,

and many peopl•, including studmts need
to be involved, in order to make COC IV
a workable plan for implemfflting Evergreen's philosophical goals.

third Thur,day of each month. One stu- ••

Two students, two faculty or staff, one
professional journalist, and one CPJ staff

dent sits on the Board as a non-voting
member. Contact the President's Office
for more information.
Covenant on Governance: (COG)
docummt : Now in its third revision, the
COG document outlines decision-making
processes in line with Evergreen's philosophical goals. For example: "Decisions
and methods to be used for their implementation must be handled at the level of
responsibility and accountability closest to
those affected by a particular decision."
"Decisions must be made only after con•
sultation and coordination with students,

member compose the Board. The Pub
Board guidelines att in the process of

faculty and staff who are both affected by
and interested in the issues ... " This and
the Social Contract are the two most
important k.eys toward understanding
your individual rights and responsibilities
al Evergreen. The Info Center has copies
ol both, or they can be found in any
offic~ copy of the Evergreen Adminislra•
live Code.
This year a DTF will reexamine the
COG and put together a revi~ docu·
men1-COC IV. Much philosoohical ex-

Publicatlom lloard (Pub Board, for
short): The Pub Board is the official publisher of the Cooper Point Journal, and is
responsible for hiring th• editor and business manager. They are also responsible
for seeing that th• CPI sticks to a five•
pag• code of ethics outlined in th• EAC.

KAOS Advisory Board: Similar to the
Pub Board. the KAOS Advisory Committtt "shall proVide general guidance,
counseling and assistance to the Station

Manager and staff of KAOS regarding the
operation of the station." It's a nine-

=ber
body, composed of two staff or
faculty. two stud,nts, thrtt Olympia
community memben, one professional
broadcaster, and one college administrator. They are responsible for hiring the
Station Manager, and for discwsing and
ma.king recommendations for future direc-

tions of KAOS. Contact KAOS or the

being revised. Contact the President's
Office for more information.
S.rvlcu and Actlvltia ha Review
lloud (S&A iloud): A board composed
oi six students. one staff and one faculty
responsible for allocating Services and
Activities fees. Allocations take place
twice a year: major allocations in Spring .
Quarter for the following fiscal year, and
smaller "discretionary fund" allocations
happen Fall Quarter. Student involvement
in this area is higher than in any other
area of the college. ln fact, the state legislature recently passed an S&tA law using
Evergrren's open, student-controlled
process as a model. Any interested community member has a voice in the
decision-making process, including those
asking for some of the money. S&:A mtttings are a fantastic lesson in group process, and more often than not, a forum
for the-discussion of social, racial. political issues. If you would like to become
involved, contact the Campus Activities
Office, CAB 305, x6220.

Prnide:nt's Office for mott information.

Disappeulng Tuk Foras (DTF'1). Ad
hoc committees that anyone in the college
community can "charge" -i. e., Dk to see

formed. These groups deal with specific
issues (for example, specialized spac,,
needs, revision of the Covenant of Governance, day care at Evergreen). Almost
any examination of policy should entail

d,arging a DTF. Most of the Um•. they
are composed of students, staff and facuJty. and make recomme-ndations to those

parts of the college conc,,med with the
issue.
Unless the Evergreen Council is active,
it's difficult to keep track of DTF's. The
lnformation Center is prc:sbably the best
place to get information about them.
Social Contnct: Part of the Evergrttn
administrative code outlining '1ndividual
Responsibility of MembeB of th• Collq•
Community." Indicative quotes: "Such a
rommunity can thrive only if members

respect the rights of oth•B whil, enjoying
their own rights." " ... but a.ll must share
alike in prizing academic and interpersonal honesty, in responsibly obtaining
and in providing full and accurate infor•
matiOn, and in resolving their differences
through due process and with a strong
will for collaboration. In its life as a community, The Evergreen St.ate College
requires a social contract rather than a
Ust of specific prohtbitions and essentially
negative rules."
The Information Center has copies.
Take the time to read it: it's only thrtt
..pages and will probably provide a lot of
insig_htinto Evergreen's philosophy.

ht~proveyour

Westside Center
Division & Harrison

I
Send

$1.00

for

your

academic

P.O. Box 25097H
Los Angeles, ca.90025

---------I

1 Enclosedis's1.00.

357-4755

Please rush the catalog.

I City_______
I State ----P-----------.J

posedly composed of students, staff and
faculty. Their functions include: overseeing mounting of ce-rtain exhibits, enrour·
aging programs and activitir.s groups to
display exhibitions, ttc. The.re has been a
fair amount of criticism of the VEG

rec,ntly. According to the EAC, "Th•
group. with rotating membership, will be

Address m,d stuff mwlopa at home.
S800 ,,.r month poffibl,. 0/frr, ...u
SI .00 (r,furulablr) to: Tripi, "S.., __ ::
funiper Road, Pinon Hills, CA 92373.

Collegiate Research

I Name ______
I Addre11_______

Visual Environment Group (VEG): Another elusive policy group, also sup-

CUSSIFIEDS

306-page,research paper
catalog. All
subjects.

and why).

:ocatable and aa:ountable- at regularly
announced mtttlngs." Campus groups
who need VEG approval for specific
projects havo had a difficult time finding
it. And no one seems to know who the
stude.nts on it are. Pressure from thoet
interested in the visual arts and environmental design would help make the VEG
a group rtsponsible to th• needs of the
commu i

COLLEGE
STUDENTS
at seJection of ne
and tapes at low pric~
We buy and sell used albums
Most complete ticket service in town

Services and Actlvilin ha: A $54
chunk of each full-time student's tuition
each quarter (part-time students pay a
proportional amount). This money funds
many essential programs and activities in•
duding th• Bus System. College Recnation Centtt, CPJ. KAOS, Ujamaa, Asian
Coalition. Women's Center, Arts Resource
Center, Day care. ad infinitum. S&:A is a
major a~• of programming over which
students have control. (Stt Services and
Activities Fees Review Board for how

_
_

I
I

Death row ,:,rlsonn, c,auca,Uln mal~. "I~
34, duins co"apondmcr
with tithrr
""''' or frmalr collqr studmts. Wm,ts to
form some kind of frlmdly 1)1,,. r,/ation1hip ""d mor, or lr.ss just uch""I" p,ut
uperi,ncn 1111di<U<U.Will -,
1111
ltttrn AJtd oxch11111•
picturn. If intnntod
writ, to: Tim lrff,r,,
Box B-38604,
Ronne,, Arizona 85232.

2

L

t

J

c

f

Campus Adf~icator: This person is
available to help two disputing parties
resolve their dispute. He or she can act
as, or find someone else to act as a
third party mediator. and if that doesn·t
wJrk, can steer the disputants to the
fonnal hearing board process. Ken Jacob
Director of Housing and Food Sttvice, '
has been the campus adjudicator for the
past several years.
Heuing Board : Formal hearing procedures are stated in the COG, and are
rath~r complicated. H~re•s a short, quick
outline: After third party mediation has
failed, a "disputant'' petitions the Presi-

s
begin to prepare for this years' programs.
S.I.N. has a desk in the Campus Activities
Office; call them al x6220 or stop

by CAB 305.
HOW TO GET INVOLVEO

Now that you know what there is to
get involved in, here's some brief ideas
about how to do it:
• Sign up on the Voluntary Service List
{after
you have a phone). This is a list
Environmental Advltory Committtt
~pt in. the Information Center. RealJ},
(th, othu EAC): An elusive standing
d s a piece of paper.with a very long list
committee composed of students, staff
of governance groups. You circle the ones
and faculty who are supposed to =iew
dent for a fonnal hearing. Th, President
po_y.,erelite that tends to develop in tradiyou ·1iig11t be interested in. When scme•
any actions which might affect the enforwards the petition to the chairperson
tional studer,t government structur 6 7"
one
from that group needs to find some
vironment. They're goal is to "measure
of the hearing board, who convenes the
What came from all this discussion (see
students, they'll find your name.
perma.ner,t members. They meet and
all proposed master plaMing, siting, and
Symposium '79) was a network structure
• Pay attention to the Current Events
construction decisions" against "the value
decide whether lo hear the case ;s is, or
based on "neighborhood politics." The
board
in front of the bookstore. All mttt·
of preservation and enhan~ent
of the
set preconditions which must be met
smallest, most intimate group of students
ings will be posted there.
ecological and biological qualitits of the
be_fore they wi~ hear the case. They give
at Evergreen is_the seminar, and therefore,
. • If you're unwilling to commit yourM>lf
this to the President, who gives it back 10
campus." The EAC has had some trouble
the most effecllve way of involving the
ngh~ off, go to a meeting of a group or
recently in gathering information and
the disputant. The three permanent mem.
most students is at the seminar level.
talk to the contact person about what
hers include one student, one staff and
airing what should be public issues. StuS.I.N._ is envisioned as a forum of repre•
ea~h-commitment
entails. This is. pertectly
dent pressure could help alleviate this
~tat1ves selected by seminars who meet
~g1t1matt>-how else can you make intel•
situation. Contact Scott Elliot through the
~•weekly to discuss any issues brought to
Campus Activities Office.
it. Information pr~nted at the forum can ~gent use of your time7
• All meetings are open (except those
find
its way back to programs and semi·
Day Catt Advisory Board: A group of
that d~al with personal issues, or hearing
~ars through these representatives, and
parents, staff and inltttsted peopl• that
l.os1rd deliberations). As a member of the
issues within programs can fin<l,their way
~Ip l?riftwood fonnulatt policy and
Evergreen community. you are entitled to
lo the forum in the same manner.
- direction. Contact V~
Brian for more
attend any meeting you wish. Sometim~
information.
In the past year, S.J.N. has accom•
(as at hearings) you are welcome as an
plished quite a bit. It actually met conEv._
Adminlotrative Code: A
OOSt'rver only: But most of the time, you
n tly. developed some bylaws, and
s.iSle
looselw notebook about four inches thick
can ask questions and participate in any
when the faculty atte-mpted some quick
crammed full of all the rules and r.guladiscussion. It's best to be prepared-talk
and
e-ven-less-than•usually-reprdlentative
tiom which run Eversr-,. Undoubtedly
to some-one on the board or group you're
curriculum planning for this academic
som, of you work-study students will •
one faculty, who will serv, no longu than
interested in before you go to a meeting,
year, the Student Information Network
have tht lftffllngly ridiculous job of going one year, all appointed by the Prftident
so
that you don·1 slow down their whole
got the-faculty to ·do it over. They spon•
around to all the diffttmt officeson
The chai~n
is chosen by this group:
process with questions that could have
sored
an
all-day
curriculum-planning
fair,
campus with pilts of papu, grabbing
from among themselvts. Before a hearing
been answered in other ways.
that enabled students to stick their two
those !wavy notebooks. taking some pages four temporary mmibers an chosen two·
.. • Wednesday is informally designated
cents
in
the
curriculum
paickage,
and
out and putting others In. This may lftll1
each from the pttr groups of thost disgovernance day." If your program schedcumbersome, but it is tht only practjcal
puting. The Pmident (or his offict) is
Evtrw,wn Council: ..Shall constitut, the ule dOt"Snot allow you to participate, talk
way to M<J>
o!' top of all tlw ntlts. Moot
largely rtsponsibl, for Mring that the
to your faculty.
forum for discussion and advke on issues
of the information In this gtosury was
hearing_proaeds smoothly by keeping all
Mfecting th~ college,., and "will also have
• Talk to your friends and people in
gleaned from the EAC.
parties informed about the ltatus of the
a watchdog, function as the place whffe
your programs about issues that confuse
All additions or alterations to the EAC
hearing. All hearings art open to the pubthe_college's principles an reitttated and
you. Students are most effective in
must bt approved by the Board of
lic,. and a vorbatim n,cord is kept. All
actions are weighed for compliance with
decision-making when they act as a body,
Trust .... Copits art available in moot
dthbtrations of the H.,.ring Board ar,
those. principles
when they confront questions and search
.
••• Its ~L--L•
...........
vcnm1p ts• Iarge,
offices. You may MVff need to ffltt to it
dostd to the public, unless the Board
~kmg it an unwieldy body: an apOUI answers. Students are least effective
but it's good to know what it is.
'
agrtes to open them. Beyond that the
pom_ted P~identiaJ representative (or the
when th_eyare isolated or whf'n they art'
hearing-is run like a trial with wit~eses
Presi:<J~nthimself), four exempt staff. five
responding to administrative decisions
exa~ination, cross examinations, etc. •
classil1ed staff. five faculty and fifteen
that have alre-ady been made. At Ever•
Ag.am, contact the President's Office for
students, all "chosen by their colleagues "
green, there's more to a college education
more information.
The council is supposed to meet e-verv •
than classes and books. You are a memo=s
d·scu
. •
ber of this community, even if you're
~dtnt Information Network (S. I.N.):
bother week • charoe
f"I
,r,
1
ss1ssues
rought before it by any member of the
only here for one module, for one
llus !s the latest, and most succe-ssful, in
college community. The council has the quart_er. As I Stt it, part of Evergreen's
a ~nes of attempts at founding an altempe>wer to take five different actions on an
ahve student government. Its structure is
goal 1s to enable students to act, instead
tssue, determined by roll call vote:
of react. Taking part in the decisionbased on a position paper written in 1979
1) Comment requires that the council elect
by a studttit study group on "Student
making beyond what's happening in your
a drafter of the comment to prepare a
Participation in Decision-Making. ..
program is the bf.st way to do that.
text tc be .voted on no later than at the
(Copies of this p;iper are available in th,
• Become involved in the student
ne.xt mtttmg. 2) Vote of conficknce
Campus Activities Office). This paper
si:-oups. Go to the Women's Center, or
. C>,ganlc:Fann Board: A new group doruords the council's satisfal:tion with the
addressed the following probltms, ..How
U1amaa, or KAOS, or the CPJ or any of
signed to help all thrtt of tht coi.
pre~nt course of events, J) Vot~ of no
can students, who tend to be transient
t~ othen and offer a little of your time.
groups that hav, a stake in tht /um get
confide:n~-opposite
of vote of confi.
and often inexperienced in decisionIt II pu_t.you in the thick of things as far
together to dt-v,lop dir.ction and coordidence (really. that"s what the EAC says)
~ dec1s1on•making, and will help you
making, be best involved without comnate projects. Tht Board is compooed of
◄) D~op means that the council refuses 1~
promising the good judgment and
find your social/cuhural niche here
farm users, ttpresentatives of the farm
consider or rule on the issue. Requires a
as well.

efficimcy that can come- from exJ)Uifflce
acad~ic program, Facilities and Campus
aod ~ontinuity7 How can students commit 2/J's majority to pass, 5) Vote of cen• The Evergreen Council rectlly nttds
Activ,ttes ttpresentatlves. The Board is
su~-made
against a person, not .an
the support and commitment of a com•
the hme- necessary to involvement withstill trying to ligun, out its responsibiliaction, and must be accompanied by a
out compromising the quality of other
paratively large group of students. Make
ties. and lftll1S to be worldng wry well.
text to be drafted by a committee of the
parts of their education7 How can stuan effort to find out what goes on with it.
Contact any of the farm carttaken for
whole. Also requires a 2/J's majority to
• Attend th~ GovemanCt" Orientation
dents
be
ttp,-r,ted
at
the
institutional
more information.
pas~. ~ontact the- Prnident's Offiu for
h,v,I while avoiding the type of student
session on Wednnday, Octobu 1 from
~re mformation.
2 to 4 pm.

Veterans' benefits in limbo
by Dave Coble

The Veteran',
~• o its isal allocation for the year and
,. currently malting no payments to veterans. l'raldent Carter 1w rtquelled immediate action oa a supplementary approJ)Ntiom bill curnntly befott Congress
but no action has yd bftn talctn. Vet- '
eran's checb for fall may be late In
arriving. According to Rqistrar Walker
Allen, tht ochool will dtftr vtteran'1
tuition payments until tht VA checks art
issued.
Additionally, rttent changa in Veteran', Administration policy may affect
the G.l. Bill benefits of military vetttans
atEvergrttn.
1
As a nsult of an appeals court ruling
handed down In lune. EVffpftn canno
long~, c,,rtify veteran, for full-time mroUment unlflS they mnt certain "resident
study'· rtquittments. A veteran must not
only be enrolled for full-time <ndit, but

must also be present in a badty-

suptrvised clus,oom for a sptcified
According to Evtrgrttn Vtteran's
Coordinator William fackson. it appean
that all regular full-time programs at
Evtrgrttn will •till qualify for full-time
VA benefits. Eversr-, has bftn em~e_red to cvtify veterans for a combination of resident study and indtpmdent study and moot programs will fall
~to this classiliation. Th, number of
indtpendent study houn may ttprn,nt
up _to one hour INS than th, houn of
reidtnt study-that is. if a program
~ts for Mwn hou.n each week, up to
IIX houn of independer,t study will alto
be considered u apPlicable to tht program by tht VA, for a total of JJ houn
. A "cla11 aession.. by the VA·s deflnit~n
15 50 mlnutn long and a minimum of U
Wttkly acheduled clau -ions(J0
cloclt
houn) is necnsary for full-tim, c,,rti/ication. In the-combination resident/indei,m-

~nt study, the independent study portion

will co
d





;r-

~tu Y u~sup~rted by weeJ<lyclassroom
U\Slr-uchon wdJ qualify for tuition and
ffts _only, regardlns of the amount of
credit awarded by th, school. According
to Jackson. most internships and individ-

ual contr.icts will fall into the independent
stud_y category, and veterans will not
receive full-time be.ne.fita.
One hour of laboratory instruction will
count as half a class session, and one hour
ol shop c_lasswill count as one-third of a
class session.

Individual contracts will qualify for
full-time benefits only if they art somehow supported by at leut seven wttkly
JeSSio~s of cLusroom instruction. "Classroo~ instruction" by the VA's definition

cons1Stsof ocheduled w.. kly mtttings
With a facuJty member and at least one
other student. TutoriaJ SieNions do not
mnt tht dt!flnition.
Although most individual contracts and

~,,.....;H-quahly
for fu,fion ancf
~ only•. ~me internships meeting cer•
~n conditions may be eJlgible for full•
~e ~nefits. The nature of thew intern•
ships is currently being determined by the

VA •nd th, State Approving Agency
. Evergrttn's Office of Vderan's Aff~irs
e_val~~ting each student's program on
an md1v1d~al basis. InfontM1tion on all fall
programs
as not ye-t com ..-...•-•• • An y ques,·
IS

1ons ttgarding benefits should be d.

to that office at 866-6254
irttt
So~e _hope for Vetttai~ at Evergreen
:y
he in legislation currently pending

ed

ore Congress. Th, GI Bill Amendments
~t of_19":9 caJJs for some chan&ff in
tose~.;;~e requirements, and according
I
pa·g t •a; Jahcbon, a vigorous letter cam. i n o
ot the Wa,hington Congres.
~na) Delegation and the House and
. ate ~eteran's Affairs Committtts

'."'Shhtstill produa, a favorabl• ch•nge
e 1aw.

