The Cooper Point Journal Volume 4, Number 22 (March 16, 1976)

Item

Identifier
Eng cpj0114.pdf
Title
Eng The Cooper Point Journal Volume 4, Number 22 (March 16, 1976)
Date
16 March 1976
Evergreen Subject
Student Organizing and Activism
Environmental Studies
Faculty Hiring and Governance
Curriculum
Media Studies/Arts
Description
Eng Pg 1: The Cooper Point Journal (front page): Symposium Accents Plight of Captured Orcas (image: SeaWorld workers lifting orca from Budd inlet (by Evans);
Pg 1: S&A Devises New Allocations Plan;
Pg 1: Funding Sought for Experimental Structure (image: inside room of experimental structure (by Bressieux);
Pg 2: Letters: (image: Olympia beer bottle (by Krall);
Pg 2: Letters: Women's Clinic;
Pg 2: Letters: Finger Painters;
Pg 2: Letters: Congrats to '3-Penny';
Pg 2: Letters: Money Back;
Pg 2: Letters: Whale Hypocrites;
Pg 2: (advertisement) TESC Women's Center (temporary housing for Older Women and Health Care Conference participants);
Pg 2: (advertisement) King County Parks (recreation leader applications);
Pg 2: Letters policy;
Pg 2: (advertisement) Intitute for Creation Research (for free packet of literature on creationism);
Pg 2: Staff credits;
Pg 3: Legitimate Massage (image: sign for Radience Herbs & Massage);
Pg 3: Int. 325 Rally: Safeguarding Nuclear Energy (image: stars and tree branches);
Pg 4: Evergreen Spring Fashions;
Pg 4: (advertisement) Bob's Big Burgers;
Pg 4: (advertisement) Raudenbush Motor Supply;
Pg 4: (advertisement) Evergreen Coins and Investments;
Pg 4: (advertisement) South Sound National Bank;
Pg 4: (advertisement) Vino Fino;
Pg 4: (advertisement) Ash Tree Apartments;
Pg 5: Quarter View;
Pg 5: In Brief: Evergreen Students Collect Nepalese Litter;
Pg 5: In Brief: Foreign Language Sign-Up;
Pg 5: In Brief: Women and Work;
Pg 5: In Brief: Rape Relief Forum;
Pg 5: (advertisement) ELD Equipment;
Pg 5: (advertisement) House of Cameras;
Pg 5: (advertisement) Olympia Greenhouses;
Pg 5: (advertisement) Drees;
Pg 5: (advertisement) Erlich Stationers;
Pg 5: (advertisement) Overlake Properties;
Pg 5: (advertisement) Dirty Dave's Gay 90's;
Pg 5: (advertisement) Donna's Knit Shop;
Pg 5: (advertisement) Olympia Sport Shop;
Pg 5: (advertisement) Rags' International Hair Designers;
Pg 5: (advertisement) Willie's Sports and Enterprises;
Pg 6: The CPJ Staff and...The End... (images: eight photos of the Journal staff (Dodge, Milton, Stewart, Feyk, Judd, Lozzi, Gendreau, Buster and Locke) working at desks);
Pg 6: (advertisement) The Colony Inn Apartments;
Pg 7: Entertainment: general area listings (images: a Marilyn Frasca painting (by Buster), the Artemis Gallery space, and Da Boids cartoon);
Pg 7: Spring Vacation Begins-Sometime;
Pg 7: (advertisement) Disney (bicentenial entertainer auditions);
Pg 8: (image: Native American orca piece from Orca Symposium exhibit);
Pg 8: Classified ads;
Pg 8: TESC Housing Office
Creator
Eng Evans, Jay
Eng Bressieux, Jean-Pierre
Eng Barry, Linda
Eng McQuarrie, Edward F.
Eng Russell, Kirk M.
Eng Gorai, Jane
Eng Bayer, S.
Eng Case, Don
Contributor
Eng Locke, Ti
Eng Stewart, Jill
Eng Milton, Curtis
Eng Dodge, John
Eng King, Doug
Eng Buster, Doug
Eng Gilbreath, Ford
Eng Meighan, Kathleen
Eng Gendreau, Joe
Eng Morawski, Joe
Eng Wright, Molly
Eng Norrgard, Lenore
Eng Cowger, Chris
Eng Groening, Matthew
Eng Shore, Stan
Eng Feyk, Jim
Eng Riddell, Catherine
Eng Lozzi, Craig
Eng Shelton-Mason County Journal
Subject
Eng Marine conservation
Eng Wildlife sanctuaries
Eng Wildlife research report
Eng Women's health
Eng Art Reviews
Eng Stage designers
Eng Theft
Eng Activism
Eng Creationism
Eng Massage
Eng Nuclear power industry
Eng Fashion
Eng Evergreen curriculum
Eng Evergreen student activities
Eng Tuition costs
Eng Sculptures
Eng Student wages
Eng Building codes
Eng Earthquakes
Eng Biocides
Eng Study abroad
Eng Litter
Eng Mountaineering
Eng Foreign language study
Eng Women's employment
Eng Rape relief
Eng Staff turnover
Eng Goldsberry, Don
Eng Overland, Mark
Eng Mohney, Russ
Eng Spong, Paul
Eng Sharp, Morell E.
Eng Wright, Eugene
Eng Tillman, Michael
Eng Biggs, Michael
Eng Garner, Lynn
Eng Ingram, Brent
Eng Bressieux, Jean-Pierre
Eng Parsons, Willie
Eng Clabaugh, Dean
Eng Filmer, Bob
Eng Macdonald, Dori
Eng Bolduc, Daren
Eng Cervinski, Chris
Eng Imfeld, Teresa
Eng Marsh, Sheila
Eng Wynia, Dee Ann
Eng Hubbard, Dick
Eng Hubbard, Rachel
Eng Bridenbaugh, Dale
Eng Minor, Gregory
Eng Adams, John
Eng Milne, David
Eng Beug, Ann
Eng Spector, Barbara
Eng Albertson, Chuck
Eng Moss, John
Eng Kormondy, Edward
Eng Harding, Phil
Eng Schillinger, Jerry
Eng Gregory, Dick
Eng Hearst, Patricia, 1954-
Eng Bailey, F. Lee
Eng Burton, Gary
Eng Unsoeld, William
Eng Peterson, Dave
Eng Bonin, Therese
Eng Struve, Lynn
Eng Coontz, Stephanie
Eng Martin, Gail
Eng Jones, Rindetta
Eng Dodge, John
Eng Milton, Curtis
Eng Stewart, Jill
Eng Feyk, Jim
Eng Judd, David
Eng Lozzi, Craig
Eng Young, Marvin
Eng Gendreau, Joe
Eng Lombard, Denise
Eng Buster, Doug
Eng Locke, Ti
Eng Beethoven, Ludwig van, 1770-1827
Eng Krall, Greg
Eng Foote, Tom
Eng Hitchcock, Alfred, 1899-1980
Eng Grant, Cary, 1904-1986
Eng Bergman, Ingrid, 1915-1982
Eng Rains, Claude, 1889-1967
Eng O'Conner, Mark
Eng Thorn, Jeff
Eng Thorn, Ellen
Eng Frasca, Marilyn
Eng Gilbreath, Ford
Eng Christian, Susan
Eng Beatty, Warren, 1937-
Eng Nicholson, Jack
Eng Scorsese, Martin
Eng DeNiro, Robert
Eng Menuhin, Yehudi
Eng Menuhin, Hephzibah
Eng Shankar, Ravi
Eng Dunn, Bob
Eng Martin, S. R. (Sennie Rudolph), 1935-2016
Eng Nichols, Dick
Eng Sea World
Eng Greenpeace
Eng Pacific Killer Whale Foundation
Eng National Marine Fisheries Service
Eng Friends of the Dolphins of Seattle
Eng KAOS Radio
Eng TESC Sounding Board
Eng TESC Women's Center
Eng Radiance Herbs and Massage
Eng General Electric Company
Eng Bob's Big Burgers
Eng Raudenbush Motor Supply
Eng Evergreen Coins and Investments
Eng Vino Fino
Eng South Sound National Bank
Eng Ash Tree Apartments
Eng Save the Children Federation
Eng ELD Equipment
Eng House of Cameras
Eng Olympia Greenhouses
Eng Drees
Eng Erlich Stationers
Eng Overlake Properties
Eng Dirty Dave's
Eng Donna's Knit Shop
Eng Olympia Sport Shop
Eng Rags' International Hair Designers
Eng Willie's Sports Enterprises
Eng The Cooper Point Journal
Eng The Colony Inn Apartments
Eng Washington Post
Eng Disney
Eng Friday Night Films
Eng Artemis Gallery
Eng Applejam
Eng Theatre Art Nouveau
Eng State Capitol Museum
Eng Childhood's End Gallery
Eng State Theatre
Eng Seattle Coliseum
Eng King Theatre
Eng Pike Place Market
Eng Seattle Opera House
Language
Eng eng
Place
Eng Budd Inlet (Wash.)
Eng British Columbia
Eng Washington (State)
Eng New York (City)
Eng Olympia (Wash.)
Eng Seattle (Wash.)
Eng Chehalis (Wash.)
Eng California (State)
Eng Guatamala
Eng Nepal
Publisher
Eng The Evergreen State College Board of Publications and members of the Evergreen community
Extent
Eng 8 pages
Temporal Coverage
Eng 1976
extracted text
Eating Out
rontilllled frOl11 page 11

10 MAMA 'S
From the exterior , Jo Mama 's
I"oks lik e another old house
a long Pear St. and State Ave. in
O lymp ia. But to walk inside the
Jonr , that first impression
cha ng<'s . The kitchen is in fullblown view and what may have
been the living room in days
g,) ne by is now a carpeted dining
rn{)m full o f partitioned booths
which reflect the work of a
skilled carpenter.
The newest re s taurant in
tl)Wn , 10 Mama's features the
Ihickes l pizza pies available in a
Il)Wn a lrea dy saturated with pizzer ia s. Their 12 - inch pizzas really
d" feed inur ~ople. And you
need four people to pay the bill
, in ce prices for a medium-sized
pi zza 112 inches) run from $7.50
Il) 59 .00.
I'm from the "th in and crispy"
5chool of pizza eaters so I can' t
realh' speak objec tively about Jo
"1'ln,a 's p izzas . But customers
b('\\' are: the service may be
at:oniz ingly slow . (In one specific GISt' , we waited over an hour
I r,'m time of order to time of deli\'ery I

ARTICHOKE MODE
The Artichoke Mode is a favorite of Evergreeners, located on
4th Avenue in downtown Olympia. The Mode is strictly vegetarian cuisine, featuring things like
cream cheese sandwiches and yogurt sundaes. The 85 cent yogurt
sundae is a delicious bowl of unflavored yogurt topped with raisins, walnuts, apple chunks,
orange slices, dates, banana
chunks and anything else that's
in season. Add a little honey and
you have a dessert that even a
yogurt skeptic would enjoy.
While you're there treat yourself to a glass of freshly juiced
orange juice - maybe the only
available in town.
Nightly dinner specia ls are always popular at the restaurant,
including such edibles as Spinach
Quiche and Egg Plant Parmesan.
Plan on waiting after you place
your order - most items are not
prepared in advance.
SEAMART RIB EYE
If you're down in the area of
Sea-Mart, shopping or just looking around, the Rib Eye restaurant is a good place to grab a
quick hamburger to stave off the
midday hungries. Although the
food can't be ranked as "exceptiona l," it's a far cry from the in-

Re-doing TESC Communications
by Curtis Milton
A proposal by three faculty
members to reorganize communications facilities at Evergreen,
including bringing the Cooper
Point Journal and KAOS-FM
under the academic wing, has
become the center of increased
speculation and concern among
media people recently.
The proposal. authored in
flow chart form by Bob Barnard,
Gordon Beck and Craig Carlson,
was first made public in a memo
sent by Will Humphreys to
famous "l" reasy Spoo·n."
Food a t the Rib Eye is fairly
typ ical "a nything-you-want-atany-hour-of-the-day." You can
get everyt hing from a hamburger
to a steak with breakfast anytime. A lthough the food isn't inspired, it 's still good and the
prices are reasonable. Try the '
"Ca nadian Bacon Burger" for a
slightly different eating experience.
Service is fast and the waitresses are friendly. In fact , it's
one of the few restaurants
around where the waitresses still
call you "honey," no matter how
old you are.

communications faculty on Feb.
27. Humphreys was given the
charge of drawing up that chart
by Vice-President Ed Kormondy.

labs would receive academic
funding they would not be
operated as academic programs
but would instead serve as
learning devices. "The operation
of the labs would be separate
from the study of them,"
Barnard answers critics of the
plan.

The proposal would first
establish a deanship for communications. The Communications Dean would be advised by
a Communications Board composed of one each of staff,
faculty, student and professional.
The Dean would be in charge
of the six communications "laboratories." The Journal and
KAOS would be two of the six,
with the others including film,
the television stud io, the hybrid
computer and advanced audio.
Each area would require the
technical assistance of either a
part-time professional or advanced, fourth or fifth year
student.
The outside professional help
would only have to be hired
when "we can't supply it from
our own resources," says Barnard. The advisors would be
there to provide technical help
only and would not, Barnard
says, impose editorial judgements
as many have feared. While the

I

Barnard sees the plan as a way
to get faculty involved in more
academic areas which they have
been avoiding. "We'll get more
faculty interested if they know
that they won't get operation
hassles imposed on coordinated
studies," he says. He also hopes
it will provide some continuity
in communication's facilities.

