-
Identifier
-
cpj0258
-
Title
-
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 10, Issue 1
-
Date
-
24 September 1981
-
extracted text
-
Rowdy Ball
The Gig Commission and Campus Activities
presents The 1981 Rowdy Masquerade Ball FeatUring the Dynamic Logs . Free Beer and Cider.
June 6 In the TESC CAB BUilding. 10 .00 p.m .
to 2 00 a m Tickets '3 00
Gnu Deli
AI 'h e Gnu Del l Gretchen Christopher and
Over1on Berry In a nigh t of intimate l alZ . June 5
""d 6 S·I OO In adva nce $5 00 at the door The
Gnu Review Blues Band. open lam J une 8 9
LJ I '
5!) cen ts cO'/er The Harmonic Tremors
Ry lhem and Blues Band June t 2, 9 P m tl eke"
;c.:
I
~
:-0
Three Swimmers pla y rock and rol l J ur ,'
$1 50 ad,ance , $ 2 50 at th e d o'"
arm
Paul Chaseman
Friday , June 19 The Gnu Dell wltl feature
gUi tarist Paul Chasman at 9 pm , cover charge IS
Films
Miscellaneous
Galleries
00
Whose Movie?
Helicopter Ride
Rainbow Restaurant
-'Satorday, June 6 The Rambo w Restaurant WI I
feature Julian Prelster , Zerek Simmons , Jay
Mabin and Steve Monger beginning at 9 p m
cove r charge is $3 50
Whose Movie is This, Anyway? Recently com pleted film s produced by Evergreen students
June 5 at 7 ' 00 pm In the Recital Hall, TESC
Comm unicat ions Btdg Free.
~ Jailhouse
Joanne Brackeen
Sunday J une 7 . The Rainbow Res tau ran t wiJ
fea ture Joanne Brackeen on piano at 8 p.m . Ao
miSSion IS $6 .00
.RoelL
Fnday Nite Films: ElvIS Presley In Jailhouse
Rock Fnday June 5 at 3, 7 and 9 : 30 p.m . In
L H I AdmISSion $1 25
Avant-garde Films
Hits of '81
The Evergreen Concert Choir presents Greatest
Hits at '81 on Saturday , J une 6 In the TESC Rp
GIlal Hall al 3 00 p m AdmiSSi on IS Iree
Mt. SIIlnt Helens Helicopter ride can be won
f or one little dollar If you buy a rafffe ticket now
from Development Office. All proceeds go toward
scholarships for students Winning ticket for
round-trip flight from Olympia to volcano will be
drawn at 5 30 p,m, Super Saturday, June 6 You
need..no.t be present \Q~in, _
Thursday , June 4 Avant Garde films : Miss
Jesus Fries On-Grill , Dorothy Wiley; Fog Pumas
Gunvor Nelson , Lady Fishbournes Complet
Guide to Belter Table Manners , Janet Perlman
Ritual in Transfigured Time, Maya Deren, Ange l
Blue Sweet Wings, Chick Strand , Chfn.moon ,
Barbara Llnkevitch ShOWings at 3, 7 and 9: 30
p ,m in LHI $1 25
Dance
European Circus
A trad iti onal, European-styfe one-ring circus
comes to Thurston County for five performances
next week . The Circus, eSPl1Clall y deSIgned for
l amlly audiences , appears at 8 00 p .m , June 3,
4. and 5 In the Experimental Theatre and again
dUring afternoon performances set for 1:00 and
4 00 pm . on Super Saturday, June 6 , OI,Itside
near the Eva ns Library . The evening shows June
3 . 4 , and 5 cost $2 .00 , admIssion to the Super
Sat urday performance is free Advance ticket s on
sa le now at Budget Tapes and Records, Rainy
Day records In Olympia and the Evergreen Book·
Split Shift Cafe
Split Shift Cafe, blfled as an envIronment and
performance, Will be showing at the O.S, Gallery,
913 E Pine St in Seattle on June 5, 6 , 7, 25, 26 ,
and 27 Gallery hours are noon to 5 00 p m MonBay tt1ro ugh Friday, ReeA to ~6 ; OO-cn.. Saturday_
Tickets for Spilt Shift Cafe are $2.00 For more
,nformatl on call 322-5916 or 184-9990.
Summer Dance
Olympia Su mmer Dance IS sti l i accep tin g regIs tra ti on. b u ' en rollmen t IS li mited for thiS fou r
week In ten Ie Modern Dance workshOp sc hedu led for Jun, 21 to July 17 . Classes meet for SIX
hours dally In Balle\. Jazz, Improvi sation, Modern , Ta p ana ot her dance l orms For further mf ormat ion con tact Karen Kirsch at 866-9527
On Exhibit : Gallery Two features a jUried exhibit of student work ; Gallery Four offers two
shOws, an Evergreen Ph otography displaY, . and a
co llection of Fantasy Art. Both shows on display
through June 7.
Sufi Dancing
Sunday . June 7
Sufi DanCing
In
CAB 108
2'
7 p .m
Autograph Party
The Artist's 'Co-op Gallery Will be featUring as
Ihelr artISts of the week (June 13 to 20): oil painters Tom Hu ssey and Thelma Dickgleser The
gallery IS loca ted at 524 S Washington In downtown Olympia Ho urs are 10 .00 a m. to 5 00 P m
Monday through Sat urday .
Reading and Autograph Party fea tUring Tina
Blade Ch ri S ' Dah l', Carol Gordon, Shannon
Nelson and Ed Prescott at Word 01 Mo uth
Books WestSide Center on N. DIVision St Olympia 7 30 p m Thursday June 4
The Go-between
Transformation
Art Auction
Transformation Through the fnner Chifd a one
day workfplayshop With Anne M ,ze and Ga l l
GOld on Sat urday , June 20 9 to 5 at the Unity
C" urch 8th and John St m Seattle Fee $30 .00
For further In format ion ca ll 1-221-3882
Auellon ' From the private collections of Auctioneer: l amous Seattle mlme-"Zero. " The 26th
Allied Arts Annual Meeting and Awards presentation Friday , June 5. 7 00 pm 909 Broadway
Plaza Cocktai ls and Hors d' oeuvres
J u ne 2tl
•
Co-op Gallery
Thu rsday , June 4 Fafcons, Shorebirds and
Pesticides The ecolog y and behaVIOr of wlnte.
Ing shorebirds and falcons in western Washing·
ton, Ihe dy nam iCs of a contaminated predatorprey sys tem . ShOWing at 7: 30 p m . In LHI
AdmISSion free
The Olympia Fifm Society presenl s Iwo ex ·
Iraordln ary IIIms - The Go-between With Julie
Chr 's l, p Alan Bates and Michael Redgrave on
JUI1P 14 al 7 00 and 9 00 P m .. and Childran of
ParadlZe - or 'e shOWing on ly at 7 00 P m on
1
Gallery Two & Four
s t ('l re
Falcons I Shorebirds
and Pesticides
·-
I
\
•
Affordable Housing?
Northwest Winetasting Dinner
t
Shared Ownership?
O ur cho l,p o f thp f ln P~t ilVa dab le Washin gto n Statp
w ines wil l ( ompl cmf'nt ,1 mul ti -( O'lrSP mea l crea ted to
show of f the'i p, Ih(' be'i t of the Northwe'i t
I n,- I urlln~
p " "tcl n f
'>1
ump bl<ln r
\- Ill Iwll ,' ( h<1rdonna\
'"I"ha ll i'lnut NO lr
Sf, lec t ( lu~t e r - CeWl:rt /l r<l ln lncr
H l/l'rl l llt.:
students
new investors
young worki ng people
singles
,en,ed w ith Hor> cf oe uvres
With 1st COur<;e
Wit h 2nd Course
WI th Dessert
Let me wo rk With you to help solve your, housing
or Investment needs, HaVing worked over ten years
in the real estate bUSiness locally, I know the
O lympia area and can help you find what you are
looking for
lu ne 7, 1')1'1 1
{, o'c lock pm
i>20 00 ppr per, o n
~ ", p r va tlO n s '\ccep l l-'d
" 1 11'.
(
William H. Connor, Associate Broker
O ne block south o f Harri son
o n DIVi sion
943-881 2
I~t·.ll [
(' J) t ( 'I' 111 (
Tbt,
(
. . telt!'
'"I' ,'
,
",",1, ;",I HI
,
,
,
,
rn
I "
L.J::I
,
Of A l , O Q •
I
'
:
f
II':
!
IT
.
I
)',
.
I
',\"
page 12 Cooper POint Journal June 4, 1981
I
Welcome to Evergr~n
Welcome Back
Today's Best
Investments
RESTAURANT & TAVERN
2410 W. HA RRISON
OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON
PHONE ... 786-9290
-You
-A Home
I will help you ' find the home
you' re looking for.
Come by and see me today
William H. Connor, Associate Broker
to
vergreen
E
Bring in this ad for
$1.00' off on Door Cover or
$1.00 off any single meal.
WE HAVE
_ Live music six nights a week: country,
new wave, jazz, blues, rock and roll
-Our kitchen is open 2 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.
daily
_ Happy Hour is EVERY DAY, 3 'til 7p.m
- 2S¢ schooners Wed. and Thurs.
ULTRA
The Ultimate in Interest Bearing
Checking Accounts
THERE IS A DIFFERENCE!
Does your bank offer these conve.nient
features?
* Slj4 % interest compounded daily,
paid monthly
* 1st Check Order Free
* No Service Charge
for senior citizens over 62
* No Service Charge
with minimum $300 balance;
$3.00 monthly charge if balance
goes below $300 minimum
9 'til 10:30 p.m.
- Dancing - Food - Pool - Darts Videogames - Chess - Ping Pong - FUN
1
..
Sept. 29
Comi ng Events
Pool and Darts
Sept. 24
Sept. 30
Radio Flyer
Radio Flyer
Sept. 27
Oct. 2
Juba
Legendary
Sept. 28 .
Band Blues
To be announced
The JOURNAL Staff
.'
,.i
l :.:.
J .r-' f
By the CP) staff
Welcome back to school ·everybody.
While you've all been at home, slaving
through the hard work of applying baby
oil to your bodies in an attempt to get a
tan, the staff of the CPJ has been growing
more pale with each passing day.
We've had a good time writing this
Disorientation Issue. We're calling it that
because after you've read it, you'll be as
disorientated as we are.
We'd like to invite all the budding
journalists, photogs, graphicos, artists,
advertising people, and editors on campus
to join us in our attempts to make the
CPI the best student paper in the state of
Washington .
.
We'll help you design an internship
tailored to your needs. Working for the
HAVE A GOOD YEAR
- Patri~k and staff
o ffer f>xp'irp> 10/1 / 81 va lue 1/20 of 1¢
Budget Tapes
and Records
1 .l<t'~
81 7 Sl l'.l ler -Kinney Rd -\0 1--4 .'\4 0
[ In,\ramcl C il~
150 C Ir<..lt' () !
0 1ymri.1 3000 H ..Jrn ... n n AVt' N\lV . 043 -808/:1 .
SBUEY'S ·PIZZA:
*:
~
:q
**
6'~.
6~
* Also
*:
:
: Sub Sandwiches.
* Chicken and Mo)oes
*
~ Salads
.
. ~~~~ff.:
*
*--*
**
**
*
...:
*
"*.
**
**
**
*
*
** 352-0990
357-7575 *
** s.
*-
214 WEST 4th AVE
DOWNTOWN
943-9181
RAINBOW RESTAURANT
Welcomes you to Olympia!
•
The best pizza in town
lunch and dinner
SUPREME
ROBUST ...
827
PLUM ST.
HARRISON & DIVISION
Across from City Hall
----
11 : 30 am to midnight
Music Saturday nights, 9 pm
Beer and wine
357..6(16/753-9943
4th and Columbia
friendly
A - Always a Sale
B - Budget Prices
C - c/o and used, too
service!
Capitol
The U ptown Store
with the
Lowdown Prices
SCHWINN®
Parts and repairs for all makes
Complete line of accessories from
.experienced cyclists.
1931 East 4th
It'. worth thr ride olcroa town!
943·1352
qlympla's Westside Center
************************
p .I!!t> 2 Cooper Point Journal
If you're not ready to sign your academic Ide away, there are other options .