111 t



V
Academic Advising: This office is
responsible for helping students
undt"rstand their acadtmk possibili•
tirs and limitations. here, and for
euminmg appropriate institutional
procn5e1 in terms of mttting thOK
nttds. Larry E1ckst.udt is Academic
Adv15"r. The office is located with
other student and enrollment 5"t·
vices 1n the first floor library.
Call x~312
Ac.ademic: Advising Ruouru
Guide (AARGJ: A usdul booklet
published by Academic Advising.
Contains mformatmn on who does
what, faculty and staff profiles,
credit and a v,1riety of aadt"m1c ~
sources Available- at Acadrmic
Adv1smg
Academic CrNlit: There are no
letter or number gradt>S~~ Credit
1::. obtained whtn a studt-nt fulfills
his or her acadrm1c obligations.
which are detrnmned at the start of
a progr.im or contr.act Credit can
also be earned by e,.,ammat1on or
frnm past expu1ence (See External
Credit) ,1r by tran ..femng from another m-.11tution Credit ,s measu~
m standard quartt'r hours. the ma>c1mum tS 16 hour'> per quarter 180
hours 1s lh(' minimum required for
graduation
Acaidemic Duns: Barb.ara Smith,
Yor\.. Wonjt John Perkins and
R!Chard Alexand('r are the academic
deans They are responsible for facuhv hmn~ and fmng, curriculum
developmenl and fnlhiwthrough,
academJC budgetmg. space ass1gnmf'nls and otl-campus programs.
Tw,1 ol lht' de.an<,.ire cho-.t'n from
the lalulty tor two-year terms, .after
which they rntdl(' back into the faculty p,1t.1l,u the previous pay level,
Th(' other two po-.1t1onsare perma•
nent,
and though faculty members
are prett>rable. ne1ther c-l the currenl ones ue faculty mt'TTlbers,as
no interested EvergrE"E'n te.ichHs
couki be luund
Barbara Smith 1s St-nior Academic
Deo1hin charge Cl! curriculum planning In summer of 1980 she succeeded teacher Will Humphreys,
who has returnied to thE' faculty
after srrvmg four years as dean.
Smith co1mehere from Nt'braska two
)"GU"S
ago. and hu never 1.augh1ma
full-time Evergrttn program. Due to
Sm11h's responsibilities,
she will
h.ive the most nttd of s1uden1 input
r./ any of the deans
Or John Perkins is filling the
other Senior Academic Dean position, which Smllh vacatied lo take
over for Humphrtys. Pl'rkins has
also never taught an Evergreen
cou~. ;md he come5 lo lcSC from
the faculty of the Interdisciplinary
S1ud1es at Miami Un1vt'rsity in
Oxford, Ohio. His main rnponsibil1t1esart' budgeting and faculty evalua11on
York Wong left thl' facuhy al the
start of the 1979-80 school yur to
becomt> Assistant Academic Dun.
Ht' will return lo the !acuity ahf'r
thlS year
Dr Richard Alexander, one ol
the original Evergrttn planning faculty 1s headed into his hrst year u
an .1ws1ant academic dl':an Alexander returned trnm a SlX•month
,1s,c;1J,;nment
a~ an excho1nge profes'°
l><l!mYmilY--.J1U1illOUL"'--1e.1ch one of IJst yt'ilfs most sue·
cesdul programs
tht' student•
1ruti.Jledgroup contract WritinR M
a Liff'work.
ASH: Aduh Student Housing;
apartment'> across Driftwood Road
from aimpus

E

B.ank: South Sound National
Bank has a branch office on the
second floor of CAB. Hours att
11-2,JO.
Buie Programs: lntt'rdisciplinary
coordinated studie:s programs de,.
signed for first-year college students
and re«nt transfer studrnts. A word
to the wise: the pace of basic rrograms c.an be a snail's (a slug's?); at
the first signs of frustration and imp.atie:nce, move on lo something
more challenging._ no matter what
your adviser says.
Bicycle Shop: In the basement of
CAB (take the elt'vator. no stairs)
you can borrow tools and get help
,1nd advice on any bicycle repair
problem. Hours vary depending on
how many people they can gel to
work there. Check with the Activities Offict>
Bookstort': Located on the second
0oor of CAB. the bookstort! carries
all books for programs and modules
as well as a gf"neral selection of
other books Any books they don't
havl' on h.and, can be ordered at the
bac\.. counter. They also carry film,
art supphts, records, cards, Geoduck T-shirts

Carttr Planning and Place.ment:
Locate-cl 1n the first floor Libr.ary
Enrollment Services area, this office
supplements a student's tducational
pr'Ogram with an inlt'grated approach to carttr explora11on, job
search and graduate school placement. They sponsor, among otMr
things, individual o1nd group counseling sessions, workshops, creditgf'nerating courses and an up-Iodate listing of carttr opportunit1n.
Call xbl93
Colltge Activititt Building (CAB):
This is the ··s1uden1 union" building
at Evergrttn, which contains many
student groups' offices, SAGA caff'tuia and deli. a TV lounge otild a
ridr board. Upstairs there's a pool
table, study lounge and a big root
deck. During the school yur, espec·
ially betwttn noon-1 and on Wt'dnndays, this is the hot.spot for
campus "activity." Sometimes you'll
find enttrtainment or speakers, but
always lots of socializing.

COC (Committee on Covnnanm)
Docufflftlt: Now in its 4th ttvision,
this document sets down thl' polky
for governance al TESC and for
community decision making. Academic disputes
and grievances
should be settled by its procedures
and guideline:s. Cop~ arY available
at the Information Center.
CoUqe R«.rution
Clntu:
located just south of the CAB bui.lding
(I I' , toward the dorms). Students
can use its resources for free. A
small quarterly
towt'I fee buys
lockt'r spact' and cle:an dry towels.
The bu1ld1ng houses a large swimming pool and diving bowl. weight
training rooms. racqut'tballthandfor dancing, karatf', f'IC This facil11y 1s the: epitome of Evergrttn's
country club atmosphere; gpt it
while you can.
CommunkatK>ns Bulldi.n1: Thts is
the MYo-'l'SI building on c.ampus and
houses an impressive array of facilities for artists, music~ns, audio
enginttn. theater and dill'lC't ttu·
dmts, such as a recital ha.II and
cxpnirnental theater, practkr rooms
Mld rt'Cording studios the likes of
which you won't find at .any other
small ~ber•I arts college.

. -- -.



R

Camrrn..-iity Rtlations and
Nlistant to the: Pralclent: Director
is Le:, Bdridge. He is the college's
repttSentative 10 the state legislatutt, local and federal gove.rnment.
He coordinate:s college rq,rese:ntatioo among community groups and
college involvement with special
pro1ects which bring Evttgtttnen
and community mffl'!ben together.
internships in government and community relations are available for
work-study qualified students.
Computu
Services: The new
director of academic computing is
Van Shafer. Bruce Hooker has
recently been hired full-time to
work on both the PLATO grant and
lo continue working as a systems
programmer on the Hewlett Packar4 system.
Due to major ttmodeli.ng over
the summer, yuu can't gt:l into the
user's access area via the old tn·
Ira.nee through LIB 2417. The
entrance is through LIB 2408.
As part of this remodeling and
upgrade. both the HP and PLATO
systems will be made avai.lable to
the widest possible. range of campus
use.rs. If you have any suggestions
for improving the availability. facilitie:s, or use of the HP system or
PLATO, pleaw relay the:se to Van
in LIB 2413 (ext. 6232).
Contract, Group: A mode of
study usually full-time, in which a
group of students o1grte 10 work/
learn as a team with one or mott
faculty sponsori. Often student generated: gtnerally more advanced
level.
Contract, lndividu.!: One student working/learning
with one
faculty sponsor under a formal
agreement stating obj«tivtt,
purposes and activities.
Cook~ Lady: Every Thursday,
the Cookie Lady sits ensconced in
the CAB lobby IS.. Lobby). Htr
stuff is positively addictive. Tread
lightly.
Cooperative Education: Helps
students to combine college study
with on-the-job experientt. Coordinators help students locate ~itearning internships.
located in
IAB I, x639l.
Cooper Point Journal: The rag
you're perusing at this very moment. The Journal comes out every
Thursday, along with the Cookie
Lady. Produced by and for stude.nts. the CPJ welcomes ideas,
writing, artwork, photos, time,
energy and criticism from anyone
and everyone.. If inlerestied. stop by
CAB 104 near SAGA or call x6213.
Coordinated Studies Proaram:
Full-time academic study move,
lasting one-four quartt'rs, in which
,everal disciplines are brought to
bear on one: subject.

Dean,: There att six of lhftn:
Llb~ry Services Uovana Brown).
and Enrollment Services (Larry
Stenberg) and four Academic De.ans
<SttAcademic Deans.)
Development Office: Headt'd by
Director Sue Washburn. the De.velopment Office is responsible for all
ol Eve.rgrttn's fund-raising efforts
for gifts and grants from private
sources (alumni. parents, friends,
from some government grants programs Thul' funds, which are
raised through the Evergrttn Foundation, are used for new studrnt
scholarships, performing arts serin,
$1udrnt and faculty rnearch, athletics, alumni program su~rt,
and
other special t'ducation.al pro;«ts
(such ilS the Seawulff. 1hl' Unsoeld
C'blter, the student record album
"'Collabor.ations," the U.S.-Japan
trade. institute, lKtutts, confere.ncn,
and many othen). In 1979--'0, •~
most S7S,OOOwas T"t'.«ived.

The Development Office staff tS
availab~ for gr.ants and other fundraising coun,eling. In fact, all fundraising ,olicitation efforts (with the
eu:e.ption of fundraise:n like con~rts or danCH) must be coordinated with Sue, LIB 3103.
DTI (Dl.. ppeuing T Mk Fora),
Any ad hoc committtt whkh is
formed to make recommendations
oo a p¥ticular issue or function.
Anyone can call for a .DTF to be
formed. Such ttqunts
for "nontrivial" matten should be cal'ried
wt in consultation with the Evergrttn Council (See Evergreen
Councill.
Driftwood Day Catt Centa-: "A
le:aming center for both preschooler,
and college. studmts. The Center
primarily serves childrm of lowincome, full-time students who de,.
pend on this service in on::wr to attend collqe, The staff of the centrr
de.pends heavily on work study, interns and volunteer students interestied in Hrly childhood ieducation,
and child development. U you like
to work with childttn, telephone
Vlrginla Brian, Centu Coordinator,
866-6060 or 866-6220. Parents may
pick up applications for their children at CAB JOS. The children accepted must be 18 months to 4 yea.rs
11 months of aige and may attend
for a total of six hours each day.
Hours att from 9 to 4 with an hour
earlier or later by permission. Thett
is a sliding fee scale based on income of the parents.

Environmental Rnour« Ce:nter:
A catalogued libr.ary with currffll
magazines on environmental issues;
it provides office space for environ-'
mmtal organiutions;
shows movies: sponsors spuk.ers and events;
has petitions; recycles cans, bolt~
and nrwspapen. There: a~ many
opportunities for involvement here;
some you can even grt paid for.
Contact l(jtty Broadbent at the ERC
ollia,, CAB 103.
Evaluations:• The method by
which faulty and students Gt'termine
academic progrns and growth and
whethe:r or not ettdit should be
awarded. As often as onct each
quarter, studmts att requittd 10
write a se.lf--evaluation, a faculty
evaluation and a program rvaluation. The final wttk of every quarlff is set aside for t-valuation writing and conferenCl':9 with facuhy
sponsors.
Evans: Dan Evans, President of
Evergrttn, was governor of Washington for twelve ynn
(remembered as "tfte golden age'") befott
Oixy's reign. Evans was Washing•
ton's most popular governor ever.
and most state politics observm
agrtt
he could be rttl«ted
now
with no problems. The local papers
bmd over bukwards
to get his
name into a headline.
Evergrem Council: Thi' decisionmalonabody outlined in COG lll
t5tt entry). The CouncO lS compRd '115 students, 10 staff and S
!acuity, and is ruponsiblt-for charg.. DTh, and se:rving as ai liaison
betWttn various fattts of the TcSC
a:mmunity.
Evc:rgret:n Political Information
Center ( EPIC): A student group

.

'.

.

tion (you coulda gueswd, right?)
through films. speaken, workshops
and a library of political (le:ftist)
periodicals. locaited in LIB 3220,
x6144.
Everpttn Times: 1) 15 minutes
behind Pacific Standard Time; another uniV'ffSal excux. 2) any one
of the four tlme:son the clock tOWff.
The two definitions
s.arily relatt'd.

R

Evera,ret:n Van: This is ,1 studentfu.nded bus service that Tl.Jnon eve,..
nings and wteke.nds, when tlw city
busses attn't running. During the
,chool year thett aire two routes:
.the "A" route goes downtown via
Division Strttt and continues on up
to 4th Ave. to Pacific Av,_ The "8"
route ion downtown via Overhu.lse
and Mud Bay R~ds. tums right on
Caphol Blvd. and g~ on up past
Capitol Campus. This y,ar, Evergreen is buying a real bus, which
we will share with IT. Cost is 25t
CThett is a once.--a-day Ct)-()J) run,
too.)
Extana.1 Cttdlt: A way for students with previous non-academic
learning to receive academic ~it
for such learning e.x~riences. Per50ns who have acquittd eignuicant
learning from past experience in ernployment, voluntttr work. travel or
Independent study m•y ht' eligible,
Requirements call for submitting an
extensive. written documt'nt de.tailing the learning that grew from the
o.periffl«. Students should apply
during their first year at Evergrttn.
Contact Jan Krones, Prior Leaming
Programs, LAB I 1024.

Facllitl~ Office.: In ch.Jrgt' of the
entire physical structure ul the college. Dav~ Wallbom is the director.
l...oc.ltedon the first floor ol LAB II.
Call x6340 for reserving moms and
xb120 for eve:rything else
Financial Aid: located m the Enrollrrient Services AITa, Financial
Aid is reponsible for ~rounging
mone:y for deserving students. They
also have a bulletin b08[d listing
for all on-campus and ~ome off.
camp(ls jobs.
Food Sttvlcn:
A cafeteria and
dinin3 area are located on the fint
0oor of the CAB building. They
offer meal plans, and pay-u-you-go
service. There's also the Dt-li on the
aecond floor for soups. sandwiches
and (H•-Ch.!l .. p,....,, IS.. SAGA
for tt.lated entry).
Friday NIie (not Night) Rims:
Self-supporting film Ima on Friday
afternoons and evenings. Usually at
3, 7 and 9:30 p.m. Due to 1ncre:a.sed
costs, thr prlct is going up to S1.25.
Full-Ttm., An ocadnnK load ol
12 to 16 quarter houn.

Goy ~"'"'
Cmter, The GRC
exists for all the fags and mies at
TESC. (Editor's note: This was
written by the GRC coordinator.
not the CPJ) If you'tt straight and
want help in dealing With hnero,exiJm, we can he.Ip you too. The
GRC will be o~n during orientation wttk. from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Stop bi or call.
Geoduclcs ( pronoun«d Cooryducksl : Oversized clams with oversiz.t'd fttt (necks?). Th,s hideous
be:astie is Evergrttn·s ma:01. They
are non-com~titive,
spuuu.al and
Graphics: The graphic facility
loc•ted at Seminar 2150. 1s available
to students who are working on
projects such as post~rs, flyers,
signs, etc. Services ava11.lbe to stu•
dmts for a ftt att phototypesetti03,
hnd.lining, and production .51':fVias
by the staff. Desi&n consultation
with the head designer,
Brad
Clernmons, and use of the waxer,
lights tables, lucygraph. and/or
drawins boartl by the student is
Fr... For det•ils all Shirley G....,.,
production coordinator, x6042.

E

E

Critva11<» Proetdun! ~ outlined
in tho COG Document, tho wholo
of oettlina
dlsput .. , from lt>formal mediation,
to Evergret:n
Council and/or Campus adjudicator, to Hearing Board, to la.wtuit.

11ur1ns&o..d,

(S..

N

Lc:i•uu Education Workshop•:
Non-a-edlt duaes: e,mythina fr<>D)
pl,otogr•phy to Chinese cooking to
~ Ott lpoNOred by the leisure
Ed. Progr•m. Sign up •t the beginning of each quarter. Call x6S30 for
more .Wormation.
Ubruy Loop: The drive-up loop
at the front of campus, between B
and C pa.rldn3 lots. You can catch
tho bus Into town hett. Called the
Library Loop bt:cau.,e it doesn't go
to the Ubr~ry.

c~

Proc:edw.s), Tho President oc his or
her d,signft II responsiblo for randomly selecting three permanent
momben--ol tf,. boud, Including a
llludent, 1tafl/mombor and a faculty
member. Tho Pttsldmt or destgnee
.i.o ..i«ts four tempora,y memben, two .. ch from tho disputant>'
poergroup,,. Mtttinp of tho board
Include hearings and dtlibtt.tions.
Within lffl days of tho dose of tho
hurinp,
they are required to vidt written notb of their decisions.
lnf0rnii"i:10;. Ce~t«r: The lnfo
center is in the room acrou from
the Bookstore on the main floor of
the CAB. They collect and dium,.
inate information about Evergree:n,
You an register to vote, look for
l01t itffl'ls, or pick up a copy of the
CPJ. the Olympia Now, and other
various propaganda thett.
Interlibrary Lo..,, If the TISC
Library doesn't havt' it. librarians
can 3et it from anothe:r library.
lntanship: Off-campus (usually)
work expe:rience undertaken for
aood.mlc credit. Arranged through
lhe. Cooperative Education Office:.
(Stt Cooperative Education.)
lnlonnatlon Services: The college's news bureau and its publications. Director, Judy McNickle
ove.nees writing all newt relu,es
about Eve:rgreen (including all student activities that SN:k publicity)
for o.te.rnal media, writes and edits
the college Newsletter and Happenin.p, which come out on Fridays,
ffld OWl"Sftl publication of thl' college C•talog. EvtrarTimes, and
all other major publications, Her
office also supervilet the Information Center. U you need help promoting an event or If you've got an
interatina academic project to de,.
tcribe or you've won a ncent grant
or award you think tnffits te1lina:
•bout, all Judy, 1166-6128,UB J114.
INtltutlonal
llaMardt:
Collect,
data and conducts studies to pro.;do coll•
dtdsion maken with
information describing ~ in e:nroUment and mention;
compiles
reports in rwpona to legislative inquiries: and is •v.U.bt. u a ,.._
,owa
to memben of the EV!f"P'!'ffl
community conducting their own
research. Director Stew Hunter it
an Evergreen graduate. U you haw
internts in the area of social Iden-,
tific rae:arch and are work-study
qualified or consldtring 'II' Internship In that area, conuict the IR
offb at x6116.

Non-commada.l,
community, Ustener--sponsottd radio
n
,
oor
or 119.J on the dial. They olkr a
wide variety of music, spoken word
and public olloin programming and
are alw•Y' looking for people (lllu•
dmts and non-students) interested
in being on the air.
1.amb,s RCmm:
PN,.
v;da lndivlduallud help with rucllng, writlna, and study skills of E....,..... students on both a
walk-In and • module bull. We
provide •lf•progn,mmed materials,
tutorins -·
and ...- ... .,,
of needs. UB 3401, x6420.

Prior wmin1 Proc,~t: Proy~_
ways to e.am credit at Evergreen be-fore even taking any classes here.
Su External Credit and Upside

~Desrtt-

Provo.t: Byron Youtz is Ewrgrttn's provost. The provost is the
one who Is ultimately responsible
for everything to do With academia. S/he is also Academic Vice
President.~---- Program Secretary, A useful resource person, auigned to work
with a group of faculty. Find out
who yours is and where. They
have most all the forms you'll ever
need and a wealth of important
information.

z

S.U-PK<d LHrnlng Unit (SPlU),
Indexed collection of technical ttsources (sound-on-sound
tapes,
computer instruction, etc.) for individually paced instruction (for credit
or not).
SPLU Labs: Several rooms on the
fint noor, LAB II, overflowing with
equipment: computer terminals,
~riters.
light tables, a sewing
machine, glass blowing and more:
open lo students. Call 1or hours and
information, x61 '55.
Seminar: A scht'duJt'd discussion
or discussion group meeting within
a specific learning program. Seminars are e:ssential to the method of
education at Evergrttn.
Slup: They're everywhere. Rolle.rsk.aten and barefoot strollers bewa ...

Mui: A ..t!-otrVe pool offioe II
loc.ated on the fint floor of CAB,
where you can buy stamps, post
lette:n and packages. The campus
mai.l room is located on the fint
floor of the library.
Media loan: loans all kinds of
media rquipment: Proj«ton, cameras. computer terminals: a.nd much
mott. lney~U a
tead\_you how to
use it. Locat
round the: corntt
from the •
tion desk in the
library proper.
Mes.y Arts Lab: A ce;;mic s~
dio located in the 201 Buildin& (be-hind the Communications Building).
Access through le:isure Education or
by paying a quarterly or daily use
ftt. Call x6530 for houri and costs.
- Metal Shops: In the Lab Annex
(betwttn LAB I and 11). For heavy
metals work. LAB I basement has
tools for more detailed work. These
facilities are primarily for academic
work.
Mlnl-Medlai: Much activity .and
media equipment available for student use. LIB 1302.
Modular Hou1ln1 (the Mods):Thoae suburlnn duplexes near the.
Rec Paivilion arr four-student aipartment.s run by Campus Hous~.
NERG (New EVUJl'ftft Raowa
Gulde), Published by the Coun,e~
ing Center, NERG contains descriptions of a vuiety of social service
rnources at Evergreen and around
the Olymp~
__

Recrutlon l>avlllon: That big
black concrete tent located on the.
edge of the soccer field. Contains
two tennis/'nsketball courts.
Red Square: The main govm:
ment pin.a in Moscow: the longnt
demonstration ever held then lasted
45 seconds. Also, the ttd brick
plaza. in front of the library, sane.
oi occasional concerts, symposiums,
and more rettntly, ash. Red brick
was chMen by campus architt'Cts
duf" to its superior drainage qualities, whkh gives reel square the appe:arance of a man-made pond every
rainy season.
Rrsidency: If you wish to become
a Washington slate resident (and
save 5400/quarter) gel a state ID or
Drivers license, ttgister to vote,
oprn a bank account, and change
your car's registration. Then wait a
year.
Retreat: When an academic program talc.rs off for other pairts to
work and play in a. different environment.

