The Cooper Point Journal Volume 9, Issue 5 (October 9, 1980)

Item

Identifier
cpj0233
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 9, Issue 5 (October 9, 1980)
Date
9 October 1980
extracted text
;~iCO ER P INT

regiltrat\ot\

~
responses

by Kenneth Stomberg
On Thunday. Sept. 25, a two-month
investigation by the special narcotia unit
of the Thurston County Sheriffs Dept.
culminated In the arreot of _.., penons.
Five of t'- weff 1tudent.1at Evergreen.
an'Hted on or near campus. Two <>then,
non-students. Wtte afffSted in Tumwatirr
on the same night.
The invetigation, which lnduded
ufl(len:ova- agmt.l poalns •• students living in the doona, came at the roquest of
Plftident Dan Evans. EvaN met in early
August with Ken Jacob. campus housing
din!ctor; and Mack Smith, campus oecurity chief, to discuu complaint.I by students conc,ming drug tnfflcldng In
camp.a hwslng.
Whm ubd to specify the number and
exact na~ of these complaints, Jacob at
fint stated he would "'rather generalize oo
that;· but lator he said thett had been
thrtt complmtts. Two students were
alarmed at the volume of drugs they had
seen recffllly, and the third warned Jacob
of a man wt-o wu frequently on campus
and always armed. Thia penon ukm that
action be tabn. Pttl&ed hrther, Jacob
said that or,e complainant told him they
"'had never IOffl so much In their Ii& ...
Spocifically,Jacob added, this meant $4050,000 worth of cocaine seen In a dorm
room.

1

t

if)

related~

~

The

pwpc,aie

of

the

investigation,

aa:ordlng to l:vans. was to locate the
smaller dml,n at Evergtten and then
"'worit up theline"' to the large-ocale
dmlen. Healso 1tated that both he and
the Sheriff we,, satisfied that the affair
was a SU<D!II.
Of the liv,, Evergreeners arrested. four
were chars,d with unlawful delivery of a
controlled oubotance. Th• fiith, John
Gardner, waa charged with ••oiforand
delivery of a substance ttp-ted
to be

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

. .;,.........

ARTS

Stitch,d Works on Paper by Judy A lor~
c1nd l Kass.1na Hol<Mn .al Childhood's End
G.illl'ry 1hrough Oct. 20
W«lrwsd.ay, Sq,tember 24
(.f'nen.1 mttllng of .all cbnc,n and chorrogr,1phrr\ mtl'ttSltd in producing tMir work for
On th, Boud'1 monthly ··chor,ognphy
Etc
At Washington Hall 153 14th Av,,
~.1ttlt. 8 pm for morir info ull 325-9949.
Wt-dnnd.ay, October I
On tM' Bo.r.rds, in $eo,1ttl,.prnents Spalding
Gray w1th his n:urat1vt

~rform.11nC1' of "Booze,

Car, and Coll~, Girls," 8 30 pm. al the
Washmgt0n Hall P1Prformancto Galltry, 153
14th Av,

~,1111,

',on,ty,

a qu,utt't

U,

prNenls
which

Mandingo

Criot

comb1nt'1

Afro-

Am,ncan and \i\'nt Afm:.i,n mflurncn, futurmit I.al, Fcxb1yMu~ Suso on the 21-stnngtd
Kora

Covu

S.S. .at 9 pm

c:;,•lurd.ay S.pt,mbu 27
Aprl•1.1m folk Mus,c Centu 220 E Union
rr~nh
an Appkl•m bc.neflt concffl featuring
mu,11 m thf' Amenc•n In~ and Bnosh vit1n
1\1u,1~1,rns
mcludf' Co11hySlaglf'. Mikit Saunders,
K,n RhNk--. and nthf'r\ Doors open at
8 r m ,dm,ssion S2
O:,ur1<by,
S.ptembu 28
T1Jf" ('f ChanMf' Product1f\n Collt"Ct1vr prP...,nh ,1n f'vt"n1ngnl women~ music with Ohv1a
l{rc.,rd1ng art1sl Ml'JI Chrl.tLln. 1n lhit l1bruy
l1•bb) of TESC at 8 pm Tickets ue S4.50,
.inJ ,r., ,1\.11\.ibl".ii Budg•t Tapes, Ro1inyDay
Rt'cords ,1nd tM Evergrttn Wonwn's Cenlff
Whttkh.111 ,1ccf"S61ble Work e-xcNI~ and
ch,kkarf' au,labk
friday, 0ct•r
J
Anti-w,l"I Countrv WHl.-rn and follt da~

by Kym Trippsmith

EVERYTHING ELSE

whl'rT 1n this blah-blah-blah. d\..) Showtimn
••
7 only. F,lday
and Sunday. Still $1.25. L.H.I.
°"~'~o~n~F~-~~Y~- ~IO~h~y~,ah~.~-~~~~m,~i<wR~·~
...
~--~A~
T
Tiw fu\1-lmgth animated 60's clas,k Y.-Uow
Submarln.- will be in Lttture Hall at 7 and
9:30 .,,. a bc-nd'it for Grapffi.ne, Enrg:rttn·s
alterNlive marketing group. AdmLHion it only
a buck! TM film ha, 10methlng lo do with
The Beat~. an obtcurT 6111 rock group w.ho
wt-rT rTally quit.- good. lt'1 too bad that hardly
anybody has ever heard of them. A 1pttial run
of the 500n-10-be-rkkitty. world-f11mou1 Evergrttn ••A.. van ~·•11run at 9 :35
Friday, October J •
......., H
'·-·
Friday Nitt' Films prnitnts Howan.i aw~
Sc.arfa« (US A .. 1932, '19 min.) Marring Paul
Muni, Gforge Rah. Ann Dvorak, and Boris
Karloff Although Hawks 1s best known for
such works iis To Havir and H•vir Not, TM
Big SINp. HI, Clrl Fncby, and Brlnpfll Up
Baby, Surfatt is perhaps hi• most hlghly tt-garded film. Y•t. moat Americans have not
tttn ii because It ha.s (until just last )'l'ar) bttn
unnailable in this country for OWT 40 yun.
(Producer Howard Hu.ghn djdn't want anybody elM ocqt himMlfto hav.- the privilqe
of lttin, it.) loos,ely bued on the mt' and fall
of Al Capone. it hH bftn dncribed as., pn,1ter film of Shaknpearlan proportions. B.n

.Ide

- hud

frld.ay. S.pt,mMr
I ht (,nu O.h

.

ALMS ON CAMPUS

-

"-'1w•--kha·,,

-

...

Ch

___

c Ii:..; al Tht 81:R'.kHIDi
Soddy at their offict" at 2201
St..
Olympia. ?·JO p.m.
Sunday, Septembff 28
Blaclt Hill• Audubon Soc~y field trip to
Ocun Shorn Carpooling at Audubon office
(2201 Water St Oly ) 7 a.m. or fflt'et at mtrooms near entrance to ~an
Shorn at 9 a.m
Tunday, Septembl'r 30
Yl'I Anothtt Huse Bumpenticlter and Button
•-•- , o U'l'nt'
~ 1·, ,._ C
<0 111,'""'
<-change •
;,a.or
i
11'1:
ommuni·, Y .>a.
CAB lobby, 10 a.m.•J p.m
Wednaday, Octobtt 1
Womanspac• an evming of inform•tlon, t-ntertainment. poetry, food lc:lruerts), gamn.
convt"r1ation. and a raffle Library 4300
Joung• For mo~ Info call Sande at 866-6162.
Sponsor"Ni by tht- Women·• C.-nlt"r and TidN
of Change
Friday U.rough Sund.y, October .3-S
W•thlngton Stat• Audubon Soddy'• Fall
flkMbura Conffftnc.-.- on 1ne ONR-How It
Works" in EUmsburJ (Wfft: you npttting ~
Yawlt). Room and board av•ilable. For information and rnervation forms contact 8111
Harrington-T~it at 90-2174.

ri

WHOSE FRIEND?

,

ft"alunng tht- Nt"W Womyn'a Pov.-rty Banet
Tom M.itt~s.
and ..Songs for Socialist Nmmism" 8·30 p.m. at tht' Olympia Ballroom
(WHhinglon and l.t°'gion Way). Sl. For morT
,nfo contact tht Gay Rnouf'Ct' Center at
..,,.,,..._
Th.- Kinks at Seattle Center Arffla. 8 p.m..
S9 adv.tSl0 day of show.
Tunday, Octoi- 1
Renten and Ownen Org.anittd for Fo1inwu
(R.O.O.F.) will iponsor singrr/songwrill'r
Mupl'
Adam in a benefit conc:ffl for lnitiativt- 24. in Meany Hall-Univ.-nily of Washing•
100 at 8 p.m Tklcets are '6.50 and att avail•
.ib~ at Budgd Tapn and Records in Olympia.
,.bl,•
• a, .. pr 0 viueu nc,r
.......

;;;;;;;~~lr1tmi71..i!u6iin
Wednnday. S.ot,mbu 24

MUSIC

/

m

.