Wt> do accept stories from freelan cers .
Poetry for the renewed poetry page will
also be accepted by Victor Cummings .
We are in the process of trying to
Increase student and community access to
the CPI You do not have to be a student
to submit your work .
Never hesitate to call us at 866-621 3
with any hot scoops or even lukewarm
ones, that you know of. If you have ideas
about the CPI, come in and talk to us . If
you've got spare time and want to improve your writing or graphic skills, then
volunteer some time at the CPl .
50, if the most exciting thing you've
planned for the fall is watching the slugs
mate, come to where the real action is,
the CPJ
-l 5.J H25 1
***********************~
~
paper can be exciting and rewarding. We
have the only internship on campus guaranteed to bring shy people out of their
shells, while showing them the secrets to
writing a grammatically correct sentence
faster than they can slip on a slug .
There are challenges (like when the
deans throw you out of their offices
before you've finished the interview),
exciting adventure (travel to exotic places
on our $48 travel allowance) and best of
all a spacious office right next door to
SAGA, whose coffee will teach you the
meaning of the words Drug Addict.
We have a booklist and syllabus here at
the office on the first floor of the CAB,
for those who may doubt that we are
teaching'. We have seminar/ critique
sessions once a week where we give and
receive support and criticism .
Sept. 24, 1981
Sept. 24, 1981
Cooper Point Journal page 3
lEse Firestation Bids Adieu
Budget Cuts Hit lESC
By John Bauman
supplies. All hiring for temporary and
permanent in stitutional Jobs has been
can celled . Student in stitutional Jobs
.
fund ed from outside th e general fund will
not be affect ed . A ban has been placed
on out-of-state travel
It IS not yet known if programs will be
ca nce lled due to the cutbacks . In an allcampu s meeting, President Dan Eva~s did
no t dwell on the cuts, but rather, spoke
about preventing the cuts which he said
were an unprecedented disaster
Evans said that the fis cal crunch was
ca used by th e substanti al tax cuts approved by th e legi slature during the past
three years. He also blilmed high interes t
rates and the slump in th e timber indu stry,
saying th at decreased revenues had preve nted the state from mee tin g its
obi igations
Evans al'io ' sa id that the tax cuts Yo.' ' re a
politi cal move by the gove rn or to shock
legislators into the awarenes'> th at a tax
hike i'i needed. Eva ns expects a spec ial
'iess ion of th e legislature to be ca lled in
November
He sa id t hat th e leaders of both the
House and Senate Ways and M eans Committ ees , upport a tax increase , and that
the chances o f such an in crease bein g
approved w ere good . He emphasized that
13y lohn Bauman
it was important ,t o wri te the legi slators to
show support for the tax increase.
.
Last Thur,day, Governor Spellman
In the meantime the admini strati on IS
annoulll ed il 10.1 percent cutback in
workin gon a new budget plan to accomfund ing for all state agencies. Th e cut in
modate the cut s. Evan s sa id that durin ~
fund ing to Evergreen will amount to 2. 6
the first three mo nths of th e bi ennium
million do ll ars over the nex t two years.
th e, college signed conlr ~c ts and
1 hl ' cuts will onl y aff ect the school's
spent
a large chllnl of Its or ;i~ in a l bud get.
gt'lw rill fund s. Aux ili ary servi ces, such dS
fh
e
college
w ill have to return the 10 I
S&A and Housing will not be aff ec ted by
perce
nt
cutbac
k during the· nex t nine
the cuts.
monlhs.
The admini strat ion has issued a memo
1 he coll ege is to report its new budge't ,
Impl ementing tt'mpora ry measures , in an
along
wi th an impact statement , to the
attempt to prepare the co ll ege for the
governor by Oc tober B, 19B1 .
cutbacks All purchase order have been
According to Vi ce President Di ck
cancell ed with the excepti on of essential
Sc hwart z, it' will be difficult for the college to cut it s bud get for the f all quarter,
but he said that the cuts wo uld become
easier to make furth er in the future. The
admini stration will propose a small cut for
the budget thi s year to be followed by
larger cuts nex t year.
.
.
352-4880
Schwartz said , " The thlllgs we do thiS
year will be a littl e less visibl e than the
things we do the second year."
The area's newest and
The admini stration will luok first for
finest women's resale
"easy" money to cut out of th e budget.
clothing shop.
Evans said that , alari es were not conWe have quality clothing
sidered "easy" money at this point .
at low, affordable prices.
Saving the "easy" money includes such
Feel free to just come in
st eps as making the summer quarter of
and browse and have a
schoo l self-sustaining, a freeze on hirin g
cup of tea with us.
for vacated fa culty and st aff positions,
Convenient d9wntown
and Ihe can ce ll ation of the proposed
masters of environmental studi es program.
location
" W e're looking al the pi eces we can cut
117 W. Legion Way
first , so we ca n spread smaller perce ntage
M-F 10:30-5
Sat 12-4
CLlt s across th e board ," sa id Sc hwart z
photo bv \'\loud) fl lrT!'1
Qver the ,ummer, the campus fire sta. tion was closed. The student firefighters
who lived there and wished to remain
- resident vol uriteers were moved to oth~r
stations in the McLane fire district. Under
the new arrangement, the college will pay
the district $122,<XXJ a year and the district
will do the fire inspections on campus
and will house and maintain the college's
equipment in off-campus stations.
The use of student voluntt::ers is not
being phased out . Rath er, McLane District
Fire Chief, Jack Munger, would like to
increase the use o f students as resident
volunteers in the district.
Having volunteers living in the stations
cuts response time by eliminating th e
need for a volunteer to drive from hi s or
her ho me to the station to pick up the
fire tru cks. The vo lunteers can go direc tly
to the fire whil e the res idents drive th e
equipment to it.
Before its closure, the campus stati on
was the only one to have res ident volunteers. Now there are volunteers living in
two other stations on Cooper Point. As
soon as water is installed at the Summit
Lake Station, volunteers will be able to
move in there. Chief Munger's goal is to
have residents living in all the stations in
the district, instead of having them all at
one station . The district is considering a
proposal to build a second story on the
Mud Bay Road fire station that will house
14-16 volunteers, but this won't happen
for several years, if at all.
Chief Munger is enthusiastic about the
cooperation between the school and the
fire district.
"The relationship is a perfect marriage,"
he said, " The §tudents perform a service
Westside Center
Division & Harrison
· 357-4755
Locally Distributed by Capitol Beverages, Inc.
p.lgl' .J Cooper Poi nt Journal
Sept. 24, 1981
now ring an alarm at the steam plant. The
person on duty at the plant immediately
calls 911 and reports the location of the
fire .
The main loss to the campus community is the accessibility of the fire
station, to both people dropping in with a
sprained wrist and people dropping in
with an interest in firefighting. The program to train students in firefighting, with
an emphasis on the campus fire prevention systems, has been dropped Members
of the Evergreen community have voi ced
concern that students will be less aw~ re
photo by J.E . Knauth
of the opportuniti es to be a volunteer.
However, students interested in being
volunteer firefighters can contact the
McLiine fire station for informati on.
Another concern is the reduction in th e
number of spaces for women volunteers.
Currently there are only two spaces in
district fire stations for women to live. If
' hese two spaces are filled, as they are
now, there are openings for women . No t
,lIllil the addition to the Mud Bay Road
,tation is being built will there be more
i han two positions for women as re' ldent
volunteers .
Mac Is Back
By OS DeZube
M ac Smith has returned to Evergreen t o
resume hi s duties as Chi ef of Security. In
a memo dated ,uly 31, Ri chard Schwart z,
VI(e pres idellt for bu si ness, empha sized
that "the politica l war is over ." Smith',
return c.a me two months af ter hi s res ignati on from Security early la,t June . .
After a per iod of negoti ati on a compromise was reac hed between Smith ,
Fdc ili t ies Direc tor Dave Wallbom , and
Sc hwa rt z, whi ch will brin g abo ut some
changes in sec uri ty procedures and the
photo by J.E. Knauth
Great selection of new records
and tapes at low prices
We buy and sell used albums
Most complete ticket service in town
for the community; they're getting a place
to live, and we're providing needed
housing for the college."
" If it weren' t for the money the college
provides and the student volunteers, we'd
iust be another volunteer department with
houses burning and people getting killed ."
On-campus, emergency fire and medical
help are no longer as close as they used
to be - 3333 can still be called in an
emergency, but instead of the campus fire
station it will now connect with the 911
switchboard. The red pull alarms, which
were connected with the fire station , will
loca ti on o f Security headquarters.
Smith, who previously reported to Wallbom, will now report directly to Vice
President Schwartz . The shift in the chain
of command is part of an effort by the
administration to ease the tension
between Smith and Wallbom . The shift
will stay in effect during a " cooling off"
period that is expected to last several
months.
Security's headquarters will be moved
from the LAB II building to the recently
vacated campus fire station behind the
Communications Building ,
Smith and two other Security personnel
resigned in protest of Dave Wallbom's
position as head of Security, a new poli cy
of rotation, and the refusal of the administration to move Security out of the
Fac ilities office
The two offi ce r's resignati ons were
accepted by Schwart z. Smith w as told
that hi s res ignati o n wouln not be
accepteo. The co ll ege ca lled Smith 's
reSignati on a " vaca ti on to think things
ove r."
Th e tension bf' tween W allbom and
Smith was cau sed ;n part by ordt'rs from
the admini strati on to improve radio communi cati o ns, Jnd to increase the visibili ty
and trai nin g of ,ec urity personnel, all of
whi t h havp now been carri f'd out.
Smith is sa ti sfi ed with t ht' changt's In
the chain of comm and and the new locati on of the security offi ce .
" I am · t he chief now, I also got a new
boss (V .P. Sc hwart z)
I have been
moved out of the Fac ilities offi ce . but I
lo'; t two of the bes t peopl e that ever
worked for me," he sa id .
W allbom say,; that he was personally
hurt by the charges, but that he wants
what's bes t for th e college
" We needed to be fair with all employees," said Wallbom, " and [thi s)
required rotation . Rotation was met with
resistance from some of those directly
involved ." W allbom said that all security
guard s and offi cers should be rotated to
all shifts, in ord er to keep from res tin g
"single jobs with sin gle people," and to
allow everyone to experi ence all as pects
of Security'S jobs.
Sc hwart z support ed Smith's tequest to
relocate Security because he felt th ere
was a need to move Security out of the
Fac ilities offi ce
" No o ne can exist without their own
territory
its own pl ace to exist, so that
it can be a functional unit. I'm trying to
separate each organi zati on, so that they
eac h have their own territorial integrity,"
said Schwartz.
BEGINNER OR ADVANCED· Cootie -.., IN ........ I
_
in I U.S. cohgI: $2,8119. Price ~ let fOUnd
trip 10 Savih from New YCM1t, room, _ , end tuition
tom!JIIt8. Go~ _
Ind Ioono"'- "" ei1vJbIe
-.
.
u.. with • $ponIoh ......." onond _
four houro I diy,
lour dIvI • _
, lour monthI. &In 18 In. 01 . - I_i·
. . " . to 4 _
-tMoghl in U.S. cohgoI ".., • two
A DELICATESSEN
253 NORTH DIVISION STREET
OlXMPIA, WASHINGTON 9850
'I'nn"HONE 357- 7573
pho to by I E. Knauth
stud('nt groups have raised conce rn abou t
Sec urity's move to the fire stati on because
uf its distance from th e core of ca mpu<;
Wallbom , though, said, " To say that
Set urity sho uld be in [the campu s core ).
says 'you come to me in stead o f being
out there looking for [crim el. The center
of ca mpu s should be student organi zati om and academic buildings ."
Many student groups who had hoped to
use the fir e statio n for their own purpo<;es,
including the CPI and the Rec Center
have bee n disappointed but the debate
over wh at to use the fire stati on for has
been avo ided .
The saf ety o f students seems to be
improved . Schwartz says, " Security is
functioning better th an it was." But he
adds, " I wo n't be happy until I'm sure
that everyth ing has settled down ."
ov_
_
time _ I. You< $ponIoh _
_ _ not
in. U.S .
will be _
Hurty,
~
_
I
by
.-oem. S I _ '
_ _ _ _ aur _ t o ' '"""'- til.