5"A (-. SNA), Suinds for S...and Activities. A portion of
tuition goes into the Se-rvica
Activities fund each quarter.
money is allocated by a board
(ailed the Sorvices and Activities
Fees Review Board) comprised pri•
marily of students. It funds a variety of programs including tho CAB
and REC Cmttr, KAOS, the bus
sy,t<m, Driftwood 0.y Care, tho
student political groups, e:tc. This
yur's 56:A Coordinator has not
beffl in. Cont.act CAB 305 for more
information.
.
SAGA: lf you were thinking that
"S.A.G.A."
stood for Slop and
Gastrointestinal
Asuuhs, you're:
suffmng from a typical Eve-rgreen
syndrome, ove.ttxpoturt: to acronyms. ''Sq.a" is short for "Kama-de.saga" the Indian name for Geneva, N.Y., wherr the corporation
originated in 1948.
Security: Semi-uniformed (blue
bluen and grey slocb-brond new)
officen and trained stu~ts
handle:
,ecurity ,roblems. In addition, campus residents un registrr serial
numbers of their valuables thett, in
case of theft. loc•ted In LAB II.

vicn
your
and
That

,

Part• llme:

An ac.adernk~rte

load of i... than 12 qu•rttt houn.
Peu: The official word from
Security Is NO pets In
buildings
and anywhere on campus, they
must be under physical control (I.e.
on • lush) of tho owner. Animal
Control folks will b-e patrolling
campus this fall to enfora thll po~
icy. Security does ..... kennels In
bock of LAB U •nd will dopit your
pooch virtually •ny time of day oc
evening.
Portfollo1 1) Your record of pttformance on fit. with tho Registrar:
it contains -.U and faculty evaluations and program dncriptions or a
copy of your individual contracts.
2) Your own record of performance; contains all of the above plus
examples of your work-papen,
llk:lrs of art pieces, tapes C1 music,
oa of
rformance:s or shows
etc..
___
_
• PotlUC:k7°A tod.t pthering
in
whkh everyone brings part of the
meal. Evergreen is potluck B!)'.
Prlnlmaklna lab, Good f.cilitia
for silkscreening,
bookbinding,
photo etching and lettnvr-,
etc.
Located in tho bu«rnent ol LAB U.
P.-occt1: An Evergrttn
catch
word, proc<M can dncribe onythlna
from whot hoppened in • lousy
oemtn.r ("our group'• really
suck, . .. ") lo all tho conditions of
-••
life ("tho I went
through thJoq110rtff ... ").

ony

S.lf H,lp Legal Aid: A w•lk-ln
dinic and ttSOUralrdenal
library
for the. Everg.ree.n community. Student staffen auess your problem,
adviJe whethe:r you need a laW)"ff.
a.nd suggest poesible courHS C1 action usina office: manuals. resource
files and consultation with the law)'ff adv..or. People who come to
thoolfk. should expect to do ,ome
rnearch and work for thm.elves;
tho pl,ilooophy behind tho SHLAP
offl~ 11 helping people help them..t .... Ubrary JUA, x6107.

Sodal Contract: Docume-nts containing principles of social conduct
to livt' and work by at Evffgfffn.
The purpose is to protect the rights
of each member of the community.
Find copies at the Information
Center.
Sponsor: A faculty member ttsponsible for supervising stuc:knts'
work in an individual contract.
Student Information
Nt:twork
(SIN): The Student Information
Network was startt'd last year by a
small group of students who saw
the nttd for a permanent system of
disseminating information about
decisions and aictions being taken
by various faculty and administrativt' groups and pe-oplt'. SIN grew
out of a student moratorium that
was the result of being system.atic.ally \eh out of dt'C1sions that may
profoundly affect the shape of Ever•
grttn in the coming years. Though
SIN has the lip-service support of
faculty and adm1n1strators, it will
take devoted studt'nts to Stt it
through. This school year, SIN has
one part-time paid recorder, Bob
delaubenfels,
who shares office
space in the S&:A Offict in CAB
305. If you are interestied,
and get involvt'd.

Upside-Down Dtaret:: This program .awards Eve:rgrttn credits for a
previously earne:d t«hnical or vocational degrtt. Students accepted
into thl' program must follow an
approved educational plan, emphuizin3 libenl arts, for two yun
at Evergre,en. Contact Jan Krones,
Prior Leaming Programs. LAB I
1024.
Vending Machines, On th, Hnt
0oor of CAB, the:sr metal mon,ten
will sr:rvt' you coffet:, juice, candy,
kr crearn bars and chips. When
they eat your coins, as they often
do, inform the folks in SAGA so
they can rrimbune. you. PLEASE
do not blame: the CPJ staff for
faulty machines-we have nothing
to do with them. Also note; we
Mwr
have change. down here, 50
go to SAGA or the Boolc.stott.
Veterans Affairs: Advises vets on
their GI Bill funds. locatt'd in the
Enrollment Services area, fint floor
Library (Stt VA update for latest on
funds.)
Voluntary Servke. Ust: Sign up
at the Information Center, second
0oor CAB, to get involvt'd in governance at Evergrttn.
Washington Occupational Worl--"w.,·o.n...5,u.vi,e • + cgm.plM4'r~
and/or manual system which provides ca~r
and occupational informatron to ,chools and social servkr agencies. WOIS information is
available on campus through Carttr
Planning and Placement, 866--6193.
Workstudy:
If you qu7My.
(check with Financial Aid) there are
many jobs available: on campus;
somr interesting and t'duational,
tome mundane.

Page 16 CPJ Orientation Issue

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Health
treatment

Introducing the
Organic
Activities

Coordinator
Farm
lS
newest TESC
resource

and counseling
snJDENT HEALTH SERVICE
Seminar 2110

by P•ter Epperson

Before I explain what the AC is, let me
tell you what the AC is not. The AC is
NOT the Services and Activities Coordinator. The AC is the Activities Coordinator. This year's activities coordinator is
Peter Epperson and you can find him in
CAB 305 (the Activities Offictl.

Now that J'vo introduad myKlf, I'd
like to take this opportunity to explain indepth why I'm htre (as AC that is) ~d
highlight upcoming ovonts.
~ribing
tho reponsibilitin ol my job
has sometimes been very perplexing. So,
I've retreated to my dictionary (keeping in
mind what l know and what my BOSS
has told me). The Activities Coordinator
is re-sponsible for helping events on
campus "work or act topther humoniously while attaining their goals and obj«tives through pleasing contrast."
How does one accomplish such a feat1
Actually, it will bt quit• difficult and
that's wlly I'm ta.king up this space and
your time. In order to insure the success
of events on campus, we must all work
together. StaH, faculty and students interested in planning activities should
contact me well in advance so that we can
coordinate with events already planned.
If you have an activity or event already
planned, please come by and talk with mt
and enter it on the master calendar. The
calendar is filling up fast, so plan ahead.
Anyone interested in production, technical support or graphic design should
drop by and visit or leave your name and
addr6s in CAB 305. The majority of
events which occur on campus re.ly on
donated energies and would not occur
without them.
Enough ol how to and why. WHAT'S
HAPPENIN' THIS QUARTER1 SttmS to
be the number one question. ALOTII
During orientation week, there's the Inter•
national Food Festival &: Evergreen's
Annual lighttr-Than-Air and lov~ls-aGeoduck Taltnt Show, plus Tht First
Cheap Dance with a rhythm and blues
band, The New Vitations, and the
Harvest Fair. (For mort: info ttttr to the
Activities Calendar or the Good News
Caltndar Updatt.)
Later on in the quarte.r there will be a
btntlit danct for tho CPJ and KAOS ,.;th
two local bands; numerous musical enter•
tainers; a comedy ttV'iew; ROCKY
HORROR PICTURE SHOW (Hallowttn
eve) and a Halloween Dance with 6Cfs
Rock-N-Roll band, Tho Frap.
Hope to see you at the aboYr:rnrntianK
evrnts and have a good year.

by Dan Farbtr
Approximately eight acres of The Evergr,.n Statt Colltgt will nevtr bt sprayed
with pesticides or herbicides. For nine
years, the Organic Farm on Lewis Road
has had this policy, established by the
farm's first users, and it will remain firm.
The farm is a multi-use resoura center
open to students and the general public
alike. Available facilities include the new
larmhou,e, built largtly by students ~d
completed in 1979. It has a large dining/
conference room and a kitchen facility
that boasts a nrw wood cook stove.
There are almost 10,000 square feet of
French intensive/biodynamic raised beds
for the cultivation of organic vegetables
~d herbs. In tht main garden area art
reearch plots where students «xperiment
with vegetable and fruit varidia to
determine their suitabUity for growing in
tho Northwtst. Along ,.;th ti- oxptrimonts ;. retarch bting conducted on
vari-'lUS t!"lethods of organic pest control
and methods of growing grain aops ..;thout tilling.
A solar groonhoUK, built by students,
will go into operation this fall, ttsting the
viability of activt oystom oolar heating in
this rtgion. A plutic, low-a.I groonhou,e
adjaCfflt to tht solar groonhou.. hu an
aquaculture tank and more raioed btds.
Tho farm has two community garden
sittS that are open to the public for yearround gardening. Spaa,, lertillun and
tools are loaned to pooplt who would
otherwise not have the opportunity to
gordtn. Tho ftt is S5 for tho season. Tho
harvest season also brings opportunities
for the public to buy vegetables or trade
labor for produce (a practice we encourage). Produce is marktted at tho Olympia
farm.,. Marktt and directly off tho farm.
lnttrnted pooplt should contact tht c.,...
takers for more information.
The academic group most involved with
the la rm is the Small Farm Program.
Students in this program have the opportunity to study and experiment with various methods of organic horticulture,
alternative energy, integrated pest control,
soil science and other related projects.
The ca~takers (two live-in, one not)
and the farm coordinator are the people
responsible for maintaining operations at
the Organic Farm. They. along ..;th tho
Farm Board (..,. Govomana, article in
this issue) coordinate projects, activities
and events, a.s well as providing a continuity between academic programs.
Activitits bting pl~
this fall include
a Leisure Education class entitled "Organic
Gardening: Backyard Self Sufficiency."
Thnt will bt held tvtry Tuesday at
7 p.m .. starting October 7 at the Orpnic
Farm. Subjects will include winter gardtning. trtt and btrry care, food preerving
and many more areas of interest to the
homo gardtnor. To register call tho leisure
Education Office: 866-6530.
To visit the fa.rm, follow the trail that
starts from tho 1idewalk bttwten the lab
anntx and Parking lot C. Thtrt are signs
to help direct folks. Tho farm is open
tvery day and tho carotaken are usually
-♦ ail:.ible tO"""anSWet
qua ons. oun c.ar.
bt arranged by calling 1166-6161.

OY"1pia'Potrery
&.'ArtSuJ'P!y,
Inc.
1822 W. J-larrisoru
Olympia ,WA98502
5nuhts.OUl>tu

.JlrtSupplus
otu.Aerylies

·we Ddi.vrr

Htalth Services:
1166-6200

943·5332..
"Welcome Back, Evergreeners"

Olympcd(Jlns
Wfvtu, Boolis
clay "Gwus

Counseling
is not just
for crazies
by Katrina Curtis
Cofftt ~d tea. Plllows and plants. R~
sponsiye pooplt who=
alJo ltt you bt.
located next to Htalth Servi- in Sem.
Bldg. 2109, tho campus Courueling Center
is a warm and confidential place for
ptrsonal concerns of students, faculty and
staff.
Tht Counseling Center 1taff consists of
two profasional counoelon ~d 1ix to
tight paraprofeslonals, all ..;th a variety
of backgrounds and training that help in
our undtntanding of human 1ituations.
Wt providt a fluor---,nt-frtt, quiet environment for those times when 'What I
am doing isn't working." or '1 want to
grow in new ways." We att interested in
and committed to ~ the sptdal
nttds of th• Evfflrtffl community.
Our ctnltr providts direct counooling to
pooplt who are focusing on a sptctrum of
issues which may include selecting programs or liltstyles, ~ing
trarwitions,
dtaling with identity and ..U-imagt, sexuality, loneliness, dtpreuion, anxiety, Joos
and working with intimate and other re-lationshipo. We also providt outreach,
e.g .. program pttlffltatioN, some consultation and training with groups and colltge offices. Wt provide information ~d
rtferral, olltr 9'0Upt ~d workshops, ~d
sponsor films.

MYTH: "I HA VE TO BE SICK, MAD
OR CRAZY TO NEED COUNSEUNG"
Our approach is dtvolopmontal in
nature. Wt do not believe there is only
"one way" for evtryont. Thoughts, f..Jings, action,, intuitione, history, drums
or lile-styln may bt explored during diffl..
cult situations or when constructive
change is dtsirtd. W• rosptct tach indlvidual'1 raouralulntsa to malt• JU. work,
rt"alizing that we caMot/wlll not solve
problems, but can and will work at Ulisting pooplo to bt aware of alternatives,
choices and resou.rca for growth and
change.
Our groups and workshops vary from
quarter to quarter and att da,igned to
m.. t some nttds for pononal counooling
or personal growth. Those offered by
,taff are lrtt to students, faculty and' collrg• stall. Thtre is a minimal Ito for
ou and works
munity ad itator,. Look for information
on upcoming groups and workshopa in

the CPJ ~d In the Happenings.
TESC CounK!ing Cmter is optn Monday through Friday, during all hours bt-n
8:30 a.m. ~d 5 p.m., for phont
and walk-in counseling or schtdultd appointments. Wt work ..;th individuals,
partrltrs, groups and organizations. To
support you, we nttd your inpull Questions, comments, constructive criticisms,
suggestions, and ideas are welcomed."
W•' d tsptcially like to heu about how
th, tnvironmont of TESCaffects you and
what your particular nttds and concerns
art.

Wt wolcomt visiton and people who
want to rtlax for a bit in a puaful spot.
Com• in, join us in getting to know our
ntW staff, find out about and resister for
groups and workshops offered this quarter. You a.re cordially invited to our new
"Tuesday Tea" -a time for IOCia!Wng~d
sharing hot drinks bttwttn the houn of
4 and 5 p.m. evrry Tuesday.

Draft
counseling

available
II you art concerntd about the drah, or
ii you havo any questions about it, htlp Is
availablt in the Olympia area. 11it Thunton County Draft Counoeling Center provides a varitty of helpful information
about the in• and outs of registration and
the draft. Its services art confidential and
lrtt ol charge.
The Thurston County Draft Counaling
Centtr provides tho following ..,,yjc:es:
- Individual counseling for young
pooplt directly affected by registration
and tho draft.
- CounKling for concerned parents.
- P.. r rap groups for clarifying p,nonal
btlitfs ~d attitudts.
- Informational handouts oxplaining the
S.l«tivt Service Systtm ~d mated
issun.
- Training workshops for preen! and
prosptctiv• counalon.
- Informational workshops.
HOURS: Monday,, 5:30-9 p.m. and
Wtdnndayw, 5 :30-9 p.m.
Wt hope to ,n>vi<lt additional houn as
ooon u more counsdon havt boon
trained. TCd>CC is looking for new
momlion-to btcome COUNO!onand/or to
~ with other ongoing projeru. Prnmtly, our buslnns fflffllnp att held oach
Thunday at 6 p.m. at the Center, 6230
Capitol Boulevard South In Tumwater. II
you would Iii« to help in any way, pie...
a
on o
yor
Wtdnnday evening from 5!30 10 9 p.m ..
or join m at a Thursday memng.

GUITAR S:ALE
Includingampe, banjoeaid mandollrw
BUY NQN AND SA

Studio
305 E. 4th

111

~cCenter

r

-

Women's Oinic:
1166-6238

OFFICE HOURS:
8 a:m. to 5 p.m. daily, Monday through
Thursday for Htalth Services and
Women's Clinic
8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday for Womm's
Clinic Only
5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday for Women's
Clinic Only
H~lth Services is staffed by a Nu=
Practitiontr who has ocheduled appointmtnts Monday through Thursday.
Physician covrrage by Dr. James Foss and
Dr. Robtrt Billings is provided from
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Tuesdays and Th~
days. Allergy injtctions art givtn Tuesday
and Thursday mornings and a wart removal clinic ls provided students uch
Wednesday altt_moon. Tho Women's
Clinic is stalled by a Women's Htalth
Cart Spteialist who has scheduled appointments Monday through Friday.
Htalth Services and Women's Oinic is
available to all currently tnrolled students
for a minimal ftt during Fall. Winter and
Spring Quarttl'J. Limited laboratory work
is ptrformed at tho clinic for a ,mall 1..
and most medications are provided at
cost. Most laboratory tests ud all x-rays
howtvtr, mu1t bt rtmTtd to off-campus
facilities. Medical insurance plans are
availablt at timt of registration ..;th
claims proctsKd by Health Strvicn.
Trtatmont for injvries and illness,
health coun .. ling, nutritional counseling,
alltrgy injections, wart romoval and
tmergoncy lint aid art avallablt in the
clinic. No overnight facilitits are available on campus, howevv-, ttfttral service
is maintained for alm,,hloun and Wftktnds. Emtrgoncy ...-vice it provided by
St. Ptttt Hospital and Thunton County
optraln a Modic Ont Emorgoncy Service.
Evrrgroon'1 Mtdlc Nint Fire Department
Unit provides llmited fint aid on campus
at all times.
Tht Women's C.linic provides physical
examinations for women at a amall service
ltt, including gyntcological distrtSS treatment and referral, venerul disease screening and treatment, cancer and DES scrttn·
ing and family planning services. Tho stall
is trained to deal with moat questions that
women and men have about sexual health.
Health Servi= and Women's Clinic
sponsor weekly in-service presentations
by our campus physicians. Workshops are
also hold in Stffldard First Aid, Advanced
First Aid, Cardio-Pulmonary Rtsuscilation, nutrition, stress and other healthrtiated concerns. Stall mombtrs ..;ll di>cuss all aspttts of diagnosis and treatment
with students.

g

$

i ¢ t

\?

s

U you have an inttNlt in chtcking out
portablt media equipment such as 16mm
projtetors, slidt projteton, rot! ffld
ca.ssette tteorde-rs, record players, cameras, tripods, microphones, microfilm
readers, video systems. and additional
..... _
.
by Eugenia Cooper
sophisticated 16mm film ~d audio pro'

I
duction
equipment;
try
to
loate
Karen
-..;
i,
'
~
Thunton County Rape Relief, a proBerkty or Pettr Randlttt. They head tht
I •
'
gram of tht Olympia YWCA, was lonntd
r")
Matta
Loan
depa_runent
which
is
an
ex..(: I .
di
,I•
in October 1973 by a group of women
tension of Circulation Services. Since
.... '
who were conceffled about the need for
i,.,_
•I
thtte are strict rul~. regulations, and
. I
supportive services to victims of rape.
restrictions on the equipment, you are
'
These women researched the historical
\ .
I.••
..