\.__./
t t t, t t, t t t t t,
• • • •

' •
,,

t.i

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

a controllod .. bstance ... Gardner had sold
agmt1 pills that are advertioed In High
Times maga;ine u boinsa form of lqal
speecl. 11,ey
actually a combination of
epinephrine and caffeine. Th• illqality ol
his actions, one investigating detective
said, wu that Gardner oold the fake stuff
as the genuine article.
Mack Smith said that th• goal of the
whole thq was to get three large-«:ale,
off-campus dmlen. Two of th ... , he said,
_,. a..-.d on other chanta In other
part• of the country. Did he think that
thoie an-ostedin Tumwater, Jackie thomiley and Kell,y Strasser. were the largescale sowu that had supplied drugs to
Evergreen1
"Affirma~." he answered.
The officialtotal valuo of the drup
hoUJht or ffJCOvered
In the invatiption
wu $28,160. This wu the total reported
In the Doily Olympum and in the campus
news ,d..,.. issued on Friday. 1lie breakdown. acmrdzw to detective Bob McBride, wao as follows: $25,000 from a
raid that netl!d 50 lbs. of marijuana. This
oa:urftd ,- Evergreen in early S,ptember. ValueperpoundwuSSOO: $2,160
worth of coaine (18 grams at $120 per
gram) !rod, thooe arrated in Tumwater,
and 11,000 wath of cocaine, acid. and
gra55 from people at Evergreen.
In a public ..-Ing on the Monday
following the arrests, P.-..idmt Evans,
Mack Smith. ;ind Ken Jacob acldro9'd a
large group ol'concemed students about
tho incident.
\
Evans began by stating the chain of
events which led him to request the investigation: student complaints, witneues
not wishing to get involved and he being
convinced of heavy drug traffic in the
dorms.
Many expressed anger that an inv.. tigation with unden:over ag,,nts had occurred
at all, and thought it was out of chancier
for Evans and the school to handle tho

Wednnd.ay, S.-ptnnbff 24
Friday Nile Films prntnts Who11 Stop tM
IWnl (U.S.A •• 1978. 126 min.I l(a,.I Rrisz•
ICrttn
adaptation of Robt-rt Storw's novel,
..Dog Soldiers:' Plus! Wit.at h Communlsml
<S.. ,h< md•w ,1,.,.he .. In <hb Im><.) L.H.I,
7 and 9:JO. S1.25.
Friday Septemb.r 26 and Sund.ay Stpl:ffllbtt 28
Friday Nit.- Film1 prnents Bttnardo Bert~
lum·s 1900 (U.S.A.lltaly, 1977, 243 min.).
Th.- enti"' four-hour tpk will be shown at
Heh Kfftning. Come early for good ,uts,
sin« th.-tt's a good chance
be a sell•
.L.
I
d·.ere

will

Httht, who also cO-wrote TIM Front Pa,e. elk!
•- "'-'="
-play.
Plu,1 Ll11•-•-•
""In•"' Hood.
""'
.,.. ,.._ ruu
'an outrageous 1947 To: Avery c•rtoon.
Wednttday, OdON'f 8
~ Academic Film Smn prewnts The
T,oi,u, Wom<n (U.S.A .. 1971, 105 min.) ...,.
ring Kathttine 1-wpbum, VannN R.edgraw,
lrTrw Papas. Cenn-ine Bujold, and Patridc.
M.g.. Dlre<ted by Mid,..) (Z..ba liM c.-1
CM:oyannil. The A.F.S. this quarter i• speciallz.ing on films about and/or by wofflt'n
Th,.·anl'w••
,, -e~
........y. b-·-•
on 1rw
•- 41•J B.c~.
...
.an1
play by Euripkta. wu Sttn as having para.UN
to the Vietnam war when It wa• produc«I on
Bra.dway in tht late 1960'1. 11w Mory fOCUlft
the fall of Troy and the fatn o( it1 womm.
f
.,_., h
on

Kathy was a friend of mine. We met
on a Monday night while watching
<:1.-in A Dorm. She overheard the
..,..!IV&-•
conversation I was engaged in about
Portugal and volunteered hene.lf u an
open, frtt person. Kathy's act wu one
of ,._ L-t. H- b•,1,- ....1 u a diuw: u.:a

"-'

•--&&'"'"...

vorced mother of a leV'ffl-~ar--old girl
who lived with her lather in Santa
Monica endeared. me to her situation.
E~ 1 night that wee:k, we met and
t&lked of thing-. that lft'ffled to draw UJ
together. She was constantly waiting
for teJ-.,hone call• from her boyfriend,
J. R. We evm '-u-•_, about ,._ cor• -·

visit Kathy &t\d found her packing up
her belongings at top speed. She
spewed out an explanation that wu
immediately accepted by her trusting
fri d n.. -·
• h
N u·
•n • V" dml
'""ming
ome.
• ,. was
-L---~
h
1UUxu a
ttance to er own apartment. The police wen arresting her
roommate. At the same time, Lawrence
had just returned to his mod. Kathy
ti
by
d .__,_, him
innocen Y came
an IW,.lluaJ
a
piece of paper. h ooon as he had the
deposition in his hand, a barrage of
li
•ty offi
d tL- Inpo
ctn, an
~
fa ce, Jseam
R fl ••-•-•
,L_ doo f
mous • • ew uuU1ol&'' Uft:
r or
the arrest. They briefly searched the
living room, finding and making one
b ong an d t a&.ng one pipe. Ka th

matter in this way.
Evans defended his actions by oaying
that once there wa, a clear cue of illegal
activity. he wu obligated to take action,
lince Evergreen is not immune to the law.
He saw 1uch an lnv.. tigatlon a1 being the
only viable option, and he roqunted that
it be completed before school began.
Othon p....,.t objected to Evan,• indilMnce to the deep effect the arrests had
-thoN hnohed. Tht four E11erg:teeuen
arrested ~lated similar ob9ervations re-garding the invatigatlon and arrest.I. In
lato August, an undercover narcotia
agent named Kathy Barnett appeared In
tho dorms. By all accounts oho was very
friendly, talkativ,,, and l"nerally inter.. tod In getting lo know othen. Some
deocribed her a, tophisticated; a IOdalito.
She lived in D dorm, later in Mod 308A
and frequmted the telnislon room of
A dorm, where she met students. Kathy
told them that she wu from California
and wu to besin
studies hero this fall.
Over the next month Kathy became a
friend of many 1tudents living In the
dorm1, includina two who were lator
arrested. She offered to take people out
for beer (ovm If they wm, underage),
pizza or to shoot pool.
At no time did anyone interviewed 1upect her of boins&t\ unden:ovor agent,
though all agreed that her tactics soon

became overbearing.
Whether she was a friend to them, or
had learned of their nam• from someone
else, Kathy soon began asking people lo
supply her with drugs. By most accounlS,
these request.I started about three w .. k.,
before school began. Together with a man
known only as J. R. (another agent). she
kept visiting people in their rooms and
calling on the phone to ut more drugs
The two ~re present a.t uch purch.ue or
delivery.
Larry Tolefree, one of those arrosled,
decribed the pair'• behavior as being
"'constantly naggjng,"'and that it "'got to
be annoying ... Ho said that Kathy and
J. R. never let up in their requests and
~ "'desperate for drugs."'
Tolofrtt had given a friend live dollars
for some marijuana. The night the grass
waa delivered to him &t\dleft on the
kitchet1 tablo. J. R. visited, again asking
for dn,gs. When he saw the gra.. he
offered Tolefree $10 for it, which he
accepted. The quantity was leu than one
ounce, according to T olefreo.
Michael Leitch, also arrested. said he
was asked by Kathy to tell her cocaine.
. At Hnt he was reluctant, but in order to
md Kathy ffld J. R.'s constant request,,
agreed to a sale. Besides.aaid Leitch,
..opportunity was knocking.'' 11,e _,is
continued OD bid, -

----1r~ti5~~~~;"';"'~-~~~&'""~[]_l_


(F~r
N~ York Tlrnn movit- critk Botley
...
fJa~lic~u~•~b~•mio~nc~lh<~~•~lm~·j·~·~-E-~la~
..y~<hough<th< film WH ,vpp<>Mdlo be part of •
promotional campaign for II prophylactic company.) L.H.I. 1:30 a nd 7:30. prttl
JN TOWN
Thunday Scptffl\11,ff2'
T•01'ymp'film o.........
p-ts
H. c.
n1:
.,.
--•.,'"'-u
Clouzot's w-,.. of Fur (Frantt. 1953, 138
min.) starrin« Yvn Montend, Charles V•nel.
Peter Vfl.nEyc:h. and Ve-n Clout.at. Four down
and out rMn drive two truck.loac:h of 1.1...a.a..
,..., ...,
explotiw nitroglyurln over.hu.ardou1 roads
in South America. Orw of the ~atnt
•\lSPfflM
films of all thnt-. with auperb Ktina, editing,
charKters, ancf nen existtntlalilt and antiimpt"ri.alist overtones. w.,....of Fur hat bttn
~ at least thrtt thnn (mOII rece:ntJy by
William Frwdkln as Son:en:r), but none of the
remakes COffM' close to 1natchina the original.
Showtlme is at 7:30 only .,, the otd Wuhlncton School (the cof'T'lffof East uaion Way and
Wtskw Ave.). AdmiMlon ii Sl.25 for FUm
Society mtmben and Sl.75 for non--fflftnben.
For thaw w•nting mo"' info on the Film
Society, call 754-6670 or drop by 2181/1 W.
Fourth Ave.
-T.J S

-r

'-I



r-

name and the ••evi) capitalist pig'" in
the TV oerialDallu. With tho end of
1 on a Friday night, the invited
Shn•m
-•-•
I crew of people back to her mod to
celebrate and we promptly went ·off to
Handy Pat\try to buy bttr. It was her
tffat and, Jina I am not of a-o- to buy
liquor, she volunteered the respoNibU·
ity of contributing to the delinquency
of a minor.
Kathy introdu·'-~
_.J
me lo two v.rv
-•1
special people, Lawrenct and Nellie.
We ate breakfast tosether, danced
around and -ny
confided in one
e~ .. ~.......