SYDlposiuDl Accents Plight of Captured Orcas
by John Dodge
The First International Orca Symposium
- accentuated by last week's capture of
five killer whales (orcas) in Budd Inlet capped two days of lectures, films and
discussions with a call for the creation of
a marine mammal sanctuary in Puget
Sound waters.
Almost overshadowed by the fateful
drama unfolding in nearby Budd Inlet, the
symposium also passed resolutions asking
for the immediate release of whales held
by Sea World Inc. in Budd Inlet and the

caped Saturday and by Sunday one of the
remaining orcas was singled out and deported on a boat by a sling device.
So while Goldsberry and his crew
seemed impervious to the symposium, the
conference coordinator, Mark Overland,
was satisfied with the eHect of the symposium. "It (the symposium) was a tool for
focusing attention on the plight of the orcas," said Overland. "I think the symposium, combined with the lawsuit I filed
last week, were instrumental in the state
launching their restraining order against

Barnard is quick to point out
that the flow chart is a device
for internally calculating who
should put in budget requests for
the specific areas. Humphreys
says the proposal won't mean a
thing unless it goes to the long
term curriculum DTF, which is a
possibility.
Nonetheless, several people are
concerned abou t the possible
implications of the proposal.
'Tm worried about being
incorporated in the curriculum of
the school," says Randy Harrison, KAOS s tation mana ger.
"Becoming enmeshed in a lab
situation frighten s me." Harr ison
is also displ eased with the fact
that so few people were invited
to th e meetin g to discuss the
proposa l.
"Emphasis shou ld be placed on
finding faculty members interes ted in teach ing basic print
journalism sk ill s," said Journal
Feature Editor John Dodge . "I
see the need for a Communications Dean as superflu ous."
Graphics designer Dave Imanaka made a three-page written
reply to the memo and proposal.
" The propose d pl a n in flow
emphasizes spec iali za tion ," Ima naka writes, "not that specialization IS a bad thin g, but
conside rin g a ll the ' uther in stitu tion s in the state already engaged
ill highl y speciali zed , well -deve loped commun icatio ns prog ram s, Evergreen ha s in s ur mountable odds at creating and
developin g a viable and compet itive prog ra m. .to give student s
a fair and equal opportu nit y to
ga in employment in thi s state."
Im a naka wou ld like to see
s tud e nt s working in broader
areas with co mmunication s with
an emphas is on "visua l literacy. "

Sea World Inc. workers prepare to lift a female
orca from Budd Inlet waters Sunday.
withdrawal of the federally issued permit
allOWing Sea World Inc. to capture four
wha les by the end of 1976.
Through the two-day affair held March
12 - 13 at Evergreen, members of the symposium kept one ear tuned to the fastbreaking news on the fate of the "Budd
Inlet Five." On Friday, while scientists,
scholars and concerned laypersons began
gathering to investigate the welfare and
future of marine mammals - specifically
orcas - in Puget Sound, the action in
Budd Inlet moved to federal courts in Seattle.
Friday a ft ernoon. U. S. District Court
Judge Morell E. Sharp ordered the whales
to be fret'd due to possi ble improper execution of the permit and because of tidal
conditions in Budd Inlet potentially endangering the whales' safety.
But Sea World Inc . appea led that decision to Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals
Judge Eugene Wright and he issued a stay
until March 22 on the enactment of Judge
Sha rp' s release order.
And on Saturday , Sea World's Don
Go ldsberry cancelled his sc heduled 10: 30
a.m. appearance at the symposium, apparently too busy preparing to remove
the whales from Budd Inlet to a possible
location near Friday Harbor in the San
Juan Islands. Tw o of the five orcas es-

• "The Early Gay Rights Movement," presented by the Union
of Sexual Minorities, Tuesday
evening, March 16th. The Gay
Re50urce Center will be sponsoring a ca rpool for all interested in
attending. For more information,
co ntact the Gay Reso urce Center , -6544 , lib . 3219.

symposium:
• All cetaceans (pro nounced see-tayceans) - from the Latin cetus meaning
whale - range in size from the six feet
and 160 pounds of the Harbor Porpoise to
110 feet and 100 tons-plus of the Blue
Whale, largest animal in the world .
• All cetaceans are divided into two
groups - the toot hed whale, includin g
the orca , and the baleen or "mustached"
whales which strain minute food organ isms from the water.
• Ancestors of cetaceans probably liv('d
on land some 100 million years ago befo re
returning to the sea.
• The brain size of the orca is approxI mately 13 pounds or four times the size of
man 's brain . Orcas are known to verba ll y
communicate, feel care and re,po nsibi li ty
within their pods and partake in hi ghl y
organized group fish-herding and huntin g
activities.
• Until 1971, there were no restrictions o r
legal limits to the harrassment o r slau ghte r
of orcas.
• While sa lm on fis hermen ha\'e long co n·
sidered the orca the ir enemy in the pur~llli
of salmon. a stud y of 150 orCJ ' ca pt ureJ
a nd killed by Japanese whalers found on l\'
1.6 percent of th e killer whal es had tran:,
of sa lm on in the ir stomachs.
As the conference wound down Sa tur day night , one sym posium member wa s
overheard say ing the symposium - co u pied with the capture of orcas in Budd In let - had a cosmic feeling. Cosmic or
not . the two -day flow of informa tio n
could not have happened at a mo re
opportune time.r-_ _ _ _~~--.

.s COOPER POINT

the
evergreen
staJ8Uege OIyrt"lOla . washington 98505

URNAL

Volume IV Number 22

March 16, 1976

Funding Sought for
Experimental Structure

S & A Devises Nevv

Allocations Plan
by Jill Stewart

The deadline for submitting 5
& A funding proposals for July
1, 1976 to June 30, 1977 is
APRIL 9th!
The early deadline has been
set so the 5 & A Board will have
time to go over, each proposal
carefully and solicit student
comments.
There will be an orientation
meeting Friday, March 12 at
1 :00 in CAB 110 for people
planning to make a budget
proposal next year,
During the meeting people will
be oriented to 5 & A, given a
basic explanation on how to
write proposals (forms, etc.) and
have the new 5 & A allocation
process explained.

Sea World Inc. "
Some of the highlights of the two-day
symposium:
• Dr. Michael Tillman from the Marine
Mammal Division of the National Marine
Fisheries Service in Seattle told symposium members Friday afternoon that plans
are underway to conduct a population
study of Puget Sound orcas from April to
October this year. The study will duplicate the work of Canadian biologist Dr.
Michael Biggs, who has taken over 7,000
photographs and had 314 personal encounters with orcas in the waters of British Columbia and Washington State.
T illman said Biggs placed the B. C. /
Wash. orca population at 19 pods (family
units) totaling 210 individuals. Biggs estimated the Puget Sound orca population at
four resident pods of 65 individuals and
another seven transient pods of 85 individ uals who sometimes travel in Puget
Sound.
Tillman added th at the orcas captured
in Budd Inlet may be a new , transient
pod.
• Symposium members passed a resolu tion offered by Greenpeace of Canada
and Friends of the Dolphins of Seattle thai
ca lled for the immed ia te release of the five
o rcas in Budd Inlet and the withdrawal of
the National Marine Fisheries Service per -

mit issued to Sea World Inc . to capture
four orcas by the end of 1976.
A spokesman for Greenpeace said the
pod captured in Budd Inlet has already
suffered irreparable damage to its social
structure and reproductive powers due to
the splitting of the pod into fragments.
• Symposium spokesman Russ Mohney
presented a proposal to the Washington
Environmental Council - meeting at Evergreen Saturday - calling for their support of a marine mammal sanctuary to be
created in Puget Sound. In response to
Mohney's proposal, the Washington Environmental Council voted unanimously
to support as an interim policy the creation of a moratorium on the capture of
any marine mammals in Washington,
• Paul Spong from the Pacific Killer
Whale Foundation at Alert Bay, British
Columbia captivated the symposium audience Saturday night with his presentation of slides, films and thoughts summarizing nine years of open-ended research among the free orcas inhabiting the
Johnstone Straits region of British Colum bia. His films and slides showed orcas in
their natural habitat - playing, hunting
and "sounding off" within close range of
Spong. Spong showed startling film foot age of his efforts to commune through
love and music with the orcas as he
moved among the orcas in his one-man
kayak.
Spong was also on hand Sunday when
the female orca was lifted by sling from
the waters of Budd Inlet. He attempted to
communicate with the orca, responding to
her "crying-like" sounds w(th his own
verbal messages.
Other facts and figures aired at the

The Services and Activities Fees Review
Board (S&A) has unveiled what they
hope is a more efficient plan for allocation
of 1976 - 77 monies to the various student
groups within their budget.
Under the new plan the 76 - 77 budget
is broken into five programatic areas:
Communications and Cultural Events;
Recreation ; Student Groups; Services,
Operations and Miscellaneous, and the
Mid- Year Discretionary Fund.
Two important deadlines have been set
- ongoing groups must ~ubmit budget
proposals by April 9 and new groups by
April 16.
By April 28 proposals will be classified
into all but the "Mid-Year Fund" area,
and money requests will be tabulated .
To explain the intricacies of writing a
budget proposal the S&A Board called an
"Allocations Orientation" meeting Friday,
March 12. Campus groups and organizations funded by S&A were encouraged to
send at least one representative.
lynn Garner said, "The Allocations Orientation saved me at least 28 hours of
work. All the people got all the information in one fell swoop. It was a great
idea. "
One day for each programatic area has
been set aside to allow individual presentations. The days are :
Wednesday, May 5 - Communications
and Cultural Events

Wednesday, May 12 - Recreation
Wednesday, May 19 - Student Groups
Wednesday, May 26 - Services, Operations and Miscellaneous
Brent Ingram, former S&A Board Executive Secretary, explains the individual
presentation days as "the time for individual groups to make presentations and be
questioned by the S&A Board and members of th e campus as a whole."
In a move to give the individual S&A
groups more negotiating power the Board
has introduced a new twist to the allocation decision-making process. According
to Ingram, if a representative from a student group takes part in the Wednesday
session, they then have participatory
power in the final decisions.
Ingram said, "for instance, a representative from KAOS could participate in the
decision-making for allocations to the entire Communications and Cultural Events
area."

Ingram feels the groups will "be able to
work together to change and cut their
proposals collectively, and they can cut
down on duplications of services through
the new decision-making process ."
Final allocation decisions will be made
on the follOWing days:
Friday, May 7 - Communications and
Cu ltural Events
Friday, May 14 - Recreation
Friday, May 21 - Student Groups
Friday, May 28 - Services, Operations
and Miscellaneous.

Evergreen student Jean - Pierre Bressieux
figures it will cost $4,500 to bring the Experimental Structures Building up to
building code and he has set out to find
the money,
Bressieux talks Wednesday with Academic Dean Willie Parsons to discuss possible funding of the remodeling effort
through academic channels. On Thursday
he meets with Dean Clabaugh in search of
other funding channels.
An effort will be made to tap a building fund of approximately $90,000 originally established to finance the new
delayed CAB Phase II building project.
The building fund comes from S&A stu dent monies and was tapped to finance
construction of the Organic Farmhouse .
The Sounding Board and the S&A
Board. already verbally, if not financially,

attempt to fix up
voiced appro va
the experimental structure.
In other action related to the experimental structure, the administration has
decided not to burn the structure as earlier
proposed. Campus firefighters felt an attempt to burn the structure down could
create a fire hazard in the process.
If the building is not brought up to
code, it will be dismantled in an orderly
fashion this summer.
Half the cost estimate deals with labor
costs and the o ther half with costs for
materials such as: plumbing and wiring,
gypsum board for insulation, plywood to
reinforce floors and timber for additional
support of the foundation.
Students interested in wOI'king on the
experimental structure, either in architec tural design or carpentry, should contact
Jean-Pierre Bressieux at 352-3839 or talk
to faculty member Bob Filmer.

-----Legitimate Massage
yo u cry with anger in your
voices. Right! Save an animal
that destroys thousands of dollars worth of fishnets, salmon ,
do lphin and sea ls each year .
Right!
Save an an imal that is as
mu ch o f a nuisa nce to divers as
it ca n be when in this a rea .
Righ t!
Killer whales are the stupid est
member of the dolphin family ,
li v in g at gut- leve l just like
sha rks. (A ny cries to sa ve the
sharks? I think not.)
Okay , I grant you the right to
yo ur own opinions.
-BUT-

r------~
G reg Krait

WOMEN'S CLINIC
T" the Ed it,H:
O n t he first fl( 'o r of the
L,brar\' build in!" jus t around th e
co rner twm H"alth Serv ices, is
t he TESC \'\'ol1\en 's Cilllic establishl'd when State budbe tary cuts
climated Familv Pl an ning pre\'i"ush' on camp us . The clinic is
an access ible , inexpemive way
t,'r TESC wome n to meet our
hl'a lt h ca re needs and learn more
.1bl' ut o ur bodies.
Su pported $()Iely by ,tudent
tel" we ()!fer numerous services,
Jncludinl! physical examinations
I,ln nuak S1 w out pap, $3 with
pa p l. \ ·. D. and infection checks
a nd treatment (freel. DES screening . Birt h Control supplies (prices
dependin g on type de sired )'
pregnancy test in g ($1.00)' coun>;e ling and referral.
\ ,\'e a re o n hand 9 to 5 on
wee kdays to sched ule appointment s with Do ri Macdonald , our
Women 's Hea lth Care SpeCialist,
~ i ves t he ac t u a l exa min a tion ,
,1Ilswers quest io ns and ca n di spel
\\'" rries and m yths we mig ht
have abo ut our bodies, Daren
B(\ld uc is head of the volunteers
IV Ill' d" pregna ncy testing, co un , (' lin;!. and refe rra l.
(, '-,'rdinated by C hri s Cer\'In,ki a nd a ided by th e volun:l'('r 'ta tl the clinic seems to be
ci"i:ig a good job of breaking
,1, ,',\ n Ih e medica l mystiques,
( hangmg the traditional s teril e
"I m ,~'phere of clinics and entl'uraglng us to take responsibi li,.
kn(\wing how our bodies
\\·" rk . \\'e want peop le to know.
[t \,(\u 'd like to find out more
dr"f' in Lib . Rm. 1223 or ca ll
0238.
Linda Barry

she sets herself up to make such
pronouncements
a wellknown artist. a critic of note?
No: she's an o rdinary bozo like
the rest of us, and I o bject to
see in g he r private prejud ices
publi s h ed in th e form of a
rev iew.
I think it is a littl e late in the
cen tury for cracks about finger
painting; nor do I see any useful
purpose in describing a work as
a total failure . I do not think
Ms. lmfeld could have made
such remarks in the face of the
artists inv olved: henc;e their
publication is an irresponsible
act. In sum I fee l the attitude
which informs this article is to
a rt as Sea World is to whales.
Edward F. McQuarrie

CONGRATSTO
'3-PENNY'
T u the Editor:
The recent performance of
Brec ht' s "Three Penny Opera" at
Evergreen was truly a high point
in Olympia's cultural scene . A
magn ifi cent production it was.
Fifteen years ago I had the
pleasure of see ing the "Three
Penn y Opera" do ne off-Broadway III New Yo rk City. And I'll
say o ne thing, as good as the
actin g was there , they couldn't
begin to hold a candle to the
s up e rb stage de sig n here at
Evergreen.
Ma y I th a nk a ll of tho se
persons invo lved in this production for providing Olympia with
sll ch a fin e evenin g of entertai nmen t.
Ki rk M . Russell

MONEY BACK
FINGER PAINTERS
To The Ed it o r :
I fo und Teresa Im feld's review
01 the Artist Class show ( From
O ne Extreme to An other) very
dist urbin g. I found it disturbing
beca use of it s pa ucity of "I-cenIl'r<'d " s tat eme nt s . The article
IS st uffed wi th opini o n masquerading as fact and judgement.
(Some exa mples: 1) "looked as if
they had been done by th e a rtist
In hi s third -g rade finger-pa intin g
c[ass ": 2 / " it was easy to
determine who had reached hi s
mar k and who had to ta ll y
la il ed " ) W~o is Ms, Imfeld, that

To The Editor:
This past weekend I arrived
home from a trip to Seattle to
find a late-night party at my
house. I didn 't kn ow many of
the people, I imagine there were
40 or so enjoying themselves in
mindless alcoho lic bliss - drinkin g, dancing and partying down.
It was soon after th at I
discovered that so meone had
fo und their way up to my room ,
a nd taken $60 cash from my
desk; one-third of my mon th's
paycheck. The ensuing interrogation s of the rema ining guests
q uick ly dampen ed the spirits and

~JOURNAL
staff
rl
:TOR
Locke

NEWS EDITORS
Jill Stewart
Curtis Mil ton

FEATURE EDITOR
John Dodge

PHOTOGRAPHY

NEWS STAFF
joe Morawski
Moll y Wright
l enore Norrgard
Chris Cowger
Cat herine Ridde ll
Matt Groening
Stan Shore

Doug King
Doug Buster
PRODUCTION
Kathl een Meighan
joe Gend reau

th e party dwindl ed , the culprit
escaped.
It is unfortunate that such a
thin g shou ld happen , especially
when I will be leaving Evergreen
in a week to work in San
Fran cisco . I needed the money to
buy some tires fo r my car. I feel
bitter and angry , not because
some hippie asshole stole what
took me a week and a half to
earn, but because it was another
reminder of the lack of respect
people have towards one another
here. A most appropriate farewell.
TO WHOMEVER IT MAY
CONCERN: We have leads on
who you are. You can mail the
money back to 421 S. Sherman
Olympia 98502 and there will be
no questions asked, your house
will not be burned down next
week and I can tell John to put
away his sticks .
Jane Gorai

WHALE
HYPOCRITES
To The Editor:
Ah, my sweet Evergreeners,
I've had it with your hypocracies. "Save the killer whales!"
LETTERS POLICY
The Journal welcomes all
signed letters to the Editor
(names will be withheld on
request) and prints them as
space permits. To be considered for publication that
week . letters must be received
by 5 p.m . on th e Tuesday be fore the Thursday of publica ti on. Letters received aft er
deadline w ill be considered
for th e next iss ue. Letters
must be typed, double -spaced
and 400 words or less. Th e
Editor reserves th e rig/It to
edit letters over 400 words.
Gene rally, a photo or original art is also run on th e letters page To be considered
for publica tion , photos / art
from th e community mus t
also be submitted by 5 p.m.
Tu esday before the Thursday
of publication. Submission
size: 5" x 7" or 8" x 10" al though ot /ler sizes are accept able . Name? , address and
phone l11u sl be on all submissions and all originals w ill be
returned .