_ _ ' ....liIog ..... _ _ in U.S.
~
lot 01 time to . . . . . . . . . . . . . ,.. ,... We
I~ FUUY ACCllfO.
. . . , Jon. 31, MeI .....m June I,
ITID-A _ _ 01 T--,
~
CoIege.
SEMESTER IN SPAIN
2442 E_ Collier S.£. Orand "-PkII, MIeIliOM . . . .
(A
I.
ProorMl 01 Trinity Cllrlilian College)
MICHAEL HOLLY
PROPRIETOR
is open .in the Olympian
HOld 116 E Legion Way.
Come by and browse
for new books. Enjoy a
cup of coffee courtesy
of the Herb-N-Onion
and the Fireside. Hours
are 11-6 P .M. Tues . .
Sal. We have new books
for all aaes &nd interests.
Spedal orden dealt with
promptly.
CALL TO LL FA EE
.... SS2tOO6
for lUI infonnIItion 1-«11).253-90lIl
(In MIe"., Of II 1011 11M Une lnopefatl" cell 1.1....a·.,n COIIMLI
116 E. legionWoy
Sept. 24, 1981
Cooper Pomt lournal pagt> S
"
.
~
(
U.S. Alone in Public Strike Response
This article first appeared in the August
2~, 1981 issue of, Action, the weekly
newsletter of the A ,F,T,
r:::-----------+-----~---.:.....----. -
. -- - - '- -----.----'
We Need a Student Union
·Wp haw the Studl'nt Ac ti v ities Board
fril'll(b tor years
'0 mu ch tor obj ectivdl"p,'rdtio n lW«lu,,' he or ,h(' cannot
(S &A) whi ch solply handl es tilE' budge tary
ity . Th(' studl'nt who turns to the EAC
hl'gin to dec ipl1t'r the gUIdelines ,
I \t' I C: r. "I I gO\l'rrMIH pi Not the stu<i.'nh
and financial m at ter s of ~ tud t' llt organ izaguidl'lincs for a , olution , is likely to bE'
It ' ('I'm, W(,' V(' forgotte n that as s\u"tll, Il'l1 h • ( 1111(', 1('(\[11 and leave At I' VI'I '
ti on~ . Wp have the Evprgr eE' n Counci l,
intimidated all the morE' ThE' guidelin es
dt'nt ~, W("f(' tilt' most impo rt ant group on
.; rt "'I- tht'\ ,ii" merplv trdll,i l'nt s. They
madp up of student s, ,taff and fa culty
are confusing and ambig uous enou gh in
campus W~,' rp the reaon thi s sc hool
representatives, whi ch serv es an advisory/
' l,l\'(, ll lIlp tlnH' or opportuni ty, or pve n
themselves , but when the sheer volume of
E'xists. W(,'rp <l ls() thE' o nes that are so
,,', ll ll<I tl on , tf) IpiHn til(' a lr o nym ~, muc h
watchdog
functio n We also havE' the
rult's and regulatiOns is cons idered , it',
often il1tinlidatPd in d isputes with faculty ,
if,,, :h .. ( o nt enb , ot til(' obsc un' docuunofficial
Student
Info rmati o n NE'twork
easy to 5t'E' why an individual student
til!' ,ldministr,ltlon, finan cial aid, whoever
Ill ' 'l1h t h,lI supposedl y govern thl >; ,chool
[S IN) madp up of represen tatives fro m
would
give
up
in
anger
and
frustration
,
Studl'n h hdvl' no rp('ogni led ~ tudent
each seminar group , whose function is to
II r' lhr' pprmancnt rpsi<i ents - the
It's thE' agE' old mind set of "you can't fight
ddv()( atl' ufgd ni/ iltion that thpy can turn
,Irilllln istfati rm , f,lCUlty ,.I nd staff - wh"
di~,eminatf' information among students
city hall " Without advi ce <\I1d/ or group
to fm 1ll'lp with an on-campu~ adm ini straknow how to usp the I,\overn ance proNone of these groups plays the adv isory/
support : IIldiv iduals feel power less against
,t iV!' problpm 'It'll Help Legal Aid has ..
cedu fe, hl'rp They 'w been here for yedfs,
ildvoca tE' rolE' thilt a st udent union would
tE'm of doing thlllgs
providl'd SOIllP h!'ip in the past ..QIJUXHh, . .Ill!' pn,'Y:I~t ,5 y;s,
111mt o f thl'm have their fri ends and. on... ( '. ," ott
bl' able to fulfill. Thi s ca mpu, has a
At cording to popular rumor , governance
the' (,utbarks in legal servi ces~'their off ice
IlPctrom, ,~ I1c1 both the staff and faculty nucial need for such an organization ,
.It I:vf'rgreen was des ign ed to enable an
will bp(onw incr easingly overloaded with
e'ippc ially now with Threatened budget
wh o 1..11"\~ ho'" to U S(' the governancp
IndIvidual to affect changes in administralegal casps
pro( l'du r,,'> hc're TIlE'y've been hen' for
cu t<; of $ 2 h million ,
tional poli cy and procedures Even if it
The ,tucipnt< who attempt to follow
l or students to actively parti c ipat e in
\ .'a rs. IT10St ot thpl11 haw their frienn s ann
WPIP true that individual stud ents have
through with d campus grievancE' on their
thE' Evergrf'pn governanc e process and for
, nn"', ', li On<;, rlnn hoth the , ta ll ilnd
powl'r at I:vergr eE' n, it simply l akes more
own, will encounter their sharE' of bureauthpm to individually and collec ti ve ly
1.11 ult\ hdvP UI1t<,n support The perllld '
than o ne person to get things done. In
cra ti( rpd tapp and run around , They
df'fpnd and promote their interes ts in th is
n(, 11I r(" ldenh h,lVP had ye,lrs of expl'lI addition to thE' question of power and
may g() to ,I dE'an rE'garding a problem
. , chool, they m~lst thoroughly unders tand
('1 1<" In dea ling With The EVl'n,:reen
numbers , it also takes time and a conthey
haw
with
their
faculty
member,
only
,thE' gu idf'lines and procedures on which
A(i n.rnl strati ve Code ( tAU rult", and r('gu sistent E'IIor t to r("cogni ze a probl em,
to bl' infornlPd' by thl' dean, that he and
I,ll 10m In tht' end , it is the lone studt'llt s
~vpr gf('E'n oper a te~ They mu st also form
propose a soluti o n a~d then wait a year
that partl cul,lr fa.-ulty member have bE'P rl
\\ II i1 .I n id ea or pr ubll'm , who will giVE' up
" po liti ca l body whic h ran represe nt
,or two for the burpaucrafi c wheel s to
thost' interests
gr ind
Wt' hpartily support the id ea of forming
Anothf'r issue is ba ckroom politics . Like
Intercollegiate Sports
an fvergrE'en Student Union that would
any bureaucracy, Lvergreen does most of'
makp t hp v iewpOints of all studentsit s di sc ussions on poli cy changes behind
white, third world, mE'n, women, younger
dosed doors . The adminis tration has
st udE'nts ami older students, known to thp
do,E'd Deem ', mept in gs, th e Pres ident's
adm ini stration an d provide the mechCouncil meetings, and closed execut ive
ani sm for following through on proposa ls
meeti ngs of the Board of Tru stees, and
and suggestions, where a transient popupro and con side of the athletic> issue
yOLl ca n bet they're not just discussing the
By Ian Lambert z
lati o n i~ unable to, The student unio n
would set aside their stereotypes and
weather . When conf li cts arisE'
be it a
would also provide guidance to individual
prE' judi ces, athleti c achievement (and
sex discrimination case, an internal audit
~tudents who are attempting to mediate a
please define that as you will) could be
of a campus organization, or curriculum
Athl eti cs have ex isted at TESC since the
conflict through the grievance procedure,
viewed as another open door - another
decisions, a delicate ballet of academic
formati on of socce r clubs in 1971 . AthletE"
or who feel they have had their rights, as
avenue for Gree ners to do what they do
and administrative power politi cs occurs
have donnE'd uniforms , cheered eac h
it student, abused
best - engage in creative collaboration ,
at private performances that students
other on , and sweated their way through
If you are interested in participating in
When we had to re-schedule a women's
neither parti cipate in, nor observe,
competition in soccer, basketball , volleysuch a union and have suggestions for its
soccer match with the University of PortWhen discussion of forming a stude.!."t
ba ll , rugby, swim ming, sa iling, runnin g,
structure and poli Cies, write to the Everland
because
of
program
commitments
,
union
arises , inevitably someone points
softball , football , judo, ultimate frisbee,
green Student Unron c/ o the Cooper Point
the coach, players, and athletic director
out that there are numerous student
and fE'n cin g. What's the differen ce, then ,
journal, CAB 305, TESC, Olympia, 98505 ,
at Portland found it hard to believe that
groups which already fulfill that function .
between athl eti cs at Evergreen in th e earl;
we would allow academics to interfere
ypa rs and the I ntercoll eg iate program
with athletics , Two weeks later when playbel,\L1n in 1979 1
ing another sc hool our opponents tol s us
Until the inception of intercollegi ate
that they had heard a rumor that Ever- .
athl et ics, sports at Evergreen were of th e
gree
n students took their educations very
Volume 10 Number 1
c. lub sport na~ure Students formed clubs
seri
ous
ly We were complimented and
tha t com peted primarily with od{e r clubs
envi ed , I dare say we have a reputation .
Editor: Theresa "San" Connor
clnd occas ionally with other coll ege team s.
Associate Editors: john Bauman , OS DeZube
That in cident alone turn ed around a lot of
10 >;ome, these were the good o ld days,
Writers: Dean Alexander, Reg istrar Allen , Steve Bader, Steve Charak, jeff Cochran,
minds
.
Every
time
our
men
and
women
Days wh en a thl ete~ played for the fun
Andrew Derby, Chris Fitzgerald, Ri chard "One No Trump" Gentzell , Donova n Grey,
reac h o ui to more com ervative or trad irtnd v igor of sport rather than for the
Mic
hael Hall , Mike Helms, Mi chae l Huntsbu rger, David Inness, Geoff Kirk, Matt
tional gro ups and connect with them
glory of Tl: SC Days when wi nning and
Love, Nash Perkin s, Thom Ri chardso n, AI Shanker, Sam Solomon, Chri stopher Sterns,
common
love
of
sports,
we
through
thi
s
10'1 ng w(' re supe rflu ous to play, and makbecome better understood and our
and Lawrence "The Cynic" Sti llwell
Ing t hl' sports page of th e Dai Iy 0 wasn't
posture as a progrE'ssive institution is
Production Manager: j E Knau th
<,ve n it di~ t itnt drea m .
Graphics and Production: Lauren Childs, Norm Gall acci, Matt Love, Curt M arsden,
,t rengthened.
I hf'rp arf:' st ill sports clubs at fvergre en,
Pablo
" Pi ca sso" Schigurensky, and Steve Yap.
A
fear
ex
ists
in
some
that
the
very
but th .. t'l11pha,ls may seem to many now
Business
Manager: Karen Barryman
nature
of
athl
eti
CS
wi
ll
cha
nge
Evergree
n,
tt> 1)(' dirpctpd towa rd inter co ll eg iate
don'
t
beli
eve
Ihi
s.
The
at
hleti
c
program
s,
arts ancI events i l _ In ...t be recelWId by noon
I
,ltHl't i(, When the Evergreen community
The Coop« Potnt Journat Is published weekly
Tueeday fOf tM! week'. publication. All articles
the team s, are only what the peopl e who
fOf the student" faculty and staff 01 The E_IV," asked a fpw years back if it cared to
_ due by ~ p;m, FrideY fOf publication the
take
pat
in
th
em
make
of
them
,
They
are
g
_
Sl8t.
College. VIewS expressed _ not
haY!' 'I1tprcoll eg late ath leti cs, o ne could
week- All conbtbutlona muat be
n.c.u.t'Y thOM of the College Of of the follOWing
an extension of a process oriented, coopaIgnId, typed.~I"" IIId of - . b I e
s,w tllE're wa'i a noti ceabl e lack of interest.