The Saturday night previous
to the drug bust, they all came over to
my off--cunpus hoUle for a party. I intraduced Kathy to my famUy of friends.
Five days later, Nellie wmt over lo

another.

Al1ll,I

pocketed it. She ......,.lyownturned
her,
- __
head u Lawrmce tried to find one
sh-" of
ti that ---'d , t\fy LrTU
'-VW JUI d na
cti
Hffl'IO on
his
a on. e was M'Vff even rea
rights previOUJ to spending the next
four days.in jail.
Kathy' I
But th •-•- of
gone
now.
e UJ-O ..1----!...
hO ,_..1..
~L--'
a person w ~ on anouft:I" s ualR'
for friendship, communication and
trust still haunts my ~ams
and fill.J
• w~er
L---·
me with
paranoia
a
new
per.
Al hough
1__
son tnn to get to uiow me. t
Kathy had an excellent act, it 1ftffll
that her ability to worm her way into
th h rts of ho
, __,
f II-"
e ea
avy IK&.lf:n

eu completely. To wa ste such an expert con
on vetty pot smokers, hUJtle small-time
dru3 usen, and heartily party down
'th
de
bttT drink
t
WI
un rage
en leetnS 0
be a waste of state and federal funds.

POSTERLIBEL?

-----:7-<:;:).=-----.A
• -~o::::::::::====:::::::;,,_-c:::::::::::.~
,

IllANK YOU,
NARCOTICS DEPT.
To the Editor:
I would like to take this opportunity to
applaud the continuing success of the
Thurston County Narcotics Department.
Their persistent efforts have greatly aided
our safe and closely knit community. ln
fact, their efforts have proven so effective
that it is now possible to walk through,
visit and yes, even reside on campus with
almost no fear at all of being offed by a
coke-crazed maniac with a key of blow in
his back pocket. It is not for this alone,
however, that they deserve our praise. ln
addition to banishing this persistent
chimera with the dripping nose and itchy
trigger finger, they have also set a shining
example for the moral values in which we
all believe. Yes, in all cases, their conduct
has been most laudable. Their ingenuity
in providing a safe, legal substitute for
drugs (alcohol) to numerous minors on
campus was a stroke of genius.
Their true color was even more explicitly demonstrated to the many subsequent
male victims who were escorted about
town by a charming and sincere hostess.
Their continuing obsession with eradicating petty criminals on contrived distribution charges is lauded far and wide. Yes,
even women walking alone in the early
evening have ample reason to applaud the
priorities of the Thurston County PD.
They indeed have reason to be proud;
for not only have they made this Ciimpus
a safer place to live, they have set a shi,ing example for those virtues we all hoc!
dear-trust, honesty, integrity, and
friendship. I salute their continued success.
(name withheld by requ,st)

GOOD OLD DAYS
AREGONE
To the Editor:
As a person new to Evergreen, I have
been surprised to hear various peo~ bemoaning the Good Old Days of Evergreen; prophesying doom for one more
good try at an A1temative Institution of
Leaming.
I find this awful. We must face and
understand the problems, true. But telling
horror storie;, promoting real and
imagined scenarios of the Fall is pointles.s
and unpleasait.
The situation of any new institution
which chall~es so many as.sumptions of
our society as does Evergreen. is p~rious. It seems to come once again to a
stand-oH between the institution being
forced to change to fit accepted norms

(meanwhile corrupting the values funda-menta] to its existence) or facing the
threat of annihilation. It is more than a
matter of chance whether or not Evergreen will survive and thrive. We have
the strength and knowledge of the people
involved in conceiving and building Evergreen, the financial investment of the
St.ate of Wa,i,ington, the hope of students
like me coming here wanting so to believe
that this is truly a place of cooperative
learning and real human concerns.
The future is ours; we must each keep
our values finnly in heart and mind, must
communicate well with each other and
work in all ways that we can discover to
make Evergreen truly as we had each
hoped it would be. Any thoughts or suggestions most welcome. Send them to the
paper.
Beka Highlander

UNDERSTANDING
SEPARATISM,
To the Editor:
I'd like to venture a few words on behalf of "lesbian-separatism," as there is
a reason, if not many, for affecting such
a radical change in one's life. I assume
women are not born lesbian separatists;
I'd like to lend an undentanding to why
they may have become so.
In the first place, to choose to become
a separatist is a highly political decision.
and one that can be difficult to make. It is
not necessarily an issue of sexual preference, and the decision is not necessarily
final. Lesbian separatists believe that the
present situation of male supremacy re-quires that women should refrain from
heterosexual relationships. That the
ideology of heterosexuality, not just the
act of intercourse, is the whole set of
assumptions which maintains the ideological power of men over women. So
lesbianism can be a way of combatting
the overwhelming heterosexual id'eology
that perpetuates male supremacy.
Granted this is not always the case, and
whether it is or not, separatists can, and
often do, quite effectively alienate their
hetero or bisexual sisters. This is a pity,
for I believe in the old saying, "United we
stand, Divided we fall." We each have
our own thoughts and ideas on how we
should continue this revolution, and the
direction we should take it in. Doubtless,
there are many conflicting opinions. But
as sisters, it is our responsibilit11 -our
obligation-to communicate with and
undentand each other as best we can. as
well as tolerate our differences.
Shannon Baker

Do it for free.
Do it yourself.
Do it with help.

priority to work in providing services and
support for war.en. Yes. lesbians are
most certainly women, and indeed that
fonns the crux of our identity. Lesbians
do not define themselves sexually. We are
lesbians because of a deep sense of women's positive power and potential in and
of themselves. Oftentimes our sexuality is
just one expression of our total identity.
But, in light of the incredible homophobia
and heterosexism at this point in time, we
must speak dearly about who we are
sexually and emotionally in order to combat that oppression.
I am personally affronted by Anne's
statement that there is an emphasis within
the Olympia women's community on
dominance and conformity to a "strongly
political, separatist and ~orking-class
revolutionary ethic," Yes, our work is
political but we do not exclude or force
conformity to our ideas. How could we
when we each, as individuals, have our
own sense of what works politically for us.
I work, and have continually worked,
in situations that deal mostly with heterosexual women and health-most often
pregnancy, abortion and birth control. I
feel it is crucial work. in order that
women have as much access to controlling
their own bodies. Many other lesbians in
this community and elsewhere work with
all kinds of women in situations dealing
with self-defense, rape intervention, media
exploitation, and more in providing emotional support around all these issues. We
are doing this work because we see how
important it is for women to help women.
I am unsure of Anne's definition of separatist. My explanation of the work we
do as lesbians, in this community and
elsewhere, should make it clear we are far
from separatist. And lastly, what the hell
is wrong with working class, revolutionary ethicsl Those who have, and continue
to have, class/money privilege should
analyze their attitudes!
Anne's description of monthly community meetings as strictly for lesbians is
erroneous. We have made it clear time
and again that meetings are open to any
women. We do not and have never asked
for women to identify themselves sexually
in order to attend meetings. I have been
to every community meeting, save one,
and I clearly n,m,mber Anne asking ii her
non-lesbian friend would be abl• to stay.
The response was a strong yes. Th• only
From Helen J. Thornton
persons asked to leave meetings have been
First off, ltt m• say that I hesitat.d to
submit a letter to the CPJ around the issue men, so I am l.Slclearwhy Anne claims
her friend w•asked to leave.
of feminism since, historically, the CPJ
Women ha~ a number of avenues to
has been less than supportive around such
work
on their feminism in Olympia.
concerns. Secondly, it appears that the
Women a.re not being asked to identify
CPJ litorally jumps at any opportunity to
their sexualpreference in order to get inpresent a supposed schism within the
volved. All kinds of women, for example,
women's community. Nonetheless, I feel
have been involv,d in the production of
strongly that Anne Richmond's article
Matrix-Olympia's Feminist/Lesbian
deserves a response, since it is a gross
Magazine. U indeed, various women see
misinterpretation of the Evergreen/Olymthe need to form more groups to meet
pia women's community.
their speak needs, they have every right
Let me first address her statement that
to do so. We, as lesbians, have at times
the only groups a.round town for womm
had to form very specific groups in order
are defined on the basis of sexual prefer-.
to meet our own needs. Heterosexual
ence. Though I am more familiar with
women must recognize their privilege in a
more community-oriented organ.i.zatims,
heterosexist society and work to challenge
the Women's Center on campus is ju.st
those advantages and to use them conthat, a center for women of all kinds. The
structively.
But. I hope to continue to see
coordinators of the Center have been of
all sexual prehrences and of different fem- more and mere women of all kinds,
especially wanen of color (who have had
inist politics. But, lesbians often do form
no privileges), involv,d in all aspects of
a large portion of the energy to run femthe Olympia women's community.
inist organizations, since they feel a