responsiblt
for
acquiring
a
proficitncy
• ..
,_
aspects of rape and the emotion.al trauma
card, having a valid ID card, ~d hana person experiences after sexual assault .
• dling equipment with proper care.
On tht third Aoor of tho library, along A consciousness raising group was formed
that same year for women who had bttn
with study rooms, study areas, lounges,
raped to come together and share their
and typewriter rooms, exists all periodilttlings and thoughts.
cals/ documents/ archives, rare books,
Work was soon underway to provide
maps, and vtttical files. A copy machine
24-hour "Rapt Rtlitf Advocacy" through
breeds paper while the main collection of
the Thurston-Mason County Crisis Clinic
microfilm await your interest. Most back
A ■ wo Doa11wt.
phone lines. Advocates-trained
women
issue periodicals are on microfilm. AJI
118+volunteers-designed
the
basic
principles
indexes to periodkals, microfilm and
that would guide their actions in working
documents exists in. the reference area on
the first 0oor. Malcolm Stilson is the busy with women victims and defined the
services they would provide to victims
librarian to ask for assistance in locating
.>uchas emotional support, legal/medical
these materials.
Media ServkH is located on the ground information and rrferrals to other com·
munily agencies.
floor of the Library Building. It coordiOne particularly strong principle which
~tes the media production center, elecunderlies Rape Relief's aid to victims yet
tronic media (audio and visual), photo
today, emerged in these early months of
services, and Washington State Film
the operation. it is a belief in the victim's
Library. Char Davies is currently the coordinator for this vast facility. The Media right a.nd responsibility lo make her own
decisions throughout her contact with
Center itself is a do-it-yourself oper-ation
with beginning to intermediate level slide/ Rapt Relit!. Rapt Rtlitf advocates retape production, audio narration, dubbing spond only to tho1e calls initiated by v1c•
and editing, photo copying, dry mounting tims themselves and provide only those
services that are requested.
of prints, slide sorting and viewing, film
Public education about the realities of
viewing, graphic arts work, and the use
rape will continue to take a high priority
of an ARP synthesizer. "Thereis also a
in Rape Relief's efforts. Public undermini black and white 1V studio and a
by Kym Trippsmith
Slanding of such things as what motivates
4-track audio studio available for reservarapists, who becomes a victim of rape and
tion in advance. Studios for professional
The Evtrgrttn library offers a wide
level production are op,en for student use
sexual assault, factors in society that
range of services along with a full-time
foster sexual assault. methods of preven•
and are located in the Communications
staff to help you learn to use equipment
tion and public response will have a sig•
lab Building and Media Services. The
~d lacilitit1 prolicitntly. Students havt
nificant impact on individual citizen per·
Master Control for the campus closed
access to many types of mate:rials, print
ceptions and on how those perceptions
circuit audio and video systems, Operated
and non-print, media equipme:nt, and
become manifested in public policy
by Dick Fulltr, is part of tho Electronic
audio and visual studios for producing
making, professional service delivery and
~d vitwing media projtets. Any QllffMedia Service.
jury trials on sexual assault.
Access to 11 photo labs is provided
tions you havt should bt directed to th•
Like Rape Relief advocates everywhere,
through Photo Services. Woody Hirztl
Circulation Desk located on the' main
local volunteers are concerned about a
(sec:ond) Aoor ol the library Building.
and Tracy Hamby are ready to provide
general attitude that rape is a "woman',;
Thero ia also a "Hands-on Guide" (which
instruction (including a course in 35mm
problem" that should. bt dealt with by
is a bullttin board on your right side as
black/whitr/color photography} and
women as well as they can. En\ightene-d
you e:nter) that attempts to give a brief
assist in production work. Craig Hickman
women and men alike are beginning to
overview of where to go to find immediprovi.._des
acces&to the teaching dark rooms.
view rape as a community problem that
AU Evtrgrttn owntd films, vidtotapes.
att htlp.
must be dealt with at a public policy level.
The library itself occupies onr--lourth
and Stalt library films an, chtcked out
o/ th• library Building with u..,,Servicts
through tht Washington Stat• Rim Library.
Thurston County Ra.,e Relief is recruitlocated on tht 2nd and 3rd floors. User
This audio visual service is located in
ing volunteers who have special skills in
Services include Referena. Circulation,
tviedia Services, the Indexes in Reference.
communication. Women who speak
Media Loan. Inte:r-Library Loan, and
and the vie~ing facilities in the Media
foreign languages anJ possess an underPeriodicals/Documents/ Archives.
Production Center.
standing of laws on hd1~n reservations
Any assistance desired will be more than
That's it-a full service library with
are especially neec!ed. as are mature
amply provided by Pat Mttheny-White,
people ready to assist you! If you need
women.
the overall coordinator of the area.
special assistance, sign up for the Library
Rape Relief provides a unique service to
If you need assistance locating reference
Research course through Mary Huslonthe community through victim advocacy
material, there exist.s an eight-person team
Miyamolo, the newest addition to the
liaison with medical and law entorcement
especially helpful with obtaining informareference librarians.
agencies and in community education.
tion from mcycloptdias, handbooks,
Women interested in working with Rape
indexes (which locate periodical articles,
Relief or who have questions may contact
government documents, -and contents of
the urganization during regular working
books), ttltphont diroctorits, and colhours al 352-0593. Victims of sexual
1,g, catalogs. Each rtltttnct librarian has
assault may reach Rape Relief 24 hours a
a primary field of interest which can be
day at 352-2211.
helpful dtptnding on what information
you nttd. Just tell Frank Motlty, tho head
of th• Rtferonce area, what field you nttd
Aspiring anthropologists would do wtll
specific assistance in and he will be more
to take note: of a quite interesting phethan glad to direct you to tht Rth,ronet
nomena at Evergreen. It is called the
Librarian most in tune with your needs.
Hidden Writen Syndrome. Evtn though
11you want to borrow books ffld obtheft are an unusual number of educated
tain copies of periodical articles from
pooplt at Evtrgrttn (tducalion bting dtother libraries makt a roqutst at tht
Hned as having an active interest in the
Reftronce Desk. Tht Inter-Library loan
arts) stiU there is not a trace ol anything
program is relricted this year dut to ffl
one could call a rea.J writer's community.
incrtUt in biUlng for tvtry roqutst of
However there is, at least, one organizmoterlal. Once your request is approved
• •
writers
J>y relertnc:e librarians,
wil
to EVffllfftl\ and to pullins from th•
pa
on to race
·pson, Pat Mcdoott tbt onts wt havt hero. It 11tho
Leod, br Becky Htstor.
Arts R.ooura Cmtor, a studtnt groui,
Clraalailon Snval is the place for
which ,poNOn poets, writtn, oxcellmt
checking books' in and out, 1Urching for
filnw,and other arts events on campus.
missing mattriab, and Media Loan.MOit
Anyont can bt a member of tho A.R.C.
matJtrials= bt checked out for the full
and htlp plan comiltg events. Rqular
ltngth of an acadtmlc quarter, 'oubjtet to
D1t!ttlnpare hold mry Friday at noon in
rtcall lf eomeono else nttdo them. 11it
tht A.R.C. office (UB 3215). The flnt
Circulation Desk handleo ~bilnating this fall will bt htld on Sept. 26.
ity of 150,000 boob. '36,000 govmunent
At themoment the job of Coordinator
documents, 4,000 audio tapa, n\lfflffOUI
fur the Arts Rnourot Ctnttt is 1tiUopen.
film loopo, and an altnsiw collection of
/vr, Evagrtffl student Is tliglble for th•
pampl\),ts, playscripts, corporate annual
10 hour per week institutional position.
roporta, and environmental impact 11a1...
To apply bring a brief mum• and a Jtat...
monts In the vtrtical files. If you need
rn11t of your inttl'ftt in tht job to tht
-1s1ance, pl•ut uk for Dtbbie RobinSorviat and Activitin office btlore
1011,KaronGooe, or MarcJohnlon and
5 p.m. Thunday, Sept. 25, and come to
they'll bt 111ftto oort out any problems
tht A.R.C. mttting Friday the 26th.
you havt in !~ting matfflala .

.~,, i

r·-

.• •
ofthebookcs

.-

Sexual assault
hurts us all

, .,


-

'• .-~:1
.

Circulate
yourself
in the library

Evl'rgreen's
Artists Expose
Themselves

s
Community

v i ¢
«
services 1n Olympia

E





Compiled b: Alexis K. Jetter, revised and
updated by Ken Silverstein.
Here is a list of Olympia community
services -1nd organizations you may want
to clip out al'd stick on your refrigerator.
The servicrs listed are meant as supplements, not ahemativts, to TESC services.
Evergrttn students should seek out school
agencies first (i.e., Health Services rather
than Thurston-Mason Health Department)
because many of th~ local agencies were
established to assist low-income people
with no other options for receiving such
services.
Organizations were hand-picked for
exposure by this compiler because due to
their relative newness and off-campus
orientation, many students don't know
about them. For a complete list of community organizations check Health
Services. pages 2 and 3 of the phone book.
SI. Peter's Hospitol-413 N. Lilly Rd ..
Olympia. 491-9480. 24 hour.; a day.
Emergency Room: 456-7287.
Thurston-Mason Public Health-529
W. Fourth (across from Mark-It) 753-8067
or 753-8076. A general waJk-in clinic.
They'll diagnose you, but ordinarily you
have to get treatment e~here;
they
serve as a referral servi«.
Family Plo.nning Oinic-529 W. Fourth,
753-8076.
Community Mental Health Center2604 12th Court S.W .. Parkmont (off
Black Lake Blvd.) 943-4760. CMHC provides crisis and emergency services; an
outpatient program involving diagnosis,
evaluation, 1ndividual therapy, group,
family, and supportive therapy; also conducts workshops.
TAMARC-1628 Mottman Road S.W ..
Tumwater. 943-8510, 24 hours a day.
Counseling and information for anyone
dealing with an alcohol problem; including spouses, family and friends.

Page 19 CPJ Orientation Issue

Community land trusts •

RECYCLING
Centrol Recyding-207 W. Seventh,
Olympia (downtown, near Capitol Lake)
943-5226. Tuesday to Saturday, lH, p.m.
Money for beer bottle, (not Bavarian
Dark-call ahead befon, you bring down
a truck full of labels they won't take),
aluminum cans. and bundled newspapen.
Will take cardboard, glass, car batteries.
No tin cans.
Continental Can-1202 Fones Road,
Lacey. 491-4900. Any dean cans.
Albertson's Food Cmtor-602 Sleater
Kinney Rd. S.E .. Lacey. 491-8283.
Reynolds aluminum truck comes here,
pays cash for all household aluminum.

Ptople's Orgo.niutlon for Wuhington
F.nergy Rnowcu (POWER)-203 E. 4th,
94l-6530. POWER advocat<S policies in
the interest of low-income consumen"Conservation rather than construction."
Southern Puget Sound Solu Entrgy
AModatlon (SOPUSOSEA)-1620 E. 4th,
94.3-4595. Hours: 12-5 weekdays, expanding in near future. SOPUSOSEA is a community-based, volunteer organization
whose purpose is to educate the public
~arding energy conservation. and im-

Landownership for a common good
back into production, revitalizing rur.il
communities and encouraging peopl~ to
work cooperatively.
The Sam Ely Community Land Trust,
named after an early land reform activist
in the 1780's has stated its goals simply as:
1. To acquire and frtt Maine land from
the traditional concept of private property.
2. To hold such land in perpetuity, not
as public or private property. but in
trusteeship.
3. To use the land in a productive manner so that it provides homes and a good
living for people without imposing undue
ecological hardship on the land and its
natural resources.
4. To foster a variety of lifestyles which
are community-minded, thrifty and self•
reliant.
5. To support efforts for land refonn
everywhere I
This group publishes the Maine Land
Advocate and is an excellent prototype
and inspiration for land reform elsewhere.
Another trust was organized in rural
Georgia to make lands available to people
wishing to operate a farm. One trust in
northern California has successfully provided fannlands to peopie unable to buy
their own land. In Maryland and Pennsylvania a trust caUed The School of
Living, organized by Ralph Borsodi, provides land for the Decentralist Organization to grow on. Also, a new lrust has
been started in Rhode Island to save
dwindling farmlands.
Right here in Olympia, the Black
Walnut Association has bttn a community land trust since 1977. The Brandywine Community, on Cooper Point. is
interested in placing their land in trust.
lney are open to input from anyone
interested and, also, would like to help
organize workshops or seminars on this
subject. They highly recommend the
book, The Community Ulld Trust, which
is available from The Cenler for Community Economic Development.
Land Trusts can be designed to meet
iny group or person's specific needs.
:...eepingin mind that the ultimate purpose
1.f the movement is to promote a better
understanding of land utilization which
seeks to benefit current and future resident._of this planet.

by Chris Sturm and Jeff Stewart

'1..,nd bel""31 to a vut famUy of which
many an dead, mo
.an living and countlea members still unborn."
Are you sick of land me in your com-munity being controlled 10lely for the
sake of private 1iain7 Do you Ettl power1..,.in determining the futun, of the re&>dence and land that you live on7 Do you
wish to Stt a positive change in the way
land is being held7 There's a growing
belief that land should no longer be a
profitable commodity, but rather a public
resoura, open to being utilittd by the
community as is deemed fit. One positive
answer to the frustrations and ideals
OTHER SERVICES
stated above is the formation of a
Community I.and Trust.
Community Sl<lllshcho.nge-921 N.
The idea of putting land in trust is an
Rogers, Olympia. 94.l-SKJL. A skills bank
old one, originating probably in the form
that provides access to resourcH you need
CXcommunity land tenure to preserve col~
or can offer. ·•credit houn," not dollan,
lectively utilized lands for each locality.
are the unit of exchange. Fix someone's
In our own nation, the idea of having a
Lawnmower while they nurse your cow.
commons such as in the Commonwealth
The CSE has a large and growing list of
of Ma!AchusettJ or a town wood lot in
members and skills.
Vermont are both early examples of comVolunteer Information Service-Contact
munity land tenure. Today then, an,
the Crisis Clinic at 352-2211. A service of
known national organization which purThere are many forms of I.and Trusts
many ways to put land in trust for a
the Crisis Clinic. Information for people
and different reasons for their existence.
chases and acquires lands to preserve in
variety
of
purpo,es.
The
Natun,
ConservClUSIS SERVICES
who want to volunteer their time and
their natural state, thus, attempting to
At this point let us mention a few
ancy, Trust for Public Land, Audubon
skills
but
don't
know
what
agency
to
control
ecologically significant properties
examples
and
the
purposes
or
goals
b~
Crisis Oink-24-hour
Crisis Line:
Society, and the National Park S.rvia,
contact.
and prevent their ruin by development.
hind them. The Evergreen Land Trust in
352-2211. Business: 352-2220. The Crisis
are all es&<!ntiallyland trust orpnizations;
The Audubon Society has similar proWashington State was formed to acquire
dinic provides a 24-hour crisis intervenall have in common 1~1 arrangements
visions.
and
preserve
various
kinds
of
land
and
tion service; phones are answe~ by
ACTION GROUPS
plementing diverse solar technologies in
whereby land is held in trust for the comThe Sam Ely Community I.and Trust in
natural
resources,
including_
wildlife,
para-professional volunteers. CC is also a
"Fhunton County. They also sponsor the
mon good.
American OvU Ubertla Union-Coll
the state of Maine is another good
mountains,
streams
and
woods,
and
to
major information and tthrral service for
Solar Outreach and Technical Assistance
The Community Land Trust is defined
Ron Jasper,on at 866-2448. The Olympia
accomplish these goals in a way that proexample. This group believes that the
Mason and Thurston counties.
Center (same addreso) which has • definias "a legal entity charteredto hold land in
chapter
is
just
now
being
reorganized.
Und Trust, as an organization and as a
Rape Relief-YWCA, 21.0 E. Union.
motes human growth and services. It aims
tive
library
on
solar
technology,
provides
stewardship
for
aU
humankind,
present
Their next meeting will be October 6,
social movement, stems from three sets of
24-hour crisis services available Via the
to promote scientific research and educacommunity workshops, sponsor technical
and future, whiJe protecting the legitimate
7:30 p.m. at the Olympia Public Llbrary.
concerns: environmental. economic and
Crisis Clinic: 352-2211 or call toll free:
tional opportunities and to further the
~sistancr
programs,
and
acts
as
a
catalyst
use-rights
of
its
residents."
It
is
more
than
They'll be discussing their futun, goals
social. Environmentally, the trust endevelopment of intra--species commu1-800-562-5614. Primary goal is to allevito promote wise energy use in the county.
a mechanism for common ownership.
and electing • board of dittctors.
courages intelligent land use and disate the psychological trauma of the rape
nication.
Urban lugue-915
S. Capitol Way,
Rather, it is ownership for the common
courages environmental damage. It acvictim by providing emotional support,
352-1424. A multi-ethnic organization
good. This concept of a land trust is a
The Evergreen Land Trust, incorporated
complishes these goals through land-use
assisting in legal and medical procedures,
which promotes equality in the communew one. based on a trust that the people
as a non-profit, charitable organization
plaMing and prevention of profit on land
and offering education.al programs to the
nity through equal opportunity in ecoliving on the land can care about the
was conferred 501-C-3 status with the
sales. Economically, the trust seeks to
public. Rape Relief offen speaken for any
nomic development. They sponsor comfuture use ot the land and conserve rather
IRS (Internal Revenue). That means they
reduao speculation and to ease access to
community organization on request and
munity events and provide speak.en upon
than exploit it. Thus, land trusts are one
are able to receive gifts of land or money
the land, This is done through prohibiting
has a resource library of books and films.
request. They have a 10th anniversary
means by which land can be preserved for
and the giver receives tax benefits for the
the sale of land and through creative
For more information Stt article in this
celebration coming up on October 18 at
future generations, and enable' current
gilt. This makes it possiMe for the Everfinancing of leases. Socially, the trust
issue of CPJ.
the Tyee Motor Inn ($15 donation inre-side.ntsto use and care for the land.
green Lanq Trust to grow as properties
seeks to create a new-system of land
Women's Shelter Program-Offi~:
dudes dinner). The guest speaker will be
How does this work7 Essentially, there
are added to its membership.
tenure. It works toward this goal by proYWCA 220 E. Union. 352-0593. Direct
Carl Maxey, an attorney from Spokane.
is no one answer to the question, however
The Nature Conservancy is a wellviding lower-cost land, putting farm land
services include: 1) Emergency housing
Women Against Violence Against
hereis an example:
through Harbor House shelter; priority
Women (WAVAW)-YWCA, 220 E.
A pie<, of land is found which interests
given lo battered women. 2) 24-hour reUnion. Call Nora at 456-4774 (evenings}
the people involved, and terms attarferrals and crisis intervention counseling
or the YWCA, if necessary. WAVAW is
ranged for payments to begin buying that
by phone (call 352-2211) or in penon;
a naJ,ionwide organization of women
property. Meanwhile, the people an
3) Advocacy: accompanying women to
working to eradicate violence against
mttting and diKUl5ing just how they wish
community agencies; and 4) Staffing a
women in general and media violence
to organize the guiding principles that will
five day/week office for walk-ins and
against women in particular. WAVAW
preserve: the land's naturaJ abundanCf!.
"Sexual Assault-it hurts us all. Let's
Wednesday, Sept. 24, 7-9 p.m. "A
Sundaiy, Sept. 2 3-4 p.m. Broadcast
public information.
has succeeded in getting offensive biUBasicaUy, this means drawing up a set
talk about it" is the theme for Rape
Speak Out for Men Who Are Concerned of Sept 25th panel (see above). KAOS-FM
boards taken down, persuading =rd
of By-laws and an Articles of lncorporaAwareness Week 1980 cross Washington
About Sexual Assault," to be led by (89.3 on the FM dial).
Fair £JKtric Ra.tes Now (FERN)-7241
company executives to state they will not
tion document. Thee can be u specific or State and in Thu.rsto? County, Septm,Chuck Strego, counselor and former
training under contract to public agencies.
EMPLOYMENT SERVICES
Commercial N.E., Olympia. FERN is a
use violence against women in thrir ad.n flexible as the originaton choole,
ber 22-29, according to local Rape AwareSeattle advocate for male victims. Com- The agency is funded by the cities or
CETA-423 W. Fourth. Suite C.
citizen watchdog group, formed to make
vertising, and organizing Take Back the
though, keeping in mind the intended purness Week Coordinator Eugenia Cooper.
munity Center, 1314 E. 4th Strttt.
Lacey, Olympia and Tumwater; by other
753-8202. CIT A provides public service
the Pugel area power utilities more ac~
Night Marches across the country.
pose of the vmture and teting that, in
Cooper, who ii a member of Thurston
Thursday, Sept. 25, 7-9 p.m. "How We public agencies; and by contributions
employment to the disadvantaged and
countable to citizen needs and demands.
Washington Coalition Apintt Pruons
legalterms, the document will serve that
County Rape Relief (YWCA), the local
Can Reduce Sexual Assault in Thur.;ton ,rom concerned citizens and organizations.
unemployed. You might check to see if
FERN intervenes in rate hike hearings,
(WCAP)-352-3814. In Seattle: PO Bo•
purpose clearly and cutainly.
sponsoring group for a series of educaCounty," a panel with Deputy ProsecutThere were 181 reported cases of sexual
you are eligible.
lobbies the legislature on conservation,
22272. A statewide organization whose
Once incorporated, the Land Trust will
tional events, beginning on Monday and
ing Attorney Ed Schaller, therilpist Trudy assault in Thurston County in 1979, acWork Options for Women- YWCA.
and consistantly points out the costs of
primary work is to reduce the overcrowdhave a Board of Dir«ton, generally
running through Saturday. Sept.ember 28,
Hoy, speakers on self-defense and parent- cording to police and sheriff departments.
220 E. Union, 94,-9140. Offers employdecommissioning and waste disposal
ing in Washington State prisons. WCAP
people who are intffested in the property
indicated that this is the fourth annual
ing, Rape Relief Education Coordinator
Those included 49 rapes, 32 molestations.
Tnfflt assistance to economically disadvanvenus.the alternatives it proposes (solar,
works with prisonen to publicize condior the land reform ideas it upholds alto
Rape Awatffless Week in this community.
Carolyn Mark, and a spea.lc.erfrom the 44 ca""'5 of lewd conduct, and 54 other
taged women. Two thrusts: job counselconservation.)
tions inside state institutions. The orpnizform I committee which will meet with
In addition to the free public events listed
religious community. There will be time types of sexual assaults.
ing and job developfflfflt. Seeks to find
F~mlnists in Self-Defmse Training
ation's goaJ ii the release of prisoners conthe Trust's Board ol Dittctors and come
below, Rape AwMa\aS Week will future
afterward for the audience to comment
For more information about sexual
women work in ~tter paying non-tradi(F._I.S.T.)-For inlonnation about rightvicted of non•violent, victimless crimes.
up with a le.ue agrttment. Thia will inspeakers to any group requesting one, and
and offer their own suggestions for ~ assa.ult issues, a speaker or other informational fields.
week clan beginning this fall, call Beth
WCAP also provides support for Native
dude all the mechanics of ..,,eryday atan24-hnu • day crisis assistance to pa.st or
vention.
tion, call Rape Relief daytimos at
Job Service Center-Capitol 5000 Bldg,
Harris at 456-6669 or the YWCA.
American prlsooen o.nd thOR they view
c:lmlafor land use; while the By-laws o.nd recent victims of ,exuol abuse. Call 352Frldav, Sept. 26, 6-9 p.m. "let's Talk 352-0593. For crisis assistance 24 hour, a
Tumwater. 753-7282. Does testing and
Ni,qually O.lta AModatlon-1821
as political prisonen.
a,d Articles of Incorporation provide the
0593 days or 352-2211 (the Crisis Clinic)
About It Together," and informal open day, call the Crisis Clinic, 352-0593
counseling, serves mostly as a job referral
Water Street. Contact Flo Brodie at
Loa! chapttn of C.-.puce,
Black
w,idelinea for policy making by the two
day or night.
house for member, of the public to tolk (1-800-562-5614 toll-free) and ask to speak
service. Their Job Bank micro-fiche sysl52-5803. The NOA works to preserve
Hilla Audubon Society, Alubn CoalJIJ'>Ups. So in effttt, the loOH agrtemeut,
The Calendar of Events for Rape
with Rape Relief staff and volunteer,
with R.tpe Relief.
tem covers the entire state.
and protect the river basin from the
lion, Wddemets Society, and Enffay
in accordance with the stated aims of the
Awareness Week includes:
about education and prevention work in
Rape Awareness Week will also be
Nisqually glacier to the Delta.
Northwnt can be contacted through the
Trus~ provide, an outline of how the
Monday, Sept. 22, 7-9 p.m. 'Women in
this community. Olympia YWCA, 220 observed in Mason County, under the coDAYCARE
People for Fair Taxn-101>3 S. Capitol
TESC Environmental Reoource Center,
land may o.nd may not be used by its curthe Media," • film and discussion preE. Union.
ordination of tho newly formed Mason
Way, 943-0633. A coalition of individuals
CAB 103, 866-6784.
m,t residents, and is •sr-1 upon by all
sented by Olympia Women Against
Saturday, Sept. 27, 2-4 p.m. "Sell- County Rape Crisis Center in Shelton.
l..itchkey-P.O. Box 403, Olympia.
and organizations working to make WashCompiler', note: I lifted much of this
roncem,d befon, they move on to the
Violence Against Women. First United
Defense Workshop for Women," pre- according to VISTA staff member Meridee
943-0475. Latchkey has a program at the
ington's ta,c system more fair. Lobbies the
information from a handy little booklet
land.
Methodist Church, 1224 E. Lesion Way.
sented by members of f.l.S.T. (Feminists Anderson. The group will s~sor
a film
Garfield School in Olympia. and an;oo~th~e:r~-,le~g~i•:la~t~u;re~to~c!lo~se~t~ax~l~oo:p~h~o~les~(~"~A~c~tu~-r-.ccal~l~•~d~t~he~~ew~~~~~~~:~~=,_----~t---------=:::_:::__
______________
~~:~:••~Y:, :S.:1pt~·:=23~:•:.:""~~p~.m~.
jP~ro~led~l~ngr-~tn~Se~lt~-~0.~t•~n:se-;-:~r;ra~in~ing~)s.
:o~ly~m§p~ia:'cC~o:m~-:-~a~bo:u~t~rape
and discussion for Mason
daycare facility in 1acey A u..U-.Yft~ ptV'"
a.lly. te
open
). I don't know where you can get
Youue.lf from Rape," a film and pretentamunity Center, 1314 E. 4th St.rttt.
County residents from 7-9:30 p.m .. Sept•
gram: ~ore and after school during
wider"}, conducts workshops for coma copy, but poke your head into the S&A
lion for students a.nd other interested perThurston County Rape ReJiet was
ember 24, at the Evergrttn grade school
school year. full day in summer. Mttts
munity organi:iations, and publishes eduoffice, CAB 305, or call x6220. They
sons, pttsented by mm,ben of Rape
formed in 1973 to assist victims of rape The presentation will be followed by cofMonday through Friday except holidays.
rational materials.
know everything.
Relief. Lectu~ Hall 2. The Evergreen
and other sexual offenses. In addition to ftt and informal discussion. For more in•
State College.
these services. Rape Relief sponsors speak- formation about Shelton events cafr
ers to any community group and conducts 426-9TI6.