JounW" ltaft, ~laIng material contallllCl
length . . . . . . will be .wlttlhtld on ~. . .
erative community , The essence of athI t has been sugges ted that the nature of
htnIIn dO.- not Imply llldoIMI'I*It · ." ttlil
The edltcn . . . . . the rtgIrt to NjacI materiel
letics lies in both teamwork and the
1WWIi~ I PI, Ottlcee 1ft located In . . College
tr,1ditional competitive athletic programs
and tl) edit .,y contributlone fOf length, oarnliberation
of
individual
potential.
For
ActIvlt_luIldlng,
CAB
1(M.
PtIoM:
-.e213.
' tIIIt, and atyte,
is " out of sy nch" with the philosophy and
All ..... to the tctitOf. ~, and
those who seek to learn, grow, and share
procE'SS of educatio n at Evergreen ,
Evergreen,
in
my
opinion
through
athletics,
I would like to suggest t/lat'atpletics at
has the potential to offer a very unique
1\' ('r ~rt'en could be a magnificent expresapproach .
'Ion of human spirit. If those on both the
\ \ 11<' 11I1til'l,t,l lll l, tilt' t,ll l~I('d mil!" of
III
Not Such a Bad Idea
The Cooper Point Journal
Disorientation Issue
P ,I).:(' "
Cooper Point lournal
Sept. 24, 1981
For the past few weeks people around
the world have been watching .two different confrontations, In Poland the trade '
union Solidarity has conducted strikes and
demonstrations against the government.
Here in the United States the Professional
Air Traffic Controllers went out on strike.
In Poland the union and its leaders have
gone unpunished, and the government
continues to recognize the union and
negotiate with it. In the United States the
U,1XXl strikers have been told that they
are permanently fired, union leaders have
been heavily fined, som~ have been jailed,
The government has refused to negotiate
WIth the Union, and the union is under
heavy fines , The government is taking
actIon In court to decertify the union so
that it will never again have to negotiate
with it.
What a contrast! Some have gone so far
35 to say that there seems to be more
freedom in Poland right now than there is
here in the U ,S, and that it smacks of
both inconsistency and hypocrisy for anyone to applaud the Polish workers and at
the same time condemn the strike here,
Of course, it is not true that there is
more freedom in Poland, Polish trade
unions are not just fighting for better
salaries and working conditions . , . but also
for a free press, the ri ght to meet the
right to have free trade unions c~ntrolled
by their members rather than their boss
the government. If there is any serio~s '
doubt as to,wheretb~eisfT],oI'f:!Jr~qm,
ask anvmember· of Solidarity ..... -",'. ,
The--question is: Should there be a
g,eneral legal prohibition against strikes by
public employeesl That's the law but
should it be? Some argue that th~re must
be such a law because government services
are essential and we can't tolerate their
disruption Maybe that was once true
when most government services were'
police and defense, but it is true no
longer. A strike by c ity bus drivers is no
more disruptive than one by drivers who
work for private lines. Shutdown of publi c
sc hools IS ill ega l. Strikes in private
.
sc hools, whi ch in some c ities serve more
((:')
"V II
,/
'I
~
than a third of the students, are legal. The
stnke by government air controllers '
which has disrupted but not halted 'air
traffic, is illegal. But a strike by airline
pilots, which could shut down all air traffic, is legal because pilots work for the
airlines, not ·the government. In each case
'
it's the same service that's shut down but if by public workers , it's prohibited
50 it's not the service but the idea that
public employees must not ,strike against
the government that's the issue . 'It's
strange that the U ,S" which got rid of
King George III over 200 years ago, is
about the only democracy still saddled
with this notion from the old monarchical
days that any public "servant': who strikes
is rea lly engaged in a rebellion against the
sovereign and therefore must be severely
punished . The United State's--gThe only
free country in the world which still ho ld s
to the notion and which reacts thi s way
to public employee strikes. The only one
which uses million-<lollar-a-day fines . The
only one to fire ali the strikers, jail them
and - as happened to one of the strikers take them off in handcuffs and shackles
Many Americans seem to think that this' is
the only way to deal with publi c
employees
But, not 50 , Canada has just gone
through a 4O-day postal strike, England, a
few years hack. endured a long nationwide strike by firefighters , Israel, Sweden,
Norway . . all face publi c worker strikes.
No one has acted the way we do, Instead
these countries have negotiated . On Ihos~
issues where thE' government has seen
merit in the uni o n's position, the government gave On iss ues where the government believed the union was wrong, it
refu sed to budge. Instead of jailing), fines,
, hackles , firings, thes(' governments
sl ~oWE'd patience, knowin g that (',Kh day
otf the loh was a pay less day Thp strikprs
would evp ntuall y return . None of these
cou ntri es is falling apart
and in none
are public employees paid exorbitantly
ThE're IS a more rational and more humanE'
way to deal with these crises than the
way we are currently using
whI ch
requires that there be some reduction in
thi s "pssential " serv ice ant:! some threat t o
saft'ty while new controllers are trained
Ye" our rountry is free : 'Bllt the day
wJlI comp when we vi ew some of these
event s with 'ihame. Even 111 democrac ies it.
I~ posslblp to act out of hysteria rather
than good s('nse. And, even if there mu st
\-X, punishment when laws are' broken hf. they ju st or unjust - there's sti ll such a
thing as making' the punishment fit the
crinl!'. Sure, we're freE' and Poland i s
not - but th E' re' ~ 'il ill c au s~ to worry ",hell
til!' puni shment for a 1llE'le strikE' 15 Illerp
" 'verp than for rpbeili o n therp
/\ 1 Sh anh 'r, AI r Pr" 'lcipnt
I{l'prrnlt'o lrom Union Teacher, St'PI "10 \
,:THE (OLl IJ C.!l , S i '~
DTI"; }KAo 'l )"1'1-\" ('PJ ,
VOTINb l TflLKlNb
DEGl~ION S, DE C.l~ IjN ~,
1'0 I.AV( IT ALL
ltv (otJ rROL ' .
C;;;
o
_-"""'-,~ :J
A
}j THI\T
c,\<ouP
(Ol-lTRI\Cl' 7
T
Ir:rr
,!/ ~IfrK!; ~-:-.r;
I
~' i,"
' , Ii 1,1'J.n r.'
" V
~
"
mo,
~
/1
i,.,
. . ,
~ \\\' \
,.
V-
'1
If
II I
Sept. 24, 1981
Cooper Point !ournal page 7
Student Survival
A Guide to Opening Evergreen's Doors
Academic Advising to the Rescue
they receive an introduction to interdi sciplinary learning and be exposed to
college level writing. However, there i s no
reason to limi t yourself to a Basic Program
if you feel that you can handle a Group
Contract or a Coordinated Studies Program and have the necessary prerequisites. The Academic Advising Offi ce is the
place to find out exactly what your .
options are and to figure out which program or mode of studying will fit your
needs.
Academi c Advising also offers a neat
little handbook called AAH (AcademiC
Advising Handbook) which , for all you
Evergreen Trivi a Fanatics, used to be
ca ll ed AARG (Academi c Adv isin g Resources Guide) . The handbook explains in
detail how to go about planning your
academi c goals . You might check out the
section on " How to Des ign an Undergraduate Education" whi ch explain s long-term
curri cul um planning , the resources on
campu s and fac ul ty profi les. There is also
a sec ti on focusing on Indiv idu al Contracts
It clarifi es t he process of drawi ng up a
contract, includi ng dealing with the
regist rar and contrac t forms.
By Th eresa Connor and Carrie Gevirtz
For those of you that are used to understanding college in terms of !;,asy-todecipher cou rse descriptions as Psycho logy 101. Calcu lu s 200, and Introduction
to Anthropo logy ; the most difficult thing
to figu re out w hen you f irst come to Evergreen i5 what the programs in the cata log
are all about
When I first came to Evergreen, I enrolled in an ambiguous ly entitled program
listed as Power and Personal Vu lnerability
try explaining that one to the folks
back home. For the first few weeks I
didn't know whether it was a 'literature
class, a philosophy class , a world hi story
ci ass or a soc iology class . As it turned
out , it was all of the above, dnd more .
It WdS a good class, but from th e descr iption in the catalog, I wou ld never
11 ,1\'C' been abl e to have figured ou t what
II \\ (IS , or that I was dyin g to study it , if
It 11,1dn't been for th e folks in academi c
,1(1\ i, lIl g A, I recall , I wa ndered int o their
" Tll ce \\I th a look oi quiet - or perh aps
nol ,0 quiet - de,per,l tion To put it
blunt ly , I \-\ ,1, confused , irustrated and
IlI' l ,lbout ready to tramier back to the
Uni\t' I'ilt\ of Was hlllgton .
rhe I\cadem ic AdVisin g Off ice is
1m ated all the fir st floor of the Library
Buildin g ri ght ne xt to the Financial Aid
ol flc,' rh e offi ce is there to help stud enis
( lan iy their goal s, demy st ify option s and
help them get around bureaucr.at i c and
academ ,( barri er, No one is ob li gated to
go to Academi c Advi sing w hile they're at
I: wrween , but new students are urged to
tJke advantage of it by dropping by
dUring orientat ion drop-in hou rs.
All studellt s have t he opportunit y to be
ass igned to a facuity advi sor in thei r
, pecialty areas, who the\ can consult at any
tllne duri ng the year about what program
to t ake and to get help with any problems
Contracts , Individual Contracts, and
Intern ships. However, to the neophite
Evergreen student, the study options and
the program descriptions have a tendency
to bl end together in a mass of confusion.
Believe it or not, the system has a
strategy whi ch ca n actually, be understood , New and first-year students are
encou raged to take Basi c Programs so
After you've been at Evergreen awhile,
start thinking about how you can combine
academi c offerings w ith individual
research projects or on-the-job training
through internships. Take advantage of the
advising workshops, and t alk to faculty
and other students , The more YOl:l know
about Evergreen and options you have to
choose from, th e better you wi II feel
about your academi c goals and your
decisions while you're a student.
See You at the Fair
By Carri e CC'v,rtz
I-or many students, old and new, Acadpmil Fair IS a harrowing ex peri ence
I-ir, t there's a maLe of numbers and
tdb ll'" and fa ces to sort through . I nevit,lbl\' , th e professor you want to talk to
" ( .lu ght up in a co nversa tion w ith an old
, Iudent who spe nt the su mmer doing the
Ill'" t IIl tere,ting things. It seems li ke an
l 'O Il Iwfore yo u get a chance to ask thi s
!..110\\ -,1-.111 , fi Il ed-w ith-confidellce prof es,m vour ,eemi nl!lv in ane Questi ons.
It doesn' t have to be so bad
First of all , studpnts have to reali ze that
the Acadpmic Fair is a place for them to
inttc'IView faculty And that the fac ulty
(whether it seems like it or not] are there
to talk about their programs, and if they
arc really involved, try to givp perspec tive
student s an idea of the ir attitude about
w hat they 're teaching .
I n ord er to come to a professor w ith
helpful question, ilt Academic Fair, you
need to dO"some researc h f ir>;! Read the
course de,cript ion and browse through
Close your catalog supplement anQ
open you Cooper Point Journal. The
information you'll find here is 1,000 times
more important than what you' ll divine
out there.
For instance, it is a fact that the faculty
member you end up working with is far
more important than all the program
descriptions and booklists combined, It is
the faculty in any given program who
determine structure, readings, and substance, It is your faculty seminar leader
who conducts your seminar. It is your
faculty member who confers with you
individually, guides you, works with you,
and who finally writes your evaluation,
What it comes down to, is that you can
be in a program which has little in common with your interests, or be in a program which is a total flop for all involved,
and still have a fantasti c educational
experience . , . if you got the faculty
member who was right for you.
Evergreerr is above all designed to provide an education tailored to the individual. That is the lJ1ajor difference between
this school and most others. That means
you'll have to take more responsibility for
your own education than you would have
to at another school, and it means you
should know everything you need to
about the ins and outs of this system to
enable you to do that
There are several ways to approach the
decision you must make before enrolling
in a program at Evergreen, You can
choose a faculty member and then enroll
in whatever he or she is doing that
quarter , (Says one veteran member of the
faculty: "Fin~ a tOj:}-notch faculty member and learn whatever it is they are
teaching,") You can find a program or
group contract through reading and
.. advice and enroll in that Or you can
decide that you're ready for an internship
or an individual contract and start looking
for the job and/or sponsor. Here are some
suggestions that might make the whole
enrollment process much easier.