To the Editor:
On Monday, I &aw a Ayer hanging in
the CAB building that got me lnaedibly
angry. It w.,. anonymous, and had no
due as to whit penon or organization
had prinh!d it.
On top there wu the eyH:atching
phrase ''Rape Suspect," followed by a
police sketch and a description of th• person's physical makeup.
This poster was similar to othen I've
seen around; ones which gave warnings
to be alert for a person fitting a particular
description.
What annoyed rru, about this particular
case was that at the bottom was printed
the name "Greg Cedar'' and that h, lives
on E. 9th Ave. Further, in the poster's t"ct
ii stated that h, hangs out with Gary
Wilson, that they an both known ha,.,.._
ers and have both threatened to rape
women. It also gives some of the places
the two are assumed to frequent around
town.
A phone call to dettctiv• Jim Hellstrom,
oEthe Olympia Police Dept., was tnlightening. He told me that to his knowledge,
neither Cedar or Wilson were wanted for
assault, harassment, or rape. He also said
that a wom.-i who had bttn raped had
picked out someone in a lineup that had
the same body structun, and beard as
Cedar, but could not make positive identification. She did not say he had tried to
rape her.
What is stated in the flyer is libelous.
and could be brought to court by either
Cedar or Wilson, if th•y chose to, and if
they know the author.
Rape ii also wrong, and I hope that
anyone who rapes or assaults another
would be caught quickly and put away.
But to print unsubstantiated facts, hearsay, or simply to decide somfflne is dangerous because they are big, different, or
look thratening is equally criminal; and
equally unpardonable.
The penon(s) who wrote the Ay..should have at least had the guts to include their name(s). Their action was one
of supreme oowardice and dec~t.
Ken Sternberg

IT AIN'T

NECESSARILY
SO

EDITOR
Kathy Davis

AHodate EdJtors
Theresa Connor
Roger $tritmatter

12-7 p.m. Monday-Friday
12-3 p.m. Saturday

Bl.IceCo-op ta open to the Evergreen
oommunity free of char9e. An uperienced rnechantr
ia available to help with repaln. Becpnnen are enoour8(1ed. And ... - now have a full line of parta
The Everqreen

and ao

,riao al low pricao.

h evergreenbike coop

by R. J. Stevens
Appearing Saturday night with the
Mondellos will be Seattle bands th•
Buken and th, Blackout,.
The Bellus, who, on first listen, remind one of Pere Ubu or John Coltrane
meeting the Talking Hods and doing
speed, made their Seattle debut at last
year's XTC concert at the Showbox
Theater. They quickly became the city's
cult favorites. Mark Smith (guitar) and
GWrge Romansic (drums) are former
Evergreen students and the band was oncampus this summer doing video work.
Confirmed rumor has it they've been
asked to tour with British politico/rockers
Gang of Four.
They have two songs on a Mr. Brown
Records sampler called LIFEELSEWHERE
and a new Mr. Brown single at the pressing plant. Not only do they sound esoteric, but they smile a lot, and you can
dance to them.
The Blackouts, who formed themselves
on the last gasps of the legendary
Telep.a.ths, are incomparable in terms of
style to other bands, though guitarist/

Art OIHctor
Craig Bartlett
Busln... Manager
Karen Berryman
Advertising Manager
Richard Ordos
Photographer
Angela Cochran

The CooPff Point Jourrual it published Wffkly
for tJw atudmts, fac:u.ltyand 1taff of TM Evagrem State College. V~
ecptttted are not
n«'flNrily thOM of the College or of the
Journal'• staff. Advmisin, materlal contained
hetrin dots not Imply endonmwnt by thlt
newsp&pe:r.Offica •~ located in the CoU.
Activities BuUding, CAB HM. Phone: 866--6213.

All l~ten to tht editor, announttmenta, and
artl and evmts items muat be recdwd by noon
Tunday for that Wttlc.'1 publication. AU artkles
•~ due by 5 p.m. Friday for publkation the
following wee:k. All contribution, mutt be
1igned, typed, doubl~spa~ and of n!'aaonable
length. Namn will be withheld on request.
The edlton rftffYe the right to ~ material
and to edit any contribution, for length. content, and 11yle.

singer Eri~Wemer sounds similar to
David Byrn• after singing lessons. They
tend toward the intellectual and ,thertal,
placing the miphasis on rhythm. Keyboardist Roland Barker not so much plays
his synthesizer as he antagonizes it into
producing the correct melodic sequence.
Bassist Steve Wymore is the newest member, formorly of Pink Section and the illfated Minim.I Man. Having never s,e,en
Wymore with the band, except for an
extended jam at the Blackouts/Pink
Section show on the Fourth of July, I expect he will bring the oft-times oblique
counterpoint that made: Pink Section one
of the most unusually rhythmic bands
around.
A fearsome combination perhaps, but
who else could get a song about (yes!)
masturbation on AM radio? Their first
single, the aforementioned Make No
Mistake, backed with Underpass, Barker's
tribute to highways, alienation and automobile suicide, is oo Modem Records.
They have a 12" EP on Engram Records
about to be released.
Next Saturday, prepare yourself for a
joyous night ct alternative pop, guaranteed to keep you dancing.

•' :~I

These are proposed amendments to
the Publications Board Document, tentatively accepted at the July 15, 1980
meeting of the Publications Board,
pending campus distribution and discussion, and subject to the final approval by the Board of Trusttts:
ARTICLE I, Section 3:
(a) Because of Evergreen', unusual
emphasis on participation in governance and curriculum planning, the staff
of the college newspaper has special
responsibilities.
Through the newspaper, the staff shall keep the community continuously informed of govern•
anc, and curricular planning developments. and shall assist in orienting new
students. Th• staff shall alert all segments of the Evergreen community to
any infringement on their prerogatives.
(b) Evergreen is committed to strong
affirmative action goals and ideals, including adequate and appropriate coverage of related matten in the college
newspaper. If n~,
th• Publications Board shall decide what constitutes "adequate and appropriate coverage," as part of the Board's ongoing
review of the newspaper.
(c) The newspaper staff and contributors shall be bound by n,),vant provisions of the Evergreen Code, including the Social Contract, in reporting,
writing and editing the newspaper and
in hind.ling the business affain of the
newspaper. Violation of the Code or of
the Social Contract shall be grounds
for immediate suspension of the Editor
and/or other members of the staff, as
provided under EAC 174-ll>l-030 of
this document. Th• Publications Board

has the responsibility of acquainting
the Editor and staff with the relevant
provisions of the Code and the Social
Contract.
(d) The Editor and Business Manager
shall each sign a covenant with the
Publications Board stating that each
has read the Publications Board Document and will abide by it.
(e) Because the college newspaper is
a vehicle for student learning as well as
a m~um for campus communication,
the Publications Board shall encourage
the widest possible participation by
interested students in the writing, editing, and production of the newspaper
and its affairs genttally, and shall discourage monopolization of the news-paper by small cliques. No student
may occupy an ~torial position, paid
or unpaid, for more than a total of one
calendar year (three academic quarters
plus one summer quarter), with this
single exception: a student who has
held one or more subordinate editorial
positions for up to one calendar year
may apply and be eligible for the position of Editor, in competition with
other eligible students. Former students
of the editorial staff may continue to
serve as reporten, photographen or
artists for the paper, of courv, and
may also assist with the production of
the paper, but shall always work under
the direction of the current editorial
staff and shall abide by the decisions
of the editorial staff.
The next meeting of the Publications
Board will be on Wednnday, Oct. 29
at 8 a.m. in the Board Room, LIB 3112.
This will be a public meeting.

•• :-.\

CATALOGUNVEILED

·1t_1.

'

The Office of College Relations last
week unveiled the latest ammunition in
the ongoing war against undff~llment: the 1981-82 Evergreen Catalog.
OCR Dir<ctor Chuck Fowler said the
new catalog marks a significant imorovement over the last one and conveys an "accurate and sensitive picture of the philosophy and concerns of
the Evergreen community." The new
catalog is available to non-students
through the office of Admission,s starting this week. Students enrolled in Fall
classes will receive slips in the mail and
can obtain a copy of the catalog by returning them to the Registrar's office.
Watch for a detailed analysis of the
new catalog and its place in Evergreen's
Marketing strategy in an upcoming
issue.