BUSINESS MANAGER
ji m Feyk

ADVERTISING
Cra ig Lozzi

PRINTER

TournaI
... G

~hc;,ttJf.
cou::/P-

The Journal news and business offices are located in the College Activities Building (CAB) rm . 306.
\.. N... ws phones : 866-6214 and -6213; adverti sing and business 866-6080.
~

1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1

1
1
1
1
1

1
1

Before you start screaming
aoout savi\1g the killer whales
why don 't you stop dumping
new-born kittens and puppies on
the bike trail? Why don't you
stop leaving these helpless fruits
of your carelessness in the care
of your pets (yo ur very own
Evergreeners!) to die of exposure? Or to be eaten (ripped into
gorey , messy shreds) by the wild
a nimals and Evergreen pets?
A ll I'm say ing is take a little
respo nsibi lit y , clean up your
ow n act before you go int o a
movement to save the' kill er
w hales (whi le abandoning' newborns to the world) .
S . Bayer

-------------------1

WE NEED housing for one night (April 10
& 11) for out of town par ticipants in
the Older Women and Health Care r.onf erence. If you have space and are interested please let us know by taking this
to the box in the Women's Center L32l4
or call 866-6162. Thank you .
how many

by Don Case
There is such a thing as an honest
massage parlor , a pla ce where o~e ca n
go to get a relaxful massage wltho~ t
feeling like a criminal. Such a place IS
Radian ce Herbs and Massage, located
at 218 1/2 West 4th Street (above the
bicycle shop in downtown Olympia) .
Founded seven month s ago by
former Evergreener Sheila Mars h and
her partner Dee Ann Wynia. Radiance has the distinction of being the
only completely-legitimate mass,age
operation in this area. The establIshment is the brainchild of Ms. Marsh,
who. after st udying anatomy and

Fri.

Avril

10

Sat. April
11

1
1
1

1
1
1
1
'1

""'en still call up to

,.

ask what they ca n
,get' here."

massage at Evergreen, became conce rned that "there was no place that
women, well, just anybody, co uld go
for a massage and feel comfortable . In
most pe o ple' s minds massage is
sy nonymous with prostitution. Radiance Herbs and Massage has been a
victim of the whole 'sauna' trip,"
The association of massage parlors
with vice cont inu es to haunt the
Radiance operation . "Me n still call up

to ask what they can 'get' here, " says
Ms. Marsh. "Usually they can tell
from my description that we don't
offer anything more than a massage .
Occasionally someone will show up
here with something else in mind, but
we're s ucc essful in discouraging them .
We've had no seriou s trouble"
Radiance occup ies two s mall room s
in an ancient harbor-area building
which, according to local historian s,
once housed a brothel. The rooms are
co mfortable, with lots of large
windows, plants and good mu sic. The
larger room co ntain s the office! reception area and the jars of herbs , of
which Radiance offers 108 different
varieties, plus several different kinds

of teas. Just off of this room is a
chamber containing the massage table
itself, cabinets of towels, oils and
scents, and a shower compartment.
Soon a third room will be added,
separating the office facilities from the
other areas.
Although rent is cheap, both Sheila
and Dee Ann hold second jobs to
supplement what the ma ssage busin ess
brings in; the profits are meager due
to the extreme l y reasonable rate s
charged at Radiance : prices run from
$5 to $15 dollars, with st ud e nt s and
se nior citizens pay ing only one-half of
this. But, as Sheila Marsh says , " It 's
a consta ntl y gratifying way of making
a living. "

INT. 325 RALLY

~-------------------------SUMMER EMPLOYMENT

King County Parks Division will be at TESC on March
24 to interview candidates for Recreation Leader positions ($3.50 I hr) in these areas:
Arts
Badminton
Water Polo
Camping
Crafts
Basketball
Softball
Tennis
Drama
Floor Hockey
Canoeing
Music
Golf
GymnastiCS
Sailing
Dance

Contact Career Planning & Placement to arrange for
an interview, Library 1220, Phone 866-6193

Why do

mosfpeople

in
eYOlldHHl1
Evolution is certa inly not a proven fact of
science. It can't be checked out by the scientific
method beca use the essence of that is repeatability. Th e conjectured evolutionary history of
the earth and its inhabit an ts is no n-repeatable
and, therefore, non -observa bl e.
Evolution is not even a legitimate scien tific
th eo ry. A valid theory must be testabl e. The re is
no way one can " test" evo lution. By its very
nature, million s of yea rs are req uired to produce
significant resu lts.
Why, then, do most people believe in
evo lutio n? That 's it! They believe in evo luti on.
It 's a matter of faith .
Scie nce is supposed to be what we see.
Science means "k nowledge," No o ne has ever
seen evo lution take pla ce . Evolution, is really
not science - it is rath e r a religious faith in
someth ing we ca nn ot see.
When it comes righ t down to it, most people believe in evo luti on because most people
bel ieve in evolut ion, It's the religion of the
scientific, political and industrial establ ishme nts.
As a scientific "model," special creation fits
all the facts of scie nce much better than does
evolution .
If you're an independent thinker and a bit
curious, we'll send you a free eye -ope ning
packet of fa ctual creationi st information . Se nd a
post card to Institute for Creation Research, P.O .
Box 15486, San Diego, California 92115.

Sl'I~I~C.IJ1'lll)INC.
by C hri s Cowger
Despite competition from th e orcas, the
kick-off rally for Nuclear Safeguard Initiative #325 received its share of attent ion
last Saturday morning, March 13 ,
(The initia tive, which would regulate
construction of all new nuclear plants,
was mistaken ly referred to in last week' s
Journ al as '#315,)
About 120 supporters of the initiative
gathered on the steps of the Capitol under
a threa tening but rain less sky to hea r
Dick Hubbard , ' one of the atomic engineers known as the "GE Three, " and hi s
wife Rachel. Afterward, petitions were
d ist ribut ed and the quest for 117,804 val id
signatures by July 1 go t underway.
( Hubbard , Da le Bridenbaugh , and
G rego ry M in or submitted well-publicized
resignations February 2 after a combined
total of 46 years' service in General Electric Co mpa ny's nuclear power division.
Their joint action sought to call nationwide attention to what they see as the un heeded threat posed by insufficient precau tion s in the ato mic indu stry,)
Hubbard recalled hi s angry reaction one
and a half years ago when a similar initiative campaign was mounted in California
while he was serving as manager of quality assurance in GE's nuclear energy departme nt at San Jose, His subseq uent disillusionment about "clean, safe, economical nuclear energy" was a painful one.
"We people in the industry become
emotional, " Hubbard to ld his audience at
the rally. "We had thought we were doing
somet hing good for mankind. "
The "GE Three" testified before a joint
Congressio nal commi tt ee on nuclear
energy February 18. Congress was in the
midst of extending until 1987 the Price
Anderson Act. which limits a reactor
owner's financial liability in case of accident to $560 million - a fraction of the
foP billion damages critics say could resu lt.
Hubbard was not enth usiastic about the
effects of his testimony. 'T he change will
not come from Washington D.C.," he
predicted.
Hubbard protested a practice known as
"grandfathering, " in which existing nuclear plants are exempted from beefed-up
sa fety requirements.
He responds to claims that nuclear
energy is an economic necessity with the
fact that Americans constitute six per cent
of the world's population and utilize 30
per cent of available energy. He feels that
energy scarcity is better alleviated by

NIJ (~I.. I~l'll

co n serva ti o n th a n by construction o f
nuclea r p la nt s.
How does he answer asser ti ons that
nobody has eve r been seriously hurt in a
nuclear acc ident? "That's the public ," says
Hubbard. "As soon as you go to work for
GE, yo u' re no longer a member of the
public."
The weakest li,nk in the nuclear chain is
the human one. "Nuclear plants opera ted
properly are less dangerous than coal
pla nts," Hubbard cl aims. But he adds that
$100 million would be required to make
existing plants safe.
Initi a tiv e 325 is being sponsored by a
statew ide organization, headqu artered in
Seattle, called CASE (CoAlit ion for Safe
Energy ). CASE needs $50,000 to mount
it s petition drive a nd to pay such bills as
the Hubbards' plane fare.
The rally was opened by folk singer
John Adams, an Evergreen student. After
Hubbard spoke, David Milne , Thurston
count y CASE coordinator and Evergreen
fac ult y member, explained the specific
provisions of In itiative 325. In brief. they
are:
• Nuclear plant owners would be
financially liable for all damages resulting
from nuclear accident - a waiver of the
Price Anderson Act.
• Actual t es tin g of emergency safe t y
sys tems would be req uired.
• Methods of handling and s toring
radioactive wastes wou ld have to be
proven safe .
• Evacuation plans fo r the area around
each reactor would have to be published.
• Nuclear energy developers would have
to demonstrate that there was an actual
need for each plant, that the power could
not reaso nably be supplied by another
source, and that the best use of the land
in question would be a nuclear fission
plant.
Initiative 325 would a lso require that
two-thirds of the legisla ture certified that
all of the above conditions had been met
(except the last one, which would be
au tomat ic ) before a nuclear plant could be
licensed.
Milne denied that the initiative represents a moratorium on atomic energy,
The problems addressed by the measure
can be solved, he says - if they co uldn ' t,
nuclear power should indeed be prohibited.
People interested in circu lating petitions
sho uld contact Milne at 866-8015 or Ann
Beug at 866- 0927,
California's petition campaign was
successful , and the initiative there will
come to a vote June 8.

I~NI~11C.Y

-----Legitimate Massage
yo u cry with anger in your
voices. Right! Save an animal
that destroys thousands of dollars worth of fishnets, salmon ,
do lphin and sea ls each year .
Right!
Save an an imal that is as
mu ch o f a nuisa nce to divers as
it ca n be when in this a rea .
Righ t!
Killer whales are the stupid est
member of the dolphin family ,
li v in g at gut- leve l just like
sha rks. (A ny cries to sa ve the
sharks? I think not.)
Okay , I grant you the right to
yo ur own opinions.
-BUT-

r------~
G reg Krait

WOMEN'S CLINIC
T" the Ed it,H:
O n t he first fl( 'o r of the
L,brar\' build in!" jus t around th e
co rner twm H"alth Serv ices, is
t he TESC \'\'ol1\en 's Cilllic establishl'd when State budbe tary cuts
climated Familv Pl an ning pre\'i"ush' on camp us . The clinic is
an access ible , inexpemive way
t,'r TESC wome n to meet our
hl'a lt h ca re needs and learn more
.1bl' ut o ur bodies.
Su pported $()Iely by ,tudent
tel" we ()!fer numerous services,
Jncludinl! physical examinations
I,ln nuak S1 w out pap, $3 with
pa p l. \ ·. D. and infection checks
a nd treatment (freel. DES screening . Birt h Control supplies (prices
dependin g on type de sired )'
pregnancy test in g ($1.00)' coun>;e ling and referral.
\ ,\'e a re o n hand 9 to 5 on
wee kdays to sched ule appointment s with Do ri Macdonald , our
Women 's Hea lth Care SpeCialist,
~ i ves t he ac t u a l exa min a tion ,
,1Ilswers quest io ns and ca n di spel
\\'" rries and m yths we mig ht
have abo ut our bodies, Daren
B(\ld uc is head of the volunteers
IV Ill' d" pregna ncy testing, co un , (' lin;!. and refe rra l.
(, '-,'rdinated by C hri s Cer\'In,ki a nd a ided by th e volun:l'('r 'ta tl the clinic seems to be
ci"i:ig a good job of breaking
,1, ,',\ n Ih e medica l mystiques,
( hangmg the traditional s teril e
"I m ,~'phere of clinics and entl'uraglng us to take responsibi li,.
kn(\wing how our bodies
\\·" rk . \\'e want peop le to know.
[t \,(\u 'd like to find out more
dr"f' in Lib . Rm. 1223 or ca ll
0238.
Linda Barry

she sets herself up to make such
pronouncements
a wellknown artist. a critic of note?
No: she's an o rdinary bozo like
the rest of us, and I o bject to
see in g he r private prejud ices
publi s h ed in th e form of a
rev iew.
I think it is a littl e late in the
cen tury for cracks about finger
painting; nor do I see any useful
purpose in describing a work as
a total failure . I do not think
Ms. lmfeld could have made
such remarks in the face of the
artists inv olved: henc;e their
publication is an irresponsible
act. In sum I fee l the attitude
which informs this article is to
a rt as Sea World is to whales.
Edward F. McQuarrie

CONGRATSTO
'3-PENNY'
T u the Editor:
The recent performance of
Brec ht' s "Three Penny Opera" at
Evergreen was truly a high point
in Olympia's cultural scene . A
magn ifi cent production it was.
Fifteen years ago I had the
pleasure of see ing the "Three
Penn y Opera" do ne off-Broadway III New Yo rk City. And I'll
say o ne thing, as good as the
actin g was there , they couldn't
begin to hold a candle to the
s up e rb stage de sig n here at
Evergreen.
Ma y I th a nk a ll of tho se
persons invo lved in this production for providing Olympia with
sll ch a fin e evenin g of entertai nmen t.
Ki rk M . Russell

MONEY BACK
FINGER PAINTERS
To The Ed it o r :
I fo und Teresa Im feld's review
01 the Artist Class show ( From
O ne Extreme to An other) very
dist urbin g. I found it disturbing
beca use of it s pa ucity of "I-cenIl'r<'d " s tat eme nt s . The article
IS st uffed wi th opini o n masquerading as fact and judgement.
(Some exa mples: 1) "looked as if
they had been done by th e a rtist
In hi s third -g rade finger-pa intin g
c[ass ": 2 / " it was easy to
determine who had reached hi s
mar k and who had to ta ll y
la il ed " ) W~o is Ms, Imfeld, that

To The Editor:
This past weekend I arrived
home from a trip to Seattle to
find a late-night party at my
house. I didn 't kn ow many of
the people, I imagine there were
40 or so enjoying themselves in
mindless alcoho lic bliss - drinkin g, dancing and partying down.
It was soon after th at I
discovered that so meone had
fo und their way up to my room ,
a nd taken $60 cash from my
desk; one-third of my mon th's
paycheck. The ensuing interrogation s of the rema ining guests
q uick ly dampen ed the spirits and

~JOURNAL
staff
rl
:TOR
Locke

NEWS EDITORS
Jill Stewart
Curtis Mil ton

FEATURE EDITOR
John Dodge

PHOTOGRAPHY

NEWS STAFF
joe Morawski
Moll y Wright
l enore Norrgard
Chris Cowger
Cat herine Ridde ll
Matt Groening
Stan Shore

Doug King
Doug Buster
PRODUCTION
Kathl een Meighan
joe Gend reau

th e party dwindl ed , the culprit
escaped.
It is unfortunate that such a
thin g shou ld happen , especially
when I will be leaving Evergreen
in a week to work in San
Fran cisco . I needed the money to
buy some tires fo r my car. I feel
bitter and angry , not because
some hippie asshole stole what
took me a week and a half to
earn, but because it was another
reminder of the lack of respect
people have towards one another
here. A most appropriate farewell.
TO WHOMEVER IT MAY
CONCERN: We have leads on
who you are. You can mail the
money back to 421 S. Sherman
Olympia 98502 and there will be
no questions asked, your house
will not be burned down next
week and I can tell John to put
away his sticks .
Jane Gorai

WHALE
HYPOCRITES
To The Editor:
Ah, my sweet Evergreeners,
I've had it with your hypocracies. "Save the killer whales!"
LETTERS POLICY
The Journal welcomes all
signed letters to the Editor
(names will be withheld on
request) and prints them as
space permits. To be considered for publication that
week . letters must be received
by 5 p.m . on th e Tuesday be fore the Thursday of publica ti on. Letters received aft er
deadline w ill be considered
for th e next iss ue. Letters
must be typed, double -spaced
and 400 words or less. Th e
Editor reserves th e rig/It to
edit letters over 400 words.
Gene rally, a photo or original art is also run on th e letters page To be considered
for publica tion , photos / art
from th e community mus t
also be submitted by 5 p.m.
Tu esday before the Thursday
of publication. Submission
size: 5" x 7" or 8" x 10" al though ot /ler sizes are accept able . Name? , address and
phone l11u sl be on all submissions and all originals w ill be
returned .