The first thing most people need is
advice. Anyone who has read the cata log
is familiar with the vague and ambiguous
language used in almost every program
description. There is good reason for thi s
vagueness : these descriptions were written
over a year ago, before most program
faculty had even met each other, let
alone spent mu ch time thinking about the
structure and substan ce of a program .
The real development ~riod of academics at Evergreen occurs at the end of
summer, And since it is the faculty who
determine w hat any given program is
abou t, you should talk to them about the
programs whi ch look appealing to you ,
Your best chance to do this is at the
Academi c Fair. The coordinators of tbe
programs are listed in the catalog. They
are always good to talk to about the
program, and they can tell you who else
will be ~eac hin g the program.
So you're all set to ask some questions,
but all you can see is hallways and hallways of closed doors? Evergreen is not a
place for those who discourage easily,
Since there are no common requirements
at Evergreen, probably the only thing
everyone learns here is that persistence
pays off and never take no for an answer.
And that is one of the most valuable
things anyone ca n learn anywhere. It is
easy to be intimidated by people who
seem important because they possess a
skull full of "knowledge" or a file full of
degrees . But they are all here to serve
you , as is the school itself, Evergreen is
funded mostly by tax money from you
and your parents. You pay for everything
you get here, So shop around, ask questions, and make sure you're going to be
satisfied before you've spent your money
and received poss ibly the short end of
the bargain .
There w ill also be advi sin g work shops
at the end of each quarter for students in
Basi c Programs and once before the
Academi c Fair in the Sprin g There is
nothing that says you need to m ake all of
your academi c decisions during you r ftls t
year, so relax . ,
Ru ss Fox ass ists a studen t in an academic advisin g workshop .
that mi ght ari se. However, students can
al'>o schedu le a'l appointment with Russ
Fox the head of Academi c Advi sing, to
d i '~uss their academi c plan s.
The most wonderful thing about Evergreen is that there are so many different
way,> of studying. You get to choose fro m
Basic Programs, Coordin ated stud ~es,
Group Contracts, student-ill itiated Cluster
By Sam Solomon
develop perspec tive on what is being
offered . Oftentimes students aren't sure if
they want to continue studying in a parti cul ar field that they had earlier hoped to
focus on . By browsing around the Ac ademic Fa ir you can get information about
specialty areas that you've considered and
make researched dec isions about your
academi c career. It is important to see all
that is offered before settling into a
program
Sometimes the in for mal atmosphere of
Evergreen is hard to slip int o when coming
from the unalternative, outs ide world . But
this change isn' t sl{Pposed to be a shock
A good way to ease in , is to li sten to
ot her people talking, asking question s,
and responding. Often other stud ents ta lking to a professor will ask about aspects
of il program that you haven't thought of
before. Do n't be afraid to hang arou nd a
table for awhile to get a feel of the professor and students di scussing the program
you're in teres ted in .
If you have previous experience that
doesn't sound like the prerequisite in the
catalog, ask the professor. You may very
the bookstore in the " Program Books"
well be eli gible for a program you were
secti on to get an idea of how the program
interes ted in , but thought you didn't have
w ill unfold du rin g the nex t three to nine
enough background for. I t never hurts
m'b nths.
to ask .
O nce you get to the fa ir , remember to
The Academi c Fair i s there for you . It is
ask for prepared handouts, a cou rse syll athe
only t ime all quarter that you will
bus, and anything else you need to know
have
access to the fa culty as a group . It is
to take the program . Let the professors
only
time that you ca n seri ous ly look
the
wa rn or encourage you , Let them talk .
at Evergreen academi a. And most imporAnd let them make an impressio n.
tantly, you are the one w ho w ill be stu ck
The Academ ic Fair is a market place for
studying anthropology when you meilnt to
you to shor for an academic nitch to
take li terature.
settle in for a few months. It is important
'
.•
I;
)
,
-~----~~~~~~--I
After talking to people about their
respective programs, it is quite possible
that you won't find exactly what you
want. Is it time to go back to Issaquah?
Not necessarily: Everyone is always touting Evergreen's " flexibility" and here is
your chance to put it into practice. Just
because the faculty have' written some
sort of syllabus for a program does not
mean it is the final word . One lonely student speaking up can affect wondrous
changes,
If you want to do anything that varies
from the program plan , discuss it with
ALL WAYS TRAVCL SERtlICC,llic.
WE5TS'OE S"O~~'NG CEN,TIER
OLYMPIA. WASHINGTON
e43-8701
843.8'700
your seminar leader or program coordinator. Depending on the program faculty,
you may be able to do a completely
independent project that has little to do
with program activities, or you may have
. to read every book, attend every meeting,
and carry it all out to the .Ietter. If you've
got an idea, ask about it. If you've got a
point, don't hesitate to press it.
Another way to get what you want out
of Evergreen is to do it piece by piece;
that is, enroll in more than one program.
Sure, they say that the whole idea of the
school is to study one theme full time,
But you should be learning by now that
anything is possible at Evergreen if you
want it to be, If you can convince all the
faculty involved that it would be good for
you and them, you could enroll for, say,
twelve quarter hours in Political Ecology
and four quarter hours in journalism with
The Cooper Point Journal (come by and
talk with us about it) ,
One word of warning if you're thinking
of doing this : students who multiply their
programs and divide their credits usually
end up doing most of the work for all the
programs they enroll in, Unless you think
you can handle two or more full-time
course loads, be careful. Make sure you
know what is expected of you be fore 'you
sign.
So you've made it into a program.
What's next? The core of every program is
the seminar, a group of about 20 students
who meet once, twice or three times
weekly wid. a faculty member. It is here
that most of the action in a program
occurs, and it is here that the faculty
member you get for a seminar leader can
make or break your experience.
Most programs divide the students
randomly among the faculty members in
the program. This may be all well and
good if you have no particular preference
as far as the faculty in your program go,
or if there is no particular field you wish
expert guidance in .
But suppose you' re mostly interested in
psychology and your seminar leader is a
botanist? From the top down, Evergreen's
numerous administrators will tell you that
this is all consi stent with the idea of
coordinated studi es, Several faculty with
varying expertises pool their resources and
provide all their students with a broad
and integrated educational experience.
Maybe, in the spirit of Evergreen
coordinated studi es, you don't even want
to speciali ze in psychology (yet, anyway)
and would just as soon have a botanic
bias that quarter or year Know what
you're doing and everythin g will be cool.
As it happens, most programs at Evergreen fall into some general category (e.g,
literature, psychology, natural science,
etc.) . The faculty assigned to a program,
however, v'ery often do cross broad
boundaries. Therefore, it is crucial that
you be aware of your seminar leader and
avoid taking a program because it emphasizes filmmaking only to find yourself
studying with a sociologist.
By the same token, you might be taking
a program because of one specific faculty
member you want to work with , Obvi ously in this case you won't want to leave
your fate up to random chance. If you
want to get in somebody specific's
seminar, usually all you have to do is ·ask .
Often you'll need a good reason, the truth
should suffice, If the answer is no, ask
again,
Once you're in t he program and
seminar you want, you may suddenly find
, after a week or two that it isn't what you
wanted after all. Your fellow students and
perhaps even faculty may tell you that
registration ended long ago and the deadline for switching is past.
Actually, it's perfectly legal and
acceptable to switch up to the 30th day
of classes , You need the consent of the
faculty you have and of the faculty of the
program you want to enter. After the 30th
day you have to submit a petition at the
registrar's office if you want to switch
programs, Your petition should be submitted with the consent of all facu lty
involved and a good reason for the
switch. You will be notified a week to ten
days after the committee has met and
made their decision. The hardest part of
switching is finding a program that will
let you enter after it has afready begun .
Persevere!
Finally, no article of this kind would be '
complete without devoting some space to
those ever-popular individual contracts.
Most individual contract students meet
for one hour per week with their faculty
sponsor. Some faculty run book or work
seminars with all their contract students
but most don't. Your time is your own ,
and you are expected ,to carry on a fulltime college program independently,
taking what you need from your sponsor.
You should not only know exactly what
you want to do, but also exactly what you
want from your sponsor before you start
looking for a sponsor.
Start with a couple of faculty members
you know you could work with, and if
they can't help you they'll probably be
able to suggest someone who can. The
Academi c Advi sing office can help too.
Don't be discouraged if the person you
want is in a program. Program faculty can
and do take contracts. Persistence and
perseverance payoff
Fi nding a contract is largely a matter of
sellin g yourself to the prospect ive faculty
member. Think of it as a job interview,
make as goi:Xf an impression as you can.
Have well thought out ideas and show
your seriousness by brin ging your portfolio, samples of your work, and a short
paper about your proposed contract.
If you're not satisfied with your contract , you can change it or scrap it the
sa me way you ca n switch out of a program. You ca n switch out of a contract
and into another contract or program with
the approval of all faculty invol ved ,
The trues t thing you'll find in all the
propaganda published by Evergreen' s PR
department is what they say aoout Evergreen not being a place for everyone. It is
not. Evergreen is the place to find the
education you want If you do some looking you can find a better experi ence tha n .
wou ld be possible elsewhere. You just
haY\' to know how to look and then start
moving. In Richard Alexander'S immortal
word, about foundi ng father Merv
Cadwalfader and Evergreen, " I did not
mean tv build a maze; I plan ned a
pal are, '> haped to the matri x of the
human mind ." Th at is what Evergreen
can be.
Pizza
No matter what day of the week you
get a pizza cravin" there's somebody you
cancall: Pizza Haven_ ,
Just dial our home delivery nwnber
7 days a week and we'll bring a
hot pizza right to your door,
If you're not in the mood for pizza,
we've got sandwiches, salads, spaghetti
and soft d.rinks. too,
So clip out the coupon and call Pizza
Haven, Then leave the driving to.us,
0IJnPa • 210 Capi1JoI Mall • 754-37t I
Sept. 24, 1981
~l.Igt' 8 Cooper Point Journal
Sept. 24, 1981
.... ,
Cooper Point Journal page <)
,
Registration for the Illiterate
By D.5 D ez ube
The first thing that you need to register
are form s and a pen. You must have the
foll owing dittos and forms to be succes siul. The Illultipage listing of courses
offered and who is teaching them . The
yellow pamphlet entitled Registration
Information Especially for :- - - - - The registration form itself, blue for continuing students, white for new students,
and gold for special students, your check'
book or other appropriate papers for
payment, and possibly an insurance
waiver form (optional) .
that it is the registrar that decides when
space beneath the signature required you
the class is fulL Some instructors have
do, if there's a " N," well you figure it out.
been known to refuse signatures to qualiTake your signed registration form to your
fied students, in an attempt to allow
appointment, watch the nice registrator
favored students, already equipped with
punch you into the computer. If the class
signatures, to beat the qualified but sigis full have her put you onto a waiting
natureless students to the regi5trar's
list a~d go find the necessary signatures
computer terminaL Don't let this happen
for' your second choice. You will be
to you. If you are qualified, demand a
allowed to return that same day without
signature, or threaten to go to the deans,
an appointment. More on waiting lists
nicely.
below.
PART-TIME DAYTIME The procedures
are the same as for full-time daytime.
DROPPING AND ADDING : To drop or
PART-TIME NIGHTTIME: The proceadd a course, get a CHANGE/ DROP/ ADD
dures are the same, but YQU register on a
form from the registrar. If you needed a
first-come, first-served basis; after
signature to get into the class, you'll need
5:30 p.rn.