~

KAOS

Thurston County's three "Big City"
mayors will take to the air waves of
radio station K.AOS at 11 a.m. Wednesday, October 15, to celebrate the
station's quadruple jump in power.
Mayors Karen Fraser of Lacey, Wes
Barclift of Tumwater and Lyle Watson
of Olympia will each emcee a 15minute program, offering brief historical highlights of their cities' development during the station's eight-year
lifetime and spinning a few of their
favorite disks for listeners tuned to
89.3 FM.

KAOS BOOKREVIEWS
Beginning in October, KAOS-FM
will feature book reviews every Saturday at 10 a.m. The reviewer, Lucretia
Lupher, is definitely a book lover and
imparts a special understanding of the
value of writing in her reviews. Ms.
Lupher has written reviews for the
Olympia News for two years and is a
member of the Friends of the Olympia
Timberland Library, who are the sponsors for this program.
These books wi!l be reviewed in the
month of October:
October 4: Th• Origin by Irving
Stone
October 11: Fifth Ho,,.man by Larry
Collins and Dominick lapierrie
October 18: A Matter of F«ling by
Janine Boissard
October 25, Dr. Fischer of Geneva
or The Bomb Party by Graham Greene

It's not too late to sign up for Leisure
Education classes, according to the
TESC Recreation &: Athletics Leisure
Ed program. This fall the program
boasts 60 different workshops which
range from Oriental Sumi painting,
Auto Mechanics and Mushroom Growing, to Teepee Making, Frisbee Sports
and Men's Aerobics. Check out a
Leisure Ed bulletin for the full rundown. Classes begin this week and registration ends at 8 p.m., Oct. 9 at 302
Campus Recreation Center. So hustle.

MAGNETICBOOKS?
The library has inst.ailed a book detection system in response to a growing
number of inquiries from library users
about missing materials.
Normally the system will remain inactive, allowing free passage through
the gates. If you fo~
to check out
books or other materials. an alarm will
sound, and th• exit gate will lock. Library staff say the detection system is
intended as a convenience to spare
library usen the frustration of wasting
time searching for books that have
been ''borrowed informally." Watch
for further details in an upcoming issue
of the CPJ.

pltoJSklnU
SuP1>ll••-Ran~
Air-Boat Dives

352-1111

10 a.m. - 7

Tues--Sun

COMPLETt
COLLECTIONS

.m. Sundays

_,...,_

irom Bob's Bisllwwanl
352-s&UI

open e11er11
da11

vegetarian meals prepared on request

-----------·

2101ltanism
oi,...

,BUYING,
• SILVER • COLD COINS
OOLLARS
RAJlECOINS

8 a.m. - 9 p.m. weekday,

WESTSIDE CENTER

·-----------,
'{j~~~

6"cli:,r«-,-,
Bt ■ LES

BOOKS.
CARDS
UNIQUE ART AND

GIFT ITEMS

1 Block South of
Harrison on Division
For Reservaliona 943-8812

357-4123

.EVERGREEN 'COINS
AND
INVESTMENTS

German beer, wines & food

I

10'1E. Stato

352-

Sunday, Sept. 28 7: 00 p.m.

I

-i

patioI salon

OKTOBERFEST

I
I
I . FREECOFFEEOR TEA
Iwith purchase of Pain I
Chocolate or Croissant
I
7 a.m.-10 a.m. M-F I

Seu

WINE & BEER-MAKINGSUPPLIES
CNER 100 BEERS-WINES,
STARBUCKS
CDFFEE-TEAS,MEATs-<:HEESES-OELI

CAPITALVILLAGE

r---------,
I COUPO~l I

._,

MAYORSBROADCAST

LBSUREED: HUSTIE

PROPOSEDPUB. BOARDAMENDMFNTS

open or
open for Dinner
Production Man"l!"r
Victoria Mixon

Do it al,

New md lmproved: Ken Sternberg,
Kym Trippsmith, T. J. Simpson, R. J.
Sttvens, J. C. Armbrust,r, ·Bill Livingston, David Innes, Katherine Mullen.
Shirley Grttne, and Kathy and J. R ..
wherever you may be.

BIGDANCE SATIJRDAY

8 0 g T

s

NE w

w.

I

].,JI~ Ji•Of.,.,,.£M-._·

9'',IJZ

.,,._-.iom,

CORRECTIONNOTICE

I
I
1

I
1

I
I

.....

sale dates In the
Ralnbow Sports advertisements.
Date ended : Oct. 4

watch for future sales.

a. ......:.u.&..-,...!

~-----------·
I,.,. .fl-~

The CPJ omitted

RAUDENBUSH
,MOTORSUPPLY
943-3650

412 S. Cherry

Open 7 days a week

8a.m.- 8p.m.

-

11!iilIi 0:Jilll
p;jH11
1

=

,:..,--=.
,......, ...

-

;- .-:

....
-'2.ts-.

MEN'S SUPPORT GROUP
A Mm's Support Group is mttting on
campus to crute a space In which mm can
discua such topics aa: MaKUlinity, Family
Relations. Men's Liberation,
Anger and
Aagrn.sion, Ways to Play, Men and the
Womm's Movemmt, Communicating, Snual
Relationd,ips. If you'"' inltl"ftted in ptting
involvNi contact Perry Spring (754-l825) or
Steve Charak (90-1372).
SISTER (Seattle lmtitute: for Sn Tlwrapy.
Education and Rneuch)
Octobe-r Workahops
Thw-scby, Oct. 9, &-10 p,m.: Labian Sexual
Ima.pry in tM Rne Arts A two-hour program
dealing with images from the: past and the
prnent. Contemporuy
woman-made imagts
cbte: from tM mid-19th century to the prntnt,
including Tee's own work. Women only
plu~. Ttt Corine. ($5)
Friday, Oct. 24, 7-10 p.m.: Sa and the Slnale
Pattnt: Should I Do I Want To
What
If
1 R~ntering the single world after a relationship and children is a challenge. It can
.tlso be a challrnge if you a_re a 11,pedalfrimd
of a singJe p.arent. This rvening woruhop will
provide accuratr, practin.l information plu5
prrminion to make thr bet choicn for you.
Oprn to wo~n and men. Carolyn '"Libory··
Livingston and Cordon Dickman. ($5 in
a_dvan~; S7.50 at tht- door.)

·1tTRA

SEWING
KITS

... ,-c.n
_.

DISCOUNT PRICED SP£CIALSI

n.<f'

1.0
~
~

C

;I lu .....

Al TRA Kits include
Everything you need
Plus you can Nve
up to 60%

==
=~
IS'
•1•
~;;;. •ll•
=--~.,.
0t

,e71

-

1

SEWING
CENTER

COLLEGE
STUDENTS

JIJlftTRY.
1""12
MllY

a:noDivision N.W.
Harnly Pantry

Olympia, WA

Fivr art exhibitt have bftn scheduled for di1play Fall Quartrr in Enrgtttr,'1 Galltty Two
and Callny Four. Admisaion to both lhow1 is
free and open to the publk. Galltry Two,
located in Library 2300, is open 8 a.m.•
10:45 p.m. Mon.-Thur., 8 a.m.-7 p.m. Fri.,
1-5 p.m. Sat. and 1-9 p.m. Sun. Callery Four,
located in room 4002 of the Library, 11 opm
from noon~ p.m. on wttltdays and from
1·5 p.m. on Sat. and Sun.
Callery Two
"Evttgrtffl Se-nion": a mixed media show.
fnturing works by thrtt ,enior art ttudmll,
will be on v'f:w through Oct. 26 in C.llery
Two oft.ht: Evans Lib111ry.11w display ftaturn
drawings •nd p.,intings by Tuckt:r Petertill,
sculpturr by Lftlie Tote, and fine Mttal won:
and ceramics by ~rah
Menky.
GaJH'ry Four
"'Evttgrttn ~on":
a twe>-student show
fe-aturing prints and photot by Doug Plummrr
and drawings and paintings by Eliubrth
Hunter. The rxhibit will be showing through
Oct. 26.
Olympia Aru
State Capitol Mu1WUm
'Thr Collagraph Idea, I9So--1980"': Glen
Alps. considtred to hr one of the foremost
printmakers in the U.S .. is featuttd in • m:rospectivt vchibil of his work, at the State
Capitol Musaam, Olympia, through Oct. JO.
CulTffltly Profeaor of Art and Chairman of
the Printmaking Division at 1M Univ. of
Washington, Alps gained national prominence
in 1956 when he developed the technique: of
Coll~phy
by combining traditional printmaking proadura with coll-..
The exhibit will Featurr prints plus a photo
n,say on the techniques of collagraphy and
eumplts of collagraphic printing plates. The
Slate Capitol Museum is opm from 10 a."m.4 :30 p.m., Tun.-fri., noon-t p.m. Sal. and
Sun. Admiuion i5 frtt.