Rape Awareness Week 1980

LEGAL SERVICES
Pug•t Sound l.<gal Servtcn-529 W.
Fourth, (same building as the Health
O.partment). Legal Services supply legal
advice and representation in civil cases,
such as divorce cases or landlord/tenant
disputes. They are l<gally prohibited from
taking criminal cases. Very conscientious
and very good. The Evergreen S.U-Help
Legal Aid Office (Library 3223), a studentrun legal advocacy office, is advised by
Legal Services lawyers.
Attorney Referral Snvice-1-800-5520787 (toll-free). This service provides the
caller with an appointment with a local
..._,,e,.Bn.--half hour wSB $15. Any
time over that is computed at regular
attorney rates {read: mudt higher).

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1143,8701
1143-8700

G.oouck-calling contnt, with notabl•
judg,s including Dan Evans. Toun of th,
n,wly compl,ted tw=tory larmhou5"
will be given, and ,nttttalnment will
range from puppet theater, vocal groups,
and fiddl, and mandolin play<n, to
strolling juggl<ts and a live satterow.
On ...hour ltte workshops will be given
on Alternative Energy, Introduction to
Organic Gardming, Northwest Ahemativt Food Network, DirKI Buying Jrom

Following are some suggestrd plattS to
hike, climb, camp, watch birds, canoe or
bicycle without spending a great deal of
time driving from campus.
Take a Hike. Mt. Elinor is the southernmost peak in the Eastern Olympics rising
about 5,900 feet above sea level and is
situated iibout one hour away from campus by car. Most hiking books will direct
people to the parking lot near the Mt.
Elinor trail. About one hour of walking
through beautiful timber will get one to
open meadows and a creek ~- From this
point about half way lo the summit one
can get a be.iutiful southeasterly view of
\1t. Rainier. Mt. St. Helens and, on .ii
clear day. Mt. Hood and other points
south. The hike continues to the summit
with no technical difficulty and from the
summit one can get a good view of the
inner Olympic Range including Mt.
Cruiser. the Brothers, Mt. Anderson and
a few others. Also, from the summit on
a clur day one can see Seattle and
Tacoma clearly in addition to Mt. Baker,
Glacier Peiik iind Mt. StnYart in the
Cascade Range. Time from campus to
summit ~uals thl'ft to four hours in
summer.
Lakt of th• Ang,Is. This thl'ft-mile hike
leaves the Boulder Crttk Road via the
Putvin Trail which is approximately an
hour and a half away from campus and
approximately 13 miles off 101 on the
Hamma Hamma River Road. The tnil
rises steeply iind contains few switchbacks. It is definitely a quick rise trail and

will get a hiker into beautiful flowering
meadows within a half an hour and then
up into two stffJ) waterfall s«tions. Lake
of the Angels is often frozen year 'round
and is situated between Mt. Skokomish
and Mt. Stone. Time from campus to
Lake of the Angels equals five to six
hours in summer.
Lena Lake. This is about a four-mile
walk off the Hamma Hamma River Road
approximately 11 mile off U.S. 101.
Most of the hikt is through trees and
there are no breUouts although it is
beautiful. The lake itself is clear, clean
and cold. If one is ambitious, one ca.n
continue up to up~r Lena Lake which is
another four miles or so and that does
break out into some open meadow country. Time from campus to Lower Lena
Ulke equals about 31/2 hours.
Aapjack Lakn. A pleasant two--day trip
of eight miles, thew two lakes are situated
in the Saw Tooth Range of the southeasterly Olympics, again, about one hour
driving time. The first four milts are on
an old logging road which was wisely
closed about six years ago as a protective
measure. The remaining four miles
m,ander through th< forest to the lak,s.
From the lakes one an continue to
Gladys Divide for a good view of Mt.
Cruis,r. Time to Aapjack Lakn from
campus equals six to eight houn in
summer.
Olmb. There are no ideal rock-climbing
areas in the immediate arTa; hown-er,
there are abundant peaks and mountains
to climb which are within two hours
driving time.
Cushman Ollfs. Rising from Lake

The folks at the Brass Earwelcome Evergreen
Evergreen students back.
Come in and see us

Cushman th ... cliffs have been used by
r,sident rock jocks for years. They are
located on the road to Staircase about
one hour from campus. Climbing dJffi..
cuhy equals Class 3 to aid. All can be
top roped.
T,nino Quarry. You've gotta be lit to
climb a wa.U to drive to this place to
climb, but some do it. Not ova 45 minu,tes away from call)pUS,the ltte climbing
on sandstone is sort of fun on a hot
October day.
Mt. Wuhlngton. This is the prominent
peak immediately north of Mt. Elinor.
The east ridge, which is easily Sttn from
t~ library roof. was fint climbed in 1972
by two "Greeners" Nick Duane and
Michael Smithson. Little or no protection
is possible. The main peak is a moderatdy
difficult mountaineering climb, definitely
worth climbing. Time from campus to
summit via ~Hitst l"Outt equa.ls six to
eight hours in summer.
Mt. Stone or Mt. SltokomJsh. These are
the ~aks surrounding Lake of the Angels.
Both peaks are technically easy, but
hazardous at selected times with steep
avalanche slopes and lots of lOOMrode..
Eight goats followed six of us to th, top
of Stone thfft yon ago. We wondered
why they would do 1uch a thing and
found out when one member of our party
urinated on the summit. The goats
scrambled to .. tract the ult from the
urine. Time from cam- to th, top al
either mountain via the Mliest routeequals six to right houn in AID'\fflff.
The Sawtootha. There are scores of
technkally difficult rock tow,n 1WTounding Flapjack Lak.. , th, moot prominent
being th< Lincoln Peak Massif. Oimbing
difficulties an, varied with the uslnt
route on Lincoln being Grade I to D,
Class 2-3. Time /rpm Aapjack \akn .tQ. ,
most summits ~uals four to six houn in
summer.
Mt. CruiHr. Sig Kutter, who is a mem-

T.E.S.C.I

Give the gift
of music.

her of th< faculty and Tom Hargis, who
teach,s and guides for TESC's leisure Education Program, climbed the north fat"e
of Cruiser two year, ago. They rated their
climb at Grade Ill, F-7. The more popular
southeast ridge is a beautilully .. pooed
F-4 to 5 on solid pillow lava. Time from
Aapjack Lalr.,s to th, top of Crul5"r via
th• southeast rib equals six to eight hours
in the summer.
(Note to Rock Jocks: You have to drive
to Leavenworth or Yakima to find granite
in Washington.)
Watch Eaa)es.Drive to the mouth of
the Hamma Hamma about one hour from
campus when the steelhead are around
and ii you're lucky, you'll ,.,. eagles
fishing.
Watch AYort,d Watufowl. Drive 20
minut,s to Nisqually O.lta and park
yourself somewhere at low tide to view
honkers, quackers, tweeters, and a variety
of other critters.
Bilte Yer Brabu Out. Try a variety of
loops south via th< O.lphi Road or Black
Lake Road. Most roads south and nst of
Olympia meander through rural countryside. Most also are dangerous ii the biker
is not alert due to the lack of paved
shoulders. The concttte road connecting
Rainier and Tenino to 1-5 is bad but th,
scenery is worth it. Join TESC Bike Club.
C..-. TESC rmt1 four aluminum
cano<s for 111< on Eld Inlet or on !lat
water rivers or labs. Blaclt Lak,, th,
Dnchutn River, and th, mouth of the
Nisqually are popular.
...,_ A Selam_...
Mclane Pond
on Delphi Road ls a pat plaa, to watch
ducks eat salamanctn.. It'• about an eight
mil, rou.-.d trip. Mark llKhlerandI
watchedtwo ducks ut a half dozen salamand<no in about 40 rninut...
\
_l,iore information about all this stuff
can be gotten from boob, mapa or from
penonnel in the Campus Recreation
Center, auch as Jan Lambertz or me.

WELCOME

BACK

TO

music by mail!!
recording tapes
blank Maxell!TDK
lifetime guarantee

To get to the farm, from Red Squar,
walk betwe<n th< two Lab buildings and
out the conc:r<tepath, then take th, path
marked "Organic Fann" through th,
woods. Bus ttrVia to the collese will be
availabl• from th, regular bus lin,, and a
shuttl• to th• farm it...11will be provid«I
for handicapped and Rnior citizens from
th< C parking lot.
More information about the lair can be
obtained from the Organic Farm car<takers at ~161.

Farmer,, Herbs and Nutrition. Th, workshop, will start at 11 a.m. and go until
5 p.m. Tour of the farm will start at
l·p.m. and run on th, hour until 6 p.m.
Apple cider, salad, an4
com-on-tho-cob
will be served. (All vqetal,1,s have been
grown at the Organic Fafln-.) Baked and
smoked salmon will be available from th<
Nisqually indlans and The Btu, Heron
Bakery will have cinnamon rolls and
other goodies.

Outdoor recreation in Washington
by Pete St,ilberg

$

t

All I know is what I read

Fall Harvest Fairthis Sunday
COME ONE, COME ALL to th•
HarvHt Fair (rain or shine-we're pre-pared), Sunday S.ptrmber 28, at Th•
Evergr,,n Stat• Coll,g, Organic Fanni
Farmen, artists, craftspersons, and just
about everybody el~ will revel ln an allday celebration of the closing of the
season with six frtt workshops, eight
hours of entertainment, and lots of food
and drink.
Featured activitin at the fair will be an
organic v~etable competition and a

y

t

tt

Page 20 CPJ Orientation IISI><

RAINBOW

;mm SPORTS

Back to school~~
PoR

current hit albums
8-tracks, ca99tltts
& singles
full line of accessories

(BR•NG,

EV

E'RGoRr.'EN
S'TUDE.TVTS
A ND E'AC<J~TY

,,.,, Y0u,C
\NI TH

7-~-s.c.

THIS

,.o

covPoN)

puzzle, easily the best around:
Both papen are availabl~ for delivery
here in Olympia. Howev'er, the P-l's local
distributor is thoroughly unreliable. So it
pays to use th~r toll..frtt number in
S.attle. (Also, I've found that writing lo
the P-J's consumer "Action" column for
help getting the paper works wdl.)
Obviously, the choice is youn. As you
can no doubt tell, I favor the P-1. But
that's largely because it's so clioariy the
underdog. and I don't thinlr. any tity
should have just one paper.

by Thom Richardson
"All I know ii just what I read in th,
papers."
-Will Rogen, Nov. 4, 1932
You tit down for breaklut at the Spar;
Shirley tells you that she'll ''be right with
you, kid," and you realize that you've left
your copy of Wu and Pua at home.
What'• to be done1 You can't jutt tit
thett, waiting for your waffl,. You gotta
have something to read, so you amble
over to the counter for a newspaper.
Which to buy1 Life's lull of complicated
quni:ions in the morning. There', the P-1
and the Tima, the Dally O and th•
Ort:aonJan, the Wall Sb'MIjoama) and
th, Chrbtlan Sdenc,o Monitor, and at
least a hall dozen more. There's even th<
CPJ, which for simplicity'• sake we'll u,.
sume you've picked up, since:you're read•
ing this article. At least it's ltte.

The Chrittlan Selena Monitor

Beamed by satellite, printed in San
Francisco, and delivered. by mail the same
day, the CSM is easily the b<St, most
complete paper available in Olympia.
Though it has no comics, it has the best
international news in the country, short
of the N.Y. TlmH. And they don't rely
wholly on the wire services!
However, their material is infused with
a brand of milquetoast liberalism that I
sometimes find nauseating. They accept
all of America's dominant cfogmas and try
to render them N:lible. I prefer a clearer
perspective on the American political
process.

The Grut "P-1" vs. tlle "llmet" Debate
Seattle's two big daili.. are the Pootlntdllga,cu and th, Tlmcl. Lik• almost
every paper in the country, they carry
essentially wire-eervia material. Each has
its own particular flavor, its own contradictory combination of progressivism and
conservatism. While there are no glaring
differences in the content of what they
print, you're only going to buy one.
Until rectntly, the P-1had the morning
market, while the Times caught the
evening aowd. Now they both come out
in the morning, and it's obvious that the
Tima is finally tryin_g.to eliminate its
competition.
This ono-on-one rac,e will probably
r,sult In on, S.attle dally. And the Tlma
has the advantage. It's th• better financed,
slicker one of the two; it's 'Washington's
Largnt Newspaper." Al if that weren't
enough, it carries both "Doonsbury" and
"Peanuts;" th, P-1does not.
The T1DM1 d<votn more space to editorials, but they're as coNttVative as those
of the P-1, often more so. They print
David Broder and,James J. Kilpatrick, in
addition to editorials reprinted from th<
Washington POil. Art Buchwald is their
saving grace. , ,.
The Daily Olympian
Our town's paper is afftttionately
called the Dally O or the OaJly Zero. It
coll)<S out in the afternoon (1 :30, to be
exact-should you need to be lint at the
cla.. ilieds). And they start home delivery
th, day alter you call.
For a town this slzt, th, Zip is aurprisingly good. Its general news compares
favorably with th, S.attle papen, though
that's to be ,.peeled, given their rellanc,e
on the wire services. In fact, they often
""' Mllr." Layton'1-Auodat<d Press ,...
ports on th, State Capitol. It hat
''Doonnbury," perhapa the most Important attribute of any paper.
However, th, Olympian is owned by
th, Gann<tt Corporation, th< fastest-

The Wall Strttl Journal

growing media conglomerate in the
country. Though Gannett maintains that
its papen are independent, the threat of
information monopolies merits attention.
In addition to the likes of James J. Kilpatrick and George F. Will, its editorial
page is regularly dotted with 'The
Crucibl•" by Mike Contris. His right-wing
religious pap is usually frightening. And
"kindly ol' editor" Dean Shacklett, a tin.less foe of Evergreen, ~ts his two bits in
on Sundays.
Still it's worth it to read the Zero, ii
only for the local news. You learn if any
Evergreenen were arrested last nightundoubtedly, splashed across the front
page-when: all the garage sales will be.
On Saturday; and whether th• Legislature
finally decided to tum Evergtten into a
polic,e academy.