BUSINESS MANAGER
ji m Feyk

ADVERTISING
Cra ig Lozzi

PRINTER

TournaI
... G

~hc;,ttJf.
cou::/P-

The Journal news and business offices are located in the College Activities Building (CAB) rm . 306.
\.. N... ws phones : 866-6214 and -6213; adverti sing and business 866-6080.
~

1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1

1
1
1
1
1

1
1

Before you start screaming
aoout savi\1g the killer whales
why don 't you stop dumping
new-born kittens and puppies on
the bike trail? Why don't you
stop leaving these helpless fruits
of your carelessness in the care
of your pets (yo ur very own
Evergreeners!) to die of exposure? Or to be eaten (ripped into
gorey , messy shreds) by the wild
a nimals and Evergreen pets?
A ll I'm say ing is take a little
respo nsibi lit y , clean up your
ow n act before you go int o a
movement to save the' kill er
w hales (whi le abandoning' newborns to the world) .
S . Bayer

-------------------1

WE NEED housing for one night (April 10
& 11) for out of town par ticipants in
the Older Women and Health Care r.onf erence. If you have space and are interested please let us know by taking this
to the box in the Women's Center L32l4
or call 866-6162. Thank you .
how many

by Don Case
There is such a thing as an honest
massage parlor , a pla ce where o~e ca n
go to get a relaxful massage wltho~ t
feeling like a criminal. Such a place IS
Radian ce Herbs and Massage, located
at 218 1/2 West 4th Street (above the
bicycle shop in downtown Olympia) .
Founded seven month s ago by
former Evergreener Sheila Mars h and
her partner Dee Ann Wynia. Radiance has the distinction of being the
only completely-legitimate mass,age
operation in this area. The establIshment is the brainchild of Ms. Marsh,
who. after st udying anatomy and

Fri.

Avril

10

Sat. April
11

1
1
1

1
1
1
1
'1

""'en still call up to

,.

ask what they ca n
,get' here."

massage at Evergreen, became conce rned that "there was no place that
women, well, just anybody, co uld go
for a massage and feel comfortable . In
most pe o ple' s minds massage is
sy nonymous with prostitution. Radiance Herbs and Massage has been a
victim of the whole 'sauna' trip,"
The association of massage parlors
with vice cont inu es to haunt the
Radiance operation . "Me n still call up

to ask what they can 'get' here, " says
Ms. Marsh. "Usually they can tell
from my description that we don't
offer anything more than a massage .
Occasionally someone will show up
here with something else in mind, but
we're s ucc essful in discouraging them .
We've had no seriou s trouble"
Radiance occup ies two s mall room s
in an ancient harbor-area building
which, according to local historian s,
once housed a brothel. The rooms are
co mfortable, with lots of large
windows, plants and good mu sic. The
larger room co ntain s the office! reception area and the jars of herbs , of
which Radiance offers 108 different
varieties, plus several different kinds

of teas. Just off of this room is a
chamber containing the massage table
itself, cabinets of towels, oils and
scents, and a shower compartment.
Soon a third room will be added,
separating the office facilities from the
other areas.
Although rent is cheap, both Sheila
and Dee Ann hold second jobs to
supplement what the ma ssage busin ess
brings in; the profits are meager due
to the extreme l y reasonable rate s
charged at Radiance : prices run from
$5 to $15 dollars, with st ud e nt s and
se nior citizens pay ing only one-half of
this. But, as Sheila Marsh says , " It 's
a consta ntl y gratifying way of making
a living. "

INT. 325 RALLY

~-------------------------SUMMER EMPLOYMENT

King County Parks Division will be at TESC on March
24 to interview candidates for Recreation Leader positions ($3.50 I hr) in these areas:
Arts
Badminton
Water Polo
Camping
Crafts
Basketball
Softball
Tennis
Drama
Floor Hockey
Canoeing
Music
Golf
GymnastiCS
Sailing
Dance

Contact Career Planning & Placement to arrange for
an interview, Library 1220, Phone 866-6193

Why do

mosfpeople

in
eYOlldHHl1
Evolution is certa inly not a proven fact of
science. It can't be checked out by the scientific
method beca use the essence of that is repeatability. Th e conjectured evolutionary history of
the earth and its inhabit an ts is no n-repeatable
and, therefore, non -observa bl e.
Evolution is not even a legitimate scien tific
th eo ry. A valid theory must be testabl e. The re is
no way one can " test" evo lution. By its very
nature, million s of yea rs are req uired to produce
significant resu lts.
Why, then, do most people believe in
evo lutio n? That 's it! They believe in evo luti on.
It 's a matter of faith .
Scie nce is supposed to be what we see.
Science means "k nowledge," No o ne has ever
seen evo lution take pla ce . Evolution, is really
not science - it is rath e r a religious faith in
someth ing we ca nn ot see.
When it comes righ t down to it, most people believe in evo luti on because most people
bel ieve in evolut ion, It's the religion of the
scientific, political and industrial establ ishme nts.
As a scientific "model," special creation fits
all the facts of scie nce much better than does
evolution .
If you're an independent thinker and a bit
curious, we'll send you a free eye -ope ning
packet of fa ctual creationi st information . Se nd a
post card to Institute for Creation Research, P.O .
Box 15486, San Diego, California 92115.

Sl'I~I~C.IJ1'lll)INC.
by C hri s Cowger
Despite competition from th e orcas, the
kick-off rally for Nuclear Safeguard Initiative #325 received its share of attent ion
last Saturday morning, March 13 ,
(The initia tive, which would regulate
construction of all new nuclear plants,
was mistaken ly referred to in last week' s
Journ al as '#315,)
About 120 supporters of the initiative
gathered on the steps of the Capitol under
a threa tening but rain less sky to hea r
Dick Hubbard , ' one of the atomic engineers known as the "GE Three, " and hi s
wife Rachel. Afterward, petitions were
d ist ribut ed and the quest for 117,804 val id
signatures by July 1 go t underway.
( Hubbard , Da le Bridenbaugh , and
G rego ry M in or submitted well-publicized
resignations February 2 after a combined
total of 46 years' service in General Electric Co mpa ny's nuclear power division.
Their joint action sought to call nationwide attention to what they see as the un heeded threat posed by insufficient precau tion s in the ato mic indu stry,)
Hubbard recalled hi s angry reaction one
and a half years ago when a similar initiative campaign was mounted in California
while he was serving as manager of quality assurance in GE's nuclear energy departme nt at San Jose, His subseq uent disillusionment about "clean, safe, economical nuclear energy" was a painful one.
"We people in the industry become
emotional, " Hubbard to ld his audience at
the rally. "We had thought we were doing
somet hing good for mankind. "
The "GE Three" testified before a joint
Congressio nal commi tt ee on nuclear
energy February 18. Congress was in the
midst of extending until 1987 the Price
Anderson Act. which limits a reactor
owner's financial liability in case of accident to $560 million - a fraction of the
foP billion damages critics say could resu lt.
Hubbard was not enth usiastic about the
effects of his testimony. 'T he change will
not come from Washington D.C.," he
predicted.
Hubbard protested a practice known as
"grandfathering, " in which existing nuclear plants are exempted from beefed-up
sa fety requirements.
He responds to claims that nuclear
energy is an economic necessity with the
fact that Americans constitute six per cent
of the world's population and utilize 30
per cent of available energy. He feels that
energy scarcity is better alleviated by

NIJ (~I.. I~l'll

co n serva ti o n th a n by construction o f
nuclea r p la nt s.
How does he answer asser ti ons that
nobody has eve r been seriously hurt in a
nuclear acc ident? "That's the public ," says
Hubbard. "As soon as you go to work for
GE, yo u' re no longer a member of the
public."
The weakest li,nk in the nuclear chain is
the human one. "Nuclear plants opera ted
properly are less dangerous than coal
pla nts," Hubbard cl aims. But he adds that
$100 million would be required to make
existing plants safe.
Initi a tiv e 325 is being sponsored by a
statew ide organization, headqu artered in
Seattle, called CASE (CoAlit ion for Safe
Energy ). CASE needs $50,000 to mount
it s petition drive a nd to pay such bills as
the Hubbards' plane fare.
The rally was opened by folk singer
John Adams, an Evergreen student. After
Hubbard spoke, David Milne , Thurston
count y CASE coordinator and Evergreen
fac ult y member, explained the specific
provisions of In itiative 325. In brief. they
are:
• Nuclear plant owners would be
financially liable for all damages resulting
from nuclear accident - a waiver of the
Price Anderson Act.
• Actual t es tin g of emergency safe t y
sys tems would be req uired.
• Methods of handling and s toring
radioactive wastes wou ld have to be
proven safe .
• Evacuation plans fo r the area around
each reactor would have to be published.
• Nuclear energy developers would have
to demonstrate that there was an actual
need for each plant, that the power could
not reaso nably be supplied by another
source, and that the best use of the land
in question would be a nuclear fission
plant.
Initiative 325 would a lso require that
two-thirds of the legisla ture certified that
all of the above conditions had been met
(except the last one, which would be
au tomat ic ) before a nuclear plant could be
licensed.
Milne denied that the initiative represents a moratorium on atomic energy,
The problems addressed by the measure
can be solved, he says - if they co uldn ' t,
nuclear power should indeed be prohibited.
People interested in circu lating petitions
sho uld contact Milne at 866-8015 or Ann
Beug at 866- 0927,
California's petition campaign was
successful , and the initiative there will
come to a vote June 8.

I~NI~11C.Y

IN BRIEF

Quarter View
~V " lft',. i~

t,,,din g, . t lil' ra in is
l)l',~lnlliflx fll ~lll ' 5 id (' ria' ,nut"!
h dr ,vi ll ~ It, , an d E-pergrecne rs
,/I,' /'ur, l iIlS to ,·ti, O il Ih e fasl, ,,>I, SCCII,' i " ,I ii liJ eir Spr il1g t l l1ll' !iuer.l/. F,'SI, itH! ll h(lt1ys a
t,l,". ~(ll1!"d tHll l) 1/:.?, tJItlSe Geo duc~ ,
ill I hl' b" nl'
still
I 'lilli' ,1/1 ,III lpo rt <lll t p,nl ill til e
iii,' "I <1 11 L'c rgr .. e" studellt ,
d ~ t'~'ldOl(t'd in tl' 05(, " II ot os
.\ Iltl'l' red

J' Ill) "

h;!J

1 1 1/(1

('If

Ol' eralls have been arorUld
f o r y ears. Ne ve r befo re ,
tllough , have th ey enjoyed
the popularity that tl, ey have
now all th e Evergree n campus.
H e re we see'· two
examples of this /-rott est Spring
fashion it em display ed ill natural surroundings. O ve ralls
can be su ccessfully hig hlighled
by Earll, Siroes, Army boots
or sel' era l other exciting access ories from the sea s oll 's
lilleLlp . Fades, rips and patciles
also make slt/aslling addition s
to YO llr overall collection.

(1 /11 '"tl~l ;llg

l:-.! ' 11 pIll' r~

~

-..r
-..r

'~
V
~
/~j
tJI V

Q

:z:
D.I
"'t
"'t

;'tJI

CI'

0

W

:::I

(J1

Q

N

'<

~

10
Ilat
1(11

3 .....

."
D.I

(J1

....

~

.

:::I

CD
CD
U'I
Q

N

A lway s cu rrcc l is til e fa sh ci ,orec of a below- tll e k ll ee li r",s, black leotards and
['(lois , , "appil y accelllu ated
/' .'1 1"l g,~.tI so cks.

ill ll

PHOTOS AND TEXT
BY CURT MILTON

Raudenbush
Motor SupplV
Discount Priced from $4'!Ch'
(EXCHANGE)

SOLENOIDS
12VOLT
(1114356,0969)

Universal Style

$4.95Exch...
11 114 25 1, 2 , 3 ,5 , 6 , " 62, 3, 4 , 6,
B, 10 , 1, 2 , 7, 9 , BI . 1, 3,?, 9 , 94,
5, 7, 9 1 ( 1114304, 6, 24, ~, 6 . 8,
30 ,3,4,5, 0, 7, 9 , 41), 1, '!, 3, " , j ,
6, 7, 50, 1,3, 4, 31 ( 1118 '110 , 1, 6,
2 11 ( 11 19181 , 98 1 ( 1119910 , 46 ,
6 7.74, 9 81 ( 09 30 , I 2 , 3 , 4 , 60.5 ,
6,7, 8)

O pen f;

10

412 S .

~ Ameri can foAotor s., '61-68, Buick · '57:
72 , Buick Special '61 ·72, Cad;!lac '57·1
72, Camaro, ' 67·72, Chevelle '64 ·12,
Chevrolet '57-72 , Chevy II:Novo '62:
72, Cor voir '60-69, Corvette ' 57·72,
f;reb;rd '67· 72, John De ... e '63 -68,
Ka;,., Jeep '66 -71, Old,mob;!e '5772, Old,. F85 '61·72, Ponl;oc '56·72,
Te mpest '61 · 70 , Voga "71 -72, Ventura
II '71·72.

S Daily and SlInda y

Ch~rry

943-365~

EVERGREEN COIN~S
AND
--,
INVESTMENTS " ~
BUYING .
SILVER &. GOLD COINS
DOLLARS
RARE COINS
COMPLETE
COLLECTIONS

TlII's s rrappy Ir ell c h - coat
u eatioll by U. S. Government
Surp/t,s is anotlrer item mak ing a big splash this Spring. A
Iwndy item in th e w et country
o f Olympia , the tre nch coat is
modeled here with matching
boots, hat and tote-bag acces so ries , A guaranteed hit w ith
tl1e "i., " crowd, a trench co at
w ith optional lil1er is always
right in style .

1722 W~I Buildi~ 1722 Harrison
(across from Bob- 5 Big BUrg"eI'5.
352 - 8848

'lVhens the last time )Ou
hearll, "'WE Will!"?