G,llory

MUSIC AND DANCE

Judy A. Jorg and L. Kauana Hol~n:
Stitched Works on Paper. The exhibit it showing through Oct. 20 at Childhood's End
Gallery, 222 W. 4th Avr., Olympia, 90-3724.
Houn: Mon.•Sat. 10:30 a.m.-6 p.m.
THEATER ARTS

On Campus
'The Salmon Show"
Octobtt 16, e p.m.: BOB CARROLL will
pramt the "Salmon Show and Othen." This
outlandish fish story it nothing la, than the
life cycLeol a ulmon. from the salmon's point
of view, combined with a cotmk diuertation
of industrial and other revolutions. As a standup cosmic dissertation of industrial and othu
up comic and salmon toliliqui.ur, ''He has
tomr of the mattrr-of-fact abra,ivenns and
raacality of a latter-day leMy Bru~:· His
prnentation "i• ecological, ebu.ll~nt, .u purify•
ing as a mountain stream." (Mel Cu.uow, The
~w York Tlmn) Admission iii 52.50, at the
Recital Hall. Sponsored by Campus Activitiff.
"'Takr a Card, Any Card"
Pacific North wet pl'ffl'IH!rrof ''T akr a Card,
Any Card" it 1eheduled for Friday, Oct. 10,
beginning at 8 p.m. in the Experimrntal
Theatre on the Evergreen Stair College
campus. The play continues under the din<;.
lion of Richard Nesbitt and Jeny Wnt at
8 p.m., October 11. 12, 11,' 18, and 19. ricktts
available at Yenny't Mu.sic and Evugrttn
Book.start for all ~ening shows exce-pt Oct.
10, Get t,p«ia.] tkktts for that show only from
Thunton County Association for Rttarded
Citi;tens, 1703 E. State. Reservations
at
1166-<0?0.

$ ARTISTS WANfED $
To do image, for publicily of campus
events. Plea,e call 6220 and talk to Loma
Cogburn or Peter Eppenon for more
information.

a.ASSIFIED ADS

RIIIIDY

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

Childhood', End

On Campu1

Packs

Fr.. Catalogs
AVAILABLE
We Rent Sewing Machines

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

GALLERY EXHIBITT

Young male q needs a good home (or
goes lo the prund). Black and white, cl
mixed ancestry. Very friendly; loves children and G=•r's. Call SM-9694.

Herpesl ... Olympia HELP will ~ holding its fiBt meeting on Wednesday,
Oct. 15, Seninar 3157 at 3 p.m. For more
information, inquire at Seminar 4115,
1-4 p.m., M.f.

We (1 man, 1 woman) desire a roommate for our westside home. 2 blocks
from Co-q,, wood heat, view of Mt.
Rainier, and morel Call 357-7344.

Roommat,,needed, male prmm,d, to
shane 3 bdrm., 2 bath mobile home on
Fawn Lakein Shelton. Call 426-0983
evenings or 426-9748 days.

Co11rhnrtu1
~~ er·
i----"(,.,

'71ant,,
,,_'----1

'I)~'""':'.

Bmdit Danu
Saturday, Oclober 11, 9 p.1111.-l a.1111.:
CPJtKAOS BeMfit Dance. Featuring l..&rry 6
the Mondellot;
the Blackouh;
and Tiu:
Beaken. (See artkln tllC'Whfft in thb lMUf:.)
Doon open at 8:30: ~ start, at 9 p.m.
and mds at 1 a.m. in Library room '300:
52.50 at the door or in advance at KAOS
($2.25 for KAOS subacribtts with card).
Dfflee Worbhop
Octobtt 11 • 12. 10 a.m. ◄ p.m. "Dara
about Dreams/Drum about Dantt." Special
weekmd workshop for 0an(fft, Movttt and
Chorrographen. Lum to UR your dream, to
l.nctta,e your mobility and crutlvity. Facilitator: Wendy Schofiekl. Cott: SUI atudmts;
525 community. To register call ~Spontored by TESC Counseling Centrr.

Olympia Aru
Old~Time Couple Dantt
Get on your dancing shon and head on
down to dw Olympia Ballroom in the old
Olympian Hotel next to Sylvestrr Park (above
the Hub and Onion). Date: Sunday, Oct. 28
from 7 to 10 p.m. (instruction 7-8 p.m.) Admission is S2 per person but well worth ii to
learn such oldies as the polka, two-strp, waltz
and schottische:. Spontored by the Olympia
Ballroom Association. For more information
call 943-9303. (Music rttorded.)
Appl~am
October 11: Denny and Judy Hall, Mike
Saunden. The best of anenil Northwnt Gaelic
groups combine for an "ening of music from
England, Ireland, and Scotland with an
occasional jump over to France. Cittern,
English ud angle concertinas,
melodian,
bodhran, penny whistle, mandolin. guitar,
rrnaybe bagpipe, and who knowt what tl1t:. An
o.dting evening with music that'll makr you.
wish AJ had room to dantt. (52)
ALMS ON CAMPUS
Thunday, Oct. 9
The Arts Rnouru Cmttt presents Happy
Birthday Wanda June {U.S.A., 1971, 105 min.)
Based on tht play by Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.,
starring Rod Steiger, Susannah York, William
Hickey, Georp: Griuard, Don Murray, and
p.,..L, F<nlin. Db,ct.d by Mark Roboon.
Strigrr at a macho biJ-pme huntff, and
Hkby u a pilot who dropped the bomb on
Napu.ki,
return home after an eight-year
hunting expedition. Stt:igtt finds hb wife bring
courted by a pacifist doctor and a right-wing

european coffee■, herb teu,
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Students or employees who feel they
have been discriminate<{ against because of race, national origin, sex,
handicap, or Vietnam era vetera_n
status can complain, formally _qr ..'!'formally, to the Affirmative Action
Office, Rebecca Wright, LIB 3238.
-20.
They also have the option c:i
using the mediation and adjudication
process which is part cl the Social
Contract, found in the Washington
Administrative Code at WAC 174-108-•
06001 (available in the library), or cl
filing a grievance with state or federal
agencies (addresses and telephone numbers available in the Affirmative
Action Officrl.

~OIA

Collegiate Research
P.O. Box 25097H

It is the policy of the Board of Trustees of The Evergreon Stat• Collegr to
provide equal employment opportunity
for all employ ... and qualified applicants for employmmt, and equal access
to programs and services for ,111 students and members of the community
regardless of race, national origin, sex,
handicap, or Vietnam era vettran
status. Thr Board of Trust<n pledges
that every effort will be made to provide the resources necessary for implementation of this policy, and it is the
responsibility of ~ member of the
college community to insure that thts
policy becomes a functional part of the
daily activities of Eve--reen

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F•cilitator, Wendy Schofield (Licensed
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Facilitator: Wtndy Scho/itld
Goss, Thursd•y. 7-10 p.m.
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For further information CAIi .- 866-4666
Danurs, Movtrs and Chortograplurs.

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Friday, Oct. 10
Friday Nite Films pruentt G. W. Pabst's
Pandora's Box (Cffmany, 1928, 110 min.)
,tarring Louiw Brooks and Fritz Kortner.
Based on two plays by Frank Wedekind.
Silmt, with music toundtrack. This o:prusion•
isl classic, about Lulu, a nymphomaniac
chorut girl who brings dntruction or murdrr
to every man she ~omes involved with (until
she fflfflS up with Jack the Ripper), has oftffl
bttn hailed by critics u one of the master•
ptfen of the German ciMma. If, npecially
noted for its uotic, whirling portrayal of bad.st~
life, and above all, for Louite Brooks
pnformance. Pabst asked her to come to
Europe after 5tting her In an early Howard
Hawks site-nt. A Glrl in Every Port. She was
regarded as onr of the most sublime act.~
of lhe 20's and Pandora's Box is Mr tour df'
fortt. The film was mutilated by tht' cmton.
upon its original rrle:a.e, but now has bttn
fully rntorrd. (Pabst's most famous film is
probably the 1931 version of TM Threepmny
Optta, which is more Pabst than BTKht.) P1usl
Tom and Jeny in Mouse In the HOUM(1947).
Ltt. Hall Onr. 3, 7, and 9:30. Only S1.25. No
rowdies, please! You'll probably be bored anyway if you just co~ looking for cheap thrills .
WNnnday, Oct. 15
The Academic Film Series prrsrnts Satyajit
Ray's Devi (Coddas) (India, 1960, 96 min.)
starring Sharmila Tagore. A rich, dre:ply
religious Bengali landowner believrs his
daughttr-in•law to be the incafl"ation of the
Hindu goddna Kali. Her husband. a "modem
rralist," disagrtts ttrongJy. A parabLe of old
world faith venus new world skepticism; suppoRdly OM of Ray's bnt films. Back when
Orvt was rrleased, the Indian govcmfflfflt was
very unhappy with the film and put an export
b.in on it. Nehru intervrned and lifted the ban.
(It 5ttl1\S the government didn't like the coun•
try being portrayed in the ninetttnth ttntury.)
Ray has said of his work. "In cine:ma we must
select evttything for thr camrra according to
the richnn1 of its power to meal.'" L.H.l.
1:30 and 7:lO. Frtt.
-T.J.S.