The Tacoma News Tribune
Tacoma'• only dally comes out in the
ever.mg, and is available for home dolivery in most of Olympia. Again, its
news is largely the canned AP poop. The
TNT (an endearing acronym, eh7) doesn't
have "Doon<Sbury," though it does carry
Jack Andenon. And like the OaJly 0,
they nm the editorialist's work u general
news, with a special byline.
Th, Oregonian

Portland's only large-scale paper, the
Or.gonion, is avaUable by mail in
Olympia, and the servic,e is relatively
reliable. It may be th, most comprehen-

11011£FOIiYOU!'-EY

sive, most liberal paper in the Northwest.
It even has "Doonesbury," on the rditorial page. Except for the fact that it covers
Portland and Oregon, rather than S.attle
and Washington, it would be my clear
favorite.
The Post•lntdligenc:er (what a name
carries editorials by liberals like Tom
Wicker, Russell Baker and Mary McCrory. They carry Jack Andenon, which
th< Timn do,s not, and""' the N.Y.
Times wire service instead of the P09t's.
Shelby Scates, a progressive who reports
on local issues, and Art Hoppe, who's
ohen funnier than Buchwald, are often
side-by-side with right•winger George F.
Will. Just this month, the P-l a Hurst
paper, subtlety moved William Randolph
Jr.'s conservati~ weekly "Editor's Report"
to the Sunday editorial page from the
front.
P•I reporters Joel Connely and Eric
Nalder have done much to publicize the
WPPSS boondoggle. {WPPSS, or
"whoops," is the public agency responsible for building Washington's nuclear
power plants, which are rapidly acquiring
a ttputation for being the most expensive
in the country.) Although the P-1 has
occasionally incurred the Governor's
wrath (perhaps a point in its favor),
neither its nor the Times' local coverage
is Pulitzer material.
The P-1 is reputed to have the briter
classified section, and its businesi section
is far superior to that of the Times. It
even carries the N. Y. Times crossword

I regularly read the Wall Sbttt Journal
for its t"ditorial page. A number of Reagan
advisors regularly publish theR, making
the WSJ something of an in-house bulletin
for the Right. I may not be comforted.
but at least 1 learn something.
The WSJ is not particularly good on
general news. but it's the only good
source for economic news. And its value
as an eye on the far Right is unmatched.
The WSJ is a satellite paper, like the CSM
{and Pravda, by the way), and is printed
in Federal Way. For subscriptions, to
either the CSM or the WSJ, talk to a
Political Economy instructor about a stu·
dent rate; you'll save about 50%.
Others
The Oly area is graced with a couple of
small weeklies. The Lacey Leader is
essentially dull, and very conservative.
For a spell, they published a column by
faculty member Ron Woodbury. But they
firrd him last year for his "leftish" views.
Some TESC students have done intern•
ships there.
On the other hand, the Olympia News
is frtt, and oheo features-~
infonnation 1 don't hen of elsewhere. That's
mostly because they use press releases for
filler.
Now that _your waffle's gone, and
you're on your eleventh cup of Spar coffee. you know all about th• Oly press.
But the bus out to school is leaving in five
minutes and you're tired of reading anyway, so you skip a paptt. Tomorrow
morning, however, you'll know which
to re~d.

WINE & BEER-MAKING SUPPLIES
OVER 100 BEERS-WINES,
ST,-.RBUQ(S

•Right now UCMS la lntflldudng their 1•
of mopodt. 1'gu tankl and MOQ
whN11 at no extra charge. The only moped
with "-.tor
broke" action, full Ill• tho
bk:ycta oouter brake you probabfy g!'N up
wUh. The bigg,Nt plua 11 the IACHI IOI-O
Hl-T...... that hat tho to
flatten out thoN at>uatveotympia hill• and
,on deUverup to 150mpg.

COFFEE-TEAS,MEATS-<:HEESES-OELI

HIIIIIJY
PIIRTRY.
,~ ..JJ

C.ARO

CAPITAl VlltAGE

352-a968

20%off
is open in the Olympian
HOid I 16E Lqpon Way.

r--------------------7
$1.00 DISCOUNf
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return this coupon and get one dollar off
any regularly pricrd LP, 8-track or cassette

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Capitol Mall I
7 9
54- 2D8 II

HE
RASS EAR

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Nowget

$100

oH Ill 1979 model■

ln ■todl

SACHS

TRl-cnY
.MOPEDS

...........

MltWNtHerr'NNf Weltakle McOOnakf'I

Ml-Ml

459-3933

Mon.-Frl. 1M1

Sat. 1~

Come by and browse
for new books. Enjoy a
cup or coffee counesy
or the Hcrb-N-Onion
and the Fireside.Hours
arc 11-6 P.M, Tues. Sat. We havenew books
for all ages andin1crcs1s.
Special ordcn dealt wilh
promptly,

....... 352-4006
I 16 E. legion \/>!'1'f

Groceries
Fresh Produce
Fresh Meats
Imported Beer & Wines
Sundries
Magazines
Self Serve Gas

.,.,

7 a.m.-12 p.m.
365 days a year

th•rleh!

L~ft f>onk

Book~
Q2Pb

a:noDivision N.W.
Handy

Pantry

Ol~a.
.l

WA

ffi §

s

I X

u

B



Sampling Olympia's Epicurean delights

0

- ....

up m future issues. The reviews were

written by a number of authors which
accounts for the varied styles.

Fred's Portside Diner, 1301 N. Washington, 943-4450
Fred's is destined to become the next
favorite cozy diner for home-cooked food
in Olympi•. fr,d's features nothing but
fresh sea food, so if you aren't a lovu of
the salty brine, you may as well tum to
the next review, un165 you are inttteted
in their excellent break.fast sp«ials. U you
do like se•food, Fr,d's is the best plaae in
town. Nestled between two lumberyards
on Washington Strttt in the Port of
Olympia, the diner is an unassuming little
building with a gre.at view across Budd
Inlet to th• hills of Cooptr Point. Th,
place is often packed for lunch and
dinner, but there are few people iilfOund
in tht off hours, so the service is better
then. Fred's breakfast specials run a little
more than the Spar's but the food is much
better-their dam eggs a~ heavm.ly.
Lunch is th• best deal gojng in Olympia
right now-$2-SS-and
tht sel<ction is
gr••t. Chock out tht seafood chowdon.
Frtd's,-Style Sallops an, particularly
notable Mld his oysters, which come from
a Mud Bay oyster farm art the best in
town. Th, ch.....:akt has earned • loyal
following. There is no draft bttr at Fr,d's
but they h•ve a selection of regular
American beer and for slightly more you
can g,eta Canadian Moosehead.

Th• S.ven G•bln, Wed. thru Sat., lunch
and dinner, Sun. brunch; 1205 West Bay
If you fttl particularly wulthy or your
parents have come to town, Seven Gables
is the place. A lovely Victorian home,
stuffed with antiques and overlooking the
Sound. The food and service are equally
as good. Some vegetarian foods. Try the
Sunday champagne brunch.

Legion Way CAie,111 W. Legion Way,
352-1408
If you've ever traveled the South, then
this little diner on Legion St. is sun to
carry you back to that out-of~the-way
truckstop you keep trying to lo~. Fortunately, the counter top ,ervice and few
tiny booths are more than adequate room
for their patrons. The coffee is marvelous
•nd the pri<ff r.. sonable. They hav• an
unbelievable ability to prepare an extraordin•ry Speci•l of the Day. This usually
consists of fruh crab on an English muffin
smothered in cheese sauce. Brealdut is
served from 8 to 11 and lunch from 11 to
5, seven days • week. Definitely a down
horn• pl•ae to enjoy the usual variety of
hambu~n, .. ndwiches, soups and naked
.. I•ds. The portions an, filling and the
service a little indifferent, but intriguing if
you want to do a study on Pacific Northwes~ "cun-trtt" attitudes.

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::~

::-:;»,, l½it
.. ,

;: •••••,... ~!II:

Dad's Place, 303 E. 4th, 9'3-9093
Typical Spar-typo food (lwnburg,en,
sandwiches, som• dinners). Their food is
zmlly cooked wtll. Good-sized bttakfosts
(you get mon, than at Th• Spar for the
same pricn). Grut lunch-time sp«ials
every day and homaru,de pies. No newspaperson sale though. And lunchtime
rush hour .. rviae is kind oEslow beca111e
it's 10 crowded. Cloees •t 4,30 p.m. Not
q,en w~nds;
not much in tht w•y oE
vogttamnfood.

Andy's Pizza and Dell, 4322 Martin Way,
11-7, closed Sunday
If you tver lincl younelf In the outback
of Lacey, try Andy's. Andy and Co.
maltts all th• bread and pizza on the spot
and Andy is a very friendly 10rt. Very
good cheesecake flown in from Now York.

.._

Soups, bagels, sandwiches, and an imGnu Dell, 111 W. Thunton, 943-1371
presoive .. t of desserts (baked on premDelicious food and a comfortable atmosphen, best describe what the Gnu Deli ises) an, also offer,<!. Wine •nd bttr
lovers won't be dlsoppointtd hett-the
is about.
selection is excellent. Espresso, assorted
Th• staff of the Deli puts a lot of care
juices and teas, and fruit smoothies round
into what they do, and it shows. The
out the bevttages.
servlae Is prompt and gracious, but you
never feel rushed. The mood is so comfortable that you may be tempted to carry
W..,,.,,1 llalcay and Dell, 1013 S. C.pitol
your schoolwork down then, and work
Way, 357-7268
on it between been or coffee. Many
It's been said that a town isn't a town
people do just that.
without a bakery, and Wagner's Bmry
A large variety of Brittany-stylt crepes
.-d Deli is on• in the good old German
is the main fare, filled with different comotyle (compltte with deli). Curttn~y
binations of vegetables, cheese, seafood,
dosed for remodeling-it will op,n soon.
or poultry. Th• curried bn,ast of turkey
Best bakery in town! The pastry is th•
is particularly good. All crepe dinnen an,
fflll McCoy (not the junk you find •t
served with • gn,en salad, and the bleu
Sahway). Their cheese Danish is superb
cheesedrasing is highly recommended.
(but doesn't come out of the oven until
Prices for the crepe dinners start at
- about 10 a.m.). Great coffee. If the rain
S2.90 and go to $6.10 (for smoked
ew,r ~ you down, waUc up there and
salmon, onion, and sour cream). Lighter,
11'1
something 1wett and gooey, a cup of
dessert crepes start •t S.75.
mfftt, and warm up.

=

Th• Mandarin Ho-. 111 N. C.pitol
w.y. 352--8855
The Mandarin Houte in downtown
Olympia has had a long-time Grftllff
following. All of the dishes are stir-fried
in woks and an, pttpared to order. 'The
Szechuan seasoning is hot and spicy and
the dtliate flavon oEthe sizzling seafood
and chicken allow the flavor of the vegetabl.. to come through nicely. The
Mandarin often -1
wg,tarian dlshes
which - nevff owrcooked. AD the
,oupe an .,..,..__ An ootic coclr.tail
imnu complm with Flaming Volcan-,
Suffmng Bastards, and Mandarin
!iings offer a touch oETrader Vk'1 but
the decor is pootwar Olympia. At any
given timt, tht employees are oeated in
the bock mdlessly peeling pile of lruh
l!ii'lic-the atmoophtn, is relaxed. Be
~ to order an _..,u for an appttiur
or • filling snack-and don't forget to ask
for hot mustard and """""' seeds! The
oervl<:eis always friendly and quick.

Rib Eye Rataurant, 2423 E. 4th, 9U-2li06
Rib Eye Restaurant on Martin Way ii
the best 24-hour restaurant In Olympia.
Gttat homemade dam chowder is omred
everyday and other "'°'upoare ma<;lefresh
daily also. The choice of entree'1 is limited
but the prices are reuonmle and the food
ii pttlty good. My lavorit,. are tht baked
potato with lots ol butter and sour aum
and their fresh-baked pi... lMtt are no
wgie dishes here and you are apt to have
to put up with lots oEcigarette smokon.
But to me, the Rib Ey• has ten times the
character than VIP'1 or Denny's tver
could.

OKTOBERFEST

Back by popular dtmand
"A Night with the Mezzo Girls"
Friday, Oct. 3
9-11 p.m.
$2 cover
A cafe be:nftit

212 W. 4th Olympia
94S.7668
"OlYMPIA'SFIIST ESPUSSO 1Ar

Los Hermano1, 4520 Pacific Ave, S.E..
~300
Los Hermanos in Lacey is considered by
many to be the BEST Mexican restaurant
around. Even before going in, notice the
beautiful stained glass windows in this
authentic-looking stucco building. Inside,
the Joung• f.. tures on• of the best (and
biggest) Margaritas. You can even~ one
that is strawberry flavor,d-don't scoff
until you'v• tried it. On Wednesday for
women and Thunday for men, Margaritas are only 75<. Por hon d'oeuvra,
you will get the complimentary chips, of
course, and two kinds of hot sauae-one
very hot, one rather mild-to mix for
your pmerred tempmature. This is one of
the morataurants I havt been to. that
has pitchers of iae ,1YatBat every table.
Th, food Is gttatl Combination dinnen
run about $5-$6. The decor is very bright
and colorful. Thett are the typical
Mexican sombttroo and paintings on
velvtt hanging around but alao some
more •uthentic things like pinotas. Some
oEthe tables have old maps oEPuget
Sound decoupaged on the top which
thoroughly entertaining while you an,
waiting to be served. Th, waltreues an,
always friendly and penonable. So, if
you've got the urge for buns and ricr,
tortillas, quacamole, sour cream, bla4
olives, beef, chicken or crab, lettuoe,
tomatoes and chee1e, head for Los
Hermanos. I'm salivating just thinking
about it.

An unblushing tribute to the Spar
by Lnlie Oren

(

It is o;toming, she rises tarly. Sht
~ly
washes-soap and water outft the ettaltl
in her worn face.
~ .. her first cigarette, drinks her
lint cup of coffee-black. Dons • unilam oE htr own devising, and drives
k>work.
She is a key player in Olympia's favaite sideshow: she is a waitrell at The
Spor. She's been here for a long, long
time, but others hav,, been httt longer.
That grizzly face, bent over the
munter, nurturing his first cup oE
mlfee, lost in the foamy bubbln ... he
was quite the rm, onae, dapper in
"51 and bowler, bringing young ladies
D sip Manhattans in the Highclimber
FDom. supporting thffl\ away into
rainy magical nights on his pure pinstriped arm.
And then,, that powd,r,d dumpling
d a woman with her not-quite-straight"' wig and dress straining to fit her
hips, delicately eating too much toast
with too much blackberry jelly-sht
an .. t in a favored booth, daily feedir'@ scrambltd egg to CO'>ing round

hands ovor a few str•y French

cbcky bibs, mystery novels she'd take
"' long to r.. d ....
And now, these youn3ste:n here
&om that new oollege. Nice kids,
mcotly, sadly thrust aw•y from distant
lanes, son,ly in need of somt goodnatured mothering. She greets a
bmrJed faae, outlandish hair, baggy
clothes. But th• eyes .,.. young and
land and drooping with exhaustion
this morning. "Coffee?" She knows.
She knows he needs the warmth, the
&agrant stimulu• after whatovff wildparty, love-lost-fottver, 5ptaking-towoodland-spirit1 lcopt him up too late
lost night. 'Wheat toostr' These kids
always want wheat toast. More vitamins, they say.
Woll, they may be right, but she
lices her food pure. Give he:rwhite any
day. At the end ol the counter pace
has slowtd, t•bl .. need a quick swipt
with her dishcloth but she's going to
take time out to eat her toast and drink
a cup of coffee before doing anything
Elsetoday. Sht sits, for awhile, simply
to watch.
Young couples at booths holdin~

rows of tired men with crackers in
their soup; dusty neon, •nd smokt,
.-d randomly-folded -•papen.
Alll'Clt
nobody wearing hats anymore,
ftmUJeS.
Modic 1 goes screaming by, outside,
past tht puked bicycles, past the
pownshop-lingeren and strolling shoppers. Sht coughs, rises. ,Now then, is
an order of ·bn,aded vtal to delivtr and
9:>ff\eOne wants sc..-otch(with a twist)
&om the bar. Moving again, on htr

DONATIONS

M-F
Tues-Sun

11:30-2:00
6:00-10:00

vegetarian meals prepared on request
/
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/

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COUPON

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1.200.peau
O¼)'mpiaµJCl

943·9849
&.-c:090

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FREECOFFEEOR TEA
with purchase of Pain
I
Chocolate or Croissant
I

II

7 a.m.-10 a.m. M-F

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I Block South of
Harrison OD Division
For Reoervationa 9'3-8812

fries:

babes with slapping lat hands, yellow

Sunday, Sept. 28 7:00 p.m.
German beer, wines & food
open for Lunch
open for Dinner

n

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Th• Pl•ce. 244 Madrona Beach Rd. N.W.
866-8213
The Place is a small, homey We out in
th• Mud Bay •rea near Highway 101. &sides th• usual fan, of American standards
-hamburgen, fish a.chips, BLT sandwiches, tic. -they take si,.dal pride in
thtir Mtxlcan dishes, which moslly consist of burritos, rice and beans, People .
who likt their food ttally HOT will lov•
Th, Plaae .. You won't need to put any hot
chili pepper sauce on your food because
so much is b•ked right in. Penonally, I
can't taste food th•t is spiaed this much,
so I don't eat Mexican here anymore. Let
me ttittr•te-this
stuff is HOT! 1 love
their salad bar though, which is included
with most of the dinnen. You only get
one chanae so pile that plate u high u
you can with frah greens, potato, maaroni, and thtte-bean salad. All are good.
Th, atmosphett ii fonnia, fluorescfflt,
and velvtt kit paintings but the servlcr ii
always friendly. They haw domestic and
some importtd bttn and a surprisingly
impressive wine list for such a smallplaco.

t

.. • •·.

.i,.t_i,

Herb and Onion, 517 S. Washington,
943-9242
The Herb and Onion, located inside the
Olympian Hotel at the comer of Legion
and Washington, is a mellow eating establishment for both vegetarian and moderate carnivore. Classical music accents the
wood tables, tall ceilings, and oval church
windows releasing a feeling of peac;efulness. Prices remain affordable with a
complete dinner bordering on $5, Mexican
dishes at $3, and gr•nd ~ omeltts
close to $6. Chicken is served in a few
dishes fc;,rthose who require more than
vegetables to susta.in themselves. Gttman
beers and French champagne enhance a
livtly app,titt, but th• serving portions
are smalltr than exp,cted and hoped for.
Everything, including two Soups oEthe
Day, is homemade and baked to perfection. Lunches, less expensive than dinners,
are buffet oriented with wooden mark.en
exchanged for your order and then delivered to your table. Bruk.fasts appear
prttty cheap and definitely lts1 gttasy
th•n their compttlton. Truly a quiet
tarthy plaae to tnjoy wholt good food.
Mon.-Thun., 8 a.m.-9 p.m.; Fri.-S.t.,
8 a.m.-10 p.m. Closed Sunday.

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Printed below is a scattered sampling of
some of the more popular Olympia area
restaurants. The list is by no means complete, and more reviews will be coming

g

E

THE RAINBOW
4 th & Colun bia
OL

le.t ...
Well, the next cup of coffff will
taste mighty fine-take
away the
aching leg throbbing muscle tittd endlessnes for a time. And the hashbrownsan crisp-no complaints-and
some lucky fellow just won a crockpot
at the punchboord. And the crazy boy
with the loping gait who comes in
every day for ham and qgs is really
beins quite calm. We is good, today,
at The Spar. Ceiling fans move in slow
ambience ... she surveys her little
world, her vast family of hungry, wayfaring, thirsty, dreaming souls.

Agbu's Yugotlavlan Rataurant, 6327
Capitol Boulevard, Tumwater, 754-3830
Agbar's has got to be one of th• greatest treats in the area. The decor is heavy
red velvet, veneer panelling and rock
music-it is thoroughly European. Adolph
Ivan Von Kralovensky owns and cook5
all of the dishes •nd boosts • long r,sume
as chef all over ea.stem and central
Europt. His prize-winning Great Dane,
Agbar, is the rutaurant na.meuke. A
typical meal includes RussW\ borscht and
• gn,en salod with marinated legumes •nd
an interesting honey-hued house dressing.
Sliaes of thick light dumplings accompany
the main dishes such as goulash or the
Agbor Special-schnitul, lamb sashlik
and beef-the spices are delicate, delicious
blends.
The wine and beer selection is limited
as is the menu but the choices are not
wasted. The Yugoslavian wine is very
good but • little too light for these h••vy
meals. The Zeller Schw•rtz Kotz goes well
with any dish but • beer would be bettor.
We Me lucky to have authmtic European
food in Olympia. If you miss that for off
funky Mighborhood restaurant in some
obscure comer of Europe, Agbar·s with its
fl•shing lights, patio fumitun, and Agbar
himself roaming his age just outside the
window will warm your heart.

n.. Asterilk,

Westsidt Center
Michael Holly is the proprittor of th•
Asterisk •nd Cheese Library, locattd in
the Westside Center just off Division and
Harrison Streets.
According to Michatl. the Asterisk is
not a rHtaurant, but a "good sh•t shop,"
and indeed it is. lf you a~ a lover of fine
coffee, cheeses, wines and beers, or fantastic ice cream cones, you will salivate
wildly •t th• Asterisk.
The mood is always laid bock and the
service always frimdly. There is a comfortable set of chain outside, where you
can wait until your sandwich is ready,
then eat it in a leisurely manner. The
Asterisk's sandwiches are without a
doubt, the best in Olympia, •nd 1 cring•
when I think of the money I've put into
my sar.dwich habit. Never mind my
baklava addiction.
With th• •ruption of all the fast food
joints in the W6tside area, it's a pleasure
to have a place like the Asterisk around.
Good food, decent prices, and people who
treat you like a real person.