NEW!
CHEMEX CM-210
2 - 10 CUP COFFEE MAKER

-'
a

ONLY $9,95

PHONE

SOUTH
SOUND
CENTER
491-8988

Th e daypack is once again
a part of the Spring fashion
scene, Always a handy acces sory, the backpack can also
be quite exciting when paired
with that uersatile, all-time
favorit e, th e down jacket.

CHECK\NG AND SAV\NGS I\CCOJNT5

TAAVELER5

C~[Cl<5

CERTIF'Cf\TES OF DEPOSITS

SAfE DEil05lT BO~£5
CN5H'ER CHECl<S AMD MONE'{ O\\DER5

SOUTH SOUND NATIONAL BANK
Evergreen Branch
C ollege Activities Building
866-2440

Main Office
South Sound Center
491 -4144

ASH
TREE
APTS :
Proiect and Apartments Include







Well Equippcu Rcc Room
Playy, ound Ar eas and Eq uipment
Laundry Fac il ities
Wall 10 Wall Carpets
Range and Refrig erator
II Drapes
• Furnished Un its Available
• Beautiful Land scape

The quarter started in a torrential downpour that did nothing to enliven the opening of
Lab Phase II, still another addition to the concrete environment.
The state legislature continued
the 44th session started last. year
- and is still in session. Student
concern centered around tuition
hikes, but both tuition hike proposals died in the House Higher
Education Committee in midFebruary.
ACADEMIC FAIR
The Short-term Curriculum
DTF called for an early "Academic Fair" in January to gauge
student reaction to next year's
curriculum proposals.
.
Approximately 600 students
participated in the Fair, and high
interest areas included the Natural Sciences and the Arts. The
Outdoor Education program received the greatest support
among the proposals.
However , the final 1976 - 77
program list was nearly bereft of
year-long communications and
performing arts proposals.
COG IIIILONG TERM
CURRICULUM DTF
The COG III DTF and Longterm curricu lum DTF are a direct
outgrowth of the heavily - at tended student curriculum planning m eetings last quarter.
T h e Long - term DTF , co m prised of 25 people, has been
loo king at Evergreen 's curricu lum in two stages - what it 's
like now , and where it should
go .
The COG 1lI DTF 's 37 members are re- evaluating governance
- student and otherwise - at
Evergreen.
Members of th e groups have
broken into interest -area groups
and ar e invest igating various
phases of student involv ement in
student activities.
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
The Board of (Trustees upheld
their decision to have a "faculty ,
staff and student" seated on the
Board rather than the "Gay ,
Third -Worlder and woman" re quested by the Sounding Board,
A faculty person, staff mem ber and student were appointed,
but student appointee Barbara
Spector refused her position in
support of the Sounding Board
decision. Chuck Albertson was
appointed in her place.
In other action dur ing the
quarter, the BOT gave the goahead to erect "Metabole," a 16 foot , 3-D sculpture; approved
the formation of a citizen's
adV is ory group to Evergreen ;
sta rted work on a Student Access Center that will include offices from Admissions to Veteran's Affairs ; a pproved a Maternity ! Pregnancy Leave Policy
that gives fathers time off to help
their wives during pregnancy ;
a nd raised summer quarter tuition by $4.00.
S&A BOARD
The S&A Board asked the
Bookstore and Food Services to
pay some form of utilities "rent. "
Director of Personnel John Moss
opposed the proposal until an
S&A meeting March 10. He then
agreed that Food Services would
pay 18 % (approx . $6,544) and
the Bookstore 15 % (approx .
$5,468) of the entire CAB utility
bill Rer year. The charges will
beco~e effective 711 / 76. . .
The Board has been trying to
rai se low student wages through
a ne w "skill - respo nsibility - ex-

perience" scale.
Board members also devised a
new allocations process that divides budget proposals into five
programic areas ; Communications and Cultural Events; Recreation; Student Groups; Services,
Operations and Miscellaneous
and a Mid-Year Fund. (See story
elsewhere in this issue.)
ESP
The student-built Experimental
Structures Project came back to
campus attention after nearly a
year of d isinterest.
In response to a memo from
Ed Kormondy, Phil Harding suggested that the building be
burned before it was vandalized
into a junk heap,
Successive weeks found students rallying to save the threestory structure - or find alternatives to burning it.
In the meantime, vandals, or
students who didn't want to see
their work destroyed , were stealing propane tanks, wood stoves,
and stained-glass windows.
Currently plans are underway
to try and bring the ESP up to
code so it may be saved .
EARTHQUAKE
Studen ts collected over $1 ,000
to help Guatemalan earthquake
victims, The money, raised
through rummage and bake sales
and a benefit dance, was given
to the Save the Children fede ra ti o n to be used in Guatemala,
BIOCIDES
The use of biocides on campus
became the subject of heated debate at the Sounding Board and
the Env ironmental Advisory
Committee. Two students felt
that se ve ral chemicals, including
2, 4- 0 and 2, 4, 5-T, shouldn't
be used on campus .
Director of Facilities Jerry
Schillinger and grounds personnel disagreed, pointing out the
many safeguards used with biocides o n campu s a nd the ex pe nse
of us ing natural contro ls,
Currently a group is forming
to produce a written document
on ca mpus biocide use,
ORCAS
La st week, si x orcas were cap tured in Budd Inlet, less than
two miles from campus. The capture coincided with Evergreen's
Or ca Symposium, held over
March 12 - 13. Since then, three
orcas have escaped, while the
others have been or are awaiting
transport to aquariums, (See
sto ry, pg. 1.)
ENTERT AINMENT
A number of well-known
names: Dick Gregory, Hearst
Lawyer F. Lee Bailey, vibraharpist Gary Burton - and wellknown movies " Clockwork
Orange," "Brewster McCloud ,"
"Little Big Man " - made their
appearance on or near Evergreen ,
The " live and Recorded" program presented a fine production
of "The Three-Penny Opera " in
the library lobby's "almost-theatre-in-the - round. "

EVERGREEN
STUDENTS COLLECT
NEPALESE UTTER
Six of the Evergreen students
studying in Nepal are busy along
the approaches to Mt. Everest
collecting data - garbage left
behind by climbers who set out
to conquer Mt. Everest.
The students. are working with
Nepalese officials in the Sagarnatha National Park to clean up
the "mountain" of garbage left
behind by the expeditions and
mountaineering tourists attracted
to the world 's most famous
mountain,
Each expedition to the mighty
mountain includes ilt least five
tons of equipment and materials .
The successfu l American expedition of 1963 - which included
Evergreen faculty member Willi
Unsoeld - carri ed 27 tons of
goods and much of that material
was neve r packed out.
A group of 18 students have
been in Nepal since last August
with Dr. Dave Peterson as their
guide. After completing their
group projects, the students will
regroup in Kathmandu before
headin g back out into the field
for individual projects. Th e
g roup is exp e cted ba c k at
Ev ergreen sometime early this
summer.

FOREIGN
LANGUAGE SIGN-UP

RAPE RELIEF FORUM
Rape Relief will present two
training session ! open discussion
meetings on March 17th a nd
18th, at the Y,W.C.A " 220 E.
Union at 7:30 p .m . (each night).

ELD

EQUIPMENT

rLEXIBLE FIBERGLASS
FRAME BACKPACKS
866-7020
BROCHURE

~ o. BOX 914
OLYMPIA , WA 98 5 07

HOUSE OF
WOMEN AND WORK
A o ne -day conference entitled
"Wome n and Work. Past, Present and Future" will be held
March 20 at United Churches (at
11th street between Wa shington
and C apitol Way ) from 9 a.m .
to 5 p.m.
The conference will feature a
number of wo men speaking on
women and work , and will
include facu lty member Stephanie
Coo ntz (American econom y a nd
statu s of women) ; Place ment
Direc to r Gail Martin (Problems
of Women who work in the
Home) and Affirmative Acti o n
Directo r Rindy Jones.
Registration fee is $2, For
more information , call 943 -4592
or 352 -0593.

115 East 5th

Olympia, WA
98501

352 - 7527

STUDENT
DISCOUNT

y--~~-------~o:--~~

=----.

Foreign language students have
the opportunity to sign up for
tutorial sessions with native
language speakers. Sess ions will
be scheduled on advanced-begin-

DREES

one thirteen east fifth a\oenue

M>

......<-~:..•~ . •:---:~ •.~..........

ERUCH STATIONERS
• .Offlce SuppI_

THERE'S
ALOT TO
APPRECIATE

._ ----------,
Dirty
Dave's

Gay 90's

• DntftJng Equip.
• .,... boob

Bring this coupon ,
Buy two
spaghetti dinners

• F... PIIItdnI

_-1344

12DOLYMPIA AVE.

For Only

3.50

IDONNA'S K .NIT SliOP
LOPI

ner, intermediate, and advanced
levels in French , Spanish , German , Chinese, Japanese, Norwegian and Hebrew, provided that
at least three credit-earning
students sign up in advance to
form the nucleus of a tutorial
group. There will be no beginning level sessions.
Students must sil;\n up for
spring quarter language study
before Friday March · 19 , Final
decisions regarding tutor scheduling will be made at that time.
French students sign up with
Therese Bonin -6049; all other
language s with Lynn Struv e
-6411.

IS

4045 Pac"~ Fic
45f-· 15fO

OVERLAKE PROPERTIES
1611 W. Harrison
943-7111

HERE

Thi s coupon ex pires 3-23-76
_________
-1

IT'S A RUNNERS WORLD
Come In and See

Running is an
exhilarating experience·

1214 V2 W. Harrison
It is a

OLYMPIA SPORT SHOP
STOCK REDUCTION SALE
20% off on ,

2 Bedroom $155, Unfurnished
$175_ Furnished
3 Bedroom $190. Unfurnished
$215, Furnished
866- 8188

FLY TYING SUPPLIES
ASSORTED RAINWEAR
BACKPACKING ITEMS
MANY OTHER ITEMS
ON SALE
"come in and browse" HOURS
Wed . thru Sat.
10 to 5 : 30
719 East 4th
,357- 7580

.,.

International
Hair DeSigners

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

joy
when doing it
with the right
shoes.

• Tiger
• Nike
• Converse
• Pony

• Puma
-----'-~ WILLIE'S SPORTS
ENTERPRISES

3530 Martin W a y
491 -8240

Student dis count with Dis cou nt card from Willies

IN BRIEF

Quarter View
~V " lft',. i~

t,,,din g, . t lil' ra in is
l)l',~lnlliflx fll ~lll ' 5 id (' ria' ,nut"!
h dr ,vi ll ~ It, , an d E-pergrecne rs
,/I,' /'ur, l iIlS to ,·ti, O il Ih e fasl, ,,>I, SCCII,' i " ,I ii liJ eir Spr il1g t l l1ll' !iuer.l/. F,'SI, itH! ll h(lt1ys a
t,l,". ~(ll1!"d tHll l) 1/:.?, tJItlSe Geo duc~ ,
ill I hl' b" nl'
still
I 'lilli' ,1/1 ,III lpo rt <lll t p,nl ill til e
iii,' "I <1 11 L'c rgr .. e" studellt ,
d ~ t'~'ldOl(t'd in tl' 05(, " II ot os
.\ Iltl'l' red

J' Ill) "

h;!J

1 1 1/(1

('If

Ol' eralls have been arorUld
f o r y ears. Ne ve r befo re ,
tllough , have th ey enjoyed
the popularity that tl, ey have
now all th e Evergree n campus.
H e re we see'· two
examples of this /-rott est Spring
fashion it em display ed ill natural surroundings. O ve ralls
can be su ccessfully hig hlighled
by Earll, Siroes, Army boots
or sel' era l other exciting access ories from the sea s oll 's
lilleLlp . Fades, rips and patciles
also make slt/aslling addition s
to YO llr overall collection.

(1 /11 '"tl~l ;llg

l:-.! ' 11 pIll' r~

~

-..r
-..r

'~
V
~
/~j
tJI V

Q

:z:
D.I
"'t
"'t

;'tJI

CI'

0

W

:::I

(J1

Q

N

'<

~

10
Ilat
1(11

3 .....

."
D.I

(J1

....

~

.

:::I

CD
CD
U'I
Q

N

A lway s cu rrcc l is til e fa sh ci ,orec of a below- tll e k ll ee li r",s, black leotards and
['(lois , , "appil y accelllu ated
/' .'1 1"l g,~.tI so cks.

ill ll

PHOTOS AND TEXT
BY CURT MILTON

Raudenbush
Motor SupplV
Discount Priced from $4'!Ch'
(EXCHANGE)

SOLENOIDS
12VOLT
(1114356,0969)

Universal Style

$4.95Exch...
11 114 25 1, 2 , 3 ,5 , 6 , " 62, 3, 4 , 6,
B, 10 , 1, 2 , 7, 9 , BI . 1, 3,?, 9 , 94,
5, 7, 9 1 ( 1114304, 6, 24, ~, 6 . 8,
30 ,3,4,5, 0, 7, 9 , 41), 1, '!, 3, " , j ,
6, 7, 50, 1,3, 4, 31 ( 1118 '110 , 1, 6,
2 11 ( 11 19181 , 98 1 ( 1119910 , 46 ,
6 7.74, 9 81 ( 09 30 , I 2 , 3 , 4 , 60.5 ,
6,7, 8)

O pen f;

10

412 S .

~ Ameri can foAotor s., '61-68, Buick · '57:
72 , Buick Special '61 ·72, Cad;!lac '57·1
72, Camaro, ' 67·72, Chevelle '64 ·12,
Chevrolet '57-72 , Chevy II:Novo '62:
72, Cor voir '60-69, Corvette ' 57·72,
f;reb;rd '67· 72, John De ... e '63 -68,
Ka;,., Jeep '66 -71, Old,mob;!e '5772, Old,. F85 '61·72, Ponl;oc '56·72,
Te mpest '61 · 70 , Voga "71 -72, Ventura
II '71·72.

S Daily and SlInda y

Ch~rry

943-365~

EVERGREEN COIN~S
AND
--,
INVESTMENTS " ~
BUYING .
SILVER &. GOLD COINS
DOLLARS
RARE COINS
COMPLETE
COLLECTIONS

TlII's s rrappy Ir ell c h - coat
u eatioll by U. S. Government
Surp/t,s is anotlrer item mak ing a big splash this Spring. A
Iwndy item in th e w et country
o f Olympia , the tre nch coat is
modeled here with matching
boots, hat and tote-bag acces so ries , A guaranteed hit w ith
tl1e "i., " crowd, a trench co at
w ith optional lil1er is always
right in style .

1722 W~I Buildi~ 1722 Harrison
(across from Bob- 5 Big BUrg"eI'5.
352 - 8848

'lVhens the last time )Ou
hearll, "'WE Will!"?

NEW!
CHEMEX CM-210
2 - 10 CUP COFFEE MAKER

-'
a

ONLY $9,95

PHONE

SOUTH
SOUND
CENTER
491-8988

Th e daypack is once again
a part of the Spring fashion
scene, Always a handy acces sory, the backpack can also
be quite exciting when paired
with that uersatile, all-time
favorit e, th e down jacket.