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Lott of crazy charactttt and goinp-on in this
satirr on war, male chauvinism and other typkal Vonnegut COr'Kft'N. Unfortunately, Mark
Robson diTKted.. (Some of his otMr "matterpiKff" include Valley ol the DoUs, Earth.quake, and Peyton Place.) Ltt. Hall oM. 3, 7,
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ECOLOGY CONTRACT OFFERED

11

MONDELLOS PLAY FOR CPJ
IllEY JUST WANT TO BE TI-IEAMERICAN FRIENDS

by J. C. Armbruster
Students wanting ·individu.al contr.acts
in environmental studies and outdoor
l'duc.ation this year will be pleased to
learn of a two-quarter individual contract
study proposed for winter and spring
quarters. If fully developed, it would let
students study snow ecology and natural
history in the Teton range surrounding
Jackson Hole, Wyoming.
Faculty members Rita Pougial6 and
Steve Hennan will sponsor the individual
contracts. Students would design and sign
individual contracts with the two faculty
instructors (who will remain at Evergreen
and arrange to correspond regularly with
their sponsors on their study's progress.
Then students would travel to the Sundance Wilderness Center near Jackson
Hole, to study under field instructor Ted
Major and assistant instructor, Christie
Fairchild. Field studies would be a major ...
part of the contract, with many outdoor
activities centered in the Teton National
Park.
Ted Major is the founder and former
director of the Teton Science School in
Jackson Hol,. For 14 years the Teton
Science School has given high school and
college students instruction in environmental studies while helping them gain
the outdoor skills needed to work and
study in the Rocky Mountain environment
Sundance Wilderness Center is in
Bondurant, Wyoming, 23 miles east of
Jackson Hole. The instruction center is
equipped with ten, 2-p,rson bedrooms,
a dining hall library and laundry facilities. Students would pay full-time tuition
to Evergreen and receive 16 hours ol
mdit. They would pay the Sundance
Wilderness Centrr an all-inclusive ftt of
$1,985. This ftt covers room and board
for three months (including bre•lcsl, all
skills progra.n-Gfees, special equipment,
and books. Portions of each fee would
pay for transporting the Evergreen faculty
from Olympia to Bondurant and back for
end-of-quarter evaluations. The fee is
roughly twicr the cost of quarterly expenses for a student living in Olympia.
Snow ecok,gy is the study of how
plants and animals adapt and develop
biotic commwities within regions dominated by long winters and heavy snowfall.
Snow ecology relates to many other environmental studies in other climactic
regions, since alpine snowfields supply
water to manycontinental watershed/
river systems, which in tum support surrounding environments.
While snow ecology is a relatively new
environmental study field to most ol us, it
is not to Ted Major. Some consider him
to be among the world's four or five top
experts on sna.v-adapted ecosystems. He
is an expert skier and ski instructor with
45 years' experience. He has earned over
40 graduate ho.irs of study in Natural
Sciences and Gwironmental Studies beyond his Seier-ff Education and Zoology

RIii/an

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M.S. from theUnivenity of Utah.
Assistant fie.Id instructor Christie Fairchild has a S.S. in Natural Re.source
Management, Planning, and Interpretation. She has assembled training certification in Advance Red Cross First Aid, and
trained in both C.P.R. and paramedic
techniques. Her past work has included
serving as park ranger-naturalist and ski
patrol ranger at Redwood National Park
and Olympic National Park. M•jor, Filirchild and ski instructor Garret Brown
comprise the Sundance instruction team.
The tentative schedule for both quarters
presently show an equal mixture of instruction in outdoor education skills and
environmental studies. Winter quarter will
begin with an intensive fiv~y
ski
school. The next six wttks feature wttk.ly
instruction in Red Cross First Aid classes
(which could lead to full certification for
students). and continuing ski school on
Tuesd•ys •nd Thursdays. The other three
days of suggested studies emphasi.u on~
week concentrations on elements of snow
ecology: the physical environment of
snow. its characteristics, its rffects on animals and plants, plant and animal interrelationships, and the. use of winter photography as a research tool.
Spring quarter's proposed studies build
on skills and field instruction gained dur•
ing winter quarter. Students would begin
field studies of the Rockies' springtime environment, studying the transitions of
plants and animals from wintering
dormancy to springtime activity, the
migratory arrivals and movements of big
game and bird populations, and plant
taxonomy. Ski school would continue for
thrtt weeks, and if students are seasoned
enough, might be climaxed by • six-day
cross-country Te.ton traverse ski trip.
Separate wttks wou.1dconcentrate on

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program."
Rit• Pougiales had more specific comments. ''My gmeral impression is that it
(the studi .. ) would be quite ll"ner•l-not
•dvanced studies." She hod made specific
requests of Major and S.ul rqarding the
academic rigor of the studies as they now
stand. ''The main •dvantage of these contracts is that they hove field studies in
environmental studies. However, I didn't
Stt any emphasis on teaching skills; I
think some. students will want that.
'1 ~de one. condition to my sponsoring students-that tome. attention be paid
to education theory. I also feel, in talking
to ,tudents, that they get • promise of
excitement without any equal emphasis on
the academic environment. So I •sic.eel
Ted and Mike to send us • list of all risks,
•nd the precautions they would take (to
keep students out of Precarious situa~
tion1). I want 'outs' whett the instructors
would tell • student his or her skills are
too marginal to attempt, say. a croucountry ski traverse.
"At the same time, I asked them to
malt< statements on the educational advantages of putting students into outdoor
•ctlvities with certain physical risks. They
h•v• to justify thooe risks in terms of their
educational advantaga."
Students interftted In the cow.. who
wish to find out about or suggest qualifi..
cations for student entry should contact
sponson: Steve Herman •t 2012 Lab I,
phone 6063; and Rit• Pougiales at 3011
Lab I, phone 6195.
Asiuming sponsor requests and m~
cations to the study outline are met and
qualified students &howan intttnt in it,
14 Gree~
will head East this winter to
study and explone the rigorous beauty of
the Grand Teton R.tnge.

.. ,,~

,,- ENROLLMENT
BREAKS RECORD
by B. Shannon

No one is certain why, but students are
pute.r allow the registrar to know exactly
coming to Evergreen in record numbers
when an o~ing appean ln a program.
this fall. By Monday, Oct. 6, 2770 stuStudents, Allen Ays, ar, mone promptly
dents had already enrolled. That is over
notified of openings and the lint to come
250 more than IHI fall. Of th... students,
really are the lint to be 1tt11ed.
•---t-~~-._....,.u.,r1-N,11..time,,l<rltM-admilo----,t.-thnll<l'p11tiJn~g~p~ro.-.~l""•=ms=of,...p=mn=o~us~--istration's goal of 2,500 full-time equivayean, administraton have also put out
lents may be reached. Registrar Walker
txtro effort thit year. In the registrar's
Allen Ays the school will be running close office, Judy Huntley took time to train
to capacity itl terms of student/faculty
her co-workers before the stampede:. And
ratios. Surprisingly, Allen also says that
this year, according to AJlen. the Deans
this fall's registration procns hH gone.
have bttn more conldentiou1 than btfore,
"more smoothly" than ever.
checking in on program waitina lists once
This writer found that many lines w~
a day or more. Thrir keener attmtion hu
indeed shorter. Administraton and workhelped them adjust to unexpected enroller, did seem I.. frantic. And student, did mtnt in artain areu. For example, Dun
Now get $100off all 1979madela
1ttm a little Ins anxious while waiting
York Wong wu added u a seminar
In stock
in line.
leader In the Management and the Public
Allen credits the new •ppointment syslntuest program, although thit will cut
tern with relieving most of the confution,
Into hit time u dean.
fever and bottleneck, that u1ually accomAs for new ttudent,, whoever they an,,
pany regittrotion. He noted several other
it is too early for the statistldaru to know
changn which hove helped to speed up
much about their backgrolllldt. Prellmin..........
registration. For example, program waitary r,cordt in the .Admitsions Office
ing list, are now kept at tht reglltrar't
thow that molt of them have trantmttd
Mon.-Frl. M
Sat. 10-5
fingertips rather than with faculty. Thlt
from other two and four-year schools, but
change and the use of an On-Line comthis hu been the cue for yun.