.
one of the same to get out. In registration
INTERNSHIPS AND INDEPENDENT
lingo, drop means to discontinue enrollCONTRACTS : You must do everything a
ment add means to increase hours, and
full-time person must do, but you must
change means either of the above.
have your contract form signed and with
you when you register. This means that
INSURANCE: Accounts receivable
you will need four or five more signatures
handles in surance and can explain the
than a student in a program and shou ld
policies to you. If you dQ not want insurbegin to get them well in advance.
ance fill out an INSURANCE WAIVER
WAITING LISTS : When your first choice ., card.' Unless you fill out this waiver you
course is full, the Registrar's Office will
are going to get insurance.
put you on a waiting list. If other students
drop the course or if it is expanded, the
DEADLINES : See the ca lendar below.
space created is given to the student on
Be forewarned, if you don't make these
the top of the waiting list. To get onto the
payment deadlines, after you register, you
waiting list, you must have all the forms
can still be charged up to 50% of your
and signatures. You'll probably have these
tuition. If you don' t pay by the 30th
already, if you 've followed the correct
calendar day (check the calendar below)
procedures so far. If a faculty tells you
you will be disenrolled. If you don't
that the course is. full and therefore s/ he
register by the 10th calendar day, you
cannot give out any more signatures, don't won' t be disenrolled because you won't
give up. Demand a signature, remind the
be enrolled anymore, because you'd be
faculty gently that a signature only mean,s
basically S.O.L. (sorta outa luck). So cut
that you are qualified to take the course,
out his calendar and hang it up and pay~ _
not that you may take the course, and
and register on tim~!
FULL-TIME Assuming that you have
THOROUGHL Y read the yellow regi,tration information pamphlet, and have
chosen your first and second choices of
classes, you should call the registrar at
(206) 86&-6180 and make an appointment
to register, the sooner the better as many
classes close. Before you go to your
appointment you should collect all the
signatures you will need . To ascertain if a
signature is needed, check the multipaged
pink class listings. If then' is a " Y" in the
MONDAY
TUESDAY
September
21
New student _ ___
registration 8:30-4 : 30
WEDNESDAY
-
22
------ 1-----
24
~
29
28
Classes begin
-- -
"...."
~
"...."""
~
---
__
5
~_I
1
October
:::-~
Withdraw and get
100% back
.... ..........
- )
New or continuing
student registration
8: 30-4: 30
2
DEADLINE FOR
REGULAR
REGISTRATION
AND FEE PAYMENT
Last day to register
without late fee
----- ,...---
7
6
!,
Registration by appointmen!.
30
Registration Day
..... ?fferings 8: 30-4: 30~
Registration Evening
... offerings 5:30-7:00~
" When all is said and done, nothing
teaches more effectively than coping with
reality. "
-Evergreen Cultural Literacy Document
25
Continuing student
registration 8 : 30-4: 30,
Even ing student
registration 5 :30-7"
Academic fair day
programs 9 : 00-12 : 00 ,
evening
programs 5 : 30-7"
By Michael Hall
FRIDAY
THURSDAY
23
~
Getting a Dose of the Real World
~
8
9
END OF LATE
REGISTRATION
$15 late fee begins
Withdraw from now
until the 27th and get
50% back
--- .... ----_. 1------- ------ -----12
14
13
~----- ~-----19
15
------ -----
?O
16
----23
22
21
-
26
-----
---.--- - - - - -
~----- ~-----27
28
29
How is an internship set upl Each
quarter of every internship is plannecJ,
arranged, conducted and evaluated in
terms of the student's academic objectives
30
LAST DAY TO PAY
TUITION AND FEES
-----
---
'life
~
212 W. 4th
943-7663
o
(5
..c
Q.
have one, assist you in locating a faculty
sponsor.
We are located on the first floor of the
Lab I Building. Call us at 86&-6391 to
make an appointment or stop in Tuesday,
Wednesday or Friday between one and
three o'clock for our drop-in hours . An
appointment might be a better idea, however . drop-in hours get very busy some
weeks .
Scholastic endeavors are extremely
important to career exploration. Combine
those endeavors with internship activities
and your chances of success are enormous.
OLYMPIA FOOD CO-op
-
ELD
Fea",;ng, E,p,.,." Eu,opean coff"",
Whole wheat and Continental p.,,,le,
Italian Sodas and Herb Teas
~ezzo
.......
>-
.!:l
~
·,nclud,ng regIstratI on
~
Yes, the academic world is a slice of
reality
but a far larger slice of most of
our lives is that which we think of as "the
professional world. " So how can a student
achieve quality learning through coping
with realityl Through an internship. We
all have a general idea what an internship
is, but let's get specific. An intern is a
qualified student in a professional field
gaining supervised practical experience.
Hm-m-m .. that's specific in a general
sense. You might be interested in a more
precise degree of specificity, but that
would be difficult since internships cover
so many areas in so many ways. I can
give you some examples. But first, I want
to give you some details about the Internship Program that is offered through Evergreen's Office of Cooperative Education .. . hereinafter known as CCK)P Ed.
Keep in mind that an internship is not
for everyone. A student should have an
idea of what s/ he wants to learn through
an internship It's also helpful to have
some sense of career goals and a desire to
explore those ideas through experiential
learning activities .
So when is a student qualified to do an
internship? Qualifications vary according
to the individual positions, but generally a
student is expected to be in the junior or
Senior year and have some work experience or academic background in the area
of the internship position. In some cases,
however, a strong interest in an area is
just as important as specific experience.
Most internships last year were set up
through Individual Learning Contracts.
Some Coordinated Studies Programs and
Group Contracts also have internships included in their educational activities . In
any case, the actual field work may be a
substantial part or a small part of the stu-.
dent's learning activitie6. The other part,
the academic component, supplies the .
balance
Where do internships happen? Most
internships are conducted in and around
the Olympia area . Many opportunities are
also available in Seattle, Tacoma, Portland and, in fact, throughout the United
States and beyond Two students are
investigating basi c-education in Puerto
Rico. Another intern is studying maternal
health practices in Swaziland, Africa.
Each internship is sponsored by a member of the faculty or by a highly qualified
staff member who has been approved by
the deans to serve as a contract sponsor.
Intern and sponsor meet on a regular basis
during the quarter to discuss the internship. In addition to providing substantial
academic input and awarding credit, the
faculty sponsor is encouraged to conduct
at least one visit per quarter for in-state
internships at the student's internship
location. The student' s field work is
guided and supervised by a "field supervisor" selected on the basis of her/his
qualifications, experience and willingness
to serve as a mentor during the internship.
Because the student, faculty sponsor and
field supervisor all cooperate to provide a
quality educational experience, we arrive
at the designation "CCK)P Ed."
for the quarter. Internship activities, academic component and the respective
responsibilities of the student, field supervisor and faculty sponsor are negotiated
before the quarter begins. The academic
component that is included in almost all
internships is tailored to meet the specific
needs of the student. Examples of typical
academic components include : Keeping a
journal ; reading related books, articles
and reports; enrolling in a related module;
writing a report or scholastic paper; or
creating a work of art. That's not a complete li st, but it should give you an idea
of the kinds of activities that provide an
academic balance to internship activities.
More than 5,000 internships have been
conducted in the past decade by Evergreen studen ts. Many have been hired by
the agencies they interned with after they
completed their internships. For others, it
was an opportunity to step into a professional setting, take a good look around,
and readjust their career goals based on
new information and experi ence.
There are thousands of success stories.
Dean Katz , for example, started his
journalistic career in a legislative internship with The Seattle Post Intelligencer
He' s now the Washington, D.C., Bureau
Chief for The Seat/Ie Times . Margaret
McDaniel recently graduated after conducting research internships with Group
Health Cooperative and The Association
of Washington Businesses. Margaret is
now Senior Fiscal Analyst with The Washington Research Council. Deborah Shauver
did an internship through Evergreen's Col lege Relations Office. She was recently
hired as Director of Public Relations for
St. Peter Hospital's surgery department.
She now holds the position of Unit Manager of Surgery at St. Peter.
It would take an entire issue of The
Cooper Point Journal to li st all the successful internships that have been conducteoin"fvergreen's short history Last
year Evergreen students were involved in
610 internships. Of the hundred or so
'
conducted during summer quarter, h ere
are a few position titles so you can see
th e diversity of possibilities
Fine Metals Sculpture Design Apprenti ce
Probation Counselor Trainee
Environmental Technical Writer
Apprenti ce Paralegal
Sa lmon Cu lturist
Wilderness Edu ca tion Instructor
Land Use Planning Assistant
Solar Energy Techni cian
Crisis Clinic Phoneworker
Consumer Protection Claims Representative
Ornithology Field Researcher
Architectural Modelmaker
Computer Programmer/ Systems Analyst
Domestic Violence Counselor
Apprentice Recording Studio Producer
Whale Surveyor
job Placement Counselor/Employment
Specialist
Graphics DeSigner
Veterinary Assistant
Assistant to U.S. Representative Don
Wilderness .Guard
Bonker
Indian Youth Camp Counselor
Co-op Ed has over 400 internship posiMagazine Photo & Graphics Editor
tions on file. Listed below are a few of
Organic Farm Helper
the internships available for Fall Quarter.
Yacht DeSigner
We invite you to make an appointment to
TV Documentary Production Assistant
come in and talk with a counselor. .We
Water Management Technician
can tell you about placement opportuniEnvironmental Specialist
ties that seem to meet your needs, help
Photographer's Assistant
you develop an internship if we don't
Apprentice Shipwright
have the one you want on file, explain
Nutritionist/Food Program Specialist
the contract negotiation process, help
Teaching Assistant
arrange an interview with a prospective
Botanical Illustrator
field supervisor and, if you don't already
Westside Olympia,
EGUIPMENT
Hours : M -F 10 a.m .-f> p.m.
Sat. 11 a.m .-5 pm .
Sun. 12 noon-5 p.m.
I
"Olympia's First Espresso Bar"
Open
days a
10:AM - 7:PM
2 blocks east of the
BowmBn St. bus stop
921 N. ROGERS
• Custom Made
• Highest Quality
• Ultra- light Tents
NEW
&
WORKING MEMBER DISCOUNTS
111 N, Washington 357-4812
STORE TOUR EVERY SATURDAY AT NOON
•
pngP 10 Cooper Point journal
Sept. 24, 1981 , Cooper Point journal page 11
....
I
t
I
How-to Get Some Greenbacks
members who would be most closely
involved. Faculty should discuss projects
with their respective dean .
Faculty Sponsors
Any project initiated by students will
require a faculty member as project director (the person in charge). The project
director will be the authorized 'person to
supervise budgeting and expenditures, and
help insure that all grant conditions, such
as progress reports, are met on schedule.
If you are developing a project ideas as a
student, it's a good idea to involve a
faculty member early on who will be willing to serve as project director.
'
Media Projects
So you've got this great idea for an
academic project ... maybe you want to
fl y to Mozambique to film the rare
African Tree Shark, or maybe you want to
do a socio-psychological study of lefthanded, female trombone players ..
you 're long on ideas; but short on greenbacks . For you , we have a solution
grantwriting.
To help you with the demystifying of
the grants process, TESC has a grants
coordinator on staff, Donovan Gray. He
assists the College's efforts to seek and
secure outside grant support. Whether it's
a foundation, corporatio~; non-profit or
government funding source, the grants
coordinator can help staff members, students and faculty in searching through the
maze of funding potentials which seem to
abound ·in the world around us. Here's a
summary of important points to keep in
mind should you be interested in e~')lor
ing grant support:
Early Contact
T he first person you should see is the
grants coordi nator . Donovan's office is
located at L. 3103. Call him at 6565 for an
appointment. Before you come in for an
appointment, you should stop by and pick
yp a copy of "Before You See the Grants
Coordinator. . ," a checklist of important
points for you to consider about your
project idea.
Lots of Leadtime
It takes many months (sometimes up to
a year) to secure outside grant support. If
you need support for a project starting in
Nlarch, January is too late to begin looking You should allow a minimum of six
months' leadtime in trying to secure grant
support.
Establishing Priorities
Due to the part-time nature of the
grants coordinator's position, priorities
have to be estab'lished about which
projects will get the greater amount of
attention and assistance. For a project to
weather the application/approval process
at TESC, it's important for it to be recognized as "an institutional priority."
Discussing your project idea with different representatives helps you in determining where your project idea might fall in
this priority process Students should discuss project ideas with those faculty
Internships
News Production Assistant
Tacoma, WA
Student intern would work directly with the
news aSSignment editor, researching news
stories, cataloging material. some news writIng , and coordinating assignments with
reporters and camera persons in the field . In
addition , some techn ical work with electronic
'
editing systems will be introduced.
Student must have strong undergraduate
work in communications, with emphasis on
writing sk ills .