CHECK\NG AND SAV\NGS I\CCOJNT5

TAAVELER5

C~[Cl<5

CERTIF'Cf\TES OF DEPOSITS

SAfE DEil05lT BO~£5
CN5H'ER CHECl<S AMD MONE'{ O\\DER5

SOUTH SOUND NATIONAL BANK
Evergreen Branch
C ollege Activities Building
866-2440

Main Office
South Sound Center
491 -4144

ASH
TREE
APTS :
Proiect and Apartments Include







Well Equippcu Rcc Room
Playy, ound Ar eas and Eq uipment
Laundry Fac il ities
Wall 10 Wall Carpets
Range and Refrig erator
II Drapes
• Furnished Un its Available
• Beautiful Land scape

The quarter started in a torrential downpour that did nothing to enliven the opening of
Lab Phase II, still another addition to the concrete environment.
The state legislature continued
the 44th session started last. year
- and is still in session. Student
concern centered around tuition
hikes, but both tuition hike proposals died in the House Higher
Education Committee in midFebruary.
ACADEMIC FAIR
The Short-term Curriculum
DTF called for an early "Academic Fair" in January to gauge
student reaction to next year's
curriculum proposals.
.
Approximately 600 students
participated in the Fair, and high
interest areas included the Natural Sciences and the Arts. The
Outdoor Education program received the greatest support
among the proposals.
However , the final 1976 - 77
program list was nearly bereft of
year-long communications and
performing arts proposals.
COG IIIILONG TERM
CURRICULUM DTF
The COG III DTF and Longterm curricu lum DTF are a direct
outgrowth of the heavily - at tended student curriculum planning m eetings last quarter.
T h e Long - term DTF , co m prised of 25 people, has been
loo king at Evergreen 's curricu lum in two stages - what it 's
like now , and where it should
go .
The COG 1lI DTF 's 37 members are re- evaluating governance
- student and otherwise - at
Evergreen.
Members of th e groups have
broken into interest -area groups
and ar e invest igating various
phases of student involv ement in
student activities.
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
The Board of (Trustees upheld
their decision to have a "faculty ,
staff and student" seated on the
Board rather than the "Gay ,
Third -Worlder and woman" re quested by the Sounding Board,
A faculty person, staff mem ber and student were appointed,
but student appointee Barbara
Spector refused her position in
support of the Sounding Board
decision. Chuck Albertson was
appointed in her place.
In other action dur ing the
quarter, the BOT gave the goahead to erect "Metabole," a 16 foot , 3-D sculpture; approved
the formation of a citizen's
adV is ory group to Evergreen ;
sta rted work on a Student Access Center that will include offices from Admissions to Veteran's Affairs ; a pproved a Maternity ! Pregnancy Leave Policy
that gives fathers time off to help
their wives during pregnancy ;
a nd raised summer quarter tuition by $4.00.
S&A BOARD
The S&A Board asked the
Bookstore and Food Services to
pay some form of utilities "rent. "
Director of Personnel John Moss
opposed the proposal until an
S&A meeting March 10. He then
agreed that Food Services would
pay 18 % (approx . $6,544) and
the Bookstore 15 % (approx .
$5,468) of the entire CAB utility
bill Rer year. The charges will
beco~e effective 711 / 76. . .
The Board has been trying to
rai se low student wages through
a ne w "skill - respo nsibility - ex-

perience" scale.
Board members also devised a
new allocations process that divides budget proposals into five
programic areas ; Communications and Cultural Events; Recreation; Student Groups; Services,
Operations and Miscellaneous
and a Mid-Year Fund. (See story
elsewhere in this issue.)
ESP
The student-built Experimental
Structures Project came back to
campus attention after nearly a
year of d isinterest.
In response to a memo from
Ed Kormondy, Phil Harding suggested that the building be
burned before it was vandalized
into a junk heap,
Successive weeks found students rallying to save the threestory structure - or find alternatives to burning it.
In the meantime, vandals, or
students who didn't want to see
their work destroyed , were stealing propane tanks, wood stoves,
and stained-glass windows.
Currently plans are underway
to try and bring the ESP up to
code so it may be saved .
EARTHQUAKE
Studen ts collected over $1 ,000
to help Guatemalan earthquake
victims, The money, raised
through rummage and bake sales
and a benefit dance, was given
to the Save the Children fede ra ti o n to be used in Guatemala,
BIOCIDES
The use of biocides on campus
became the subject of heated debate at the Sounding Board and
the Env ironmental Advisory
Committee. Two students felt
that se ve ral chemicals, including
2, 4- 0 and 2, 4, 5-T, shouldn't
be used on campus .
Director of Facilities Jerry
Schillinger and grounds personnel disagreed, pointing out the
many safeguards used with biocides o n campu s a nd the ex pe nse
of us ing natural contro ls,
Currently a group is forming
to produce a written document
on ca mpus biocide use,
ORCAS
La st week, si x orcas were cap tured in Budd Inlet, less than
two miles from campus. The capture coincided with Evergreen's
Or ca Symposium, held over
March 12 - 13. Since then, three
orcas have escaped, while the
others have been or are awaiting
transport to aquariums, (See
sto ry, pg. 1.)
ENTERT AINMENT
A number of well-known
names: Dick Gregory, Hearst
Lawyer F. Lee Bailey, vibraharpist Gary Burton - and wellknown movies " Clockwork
Orange," "Brewster McCloud ,"
"Little Big Man " - made their
appearance on or near Evergreen ,
The " live and Recorded" program presented a fine production
of "The Three-Penny Opera " in
the library lobby's "almost-theatre-in-the - round. "

EVERGREEN
STUDENTS COLLECT
NEPALESE UTTER
Six of the Evergreen students
studying in Nepal are busy along
the approaches to Mt. Everest
collecting data - garbage left
behind by climbers who set out
to conquer Mt. Everest.
The students. are working with
Nepalese officials in the Sagarnatha National Park to clean up
the "mountain" of garbage left
behind by the expeditions and
mountaineering tourists attracted
to the world 's most famous
mountain,
Each expedition to the mighty
mountain includes ilt least five
tons of equipment and materials .
The successfu l American expedition of 1963 - which included
Evergreen faculty member Willi
Unsoeld - carri ed 27 tons of
goods and much of that material
was neve r packed out.
A group of 18 students have
been in Nepal since last August
with Dr. Dave Peterson as their
guide. After completing their
group projects, the students will
regroup in Kathmandu before
headin g back out into the field
for individual projects. Th e
g roup is exp e cted ba c k at
Ev ergreen sometime early this
summer.

FOREIGN
LANGUAGE SIGN-UP

RAPE RELIEF FORUM
Rape Relief will present two
training session ! open discussion
meetings on March 17th a nd
18th, at the Y,W.C.A " 220 E.
Union at 7:30 p .m . (each night).

ELD

EQUIPMENT

rLEXIBLE FIBERGLASS
FRAME BACKPACKS
866-7020
BROCHURE

~ o. BOX 914
OLYMPIA , WA 98 5 07

HOUSE OF
WOMEN AND WORK
A o ne -day conference entitled
"Wome n and Work. Past, Present and Future" will be held
March 20 at United Churches (at
11th street between Wa shington
and C apitol Way ) from 9 a.m .
to 5 p.m.
The conference will feature a
number of wo men speaking on
women and work , and will
include facu lty member Stephanie
Coo ntz (American econom y a nd
statu s of women) ; Place ment
Direc to r Gail Martin (Problems
of Women who work in the
Home) and Affirmative Acti o n
Directo r Rindy Jones.
Registration fee is $2, For
more information , call 943 -4592
or 352 -0593.

115 East 5th

Olympia, WA
98501

352 - 7527

STUDENT
DISCOUNT

y--~~-------~o:--~~

=----.

Foreign language students have
the opportunity to sign up for
tutorial sessions with native
language speakers. Sess ions will
be scheduled on advanced-begin-

DREES

one thirteen east fifth a\oenue

M>

......<-~:..•~ . •:---:~ •.~..........

ERUCH STATIONERS
• .Offlce SuppI_

THERE'S
ALOT TO
APPRECIATE

._ ----------,
Dirty
Dave's

Gay 90's

• DntftJng Equip.
• .,... boob

Bring this coupon ,
Buy two
spaghetti dinners

• F... PIIItdnI

_-1344

12DOLYMPIA AVE.

For Only

3.50

IDONNA'S K .NIT SliOP
LOPI

ner, intermediate, and advanced
levels in French , Spanish , German , Chinese, Japanese, Norwegian and Hebrew, provided that
at least three credit-earning
students sign up in advance to
form the nucleus of a tutorial
group. There will be no beginning level sessions.
Students must sil;\n up for
spring quarter language study
before Friday March · 19 , Final
decisions regarding tutor scheduling will be made at that time.
French students sign up with
Therese Bonin -6049; all other
language s with Lynn Struv e
-6411.

IS

4045 Pac"~ Fic
45f-· 15fO

OVERLAKE PROPERTIES
1611 W. Harrison
943-7111

HERE

Thi s coupon ex pires 3-23-76
_________
-1

IT'S A RUNNERS WORLD
Come In and See

Running is an
exhilarating experience·

1214 V2 W. Harrison
It is a

OLYMPIA SPORT SHOP
STOCK REDUCTION SALE
20% off on ,

2 Bedroom $155, Unfurnished
$175_ Furnished
3 Bedroom $190. Unfurnished
$215, Furnished
866- 8188

FLY TYING SUPPLIES
ASSORTED RAINWEAR
BACKPACKING ITEMS
MANY OTHER ITEMS
ON SALE
"come in and browse" HOURS
Wed . thru Sat.
10 to 5 : 30
719 East 4th
,357- 7580

.,.

International
Hair DeSigners

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

joy
when doing it
with the right
shoes.

• Tiger
• Nike
• Converse
• Pony

• Puma
-----'-~ WILLIE'S SPORTS
ENTERPRISES

3530 Martin W a y
491 -8240

Student dis count with Dis cou nt card from Willies

ENTERTAINMENT
SPRING VACATION

SEATTLE
:;:;.~Q: .:>.Q.

Due to an err'or by
the film distributor,
the Friday Night
Films is unable to
show "Notorious" by
. Alfred Hitchcock. In
its place will be
"Secret Agent" by
Alfred Hitchco·ck.
Showings at 3,7 and
9:30p.m. Admission
is SOC.

.:I$"~~?;:

Lynryd Skynyrd, along with
Outlaw and Montrose invade the
Seattle Coliseum Tuesday night.
The King Theatre in Seattle
presents Martin Scorsee's uncompromised film, "Taxi Driver."
Starring Robert DeNiro (of Godfather II fame) as an insomniac
cab driver in Manhattan . "Taxi
Driver" promises to be one of
the best-received movies of the
year.

The Ilews core staff; hard-working, clean ,
reuerent .
Left to rt. John Dodge, Feature Editor; Curt Milton , News Editor;
and Ji ll Stewart , News Editor. Jill will be
the new editor for Spring, Summer and
Fa ll Quarters.

Artemis Gallery
ON CAMPUS
::-..,<::~m.-{o':".¢:::m~M.;':;:-~;~~:;:-:;:::;w.<-:~.~-:~:::>.~

With this being the last week
of school, we have a limited
schedule of events. I guess everybody is busy writing evaluations
and planning what to do during
their Spring vacation.
Tuesday, March 16 The
"Ides of March Celebration," a
display of student craftwork,
continues from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m .
in the main library lobby.
Wednesday, March 17 KAOS presents "Chorale," Beethoven's masterful last symphony
at 2 p.m. on Greg Krall's show .
Also on Wednesday - Evergreen faculty member and musi cian, Tom Foote, presents a complimentary slide and musical
tape presentation which will
trace the developmeilt of country
and western music in America; 8
p.m. in LH one. No charge.
Friday, March 19 (the final
day of winter quarter) - Friday
Night Films wraps up the winter
quarter film series with "Notorious" (1946 - USA). Directed by
Alfred Hitchcock and starring
Cary Grant, Ingrid Bergman and
Claude Rains, "Notorious" is a
suspenseful tale of World War II
espionage. Showings at 3, 7 and
9:45 p .m. in L.H one. Fifty

Business, advertising and prod~jction. Left
to rt . lim Fe yk and David Judd , Business
Managers; Craig Lozz i, ad sales (also
Marvin Young , not pictured); loe Gendreau , production; and Denise Lombard
(Ilot pictured) business secre tary.

DOllg Bllstel.

0111'

co rn er alld d oeslI t

Also tllallks to Woody , Phord and the
other pllOlks ill PrlOtO , Dave and Ian in
Graphics. our typesetters Billie arid Sherry
alld th e asso rted rabble that write for us
alld Margaret "GribbJeskov" (ScribbJesdo ve 7 Dibblefro v ? Mom 7) who 's not our
adviso r. but a supporter of the gro up anyway.

pllO tog . Hr li1'es ill 'til l'
(0 111('

o lif 1111ICll.

The CPJ Stall and•••

A ll d m e, yo~1Y typica l mild-nlal1lle red
ca /llpli S lIIudrak er and possessor of
illsallit!l. What m ore is there but a takeover of the Washington Post and maybe
Doolll?sbury.

The End•••
by Ti Locke'
'Tis the end of th ree quarters
as th e ed itor of the louma!.
As a fifth-year-journalism -stu dent-cum-editor I found that Everg reen expects the editor of its
paper tQ provide more than editori a l policy.

~ Colony Qnnc!Jl1pa, tmenf§
1818 EVERGREEN PARK DRIVE • OLYMPIA, WA 98502 • (206) 943-7330

All Utilities Paid

Social Rooms

Fully Furnished

Free TV Cable

Laundry Facility

Recreation Room

Wall-to-Wall Carpeting
Easy access to freevvay & City Center
.Just dovvn the Road from the Greenvvood, Inn

A Singles Community

1 Room
2 Rooms
4 Rooms

$ 74.50

$144.00
$250.00

The ed itor ha s to be able to
w.a lk the paper through every
step of its production, from raw
copy
to running the presses .
I
In lieu of a journalism department , the edito r has to find and
train severa l sets o f writers,
photographers, production people and core staffs and produce a
paper that people would want to
read.
The editor is the "ultimate ac countable" - taking the blame
for anyt hing the paper does (or
doesn ' t) do .
Along with that juggling act ,
the editor should have time to
write scathing editorials that incite people to action.
The editor (and core staff) live
and breath the Journal while it is
in production. There are never
enough ads to run a paper big
enough to carryall the week's
news. There are never enough
writers to cover that news . There
are always critics-after-the-fact
who never offer to write . .. etc.
... etc ...

OLYMPIA
~~cc:CgQg:C:.:K.~j j:,:a:~~>.

I

Friday, March 19 - Applejam
offers a very special evening
with Mark O'Conner, the 14
year old National Junior Fiddle
Champion and National Guitar
Flatpicking Champion. For this
concert , Mark will be accompanied by Jeff and Ellen Thorn
of the Old Hat Band fo r an eve ning of old-time, western and
bluegras s music. Attention,
please: The concert w ill be held
at Theatre Art Nouveau, 911 E.
4th, Olympia. Doors will open
at 8 p.m. and admission is $1.50.
Saturday, March 20 - Apple jam returns to the fo lk center
with Hollering Pot, a trio from
Victoria, B.C., for an evening of
Irish and British Isles folk music.
Doors open at 8 p.m. for $1.00.

Turning to the art scene There's a new art gallery in town
called The Artemis Gallery in
downtown Olympia at 218 W.
4th St. Through March 21, the
gallery presents 14 startling paintings by Evergreen faculty member and noted artist, Marilyn
Frasca.
The exhibit represents
work done by Ms. Frasca since
moving to the Northwest. Her
paintings are designed, through
the use of multiple paint types,
to reflect, collect and diffuse
light to, around and past the
viewer, much as the bay, mud flats and sky reflect and diffuse
the light where Marilyn lives in
Kamilche, Some of the paintings
are large - four by four feet while others are much smaller.
The prices are high, but so is the
quality of her work.