TRI-CflY

WE

studi .. in ornithology, entomology, park
rHOura moru,gemmt, backpacking
school, and plant taxonomy. These specialized studies would include guest
IKturen. The tentative guest list includes
Or. Mary Meagher; Dr. Jack Major, •
renowned plant emlogist (and Ted
Major's brother); and Ed Riddell, nature
photogr•pher. F.achquortu would condudt with two weekJ spent finishing individu•I ~ projects, consulting with
field instructor.I, praenting final projects
and receiving (acu.Jty evaluations.
The propoml studies, as now outlined,
started as twose.pa.rate projects. Mike.
S.ul. an Ev"IJftn alumni, and Michelle
Horowitz are executive directors of the
original Sund.ice Wilderness Center at
Grant's Pass, Oregon. They hod propooed
a more compl,,t intern study program to
Evergreen actdemic deaN IHt Spring, but
withdrew it to seek instructors with matt
academic ecpertise.
Saul went on vacation in Jackson Hole
and there met Major, whoot problem was
the revene of their own. He wanted to
offt.r a coll"9"-accredited field study
course in snow ecology and natural
history, but lacked •ccreditation with anv
college or university. Sundance Wilderness Center-Wyoming was crrated. and
studies We.rT drawn up to capitalize. on
Ted's expeniR. Two problems merged
into a joint 10lution.
Individual contract sponsors Herman
and Pougiales have studied the proposal
and are still gathering their own responses
to it.
"I've t•Iked to Mike and Ted. and they
impressed me. as people who know what
they' re doing," said Steve Herman in a
telephone interview. '1 emerged feeling
that they would put together a good

459-3933

by T. J. Simpson
The following a.rticle is bASed on a conv.,...tio" with ShlllD" O'"ei/1, Judy
Sch""'' •"d Steve Fisk of Larry •"d the
Mondellos, on A Soturday o~unoon in A
lArgeyellow house ,omewher, in Olympia.
-T./.5.

Judy Schneps, le•d vocalist for Olympia's Larry and the Mondellos, gulps
down another shot of whiskey and shrug,.
"It's so weird, because like, a fanner
kid from Yakima can come up and say,
Wow, you guys are great!' And this 40year-old guy will come up and say, Wow,
you guys are gre•tl' The-:,this l~year-old
will come up and say, Wow, you guys
•re great!' Then this punk rocker will like
us, then this Dead Hud will like us, and
then a Heavy Metal guy will like us. So I
look at myself and go, What kind of
music do we do when 20 different types
of people like us and it's not any kind of
Punk or New Wave thing7' So we kinda
have no identity."
Though most people would call the
music they write and. perform "New
Wave," the Mondellos reject that l•bel.
As organ player Sll!YeFisk .. ys, "New
Wave. doesn't mean anything anymore."
They like to think of themselves as an
American band and.more specifically, ••
an Olympia bandin the tradition of the
Fleetwood,, the Triumphs, and the Bootmen. Three cl the fiv• band members
grew up in this area, including guitarist
and songwriter Shown O'Neill. He
adr.nowledg,s th•t his hometown is hardly
the most supportive or creative environment for original rock bands.
"Olympia has a real provincial-type
atmosp~ ... he says, "and that gives ya
a lot to react against. But just because
you're reacting against it doesn't mean
that you're putting out quality merchandise. Son of the. dittction we're going
is ... ah ... y'know, not just .. y1ng, '0.K.,
we' re gonna be ru.l angry and we'~ Just
gonna yell and scre:am.' We re gonna try
to att•ck people cerebrally and inf-Kt their
minds with <2rt•in lyrics, like, It hurts
wh,m you hold m,! . .. If they hear som~
4

body screamiJ-tlat them, they're just
gonna tum it off. But, if they hear some
melodic sort of noise coming out, they're
gonna pick up those words, try to figure
'em out, and they'll start singln' 'em on
the way to the store.''
Shawn describes their music as "upbeat
soap opera," Musically, their major influenas are the old greats-the Beades,
the Stones, the Who, Hendrix, etc. A, for
the lyrics, Shawn cites Jim Mormon, Burt
Bacharad\, and tven BarbaroStreisand as
his inspirations. Yet the lyrics present an
almost apocalyptic vision of love scum
side up. It's neurotic and egocmtric "end
of the relationship/end of the world" stuff
with good old-fashioned cynicism and dis-illusionment.
"AJienation-that's punk!'' says Fisk.
'This is disillusionment."
Shown belches. ''Ye•h, it's like building
your hopes up and thinking you're in this
real secure-type feeling, then you get a
phone call that somebody just died in a
car wreck and now you're ugly."
Besides having fast, pulsating rhythms
and memorable melodies, another thing
that makes their songs so striking is the
constant repetition of the song's title or a
key line. in the chorus, which is usually
quite caustic. After hearing them perfonn
such numben as '1t's All Over," "You
Make Me Nervous," "Fuseha Rayon" ('1
wanna live and die in Fuscha Rayon
").
and ''The American Friend" (inspired by
the Wim Wenden movie of the same
title), I can't help but feel that Larry •nd
the Monde.Um att the most eJl'citing, original, and mjoyable local rock 'n roll band
I've heard yet in my four ye.an of being
in this area.
They're •lso easy to dance to, •nd those
who wish to will have a chance to dance
to their music this Saturday, Oct. 11, on
the fourth floor of the TESC library. As a
port of a benefit for KAOS and the CPJ,
they'll be playing along with two Seattle
bands, The &.ktrs and Tire Blackouts.
You can hearthe Mondellos on their
soon-t~reloased
single with "Song for
America• and "Fuscha Rayon·• on Mr.
Brown R«ords, an independent label in
Olympia. They have to change their name
though, becausethere •re two other bands
in the country with practically the same
name, and both have recently recorded
singles. (For those who don't already
know, Larry Mondello was the name of
thelitde, gn,e<!y,f•t kid on the Lnve It
to 8ell'Vel' TV show. You can't gd much
mo~ American than that.)
The origin of Larry and the Mondello,
goes badr. to the fall of 1974 when Shawn
and drumm,r Chris Lee played in Seattle
with a group known as Subterranean
Honk, (which later evolved into Larry
and the Lawyers in Olympi•).
When they changed their name to Larry
and the Mondellos, they were •ctually a
compostt group of whoever showed up.
At first, up to 10 or 12 musicians took
part, then it narrowed down to seven
steady band member,.
The Clllffnt five-person band is barely
a year oki. lnere were only four band
members whim the "new" Monde.llos
played their first public perform•nae at
the "Heater>Magnetics" concert lost January here at Evergreen. This inst summer,
organist Stew, Fisk (also known for his
work with Cuotomer Service) performed
with the group at an outdoor Fourth of
July colobration after they hod rehearsed
tog,other(for the first time) only an hour
before. ~k's swirling organ style added •
lot to the group's sound and he was lorer
asbd to stay on with them.

'IJllla----------------

The band now consists of Shawn
O'Neilf (lead and rhythm guitar, vocals
and chief ,orgwriter), Judy Schneps (lead
vocals), Mw, Dickerson (bass and backup vocals), O,ris Lee (drums). and Fisk
(organ and synthnizer).
Although the band is instrumentally
tight, Judy's vocal, are extremely important. At times, her voice has a n05talgic
quality, reminiscent of the Shirelles or
Leslie Gore mixed with Patti Smith. She
started singing the blues In 8th gr;,dt and
daims that her earliest influences we-re
Janis Joplin, BUileHoliday, Bonnie Raitt,
and Aretha Franklin.
Becaute the group can't afford their
own soundmm, she <•nd the audience) is
often fruttrotedby the fact that the instruments drown out her voice when the
sound syatem isn't good enough.
"Soundms, don't consider the voca15,"
she complaim, '1ney're just into the
h~vy guitar. How can I sing, if I can't
hearl And if I drop, everybody else in the
band drops. I'm a vocalist, and I'm just as
important as everybody else.."
Inadequate sound equipment is hardly
the band', worst problem though. As
good as they are, they're still having a
hard time finding enough work or recognition. lbree of the group's mem~ are
currently living in Seattle, which is where
they get most of their gigs nowadays.
Steve prefen living in Olympia and is
cynical about the "Seattle scene," which
he finds "very limited."

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"Most people in Seattle like to spend
their money on foreign films .. there's aU
this money there, but no one wants to
spend it on local bands. There's a real
wealth of diversified bands that are stuck
playing in bars for fiv• dollars a night
Seattle is full of this whole cloud of
people who think they're acting like
-punks in lC'fTland think that's how you're
supposed to act. It's really disgusting!"
Steve continues, "A band can have their
own 45 out and play lead on for some
monster act from Europe or someplace,
yet they're living on food stamps." As the
whiskey bottle makes another round, Judy
comments, "Audiences don't know what
they want." Everybody seems to agree.
Hopefully, a large enough audience will
"discover" Larry and the Mondellos (or
whatever new name they decide to choose)
before they starve to death or are forced
to spend too much of their time on more
profitable labor such as waiting on tables
or washing clshes.
Before they leave, Judy tells a tragic
tale from M deprived childhood that's
sure to melt the heart of any reader: "My
mother's from France and they don't have
cereal boxes there. So, she always opened
1he cereal boces upside down when I was
a child and I could never read the cereal
boxes before I went to school. And that
has affected my personality to this day."
If that isn't enough to make you cry,
then it should at least be enough to make
you want to check out Larry and the
Mondellos.

943-1352

Great se ection of new records
and tapes at low prices
We buy and sell used albums
Most complete ticket service in town
Westside Center
Division & Harrison
357-4755

Media
cpj0233.pdf