1 quarter. 40 hrs.l wk . Volunteer position.
Claims Representative
Olympia. WA
Student intern would assist staff employees
of the Olympia Consumer Protection Office.
Provide information to consumers on various
laws, handle written complaints by consumers
against specific businesses and may be asked
to handle some routine investigation .
Prefer student with background in: Political
SCience , Business Administration. Liberal
Arts or Psychology .
1-2 quarters, 20-40 hrs.l wk. Paid position.
Grants and Research Assistant
TESC
Studen t intern would provide assistance in
researching funding sources both public and
private. individual . corporate and governmental tntern wou ld also assist in the preparat io n 01 grant p'rOposals with an emphasiS on
assis ling students with project and proposal
development.
Prefer student with good writing , research
ski ll s. Student should type (30-60 wpm) and
have good telephone manner. Intern will need
to know how to work well in small groups and
with individuals . Ability to abstract intuitively
is a "plus ."
3 quan ers. up to 40 hrs .lwk . Work study or
yolun1eer position.
Solar Engineer/Draftsperson
Olympia. WA
Student intern would partiCipate in solar site
surveys. solar catcu lations (heat loss and
gains) . collection sizing . Dralting working
drawings for new houses and retrofits. Student intern would obtain experience in field
installations of domestic hot water systems
and passive solar solariums.
Prefer student with background in : Mathemati CS. drafting . design. solar energy .
bu si ness or communication skills. Basic
typing ability.
1-3 quarters, paid position for work study
qualified : 20-40 hrs .lwk.
S&A Coordinator
TESC
The student intern shall be responsible for
facilitation of S&A Board meetings, facilitation and selection of board members, setting
up altocation structure for S~A fees and
clerical work of the following nature: typing
minutes. agendas. memo's and 'iling information pertinent to the S&A.
The background needed for this position is
in management , government, human relations
and the ability to work well in groups. Knowledge in all these areas is help'ul. but not
necessary .
3 quarters. 20-40 hrs.1wk. Paid position.
Partner In Nursery and Vegetable Growing
Oroville. WA
Student intern would help with 'arming activities , do research on selected agriculturalhorticultural topiCS. help in reaching people
with appropriate agricultural practices .
Pre'er student with horticultural background
and farm experience. A student with dedication towards a better agriculture would be
ideal.
1 quarter. 40 hrs.lwk. Profit-sharing and
room and board .
Outdoor School Intem
Portland, Oregon
Student intern work with all resource instructors on concept paths, assist with program
areas , including meals, campfires, recreatfonal
activities, and cabin activities , be involved
with pre-Outdoor School stall training. work '
with the staff on the training of high school
counselors. work on the deve,lopment and.
implementation of special projects to enhance
the curriculum . work with budgeting process.
administrative respon si bilities and work with
the si te supervisor .
Prefer studen t with academic background
in : Scie nc e Education, Biology , Ecology .
camp skills and activity planning .
1 quarter, approx . 40 hrs ./wk. Paid posit ion .
Women's Health ClinIcal AssIstant
(Five pOSitions) TESC
Student interns would counsel students on
birth con trol, health needs and preventative
health, perform minor lab workl assist pro'esslonals with exams and attend trainings and
the Women's Health Clinic stall meetings .
Pre'er student with previous experience In a
clinical setting or Interest In Health or Social
Sciences.
.
1-3 quarters. Itexlble hours . volunteer
positions.
Projects that make extensive use of the
College's media equipment, such as television, recording or film, present special
considerations . As the College's academic
program budgets get tighter, the use of
this type of equipment becomes more
critical and subject to extensive review by
faculty and deans. It is beneficial to
involve staff directors from these areas in
the project development stage. Judith
Espinola, Media Services Coordinator, can
be helpful in answering questions about
scheduling extensive use of media
equipment.
level of Requested Funding
Projects which need smaller amounts of
funding ($1 to $1,000) have better chance
of getting funded in a shorter period of
time. Projects that need for larger
amounts of funding take much longer. Be
realistic about the size and scope of your
project. Media projects; especially student
film projects, are among the most difficult
to find funding for. However, there have
been student film projects in the past
funded from outside grant sources, so it's
not an impossible task ; it's just very hard .
General Comments
The Development Office is the beginning and ending point for seeking grant
support . All proposals being submitted to
outside funding sources have to be sub-
Intramural Coordinator
TESC
Student intern would assist Director
Intramurals with program development , group
leadership , program evaluation. Help to
develop co-c urricular activities and Th ird
World student involvement .
Prefer student with experience with sports
and recreation . Ability to deal with groups
essentiaL
1 quarter, 15 hrs.lwk. (5 paid/10 volunteer) .
0'
Technicat Assistance Project Assistant
Olympia, WA
Student intern would participate in hotline
crisis intervention: program (shelters advocacy
and counseling 'or battered women, abusers)
referral , develop and maintain regional resource library , assist in provision of over the
ph·one and on-site program consultation and
technical assistance around the state, participation and possible development and impletraining programs 'or program
mentation
advocates.
Pre'er student with background In: Women's
Studies, Sociology, Psychology, Community
Organization, BUSiness. Library/Resource
development (any of these) .
1-3 quarters. flexible hours, paid position
'or work study qualified, travel covered .
0'
Teaching Assistant
Lacey . WA
Student intern would be responsible for some
group supervision and Instruction of handicapped children.
Student with an Interest in working with
young handicapped children Is preferred.
1 quarter. 15 hrS.lwk. Volunteer position .
Juvenile Rehabilitation Counselor Aide
Student intern would be responsible for
assisting clients with personal matters, job
'inding , recreation, case planning, survival
sk ills , and accompanying clients on !rlps,
hiking , fishing and so forth . Positions available In Port Angeles, Shelton. Olympia.
Chehalis , Longview, and Vancouver.
It is preferred that prospective interns have
experience or knowledge of the causative
factors involving problem youth .
1 quarter, negotiable hours. Volunteer position : some expenses.
Environmental Technlcat Writer
Olympia
The intern would edit and produce the monthly
newsletter, "Shoreline/Coastal Zone Management. " Other dulles may include developing
public in'ormatlon brochures. editing a revision
the coastal program document , and
aSSisting in the development of workshops.
The pre'erred academic background and I or
work experience for this position Includes
journalism, advertising , communications. and
other related fields .
1-2 quarters, 20 hrs.lwk. Paid position.
0'
mitted. by the Development Office, so
that outside funding sources know that
the proposal has the official approval of
the College. This is also important in our
coordinating all contacts with funding
sources, which avoids any confusion by
the 'funding source over who represents
the College's point of view.
At the same time, you can help us by
letting us know of any contacts you might
have with a funding source. Often,
parents, relatives and friends of students
who work in corporations, government
agencies or foundations have been most
helpful in securing funds for College
projects. If you have such a contact, let
. the Development Office knbw about it.
The Rewards
Though it might appear to be a confusing maze, many student projects have
successfully been funded through grants.
This past year's efforts included:
Pennies
·from
Heaven
f,
And We Mean Pennies!
By John Bauman
I
To be truthful , I'm reluctant to write an
arti c le on the Financ ial Aid office. After
all . they supported me for three years of
my life. I t hink t hat's an accurate statem ent , but it's certai nly open to di spute.
vou might say that the government supported me, o r that vague aggregate. the
taxpayers. Vou mi ght say that I support ed
myself by filling out forms (at a remarkab ly hi gh hou rly wage ). The question is a
subjective one. I wasn 't working . . I had
an income
som eone was my benafactor
and who fit the ro le better than the
folks at Financial Aid? They' re so fri endly,
so accessible, so helpful
To a student from far away, the
Financial Aid people are the closes t thing
around to generous parents with a large
bank account .. a very large bank
account. Who would have thought that a
part of the job of parenting could be performed by committee? It sounds like -the
beginning of a bad joke It is truly
miraculous that the Financial Aid people
fill this role so admirably. I wish to be
sure that they know they're apprec iated,
and also make known my own lack of
objectivity regarding the subject. I trust
that I've succeeded in both .
Most of the news about financial aid
concern s loans. The interest on Guaranteed Student Loans (GSL) will go up to
9 percent beginning October 1, 1981.
There will also be a 5 percent " origination
fee" c harged by the bank making the
loan . The fee will be deducted from the
• $500 to conduct research on "neardeath" experiences, which resulted in a
published report which made a substantial national contribution to this growing
area of knowledge;
• $1,250 for scholarships for young people
to attend the student-initiated "Bridges"
wilderness experience program;
• $24,719 for a film project on Native
American fishing rights . Over the past
several years, TESC has been awarded
more National Science Foundation
grants for student-originated-studies
projects than any other college or university in the United States.
To assist the campus community with
the grants process, the grants coordinator
will be conducting grantswriting workshops in the near future. Watch the CPJ
and "Happenings" for announcements of
workshop dates and times. I n the meantime, if you are considering a grant, even
if it's just a gleam in your eye at the
moment, contact the grants coordinator
for advice and assistance.
Programmer / Analyst
Olympia, WA
Student intern would report to Director and
conduct investigation of mini/micro computer
applications; write computer programs1 interface with operating systems/data communications applications.
. Pre'er student with commercia! programming experience; computer science/ data
processi ng education.
1 quarter, 20 hrs.l wk. Work study position.
So you finally get to Evergreen after
shell ing ou t a few bucks o n your airplane
ticket , d eposits o n your apartment , phone,
power and furniture. Vou find out you r
bank account is runnin g low and your
wa ll el is fee ling li ght and o n top of it all
you still have n' l paid you r tuiti on . You
wake up o ne morning to the awfu l rea li zati o n thai it's t ime to find a job.
But don 't despa ir To ease the burden
of job hunting , es pec ially for those new
to the co ll ege, the Evergreen Finan ci a l
Aid off i ce wi ll post on-campus job posi tions sta rt in g Sept. 2'\ Any student may
stop in to c heck the li st, and staff
perso nnel wi II be on hand to refer them
to an interv iew with t he d es ired employer.
Jobs wi ll be broken down into two main
categori es: work / study and institutional
Work /s tudy , wh ic h is part of a federal
finan c ial aid program, sets aside a certain
number of jobs for students who are
eli gibl e for work study posit ions as part of
the ir finan c ia l a id packet. On ly work
0'
Assistant to Ptannlng Services
Tumwater, WA
Student intern would assist a professional
planner in comprehensive planning, commu·
nity planning, parks and recreation planning,
statewide planning .
Prefer student with background in : Environmental Planning. Comm unity Planning , or
Geography.
1-2 quarters , approx . 20 hrs ./ wk . (or more) ,
volunteer position .
Sept. 24, 1981
JE
Knauth
dents appli ed betore the d eadline (last
April 15) to ex haust the ava il ab le f unds. If
you haven't applied yet , you 're out of
. luck . vou may gpt i1 federa l basic gritnt .
hut that's all th at\ "ill ava il ab le. The
moral : apply befo rt' the deadline'
Ilere's some · ad~i( f-' tor those who
,rrewed up thi s year r inanc ial Aid need s
vour Stud t' nt Eligibilitv Report bv April 1.
'0 you mu st mail your hnan c ial Aid Fo rm
to the Coll egp S<holarship Servi ce by
March 1. If you 've 'E'en the appli cat ion .
you know wh,lt d pain It is . I plan to sta rt
worki ng on mll1<' t hi ... weekend .
ALPINE
CLEANERS
•
•
•
•
QUALITY CLEANING
ALTERATIONS
DRAPERIES CLEANED & PLEATED
LEATHER CLEANING
7 AM - 6 .PM MON - FRI - SAT 9 AM - 5 PM
mud bay- potterY-
stud y e ligibl e student s may apply for
these positi ons . )nstitutional pmiti o ns,
however , are open to anyone o n ca mpu s.
The types of jobs whi c h w ill bf' o ff ered
und t hf' w ages vary great ly . Positi o ns may
be anything from library helper or , hower
room attendant to secretary to a lab aide
Starting pay rUIl S from $3.35 pf' r hour
and is based o n the student 's ex peri ence
dnd the job 's res ponsibility leve l. Ra ises
are given to students for every 400 ho urs
t hat they work .