Market Art - The second annual Pike Place Market Art
Show runs through March 20
from 10 a.m. to 5 p .m. in the
Sanitary Market across the street
from the main market . Spend a
day browsing and shopping at
the Pike Place Market. It's a
guaranteed good time.

BEGINS-SOMETIME
by Jill Stewart
What's all thi s confusion over
the dates of Spring vacation 7
The Evergreen State College Bulletin claims that March 20-28 are
the vacation days , but the
Activities Calendar is marked
March 27-April 4.
The official bl ue calendar mos t
faculty have says the la st day 0 1
W inter Quarter is March 19 and
Spring Quarter begin s March 31.
Student Bob Dunn was rather
perplexed about obvious discrep ancies in the school 's publi cations , so he went on an
expedition through the variou s
department s of Evergreen's ad ministration to d ete rmin e th e
real dates .

And on March 28 - Violinist
Yehudi Menuhin brings his rare
talent to the Seattle Opera House
for an 8 p.m. recital. Considered
by many the grand master of the
violin, Menuhin will be accompanied on piano by his sister
Hephzibah. Menuhin's collaborations with Ravi Shankar were
largely responsible for introducing Indian music to America and
the entire world. Recently the
famed violinist, conductor and
humanitarian has broadened his
horizons into the jazz idiom .
Tickets for this Northwest Releasing event are available at the
Bon Marche and suburban outlets.

Dunn discovered that the VicePresident's office " wasn ' t real
sure," Rudy Martin 's Of fice
" didn't know," Dick Nich ols
"couldn 't say" and the Registrar
thought the date was "probabl y
the same as the official blu e
calendar" which places vacati o n
days on March 20-30 . Dunn
claims that not only is everyone
confused about the dates, but
that "I couldn't get anyone to
admit they are in charge of
publishing the correct information."
However, after considerable
discussion at the Registrar ' s
office, the consensus was that
Spring Vacation is indeed March
20-30. Spring Quarter begins
March 31.

cc

For the last time,
ADIOS

They think .

The gallery is open 11 a.m. to
7 p.m. except Monday. Artemis'
schedule in weeks to come in clude: Ohio Quilts and Turkish
Flatwoven Rugs from March 23
to April 9 and photographs by
Evergreen staff member, Ford
Gilbreath, from April 11 to April
23.

SIN6ERS, * DANCERS, * MUSICIANS
Tryout and perform in the 1976 Bicentennial

DlMY €NT€RTAlNM€NT

WORK

Elsewhere in town - the paintings of Susan Christian are on
display at Childhood's End Gallery at 507 S. Capitol Way and
the Governor's Invitational Exhibit continues at the State Capitol Museum through March 31.

PROGRAM

in cooperation with

The California
Institute of the Arts

At th e State Theatre in Olympia - Warren Beatty and Jack
Nicholson star in "The Fortune,"
(Don't know much about this
film', but the two actors together
make for an interesting combo.)
~·Q'Rcn: =.~ »~~"C~

oocc~ :ecec~"¢":«·I1i:RI7C~"!Q:·':~.O:«<-:

TENINO
'l~C"g"}~®



~:C::.l8:&: :~C·j"e~:.eo:;>¢OO.»:-»»:·::;':';'%":«-:<

Fiddle and Bluegrass lovers The Tenino Old Time Music Festival is slated for Friday and Saturday evenings (March 19 - 20)
in the Tenino High School gymnasium. Many of these participants represent the best old time
music makers in the Northwest.

Eleven week summ er lob and
workshops in en tertainment
JUNE 13 -

AUGU ST 28 . 1976

Perform in front of thousands while still improving your s kill s a t
And .
The staff turnover is astounding. During the last academic
year there were four different
editors and twice as many different sets of staffs. I've had three
different news core staffs. This
quarter's staff that is both talented and " together " . . . and
they a ll started midway through
last quarter .
'
Thanks all.

Disneyland / Walt Iilisney World
For qualified college students
UNIV. of Wash.
live auditions will be held at the fo llowing tocation : Seattle, Washington
In Meany Hall In the
Date:Sunday, April 11, 1976 _ Place: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Auditorium

.

12

Time:- "

00" to

6pm


Singers, Dancers and MusiCians prepare a three minute penormance selec1l0n
• ___ BRING YOUR MUSIC. Musicians bring your own instruments
Equal Opportunlly Employer

One of Marilyn Frasca's
paintings at The Artemis.

For furth er information. please write : Ellen Lam
Administrative Fine Arts Coordinator, Di sneyl and • 1313 Harbor Blvd ., Anaheim , CA 92803

ENTERTAINMENT
SPRING VACATION

SEATTLE
:;:;.~Q: .:>.Q.

Due to an err'or by
the film distributor,
the Friday Night
Films is unable to
show "Notorious" by
. Alfred Hitchcock. In
its place will be
"Secret Agent" by
Alfred Hitchco·ck.
Showings at 3,7 and
9:30p.m. Admission
is SOC.

.:I$"~~?;:

Lynryd Skynyrd, along with
Outlaw and Montrose invade the
Seattle Coliseum Tuesday night.
The King Theatre in Seattle
presents Martin Scorsee's uncompromised film, "Taxi Driver."
Starring Robert DeNiro (of Godfather II fame) as an insomniac
cab driver in Manhattan . "Taxi
Driver" promises to be one of
the best-received movies of the
year.

The Ilews core staff; hard-working, clean ,
reuerent .
Left to rt. John Dodge, Feature Editor; Curt Milton , News Editor;
and Ji ll Stewart , News Editor. Jill will be
the new editor for Spring, Summer and
Fa ll Quarters.

Artemis Gallery
ON CAMPUS
::-..,<::~m.-{o':".¢:::m~M.;':;:-~;~~:;:-:;:::;w.<-:~.~-:~:::>.~

With this being the last week
of school, we have a limited
schedule of events. I guess everybody is busy writing evaluations
and planning what to do during
their Spring vacation.
Tuesday, March 16 The
"Ides of March Celebration," a
display of student craftwork,
continues from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m .
in the main library lobby.
Wednesday, March 17 KAOS presents "Chorale," Beethoven's masterful last symphony
at 2 p.m. on Greg Krall's show .
Also on Wednesday - Evergreen faculty member and musi cian, Tom Foote, presents a complimentary slide and musical
tape presentation which will
trace the developmeilt of country
and western music in America; 8
p.m. in LH one. No charge.
Friday, March 19 (the final
day of winter quarter) - Friday
Night Films wraps up the winter
quarter film series with "Notorious" (1946 - USA). Directed by
Alfred Hitchcock and starring
Cary Grant, Ingrid Bergman and
Claude Rains, "Notorious" is a
suspenseful tale of World War II
espionage. Showings at 3, 7 and
9:45 p .m. in L.H one. Fifty

Business, advertising and prod~jction. Left
to rt . lim Fe yk and David Judd , Business
Managers; Craig Lozz i, ad sales (also
Marvin Young , not pictured); loe Gendreau , production; and Denise Lombard
(Ilot pictured) business secre tary.

DOllg Bllstel.

0111'

co rn er alld d oeslI t

Also tllallks to Woody , Phord and the
other pllOlks ill PrlOtO , Dave and Ian in
Graphics. our typesetters Billie arid Sherry
alld th e asso rted rabble that write for us
alld Margaret "GribbJeskov" (ScribbJesdo ve 7 Dibblefro v ? Mom 7) who 's not our
adviso r. but a supporter of the gro up anyway.

pllO tog . Hr li1'es ill 'til l'
(0 111('

o lif 1111ICll.

The CPJ Stall and•••

A ll d m e, yo~1Y typica l mild-nlal1lle red
ca /llpli S lIIudrak er and possessor of
illsallit!l. What m ore is there but a takeover of the Washington Post and maybe
Doolll?sbury.

The End•••
by Ti Locke'
'Tis the end of th ree quarters
as th e ed itor of the louma!.
As a fifth-year-journalism -stu dent-cum-editor I found that Everg reen expects the editor of its
paper tQ provide more than editori a l policy.

~ Colony Qnnc!Jl1pa, tmenf§
1818 EVERGREEN PARK DRIVE • OLYMPIA, WA 98502 • (206) 943-7330

All Utilities Paid

Social Rooms

Fully Furnished

Free TV Cable

Laundry Facility

Recreation Room

Wall-to-Wall Carpeting
Easy access to freevvay & City Center
.Just dovvn the Road from the Greenvvood, Inn

A Singles Community

1 Room
2 Rooms
4 Rooms

$ 74.50

$144.00
$250.00

The ed itor ha s to be able to
w.a lk the paper through every
step of its production, from raw
copy
to running the presses .
I
In lieu of a journalism department , the edito r has to find and
train severa l sets o f writers,
photographers, production people and core staffs and produce a
paper that people would want to
read.
The editor is the "ultimate ac countable" - taking the blame
for anyt hing the paper does (or
doesn ' t) do .
Along with that juggling act ,
the editor should have time to
write scathing editorials that incite people to action.
The editor (and core staff) live
and breath the Journal while it is
in production. There are never
enough ads to run a paper big
enough to carryall the week's
news. There are never enough
writers to cover that news . There
are always critics-after-the-fact
who never offer to write . .. etc.
... etc ...

OLYMPIA
~~cc:CgQg:C:.:K.~j j:,:a:~~>.

I

Friday, March 19 - Applejam
offers a very special evening
with Mark O'Conner, the 14
year old National Junior Fiddle
Champion and National Guitar
Flatpicking Champion. For this
concert , Mark will be accompanied by Jeff and Ellen Thorn
of the Old Hat Band fo r an eve ning of old-time, western and
bluegras s music. Attention,
please: The concert w ill be held
at Theatre Art Nouveau, 911 E.
4th, Olympia. Doors will open
at 8 p.m. and admission is $1.50.
Saturday, March 20 - Apple jam returns to the fo lk center
with Hollering Pot, a trio from
Victoria, B.C., for an evening of
Irish and British Isles folk music.
Doors open at 8 p.m. for $1.00.

Turning to the art scene There's a new art gallery in town
called The Artemis Gallery in
downtown Olympia at 218 W.
4th St. Through March 21, the
gallery presents 14 startling paintings by Evergreen faculty member and noted artist, Marilyn
Frasca.
The exhibit represents
work done by Ms. Frasca since
moving to the Northwest. Her
paintings are designed, through
the use of multiple paint types,
to reflect, collect and diffuse
light to, around and past the
viewer, much as the bay, mud flats and sky reflect and diffuse
the light where Marilyn lives in
Kamilche, Some of the paintings
are large - four by four feet while others are much smaller.
The prices are high, but so is the
quality of her work.

Market Art - The second annual Pike Place Market Art
Show runs through March 20
from 10 a.m. to 5 p .m. in the
Sanitary Market across the street
from the main market . Spend a
day browsing and shopping at
the Pike Place Market. It's a
guaranteed good time.

BEGINS-SOMETIME
by Jill Stewart
What's all thi s confusion over
the dates of Spring vacation 7
The Evergreen State College Bulletin claims that March 20-28 are
the vacation days , but the
Activities Calendar is marked
March 27-April 4.
The official bl ue calendar mos t
faculty have says the la st day 0 1
W inter Quarter is March 19 and
Spring Quarter begin s March 31.
Student Bob Dunn was rather
perplexed about obvious discrep ancies in the school 's publi cations , so he went on an
expedition through the variou s
department s of Evergreen's ad ministration to d ete rmin e th e
real dates .

And on March 28 - Violinist
Yehudi Menuhin brings his rare
talent to the Seattle Opera House
for an 8 p.m. recital. Considered
by many the grand master of the
violin, Menuhin will be accompanied on piano by his sister
Hephzibah. Menuhin's collaborations with Ravi Shankar were
largely responsible for introducing Indian music to America and
the entire world. Recently the
famed violinist, conductor and
humanitarian has broadened his
horizons into the jazz idiom .
Tickets for this Northwest Releasing event are available at the
Bon Marche and suburban outlets.

Dunn discovered that the VicePresident's office " wasn ' t real
sure," Rudy Martin 's Of fice
" didn't know," Dick Nich ols
"couldn 't say" and the Registrar
thought the date was "probabl y
the same as the official blu e
calendar" which places vacati o n
days on March 20-30 . Dunn
claims that not only is everyone
confused about the dates, but
that "I couldn't get anyone to
admit they are in charge of
publishing the correct information."
However, after considerable
discussion at the Registrar ' s
office, the consensus was that
Spring Vacation is indeed March
20-30. Spring Quarter begins
March 31.

cc

For the last time,
ADIOS

They think .

The gallery is open 11 a.m. to
7 p.m. except Monday. Artemis'
schedule in weeks to come in clude: Ohio Quilts and Turkish
Flatwoven Rugs from March 23
to April 9 and photographs by
Evergreen staff member, Ford
Gilbreath, from April 11 to April
23.

SIN6ERS, * DANCERS, * MUSICIANS
Tryout and perform in the 1976 Bicentennial

DlMY €NT€RTAlNM€NT

WORK

Elsewhere in town - the paintings of Susan Christian are on
display at Childhood's End Gallery at 507 S. Capitol Way and
the Governor's Invitational Exhibit continues at the State Capitol Museum through March 31.

PROGRAM

in cooperation with

The California
Institute of the Arts

At th e State Theatre in Olympia - Warren Beatty and Jack
Nicholson star in "The Fortune,"
(Don't know much about this
film', but the two actors together
make for an interesting combo.)
~·Q'Rcn: =.~ »~~"C~

oocc~ :ecec~"¢":«·I1i:RI7C~"!Q:·':~.O:«<-:

TENINO
'l~C"g"}~®



~:C::.l8:&: :~C·j"e~:.eo:;>¢OO.»:-»»:·::;':';'%":«-:<

Fiddle and Bluegrass lovers The Tenino Old Time Music Festival is slated for Friday and Saturday evenings (March 19 - 20)
in the Tenino High School gymnasium. Many of these participants represent the best old time
music makers in the Northwest.

Eleven week summ er lob and
workshops in en tertainment
JUNE 13 -

AUGU ST 28 . 1976

Perform in front of thousands while still improving your s kill s a t
And .
The staff turnover is astounding. During the last academic
year there were four different
editors and twice as many different sets of staffs. I've had three
different news core staffs. This
quarter's staff that is both talented and " together " . . . and
they a ll started midway through
last quarter .
'
Thanks all.

Disneyland / Walt Iilisney World
For qualified college students
UNIV. of Wash.
live auditions will be held at the fo llowing tocation : Seattle, Washington
In Meany Hall In the
Date:Sunday, April 11, 1976 _ Place: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Auditorium

.

12

Time:- "

00" to

6pm


Singers, Dancers and MusiCians prepare a three minute penormance selec1l0n
• ___ BRING YOUR MUSIC. Musicians bring your own instruments
Equal Opportunlly Employer

One of Marilyn Frasca's
paintings at The Artemis.