Drinking in Olympia

II 1£ you are borea, you must be boring"
by Kathy Davis
I won't go so far as to try to glorify
drinking as a social pasttime. We've all
heard, perhaps too often you say, the
evils of drink expounded. It will ruin you,
liver and if you're not sensible, become a
habit that will ruin your life.
Of course, you know too that drinking
and driving don't mix. Not only could it
be hazardous to your health to lose control of that stttl beast that surrounds you,
but gett~ caught in a state of inebriation
behind the wheel could prove to be expensive. I know someone who recently
received a D.W.I. (Driving While Intoxicated) citation. He paid a $500 fine, plus
legal fees, plus the cost 0£ mandatory alcohol abuse classes. Keep those figures in
mind, poverty-striC-f,en students, when
you slide into your auto in the heart of
Saturday night.
On the other hand, (those warnings out
of the way) no one could label me a temperance crusader. I turned 18 in Wisconsin. where brewing is a vital industry and
the only thing to do on those sub-zero
January evenings is to go to your local
bar and try to forget how cold you are. I
have always made more friends over a
pitcher of beer than a mug of hot
c-hocolate.
If you are a new student, under 21 and
commg from a place like Wisconsin, you
are about lo experience that ironic (and
unta1r in my mind) system of state to
stale discrepancy in drinking age laws.
What you were mature enough to handle
there you are too immature for out here.
My only advice to you is-find someone
old enough lo buy for you and have
parties at home. Unless you look like you
are 50 or have a fake l.D., forget even
trying to get into bars.
You just can't get into any drinking
establishments around here without
proper identification. You must have
something with a picture on ii. The best
form of I.D. is either a Washington State
Driver's License or a Washington State
Identification Card. Many places (though
not all) will accept an out-of-state driver'!
license if it has a picture. A few places
will accept a picturelHS license accom-

panied by your student 1.0., but that is
quite rare.
In Washington, the slate controls the
liquor trade. If that seems unusu~ to you,
here are some things to l"flnember. A
"tavern .. only sells bttr and wine. A
"lounge" has hard drinks. A lounge is
always connected to a restaurant because
in order to get a liquor license, a large
percentage of the establishment's revenue
must be from the sale of food. Every gr~
cery store has a large selection of beer 'llld
wine for sale. Hard liquor can be obtained
only from a state liquor store, where
shopping carts are provided for your
convenience.
A word of warning to all those who
come from New York, Chicago, Los
Angeles or Seattle: You are apt to get
discouraged with the lack of choices he:re.
Olympia is, after all, a very small, rather
conservative city. Use your imagination,
be adventuresome and don't isolate yourself from the non-Evergreen community.
As Dr. Leo Busgalia (th• Professor of
love} says, "If you're bored, you must be
boring."
The following is a review of several
drinking establishments in the area. Not
ALL places are cove~. of course, but
I hope there is enough variety here to
appeal to most tastes.
CulturN Evergreen Hang-outs
Gnu Deli is THE Evergreen nightspot.
If you are trying to get away from other
students. don't go here. The atmosphere is
warm and tasteful with lots of wood,
subtle colors and quality artwork. In fact,
the Deli is a gallery too, with different
artists showing each month. The entertainment is consistently superb. The most
common genres of music featured are folk
and jazz, though a wide range of styles
are presented-from Irish music to African. from very abstract jazz to very traditional. They have booked some greats like
Art Lande. Jim Page and Bryan Bowe.rs
(see Arts and Events) and they showcase
fine local talent too. The capacity is small,
so I would suggest to get a seat for some-one really hot, go EARLY. Cover ranges
from $2-SS. They knock down th• price
as the evening goes on. They have a good

selection of imported beers and fine wines. They f•ature two happy houn, from 4-6
By far, the Gnu Deli is the most culturtd
and 11-midnight (pitch•rs ar• $1.50,
and classy entertainment establishment in
schoon•rs are just 2.St!). Pitch•n are reguOlympia.
larly $2 and they have Heidelberg, Bud
Rainbow Restaurant is another place to
and Rainier dark on tap.
find a crowd of Evergreen students. They
Spud and llma's Two Mil• Houso (I
have entertainment ocasionally, usually
don't think th• official nam• includes
local musicians. Watch for posters or anSpud and Elma anymore but that is how
nouncements. The separate bar area is
most peopl• still remember it.) is the
a very congeniaJ place to h~ out with
closest bu to the Evergr-ttn campus. You
friends. A notable featu.tt here is the juke-- ca.n always find a real variety of people
box which contains a great collection of
here-students, all types of work•n. from
rhythm and blues, •arly jazz and a lot of
v•ry old to young. A loyal group of regumusic you just won't hear anvwhere else
lars mak• this a friendly place. The atin town. Their happy hour is Mon-Fri,
mosphere is down-home country and
5-o pm (glass of light beer is lSt, dark
western, like the music on the jukebox
so;; pitcher of light $1.75, dark $2.50).
('Tait• this job and shov• it") and th•
Regular price for pitch•rs is $2.50 for light bands on Friday and Saturday nights. Th•
and $3 for dark. Pabst, Oly dark and
quality of musicianship is sometimes quite
H•idelberg ar• on tap.
bad, but when you are dancing and havCatt lntennuzo used to be strictly •
ing a great time with friends, you tend to
daytime place to drink espresso (they
not notice. Sunday is open mik• night for
hav• more kinds of coffft drinks than
all you aspiring musicians. Sometimes
you probably knew existed) or sodas,
you can hear a whole evening of wonderread, pJay music or have intellectual conful undiscovered t~ent and other times,
versations. No alcohol is available. They
no one shows up at all. They-don't have a
occasionally f•aturtd poetry readings. Just happy hour h•re and th•y don't charg•
recently, however, they have begun staycover on the wttkends, but the pitchers
ing open at night and inviting local artists
go up from $2.25 to $3 when there is
in to play fine acoustic music. Watch for
music. H•idelberg and Oly dark are
posters or ask your friends. This could
on tap.
become the new nightspot for trendy
5th Quarter Tumwater Lounge I might
Evergrttners.
have included this in the disco lounge
category on atmosphere and clin1tele
alone. The decor is red and black naug.1Dandng on th• Wftkmd
hide and all the "artwork" is sportsrelated. But on weekends they have rock
4th Ave. Tav. is still in the prOCffS of
'n roll band! and over the summer the}'
remodeling, which has bttn going on for
booked an African jaz.z/~lsa group for
over a year. They have a large screen 1V
two weekends who played hot dance
which is supposed to be color but is
music. Hopefully, the response was posiusually just green. The crowd here is
tive and this signals a trend for higher
a mixture of Eve.rgreeners, young working
quality music in the area. Their happy
people and stat• employees. On Thunday
hour runs~.
Mon.-Fri (85' for well
nights they play old '605 records and th•
drinks, $1.75 for doubles). Hamm• and
crowd votes on each one until they pick
Olympia are available on tap but they
a favorite for the evening. I hear this gets
don't offer it in pitchers.
wild. On weekends they hav• dance
Trails End offen the most authentic
bands-mostly rock 'n roll, from innovacount.ry and western atmosphere around.
tive to mediocre. Cover ranges from $1-3
Th• bands play country, th• cli•nt•I•
and they charge the full amount up until
wear cowboy hats and boots and. the barabout the Jut 20 minutes of music. Basimaids look like Gunsmoke's Kitty in mini,
c.ally, the 4th Ave. is a good place for
m"iniskirts. The unique feature here is
drinking, dancing and getting rowdy.
that th• whol• place (lounge and restau-

Ballroom dancing in Olympia
Ballroom dance, folk dance, "old-time ..
couple dance-it is possible to do all of
these. and more, in Olympia. The
Olympia Ballroom ~lion
sponsors
dances and ethnic events, featuring music
and dance, at the newly refurbished
Olympia Ballroom, located in the
Olympian-by-the-Park Building, Legion
Way .and W.ashington Strttt in downtown
Olympia. Th• regularly scheduled dances
include ballroom dancing (foxtrot, swing,
•tc.) on th• first Saturday and th• tl\ird
Friday of each month, International Folkdancing on the second Friday, and old-

time couple dancing (waJtz, schottische,
polka, etc.) th• fourth Sunday of •ach
month. The ethnic events coming up for
the fall quarter are American Folk Dan«,
S.pt•mber 27; Scandinavian Music and
Dance, October 25; and a Greek Party on
the 15th of Novem!.oer. Complet• details
of all these •vents are given In th• Association's newsletter. To be included on
the newsletter mailing list, write your
name and address on a card or piece of
paper and drop it of' at Faculty Member
Al Wiedemann·, office (LAB I 2016). H•
can also be call«l for further information
about these ev•nts (_)_

instruction in these and other forms of
dance Is also availabl• at the Olympia
Ballroom through the Centralia CollegeOTCC continuing education program. On
Monday nights there is beginning and
int•rmediat• folk ~.
juz ~ on
Tuesdays, old-tim• coupl• and ballroom
dancing on Wednesday, and mld-ostem
dance on Thundayw. 0.begin the
wttlt of September 22 and the cost is
$10.20 for uch U-week omn.Call
753-3433 for times and registration information.
In addition to these activities at the
Olympia Ballroom thett is folk dancing

•very Tuesday night at the Olympia
Community Ce.nte.r. There is instruction
••ch evening from 6: 30 to 9 p.m. and
request dancing from 9 to 10 p.m. 1ltere
is no charge for this activity and more
information can be had by calling Bill
M•lzer (the instructor) al 491-9611. And if
you really lih couple dancing, the MountainttTS ol S..ttl• sponsor an olckime
coupl• dance on th• first and third Friday,
of each month at the Masonic Temple in
S..ttl•. At S2 for 3½ hows of dancing it
is th• "ent•rtainment valu•" of the Pacific
Northwest) Al Wledernmn can supply
more information on theat danca.

Olympia Food
Coop
921 N. Rogers
Olympia

Westside

754-71:,M
TESC Bus stops at Division & Bowman
Walk two blocks south to Co-op
Mon-Sat 6: 35 bus leaves Co-op for TESC

Hours
Whole Foods
Great Prircs

Mon-Sat 10-7
Fri open until 9
Sunday noon-5

Happy Hour
Everyday
5:00 - 6:30
Capital Mall
7S4-9767

rant) is connected by huge glass windows
to a large horse show arena. You can sit
sipping your cocktail and contemplate all
aspects of horse culture in America. They
often provide live music in the lounge all
seven evenings of the week. Happy hour
is 5-9, Mon.-Thurs. (well drinks are $1. ..
for anyone wearing a cowboy hat, that is).
Asta.I.r'sused to be a teen-ag• disco club
but apparently someon• realized that selling beer and heavy metal rock 'n roll to
grownups is more profitable. Truthfully,
I have never been much further than inside the door of Astair's (as in Fred, I
guess} because l never felt the live music
they offered was worth the cover price
they asked-ave.rage about $4. They seem
to go for the electric muscle man, Ted
Nugent-type groups, th9ugh th•y ha,•e
some punk bands too. What stands out in
my mind about this pla~ is that it is red,
everything bright rtd and a mirrored
dance Aoor. If you want to check it out
without. emptying your bank account, go
on a Wednesday night. That is what they
call "Animal Night." Cover is just $1.25
and pitchers are 75< all night.
Maplebrook Inn is another rowdy, getdown, let's-all-g•t-sloppy-drunk kind of
place to dance to country rock bands.
People who work hard all week come
here to play (i.e. drink, dance and socialize) hard on the weekend. They have live
music every Fri. and Sat. nights and never
charge a cover. Happy hour is from
10 a.m.-noon (schooners 25<, small
pitchers 75<) and they have more beers on
tap than l have room to name.
The Ditco Scene

I

Golden Carriage Everyone here who is
not already romantically coupled with a
member of the opposite sex looks anxious
and obvious. Coordinated polyester outfits abound. The bands (offered 6 nights
a week) always wear suits and play top 40
disco hits. Barmaids wear little black
leotard things with plunging necklines and
the decorations on the walls are outrageously ugly. But the seats are soft and
the drinks are strong. Co here to see
mid.ile--class Olympians having fun or at
least trying to forget what is most painful.
Happy hour is daily, 5-7:30 (drinks 7Sf').
Ebb Tide To be honest, I have never

gone here at night to dance and dc;m·tplan
to even to write this review. The-1 havt
the standard shiney dance floor, swirly
lighting and live disco music on Fri. and
Sat. nights. l do want to mention this
place, however, for their excellent happy
hour. Tues.-Fri. from 4,30-{,,JO, drinks
(which are strong) are 95< and they offer
a free taco bar. That's right, real meat
tacos with all the trimminp, all you can
eat. It's a great dinner-time deal and the
window tables provide a beautiful, soothing view of the inlet.
Exit 104 at the Westwater Inn has live
music by their "poolside lounge" from 5-8
daily. After that, though, it's disco discs
for your dancing enjoyment. The crowd
varies in age, but all stem to be trying to
appear wealthy and sophisticated. For a
step back into the decadent '70s (but don't
wear your jeans-they have a dress code)
shake your booty at Exit 104.
Tom Tom Room at the Vance Tyee Inn
is basically the same sort 0£ scene as
above except that they offer live music to
dance to all evening. The bands are wellscrubbed, short-trimmed and tuxedoed
and so is their music.
Good 01• Taverns

Eastside Oub From reading old orientation issue bar reviews, this seems to be
the consistent favorite with Evergreeners
(at least the ones who write bar reviews).
The big attraction is the proprietor, Babe,
an elderly gentleman whc, usuaJly wears a
bow tie. He not only comes to your booth
to take your order (no matter how busy it
is at the bar) but al5o, automatically
whips off the table and fills all the glasses
when you order a pitcher. His popcorn is
great! This is also a haven for pool fanatics. There are six (of the best I am told)
tables in the back. The crowd is always
a fascinating collection of Evergreeners,
bikers (I mean the real thing, in black
leather) and just-plain-folks. The Club
offers a comfortable social atmosphere,
especially in the booths. There's no happy
hour. Bud's on tap and pitchers are $2.50.
McCoys (or The Real McCoy) I like
this place because it's such a typical sleazy
(and I don't mean that negatively) tavern.
The bar is horseshoe-shaped. The ceiling
is high and there's miniature pl.a.sticani-

mal trophies on the wall. The clock is
from ffl old taxi service. Everything is
stained ye 1lowish from cigarette smoke.
The clientele tends to shout a lot but the
bartender-I have always found-is
friendly and ca.Im. It's the kind of place
you'd expect to find Tom Waits hanging
out. Their happy hour runs 5:»7,
Mon.Fri. and 2-4 on Sun. (schooners are 30t,
pitch•rs $2). Pitchers regularly $2.50,
Rainier on tap.
Buzz's on "Beautiful Mud Bay" is also
close to school, near the Blue Heron
Bakery and across from the antique and
trinket shop. Nothing special to say about
this place really except that Mud Bay is
an interesting little community with a nice
view of the Black Hills. You can meet
some colorful local folks here. They make
very fres'.h popcorn too. Na happy hour
here. Blitz and Schlitz on tap and pitchers
("good-sized ones" says the bartender)
are $2. 75.
Boulevard Tavern I only mention this
place because it is in my neighborhood.
It's like every other tavern around townCasey's, Charlie's, Schooner's, Silva's.
etc., etc.-with a bar, booths, color TV.
jukebox, pinball, tab slot machine and
bunches of rowdy friends out for a good
time over a mug 'o suds. This is by far
the most common type of drinking establishment in Oly. There is probably one
within stroning distance of your house.
Downtown Lounges
Highclimber Room in the back of the
Spar (if you haven't figured out by now,
the Spar is the social mecca of Olympia)
is known for their good strong drinks.
Unfortunately, they did away with their
happy hour, which used to be abo•.Jt the
most economical way to get drunk in
Olympia. Regardless, this is a pleasant
spot to sip a cocktail. The lounge closes
at 10 p.m., so plan to go early. They
fpature a big screen TV too, so unless you
are a real sports fanatic, don't go there
when any BIG game is scheduled.
Ben Moore's (Why Not1) You can get
an idea of the flavor of this place by the
fact that their only happy hour runs from
7-10 in the morning. (I was so surprised
to hear that l forgot to ask the price of
drinks, but at that time of day, I'm sure

it's the best deal in town.) You are apt to
find some extreme characters here.
King Solomon's is like a mirrored cave.
The place is small with a low ceiling and
everyone looks up when a new customer
walks in. The tables are close together too
so the folks beside you know exactly
what you're talking about. My favorite
drink here is their Dirty Mother. Happy
hour is from 4-6 (drinks are 8~.
Touring T~coma Uust 30 miles away for
those of you aching for some variety)
Engine House Number 9 This old red
brick fire station is a recognized historical
monument. The authentic decor includes
firemens' helmets hanging in a row, the
pole they used to slide down, the horses
names above where they used to stand
and a giant photo-portrait of the old fire
chief himself. On hot days, they open the
big garage doors and you can eat outside
sidewalk cafe-style on the brick patio.
The food is great-deluxe salads and
create-your-own sandwiches, tacos and
burritos. light and dark beer is served in
jars. There's no pinball machine but darts
are popular. Quality entertainment is
featured on weekends. I heard a fine dixyland band (Great Excelsior Jau Band)
there and felt like I was in New Orleans.
Oefinitely worth a trip to Tacoma.
The Brick is a great rowdy place to go
drinking and dancing on the weekend.
They are proud to point out their view of
the smelter. The ceiling paint is peeling
and the noor is cracking-r.o pretentiousness here folks-this is just a good-time
place. I especially like the old-fashioned
ceiling fans and the big mural of a tropical scene on the wall behind the stage.
Good live music too, mostly rock and
blues, always hot and fun to dance to
Java Jive If you are looking for something really different. check out this place
Shaped like a giant teapot and overflowing with jungle decor, the Java Jive features Maestro Bobby on his Yamaha
organ every weekend. Bobby knows almost every song ever written (including
all the themes from old 'TV shows) and
loves lo take requests. Two live monkeys
live in a cage by the pool table. This place
1s one of a kind, suggested only for the
adventuresome.

Where is the gay scene in Oly?
by Jeff Cochran
When I try to write about gay '1ife" in
Olympia, I am re.minc:H'dof something a
friend said to me on the: occasion of my
brother (also gay) coming here to visit
me. I remarked that I would show my
brother around Olympia's gay "SCffle."
My fri•nd queried, "Oh, and what wlll
you do for the rrst of the afternoon7"
This gives newcomer, an idea of what to
expect from Oly's ",cene." However, there
are other things happening in Oly that I
think you should know about.
Olympia has a very stTong Lesbian
community, and the following are some
of my (male) observations of the community. They hold monthly meetings.
publish Matrix, are vocal and militant,
an
gay men in Olympia to come out. They
are the only strong, unified, homosexual
force in Olympia. The goals of the
lesbian community are a.diverse as the
number of womyn in ii, but some that I
have perceived as common .are working to
eliminate sexist, racist. and classist attitudes within themselves, working to stop
sexism, racism, and classism in the community around them, working to be
aware of and combat imperialisti'c institutions, working for an end to capitalism as
an econort\.ic institution in the U.S., and
last, but moot important; working,
womyn with womyn, to foster a community that supports one another. This
"Community" offen penonal, emotional

and physical support, financial support,
political support, and lots of chances to
just play. To "join" the community you
need only be a womyn, identified wom•
mo·n. Meetings are announced in Matrix
(Olympia's Feminist/Lesbian newsletter)
and by flier. lt talc.es a lot of commitment,
but from my experiences with womyn in
the community, it gives a lot of rewards.
The gay men in Olympia .are a different
bunch all together. There are presently
two gay male structures in Oly, and a
third on its way. One is a rap and su~
port group that meets every Wednesday
night. There are facilitators who, it is
alleged, keep the discussions on track.
There have bef-n discussions on communicating (this one comes up a lot actually),
alienation, loneliness, and fdcets of our
lives that we feel good about or wish to
chan e. Sometimes we ·ust la around.
n t e upcoming weeks there will be a
series of workthops on massage. movement and actltlg.
Th• South Sound Lambdas-I lovingly
and jokingly refer to them as the SLA-is
a social group with a hierarchical structure. They consist of middle and uppermiddle class, mostly closeted, gay men.
They have a board of directors (originally
the board was temporary. but they have
voted themselves into permanence) and
lots of committees. They have dues, and
in an attempt to get funding from the
whol• gay mal• community (1ic) they
. have staggertd their dues for Income variation. Th• SLA ha1 1ponsortd picnla and
partiH, and will be instrumental in bring-

ing Christianity to Olympia's gay heathens vis a vis the Metropolitan Community Church.
The third group (the one on its way) is
the imperial court system-or Olympia
gets crowned with drag balls and mock
monarchy. This should clear up any
doubts you may have been harboring
about class consciousn~ among gay men
in Olympia-there
isn't any.
As far as an established social scene in
Oly, there is a tavern, a coffee shop. and
organized events. For those of you new to
Washington State, taverns can sell beer
and wine, and the beer is three/two
(3.2% alcohol).
The t;1vern is the Rainbow Restaurant
at 4th and Columbia. It is a "family" tavern. The crowd is mixed gay and straight,
but Wednesday evening is sometimes re-fe-rred to as "
ni t." This is due to_
the Evergreen rap group's habit of going
to the Rainbow after the mttting. Wednesday now attracts large (for Olympia)
numbers of g.., men, and it is one of
Olympia's most enduring gay social
events. The Rainbow has good food, a
relaxed atmosphere. cheap beer and a
great juke box. The decor has been de-scribed as "an interior decorator's nightmare," and the service is sometimes a
little slow. If you lik• to dance, you'll
have to go to another tawm in Olympia
(th• 4th Ave. is safe if, and only if, the
dance floor is crowded), town (Seattle or
Portland), or to a dance at Evergreen.
Th• Caf• lnt•nnazo ii th• cofftt llhop.
H•re th• •tmosphett is gentl•. the coffee

wonderful (they also have a selection of
teas c.nd Italian sodas for the non-caffeine
crowd), and there is a wide stock of chic
magazines to read while you sip your
whatever. lt is primarily a womyn's space
and the men that go there re-gularly a~ an
off-beat group of state workers and tired
street philosophers.
Tides 0£ Change and the Cay Resource
Center bfing Lesbian and gay cultural
events to Olympia throughout the year.
Examples of such are the Meg Christian
concert at TESC on Sept. 28th, and the
New Womyn's Poverty Band dance at the
Olympia Ballroom on Oct. 3.
Any event on the TESC campus ts open
to all, and this being the policy, you can
dance or whatever at any event planned
by a student group There is more accept·
ance of sexual minorities at Evergreen
~n....a!.....an~lege
I'. c u er bee11to.
This brings to mind a point abo.ut the
greater Olympia community. Olympia 1s
a very small city with a long tradition of
conservatism. Olympia in general is not d
very gay place to be. When out at night,
go with a friend if possible. If you are an
out-of-the-closet faggot or dyke, you will
probably be verbaUy trashed sometime
during your stay in Olympia.
If you are interested in obtaining any
inform.ation about the groups or places I
have listed in this article, or in finding out
what is available in Seattle or Portland,
you can stop by or call the Gay Resource
C•nter, LIB 3210, 1166-6544.W• will be
open 9-5 during orientation week.

CPJ Oriontatiolf,lssuo

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Shopping for movie theaters
by Konneth Sternberg

y

a sp«ial Sl .60 admission during a certain
period of each wttkday, Call for complete details.
Lacey Cinema

The only ci!lfflla in the area, perhaps
the region, with six screen,, the Lacey
Cinema is not yet one year old. From
South Sound Mall (where the city bus
runs) it's a ten-minute walk up Martin
Way.

This is by far the best theater in
Olympia. The seats are the most comfortable, th• sound superior. The largest
room seats 524 andhas Dolby stereo,
Sound leakage from other rooms is virtually absent because the walls are made of
thrtt-inch concrete.
I object to the plastic quaJity the theater
shares with all newer theaters but the
quality of the viewing ecperie~ce is high.
Oriv~ln•
For folks who love the.ir cars, there's
the Sunset or the Lacey driv~in theater.
The sound is always poor but the atmosphere can be intimate.
AJtematives
The majority of films shown locally are
big box office hits. This includes tM latest
martial arts extravaganza, Burt Reynolds,
or Wah Disney films. Of course then .1.re
a few different ones but unless they can
pull in a lot of money-the name of the
game when you run a big theater-such
films aren't likely to be booked,
The St.ate
Three theaters in one, with a very good
main room. The sound is good, the seats
comfortable. The two smaller scrttning
rooms leave much to be desi~. At each
of the many times I viewed films in these
rooms there was always one or two (or
more) times that the film became a soft
blur. The films here are projected at an
angle, so the focus isn't always sharp.
The State also has a history of keeping
the same print of a film until it literally
disintegrates. When a film you'd like to

see comes there, go see it as soon as it
arrives.

The Capitol ond Olympic
These two are almost identical • the
Capitol being slightly larger. I like th..,
two because they are old, classy movie
houses. Both have balconiH. The screens
are good, the sound enjoyable, and the
popcorn better than average.

Capitol Mall Onema
The throe big drawbacks hero are an
unacceptable level of sound leakage from
the throe adjac,nt theators, visibly dirty
scrtt~s. and sticky, trash-laden floors. (In
~II fa1mess, every theater in Olympia has
filthy floors. Caution is advised when
~ting your foot. You may need a crowbar to pry it loose,) All this for $4; fifty
cents more than all the other theaten.
Howrver, unlike the others, the MaJI has

. There _are alternatives to paying steep
ticlcet pnces to see movies. The Evergrttn
Friday Nite, Acadomic, and E.P.1,C, film
series all show worthwhile fiJms at low or
no admission prices.
The Olympia Film Soc'oty features
foreign and non-mainstn am Americ,1,n
films. This newly fonnec cooperative
shows films monthly at tho Old Washington Junior High School; legion Way
and Eastside St. It costs Sl0/year for
membership, which admits you to the
films for Sl.25. Admission is $2. 75 for
non-members. For more information call
754-6670 between 9 and 4, 30.
Tho State Film library, located in the
Evergreen library building, has hundreds
of films in its catalog. These films are
free to borrow, and Media Loan has projectors. Timberland library also has some
good films, and will even loan you the
~rejector. Invite some friends, show some
hims, and have a party.

A chocolate chip pizza??!
bv D..w1d lnnt c.
1

Q What·._ rrw differE"ncebetween an
l::.vergreenerand a pizza?
A rizzds d0n't scream when you
:hrow them m the oven
01 the tradit1flnal fast food restaurant
mt"ai .. availablE" m

Shakeys all across the country and the
ones in Olympia are above averagr in the
quality of their food. Shakeys has outlandish combinations like the "Hawaiian
Drlight" (Canadian bacon and pineapple),
"Mad Merriment"® (shrimp, olives and
mushrooms), and the "Big Ed Special"®
(c;ombmation n ith--aneho • iuL Thty'r@ all
pretty good. Sh.akeys is where you'll find
half the Capital High students on the
weekends; definitely a high--enrrgy
atmosphere.
Just down Harrison Ave. from the
Westside Ce.nter towards Mud Bay is the
traditional standby Pizu Hut, on Harrison and Kenyon. I worked for Pizza Hut
for years and usually enjoyed it. From
personal experience, I can say that very
few preservatives go into the food. It's the
only fast food store I've seen that displays
a nutritional analysis chart. While I never
cared for the thin or thick crusts, the new
Pan Style pizza has got lots of chttse,
topping and then more cheese. The salad

bar features 1he bnt bleu cheese dressing
I've had that I didn't make myself.
Pick up the phone some eveni-"' and
dial 754-3711 and order from Plua Haven
at Capitol Mall. Pizza Haven delivn-s.
The pizza isn't great, exactly, but it's not
exactly expensive and then you don't
have to get dressed to go ~et it.
At least once in ·your Hfe, you should
go to Jo Mama•,, 120 W. Pear, Hero Is
the cream of the crop in Olympia. Whole
grain crust, exotically spiced sauce and
lots of topping ... lots.of topping! My
heart almost stopped when I first saw the
prices, but one small pizza fed three of us.
Jo Mamai's hais an incredible variety of
pizzas, from tofu and sprouts to mushrooms and white sauce. This is the plaice
to go when your parents arrive to visit,
or to take a special friend. The restaurant
is a converted house with elegantly fitted
wood inside. Very cozy.
Hate to go out7 Want to take som~
thing different to ii pot luck7 Broke7 How

about a fool-proof dish (Chicago/Sicilian)
pizza from your own oven7 It's easy, you
can'do it.
Get some tomatoes and cut and pulverize them into sauce. Two or three ripe
tomatoes into a bowl, use a fork. Spice to
taste with oregano, sweet basil, garlic.
pepper, salt. a little oil, and parmesan
cheese. (There's a secret spic-etha! really
and truly adds to the taste and enjoyment
of your pizza, but it's illegal in some
states.}
Find a recipe for drop biscuits from a
cook book, and mix it up, substituting
Aat beerfor water, If milk is called for,
mix powdered milk in the Aat beer.
Grate some cheese. Mozerella or provolone are the traditional choices, but almost any firm cheese wilJ do.
Ch00<e your toppings, anything will
work. Slice vegetables thin, use precooked meat. Try being exotic, if you
like. How about almond slivers, or turkey
and cranberries) Salmon and thinly sliced
peeled lemons, sunflower seeds, even
diocolate chips can be surpruingly good
on pizza.
Now, preheat your oven to about 350ci
and find ,1,cast iron skillet, a cake or
brownie pan or any baking dish about
ftwe h■ d1a d&p. Spoon the dough into
your huvily greased pan about throe
quarters of an inch deep (rommber, the
dough rises like crazy). Sprud the sauce
evenly over the top, leaving· about half an
inch on all the sides. Sprinkle some cheese
over the sauce, put some topping, then
more cheese, more topping, more chttse,
etc. Don't get carried away or it'll be
soggy and never cook. Shako pannesan
cl,..,. on top and bake till the dough in
the middle Is done (just pry a hole in the
middle of the topping with"a fork and
look at the dough undomeath). Baking
takes 20 to 30 minutes or so. Whm it's
done, let it cool till the cheesesets (about
2 minutes). Cut, serve and le.ave one be-er
open for the next time.

I

On the week of September 22 through
the 28, Friday Nile Films presents its third
annual Orientation Week Film Festival
with four nights of top-notch film
viewing.
Monday, September 22's presentation
will be Louis Malle's highly acclaimed
1960 French comedy, Zuie. Based on
Raymond Queneau's ''unfilmable" novel
about a foul-mouthed 11-year-old girl
who comes to Paris to visit her dragqueen uncle, the film has been fa..,orably
compared to the comedies of The Marx
Bros, and Mack Sennett. Z.azie was
described in one review as "on orgy of
outrageous sight gags, in-jokes, Him
parodies, visual games, changing speeds,
and wild stunts. The use of breadrneck
editing in particular marked a new era in
film technique, but in all departments
Zazie is a funny, magical and unique
movie, a film-freak's journey through the
looking glass.'"
I'll admit that I haven't seen the film
yet, but I have read (and liked) the novel,
and knowing that Malle can put out a
good film now and then, I can say that
Zazi• ought to be good.
One of Charles Chaplin's earliest and
most famous shorts, The Tr.amp (1915)
will be on-the same bill.
On Wednesday, September 24, comes
Karel Reisz's Who11 Stop the Raln7 based
on the National Book Award-winning
novel, "Dog Soldiers" by Robert Stone. I
feel that it's not only the bnt of the "Vietnam films" that were suddenly in abundance a couple of years ago, but al10 one
of the ten best movies of the past decade.
It's been argued by some that Who11
Stop the Rain7 really isn't about the Vietnam War at all, but abou. the death of
the 60's. I think that it's about both but
the Vietnam War is the film's central
metaphor. (Nick Nolte literally "brings
the war home" with him.)
The two male principles of Who11 Stop
the Rain 7, after fighting in a hideous war
they no longer believe in, come home to
find a world as conupt. nightmarish, and
violent as the one they just left.
It starts off with Michael Moriarty, as
a Vietnam veteran turned journalist. cov•
ering the war on the battlefield. After
scenes de.picting the gruesome horrors of
battle and the carnage caused by the
American involvement in South Vietnam,
he becomes sickened, disillusioned and
cynical. Deciding that he may as well
profit from the war too, he arranges to
have an old buddy, Ray (Nick Nolte),
who is being discharged, smuggle a pound
of heroin back to the Stata for him. Ray
reluctantly goes through with the plan,
but when he brings the smack to Moriarty's unsuspecting wile (Tuesday Weld)
in Berkeley, he finds that Moriarty's supplier has tipped off the Feds. An F,B.L
agent and his two thugs want the smack
for themselves and will do anything to
got it. They take Moriarty as a hostage
and pw-sue Nolte and Weld, who have
the smack, throughout the Southwest.
Along the way, Nolte and Weld experi-

ence constant disillusionment, not only
with the American Dream, but also the
"counterculture" dream of the 60's. After
re.adting a "magic mountain" like something out of "The Electric Kool-Aid Acid
Test," the film explodes into an apocaly~
tic, and eventually, very moving and
poetic climax.
The characters are complex and richly
embellished. Unlike Coming Home and
other such attempts, this film successfully
captures the mood and feeling of the late
t:J:/sbetter than anything I've yet seen.
Another accomplishment here is that we
t1regiven a hero for a war that really
didn't have any-the kind of hero that
many wished wo had. Nick Nolte's Ray is
the essenae of Brando and Bogart rolled

w

$

t

by T.J, Simpson

Life in Olympia can, at times, become
painfully boring. When you're in the
mood lo escape the common routine the
choices are _limited, Perhaps it's too rainy
to go campmg, or the only live music in
town sounds like a cross between a den~
tisrs drill and a saxophone.
In desperation, you grab the newspaper
and search for the entertainment page.
Maybe, there's a good movie in town. The
~u~ber of films available at any one time
1s f1~te-en.With such a large number, the
choice of which lo Stt should be simple,
but beyond the quality of the films, hero
are some other factors to consider.
Not quite two years ago, there were
only three major theaters in town: The
State, Olympic, and the Capitol. Each
had one screen and carried only major
Hollywood releases. The only alternative
was a small church-turned-theater called
~he Cinema, which ran exce-Jlentforeign
films, as well as American films outside
the ~ainstream of big-time, popular
movies.
Then, the Capitol Mall Cinema was
built •. It featured four sc~ns, and could
run d1ffere~t films continuously. Many
felt that this was tho beginning of the end
for the Cinema. Perhaps much of the
Cinema's business went to the Mall, but
also, stories circulated that the owner of
tht' Cinem~ was in serious debt. At any
rate, the Cinema-Olympia's
only indepe ndently owned theater closed for good
in August 1979.
Shonly after this. the State theater expanded from one to thrtt screens. La.st
November, the Lacey Cinema opened
with six separate theaters. Within a twoyear period the number of Olympia
theaters more than doubled. All the movie
theaters in Olympia, except the Capitol
Mall Cinema. are owned by one man,
Tom Moyer. His brother, Larry, owns the
Mall theaters. Both own huge theater
empires 050 theaters or so), and (according to staff of numerous local theaters)
b0th brothers have a strong hatred of
0ne another.

Olympia, pizza is prob~
ablv thl' most balanced and nutritious. It's
rrnh,1bh the mnst expt>nsive, too, averagm>,: Jb(•ut six to sevE"ndollars a pound.
Tht'rf' '- a pizza tor every taste in town,
ran~mg trom gourmet concoctions with
qe,1k.
mushrooms and white sauce to
wh.it looks (and tastes) like spray-painted
cardboard.
Here" a rundown of the local pizza
parlors in town. In the last 10 days, I've
been to most of them. You should take
longer. I now weigh 14 pounds more and
none of them were too bad. With enough
ht-er any pizza tastes great.
Go the the Rainbow Rest.aur.1.nton the
corner of W. 4th and 5., Columbia, downlown. My friend Evan, a New York
native. says it's the next ~t to New York
pizza I thought the crust needed more
salt and more tomatoes in the sauce, but
there was more than enough cheese. The
a1mosphere at the Rainbow is great. It's a
great place to go in groups. Lots of Evergreen people go there. The floor was built
from the old Adams Bowling Alley lanes
and the bar is topped with part of the old
Tenino Eagles dance floor. Local artists
display their work on the walls ot the dmm~ room The people working there treat
ytiu like people instead of customers.
If y0u re up for the trip, try Dirty
Dave's Gay 90's Pizza Parlor, 3939 Martin
WJy out by Lacey. The pizza's good. the
Ix-er scold. and they have eleventy thou<.,mdposters lining the walls and ceilings
,inJ crnwding the bar. You might read
them all in about six trips.
Cll,ser to home. you will find Shakeys
.11 lht>Wes1side Center. I've been to

$

into one. Distinctly American, he's the
kind of hero we thought heroes were
supposed to ~ when we wtte kids, and
for once, he's even on the right side. After
over a decade of realistic "anti-heroes"
like Nicholson, DeNiro, and Hoffman
(who are great in their own way}, it's a
relief to have someone we can really root
for again.
Reisz, like Arthur Penn and Francois
Tru.Haut, is one of the last true romantics
in Cinema. The romantic mythos of
Who11 Stop the Raln7 will outlive the
fuzzy-minded ambiguities of the other
films in this short-lived genre.
An unintentionally fuMy short, What
ls Communism 7 will be included on the

bill.

I

Speaking of communism, Bernardo
Bertolucci's 1900 will be showing on Friday, September 26, and Sunday the 28th
for those who can't make it on Friday.
This mammoth, four-hour epic spreads
from 1900, when an Italian landowner's
and peasant's grandsons (Robert DeNiro
and Gerard Deparclieu) are born on the
same day, to the day, in 1945 when thl'
Socialist peasants liberate themselves from
the Fascists. (There's also a humorous epilogue that has DeNiro and Depard1eu as
old men in the 197Cfs.)
As the film follows the two grandsons
through the century, we see them as
childhood friends in scenes remm1scent of
''Huckleberry Finn" (frog-lovers beware!).
war buddies, and t>Venluallyas reluctant
enemies on different sides of the cias!>
struggle with Depardieu as a fugitive
Socialist leader and DeNiro as an meffec.
tive liberal controlled by the Fascists.
Burt Lancaster and Sterling Hayden
~ve the best performances in the film as
the patriarchial grandfathers of different
classes, who share a deep respect for each
other. Here Bertolucci shows how the
complacent coexistence of the old anstocracy and peasantry was destroyed by tht'
middle-class fanaticism of the Fascists
The film does have its flaws. The
Italian version is 5 1/2 hours long, but
this four-hour version is the only one
available in this country. This accounts
for some of the holes in the narrative and
some lapses in the continuity of the characteriz.ations. Also, the vicious portrayals
of the Fascists and some of the red f1agwaving are overdone. Yet all in all, 1900
is an incredible achievement. one of
Bertolucci's best (though not as gooJ as
his last Tango in Paris and The Conformist) and again, easily one of the 10
best of the past decade. It's consistently
entertaining, beautifully photographed
and rich in literary and political themes
Like most of Bertolucci's films, it wa,;
filmed around his home town of Parma
and is his own personal and artistic v1s1on
of Italian life in the first half of the 20th
century. {Although Bertolucci re1omed th,:
Italian Communist Party in 1969, the
Party was very displeased with 190) fl•r
some dogmatic reasons.)
The supporting Gtst includes Donald
Sutherl•tnd as a Macbeth-like Fascist
leacfer, the alluring Dominique Sanda as
DeNiro's free-spirited wife, and Stephania
Sandrelli as the radical organizer who
Depard.ieu marries. The movie was filmed
and post-synched in English, although
some of the minor characters were obviously speakmg Italian and their voices
dubbed in English.
Note: The showtimes for Z.az.ieand
Who11 Stop the 8-n are 7 and 9: 30. ThE"
showtime for 1900, on both days. is
7 p.m. only (the entire film will be shown
at each 'screening). Admission is now
$1 .25 (which is not too bad considering
that most people had to pay at least five
bucks to see 1900 when it came out three
years ago). Advance tickets for 1900 are
available in the CPJ office. Audiences are
advised lo show up at Lecture Hall One
early to get a good seal

The followlngIntroductory
special will be offered to students 9-29-80through 10-10-00

color print film
12 exp-$1.99
20 exp-$2.99

Dllwelop& Prtnt

--------~-exJ>-$3--~~-

slides
20 exp-$1.39
36 exp-S2..3!L
movies- $1.39

Leaveyour film at the TESC Bookstore for prompt, quality, photofinishing service
Call1166-6216

Ottw Services
II we do nor have the boo, you
wan! we wdl special order at
no add1t1ona1 cost But 1na1 s
not al I. we have
Paper supplies
Art supplies
FIim and photography paper
Film processing
Greeting cards
Postcards
Drug and sundry I rems

Candy and snacks
Imprinted c1oth1ng such as

T sh,rts

gym shOrts

hooded

sweatshirts

Swim sul!s & sw,m goggles
We w111 do our best lo take care
of any special reques1s tor
books or merchandise not
currently stocked

lloabtore
TM Ewu;,wi Slate College
886-Q16

Media
cpj0232.pdf