For furth er information. please write : Ellen Lam
Administrative Fine Arts Coordinator, Di sneyl and • 1313 Harbor Blvd ., Anaheim , CA 92803

Eating Out
rontilllled frOl11 page 11

10 MAMA 'S
From the exterior , Jo Mama 's
I"oks lik e another old house
a long Pear St. and State Ave. in
O lymp ia. But to walk inside the
Jonr , that first impression
cha ng<'s . The kitchen is in fullblown view and what may have
been the living room in days
g,) ne by is now a carpeted dining
rn{)m full o f partitioned booths
which reflect the work of a
skilled carpenter.
The newest re s taurant in
tl)Wn , 10 Mama's features the
Ihickes l pizza pies available in a
Il)Wn a lrea dy saturated with pizzer ia s. Their 12 - inch pizzas really
d" feed inur ~ople. And you
need four people to pay the bill
, in ce prices for a medium-sized
pi zza 112 inches) run from $7.50
Il) 59 .00.
I'm from the "th in and crispy"
5chool of pizza eaters so I can' t
realh' speak objec tively about Jo
"1'ln,a 's p izzas . But customers
b('\\' are: the service may be
at:oniz ingly slow . (In one specific GISt' , we waited over an hour
I r,'m time of order to time of deli\'ery I

ARTICHOKE MODE
The Artichoke Mode is a favorite of Evergreeners, located on
4th Avenue in downtown Olympia. The Mode is strictly vegetarian cuisine, featuring things like
cream cheese sandwiches and yogurt sundaes. The 85 cent yogurt
sundae is a delicious bowl of unflavored yogurt topped with raisins, walnuts, apple chunks,
orange slices, dates, banana
chunks and anything else that's
in season. Add a little honey and
you have a dessert that even a
yogurt skeptic would enjoy.
While you're there treat yourself to a glass of freshly juiced
orange juice - maybe the only
available in town.
Nightly dinner specia ls are always popular at the restaurant,
including such edibles as Spinach
Quiche and Egg Plant Parmesan.
Plan on waiting after you place
your order - most items are not
prepared in advance.
SEAMART RIB EYE
If you're down in the area of
Sea-Mart, shopping or just looking around, the Rib Eye restaurant is a good place to grab a
quick hamburger to stave off the
midday hungries. Although the
food can't be ranked as "exceptiona l," it's a far cry from the in-

Re-doing TESC Communications
by Curtis Milton
A proposal by three faculty
members to reorganize communications facilities at Evergreen,
including bringing the Cooper
Point Journal and KAOS-FM
under the academic wing, has
become the center of increased
speculation and concern among
media people recently.
The proposal. authored in
flow chart form by Bob Barnard,
Gordon Beck and Craig Carlson,
was first made public in a memo
sent by Will Humphreys to
famous "l" reasy Spoo·n."
Food a t the Rib Eye is fairly
typ ical "a nything-you-want-atany-hour-of-the-day." You can
get everyt hing from a hamburger
to a steak with breakfast anytime. A lthough the food isn't inspired, it 's still good and the
prices are reasonable. Try the '
"Ca nadian Bacon Burger" for a
slightly different eating experience.
Service is fast and the waitresses are friendly. In fact , it's
one of the few restaurants
around where the waitresses still
call you "honey," no matter how
old you are.

communications faculty on Feb.
27. Humphreys was given the
charge of drawing up that chart
by Vice-President Ed Kormondy.

labs would receive academic
funding they would not be
operated as academic programs
but would instead serve as
learning devices. "The operation
of the labs would be separate
from the study of them,"
Barnard answers critics of the
plan.

The proposal would first
establish a deanship for communications. The Communications Dean would be advised by
a Communications Board composed of one each of staff,
faculty, student and professional.
The Dean would be in charge
of the six communications "laboratories." The Journal and
KAOS would be two of the six,
with the others including film,
the television stud io, the hybrid
computer and advanced audio.
Each area would require the
technical assistance of either a
part-time professional or advanced, fourth or fifth year
student.
The outside professional help
would only have to be hired
when "we can't supply it from
our own resources," says Barnard. The advisors would be
there to provide technical help
only and would not, Barnard
says, impose editorial judgements
as many have feared. While the

I

Barnard sees the plan as a way
to get faculty involved in more
academic areas which they have
been avoiding. "We'll get more
faculty interested if they know
that they won't get operation
hassles imposed on coordinated
studies," he says. He also hopes
it will provide some continuity
in communication's facilities.

SYDlposiuDl Accents Plight of Captured Orcas
by John Dodge
The First International Orca Symposium
- accentuated by last week's capture of
five killer whales (orcas) in Budd Inlet capped two days of lectures, films and
discussions with a call for the creation of
a marine mammal sanctuary in Puget
Sound waters.
Almost overshadowed by the fateful
drama unfolding in nearby Budd Inlet, the
symposium also passed resolutions asking
for the immediate release of whales held
by Sea World Inc. in Budd Inlet and the

caped Saturday and by Sunday one of the
remaining orcas was singled out and deported on a boat by a sling device.
So while Goldsberry and his crew
seemed impervious to the symposium, the
conference coordinator, Mark Overland,
was satisfied with the eHect of the symposium. "It (the symposium) was a tool for
focusing attention on the plight of the orcas," said Overland. "I think the symposium, combined with the lawsuit I filed
last week, were instrumental in the state
launching their restraining order against

Barnard is quick to point out
that the flow chart is a device
for internally calculating who
should put in budget requests for
the specific areas. Humphreys
says the proposal won't mean a
thing unless it goes to the long
term curriculum DTF, which is a
possibility.
Nonetheless, several people are
concerned abou t the possible
implications of the proposal.
'Tm worried about being
incorporated in the curriculum of
the school," says Randy Harrison, KAOS s tation mana ger.
"Becoming enmeshed in a lab
situation frighten s me." Harr ison
is also displ eased with the fact
that so few people were invited
to th e meetin g to discuss the
proposa l.
"Emphasis shou ld be placed on
finding faculty members interes ted in teach ing basic print
journalism sk ill s," said Journal
Feature Editor John Dodge . "I
see the need for a Communications Dean as superflu ous."
Graphics designer Dave Imanaka made a three-page written
reply to the memo and proposal.
" The propose d pl a n in flow
emphasizes spec iali za tion ," Ima naka writes, "not that specialization IS a bad thin g, but
conside rin g a ll the ' uther in stitu tion s in the state already engaged
ill highl y speciali zed , well -deve loped commun icatio ns prog ram s, Evergreen ha s in s ur mountable odds at creating and
developin g a viable and compet itive prog ra m. .to give student s
a fair and equal opportu nit y to
ga in employment in thi s state."
Im a naka wou ld like to see
s tud e nt s working in broader
areas with co mmunication s with
an emphas is on "visua l literacy. "

Sea World Inc. workers prepare to lift a female
orca from Budd Inlet waters Sunday.
withdrawal of the federally issued permit
allOWing Sea World Inc. to capture four
wha les by the end of 1976.
Through the two-day affair held March
12 - 13 at Evergreen, members of the symposium kept one ear tuned to the fastbreaking news on the fate of the "Budd
Inlet Five." On Friday, while scientists,
scholars and concerned laypersons began
gathering to investigate the welfare and
future of marine mammals - specifically
orcas - in Puget Sound, the action in
Budd Inlet moved to federal courts in Seattle.
Friday a ft ernoon. U. S. District Court
Judge Morell E. Sharp ordered the whales
to be fret'd due to possi ble improper execution of the permit and because of tidal
conditions in Budd Inlet potentially endangering the whales' safety.
But Sea World Inc . appea led that decision to Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals
Judge Eugene Wright and he issued a stay
until March 22 on the enactment of Judge
Sha rp' s release order.
And on Saturday , Sea World's Don
Go ldsberry cancelled his sc heduled 10: 30
a.m. appearance at the symposium, apparently too busy preparing to remove
the whales from Budd Inlet to a possible
location near Friday Harbor in the San
Juan Islands. Tw o of the five orcas es-

• "The Early Gay Rights Movement," presented by the Union
of Sexual Minorities, Tuesday
evening, March 16th. The Gay
Re50urce Center will be sponsoring a ca rpool for all interested in
attending. For more information,
co ntact the Gay Reso urce Center , -6544 , lib . 3219.

symposium:
• All cetaceans (pro nounced see-tayceans) - from the Latin cetus meaning
whale - range in size from the six feet
and 160 pounds of the Harbor Porpoise to
110 feet and 100 tons-plus of the Blue
Whale, largest animal in the world .
• All cetaceans are divided into two
groups - the toot hed whale, includin g
the orca , and the baleen or "mustached"
whales which strain minute food organ isms from the water.
• Ancestors of cetaceans probably liv('d
on land some 100 million years ago befo re
returning to the sea.
• The brain size of the orca is approxI mately 13 pounds or four times the size of
man 's brain . Orcas are known to verba ll y
communicate, feel care and re,po nsibi li ty
within their pods and partake in hi ghl y
organized group fish-herding and huntin g
activities.
• Until 1971, there were no restrictions o r
legal limits to the harrassment o r slau ghte r
of orcas.
• While sa lm on fis hermen ha\'e long co n·
sidered the orca the ir enemy in the pur~llli
of salmon. a stud y of 150 orCJ ' ca pt ureJ
a nd killed by Japanese whalers found on l\'
1.6 percent of th e killer whal es had tran:,
of sa lm on in the ir stomachs.
As the conference wound down Sa tur day night , one sym posium member wa s
overheard say ing the symposium - co u pied with the capture of orcas in Budd In let - had a cosmic feeling. Cosmic or
not . the two -day flow of informa tio n
could not have happened at a mo re
opportune time.r-_ _ _ _~~--.

.s COOPER POINT

the
evergreen
staJ8Uege OIyrt"lOla . washington 98505

URNAL

Volume IV Number 22

March 16, 1976

Funding Sought for
Experimental Structure

S & A Devises Nevv

Allocations Plan
by Jill Stewart

The deadline for submitting 5
& A funding proposals for July
1, 1976 to June 30, 1977 is
APRIL 9th!
The early deadline has been
set so the 5 & A Board will have
time to go over, each proposal
carefully and solicit student
comments.
There will be an orientation
meeting Friday, March 12 at
1 :00 in CAB 110 for people
planning to make a budget
proposal next year,
During the meeting people will
be oriented to 5 & A, given a
basic explanation on how to
write proposals (forms, etc.) and
have the new 5 & A allocation
process explained.

Sea World Inc. "
Some of the highlights of the two-day
symposium:
• Dr. Michael Tillman from the Marine
Mammal Division of the National Marine
Fisheries Service in Seattle told symposium members Friday afternoon that plans
are underway to conduct a population
study of Puget Sound orcas from April to
October this year. The study will duplicate the work of Canadian biologist Dr.
Michael Biggs, who has taken over 7,000
photographs and had 314 personal encounters with orcas in the waters of British Columbia and Washington State.
T illman said Biggs placed the B. C. /
Wash. orca population at 19 pods (family
units) totaling 210 individuals. Biggs estimated the Puget Sound orca population at
four resident pods of 65 individuals and
another seven transient pods of 85 individ uals who sometimes travel in Puget
Sound.
Tillman added th at the orcas captured
in Budd Inlet may be a new , transient
pod.
• Symposium members passed a resolu tion offered by Greenpeace of Canada
and Friends of the Dolphins of Seattle thai
ca lled for the immed ia te release of the five
o rcas in Budd Inlet and the withdrawal of
the National Marine Fisheries Service per -

mit issued to Sea World Inc . to capture
four orcas by the end of 1976.
A spokesman for Greenpeace said the
pod captured in Budd Inlet has already
suffered irreparable damage to its social
structure and reproductive powers due to
the splitting of the pod into fragments.
• Symposium spokesman Russ Mohney
presented a proposal to the Washington
Environmental Council - meeting at Evergreen Saturday - calling for their support of a marine mammal sanctuary to be
created in Puget Sound. In response to
Mohney's proposal, the Washington Environmental Council voted unanimously
to support as an interim policy the creation of a moratorium on the capture of
any marine mammals in Washington,
• Paul Spong from the Pacific Killer
Whale Foundation at Alert Bay, British
Columbia captivated the symposium audience Saturday night with his presentation of slides, films and thoughts summarizing nine years of open-ended research among the free orcas inhabiting the
Johnstone Straits region of British Colum bia. His films and slides showed orcas in
their natural habitat - playing, hunting
and "sounding off" within close range of
Spong. Spong showed startling film foot age of his efforts to commune through
love and music with the orcas as he
moved among the orcas in his one-man
kayak.
Spong was also on hand Sunday when
the female orca was lifted by sling from
the waters of Budd Inlet. He attempted to
communicate with the orca, responding to
her "crying-like" sounds w(th his own
verbal messages.
Other facts and figures aired at the

The Services and Activities Fees Review
Board (S&A) has unveiled what they
hope is a more efficient plan for allocation
of 1976 - 77 monies to the various student
groups within their budget.
Under the new plan the 76 - 77 budget
is broken into five programatic areas:
Communications and Cultural Events;
Recreation ; Student Groups; Services,
Operations and Miscellaneous, and the
Mid- Year Discretionary Fund.
Two important deadlines have been set
- ongoing groups must ~ubmit budget
proposals by April 9 and new groups by
April 16.
By April 28 proposals will be classified
into all but the "Mid-Year Fund" area,
and money requests will be tabulated .
To explain the intricacies of writing a
budget proposal the S&A Board called an
"Allocations Orientation" meeting Friday,
March 12. Campus groups and organizations funded by S&A were encouraged to
send at least one representative.
lynn Garner said, "The Allocations Orientation saved me at least 28 hours of
work. All the people got all the information in one fell swoop. It was a great
idea. "
One day for each programatic area has
been set aside to allow individual presentations. The days are :
Wednesday, May 5 - Communications
and Cultural Events

Wednesday, May 12 - Recreation
Wednesday, May 19 - Student Groups
Wednesday, May 26 - Services, Operations and Miscellaneous
Brent Ingram, former S&A Board Executive Secretary, explains the individual
presentation days as "the time for individual groups to make presentations and be
questioned by the S&A Board and members of th e campus as a whole."
In a move to give the individual S&A
groups more negotiating power the Board
has introduced a new twist to the allocation decision-making process. According
to Ingram, if a representative from a student group takes part in the Wednesday
session, they then have participatory
power in the final decisions.
Ingram said, "for instance, a representative from KAOS could participate in the
decision-making for allocations to the entire Communications and Cultural Events
area."

Ingram feels the groups will "be able to
work together to change and cut their
proposals collectively, and they can cut
down on duplications of services through
the new decision-making process ."
Final allocation decisions will be made
on the follOWing days:
Friday, May 7 - Communications and
Cu ltural Events
Friday, May 14 - Recreation
Friday, May 21 - Student Groups
Friday, May 28 - Services, Operations
and Miscellaneous.

Evergreen student Jean - Pierre Bressieux
figures it will cost $4,500 to bring the Experimental Structures Building up to
building code and he has set out to find
the money,
Bressieux talks Wednesday with Academic Dean Willie Parsons to discuss possible funding of the remodeling effort
through academic channels. On Thursday
he meets with Dean Clabaugh in search of
other funding channels.
An effort will be made to tap a building fund of approximately $90,000 originally established to finance the new
delayed CAB Phase II building project.
The building fund comes from S&A stu dent monies and was tapped to finance
construction of the Organic Farmhouse .
The Sounding Board and the S&A
Board. already verbally, if not financially,

attempt to fix up
voiced appro va
the experimental structure.
In other action related to the experimental structure, the administration has
decided not to burn the structure as earlier
proposed. Campus firefighters felt an attempt to burn the structure down could
create a fire hazard in the process.
If the building is not brought up to
code, it will be dismantled in an orderly
fashion this summer.
Half the cost estimate deals with labor
costs and the o ther half with costs for
materials such as: plumbing and wiring,
gypsum board for insulation, plywood to
reinforce floors and timber for additional
support of the foundation.
Students interested in wOI'king on the
experimental structure, either in architec tural design or carpentry, should contact
Jean-Pierre Bressieux at 352-3839 or talk
to faculty member Bob Filmer.
Source
Eng US-WaOE.A.1973-01
Media
cpj0114.pdf