Cert a in lo bs, suc h as those o n Th e
Coop er Point Jo urnal, the KAOS radio
stati o n and other student o rgan izations,
can even be turn ed int o internshi ps .
However, int ern ships must be clea red
t hro ugh t he Cooperative Education off ice
It's also a good idea t o c hec k the int ern ships ava i lahle through the Cooperat ive
Education o ffi ce here on ca mpus,
866-6391 . They m ay be able to place you
in an int ernship pos it io n where you can
get both m o ney and c red it for your work.
Once hired. a student can work a maxi -
mum o f 1<) hours Ill'r week during the
u( uderni L period , the avt' r ag~' work
sc hedule being 15 hours . If 'ionworw
w i, hp'i to work over tht> m ax imum, thf' n a
w<l iwr mU 'i 1 bf' prese nted to thp bus in ess
ll),lI)itgt'r, Ken Wink lpy. for approva l. Thi s
" not u ... uall y all owpd , but if you need to
work ill orP hOll r... it " wort h a shol.
Roughl y Olll'-qudrlt'r of I:vergref'n\ stud pnh drP em pl oyed by thp (o ll pge and
m os t of the positi o ns an' fil led by IhoSf'
w ho t ake adva nt agp of th e filii lob ~alr
If t hat 's th e case, there arp port -lime Job.,
ava ililhle in the O lymp ia area . Tllf' Dail y
O lympi ill) ha ... c1 li sting of available jobs
You ca n also check with the O lympia Job
Sf'rv icf' Center at .5000 Capit o l Blvd . or
(a ll Di al-a-Job at 7~3-4.5.50 . Another option
i, to hit the streets and con tac t loca l
sho ps and restaurant s about upc oming
Jo h op(~nin gs.
If iii I else fai ls and people ca ll you a
" clamn Crpener, " wh ile tossing you out o n
your butt, you ( <In ,dways go into door-todoo r yo-yo sa les.
1754-4950 )
CAPITOL VillAGE SHOPPING CENTER
400 COOPER PT . ROAD s.w.
PETE RSONS
Stoneware Pottery
by Curtis Haefer &
Susan Rowell
8 a.m. - 9 p.m. weekdays
218 W 4th Oly.
10 a.m. - 7 p.m. Sundays
•
.open, every
Tues-Sat 1(}.5 p.m.
493~ . mud bay rd. nw
olympia . wa. 98502
P,lt-!f' 12 Cooper Point Journal
students with less than maximum need
will have their grants cut in half . They
wrll recetve full grants fall quarter, onehalf therr grant winter quarter, and no
grant spring quarter.
Last year the eligibility rules were
relaxed . Students were eligible to receive
grants after three years independence
Irom therr parents, rnstead of needing five
Yf'ars rndependence.
.
Laura Thomas, director of Eve;green' s
financial aid office estimates that about
40 students here will be affected . She
warns that further c uts in the program are
like ly later in the year, but all grants
awarded for fall quarter will be give n out
in full .
The budget for the other programs has
,1 11 bef'n aWilrded . In fiKt, eno ugh stu-
Bv Theresa Connor
Fish Culturisl
Rochester. WA
Student intern would assist hatchery personnel
in all phases
satmon rearing . This would
include incubation of eggs, size grading. size
sampling , water management, disease diagnOSis, feeding transport, etc .
Prefer student with background In: Biology/
Mechanical background Is preferred but not
required. Prefer student have work experience
of an outdoor variety.
1-2 quarters, hours lIexible. pay negotiable.
0'
The State Need Grant program awarded
more money than is available for the
1981-82 sc hool year As a result som e
by
Georgette Chun' assists student Steve Bader with finan cia l aid application
Job Hunting
Biological Aide
Olympia. WA
Student intern's duties would center around
fish and wildlife resources. Specific duties
could Include: field surveys , data tabulation,
Environmental Impact Statement review, etc.
Prefer student with training in biological
SCiences, math or physical sciences with an
interest In 'ish and wildlife conservation.
1-3 quarters, hours flexible. volunteer
position .
Child Advocate
Olympia
Student intern would be responsible for:
Counseling and advocating for children 'S
rights, designing programs to provide an environment of sa'ety, emotional release .
acceptance, and nonviolence. Programs meaning, projects , counseling sessions , structured
and non-structured time. Play therapy is an
integral part of the programs' childrens program . The intern will work with the child
therapist, and with the rest of the staff . will
attend weekly stall meetings. case con ferencing, monthly trainings and an initial training .
Pre'er student with experience in working
varying ages.
with children
2-3 quarters, 15-40 hrs. Volunteer position
'
mileage covered.
loan money you receive. In o ther words
if you take out a loan for $1 ,000, you 'll '
get a c hec k for $950. I f you want to take
o u t a GS L and ca n't find a bank that will
g ive you o ne, go talk to Finan c ial Aid .
They ca n he lp you find a bank that will .
The state legislature ha s created a new
loa n program to be used to offset hardships crea ted by the tuition hikes. These
loans are not ava il able to siudents yet .
They may becom e ava il ab le winter
q uart er The leg islation authori zes S[ilte
to ea rm ark 2'/, perce nt of stude nt
turti o n and fees to be used as loans to
needy students who have been unab le to
get a loan through a private bank .
The interest on the National Direct
Student Loans (NDSL) has been rai sed to
5 percent. Even with the interest hike
these are sti II one of the best dea ls ar~und
Cont inuing our student loan hit parade,
all students should be aware of the
emergency loan program These are shortte rm loans available to any student who
is temporarily hard -up for cash . The program is open to all students , whether they
are on financial aid or not. If you ever
find yourself waiting with an e mpty fridge
for an East Coast check to clea r talk to
Financial Aid. (They might not have
money, but they may be able to recommend a good crash diet . arr, arr, arr.)
The in terest rate on these loan s is 12 percent a year afld there is a $2 servi ce
(·harge.
866 -1611
day
WESTSIDE CENTER
(206) 352-0700
NATURAL FIBERS
Comfon.ble Clothe• .
for Hom• •nd Omce
MON to SAT 10:30 - 5:30
Ne.t to Budget Tap ••
Sept 24, 1981
Cooper Point Journal page 13
•
On Becoming a Resident
i
To Be or Not To Be
~
/ //
~/
/ ,/
.-
...- .
·W~ ~\\I"'(':,"tON ~"Te'
R~'":)\O£NT5
/£
F
,
-" v
"-'
/
.../
'"
/..-
/
"
The key word in the Washington State
law regarding res idency is " domi cil e,"
defined as follows :
" a person's true, fi xed and
permanent home and place of
habitation . It is a place where he
intends to remain and to whi c h
he expects to return when he
leaves, not intending to establ ish
a new domici le at any time,
whereas a res idence can be defin ed as a home wh ich may be
temporary or pe rm ane nt. A
person therefore cou ld have
several places of res idence . Thus ,
as it relates to the c lassifica ti on
of resid ent, and non-resident student" the key issue is whether or
not a person has establ ished a
domici le in Washington ."
/
,/
i
I
/
,
Pi;, ~\;,I.,
By Registrar Walker All en
For those of you who may be planning
to apply for res idency status , we wdnt to
make certain that you understand what
the state of Wijsh ln gton identifie, as being
proof of res idency statu s.
Ma ny non -reSIden t students are of the
op inI o n IJnd perhaps were told by friends)
t hat th(· only req uirement for residency is
to have lived in the state one year. Such
is not the case , on ly part of it.
Or, Ii a student worked fu ll or part ··time
and paid taxes, he/ she ass umes that res i-
den cy is guaranteed because of having
become a taxpayer . And that's not the
tot al case.
O r aga in, a student may assume because he/she is a dependent of parents
who reside in the state, that residency is
guaranteed . Students and parents alike
have been surprised to dis cover that under
Washington law any person 18 years or
older establishes hi s/her own 'res idency
w ithout regard to parental domi cile . The
technic ,11 language is: "classified resident
for tUItIon and fee purposes"
What this means is that you must be
abl e to demonstrate conclusively that you
are here for other than educational purposes . Some of the fa ctors the law identi fies as indi cators are :
1. Did you come here for educational
purposes?
a. If yes , have you continued as a
full -time student?
(1) If yes, do you visit your
fami ly out-of-state for extended
per iods of time? (e.g. , during
summer and holidays?)
(a) If so, it's going to be difficult to prove domicile.
(b) If no, you're looking a little
I ike a res ident.
.
b . If no, why did you com e here? (It's a
eas ier to prove residency if you didn't
come here ju st for educational
purposes .)
Handling Stress •
Heritage House
• •
Burnout.
• •
Welcome From the Twilight Zone
. 2. Whether you came here tor educational purposes or for other reasons, what
have you done to establish " domicile?"
a. What about voter registration I
Have you had it for at least a year
(a nd voted in an election?)
b . If you have a vehicle and this is
your " do mi cile," has it been regi stered for at lea st a year before you
apply for " re si dent c lassification"l
If not, you ca nnot be so classified .
c. If you do any driving you will have
a Washington driver's li cense. If
not , you would probably have a
Washington I D . Either of t hese
wi ll have bee n in your possess ion
for at least o ne year.
d . What is the source of your income?
Thi s is t ri cky, but basica ll y someo ne domi ci led in this state wi ll
have all possible sources in this
state (bank accounts, etc.) Some
students can only get loans via
their parents' bank, but many of
those banks require one to be a
resident of that sta te to qualify for
a loan .
Guide to TESC Library
I,
I
1
,
, .
!.
t
!,
,,
Media Loan
Media Loan provides access to portable
audio/visual equipment for academic work. Over
4,000 items are available for checkout, Irom
casse tte ptayers to color video cameras. Instruction i.s provided on videotape and through workshops . Stop by lor more information .
Welcome to the liveliest academiC library on the
West Coast- maybe in the whole country! We're
proud of th e service we provide for you and we're
at ways willing to hear your suggestions on how
our services can be improved. Check us out. Use
the resources for learning , fun , curiosity .
You'll fi nd The Library tnslder, an in-dept\!
introduction to the resources and the people who
work here, to yo ur rig ht as you enter the library.
It will give you the latest scoop on how to check
out a book or a piece of equipment, how to get
relerence help , how to use the media facilities ,
how to check out a lilm or slides, how to get
materials on Interlibrary Loan.
Susan Smith
Acting· Dean of the Library
Administration
We lolks in the main ollice answer co rrespondence and the phone , maintain the liles and
monthly tim.e records, build and batance the
budgets, pay the bills , provide leadership for long
range plann ing , make decisions, call meetings ,
and occas ionally call somebody on the carpe t.
Marge Brown, Peter Randlett , Alley Hinkte
Reference
There are many ways 01 approaching various
subiects and there are numerous avenues of
researching a topi C. The relerence area provides
you with guidance in finding the best ways and
most usefut tools fo r research.
As you can see, this can become very
personal. We're as interested as you in
seeing that you are accurately classified .
But, you must understand/ appreciate/
reali ze that we're charged with making a
decision based on the law of this state.
We don 't make you a reS ident, or a nonresident - you do that. We weigh the evidence and it's up to you to provide proof
that you are here for other than education al purposes . We' ll answer your question s, but can' t tell you what to do to
" prove domic il e."
AI Warber
Clrcutation
The circulation desk is where you check out
library materials, recall circ ulating items, pick up
interlibrary loan and reserve shelf materials, and
request special services such as recalls or
searches . The staff will try to answer your questions and help you with library-related problems .
Getting Help
S I ~CLE ACCOMMODAT ION
$98
Frank Motley
Hy Chris rlt zgpra lcl
In cl udes furn i sh ed private
room (unfurni shed $88) with
direct access to th e ce ntral
activity co r e Also, game
room , TV room , laundry
facilities, c ity bus se rvj ce.
NO utility deposits needed,
utility billed monthly by the
m anagem ent. Cuaranteed $35
m ax imum billing per single
unit.
A l so available: studio, 2bedroom and 3-bedroom units
Ask how you ca n get a TV
free .
1818 Evergreen Park Drive
943-7330
Pa : Matheny-Whi te
It is not particularly unusual to question
thp wisdom of your dec isio n to enter (or
reen ter) the madness of coll ege life. Both
Ilew students who are coming to co llege
i or the firsl time, and returnin g students
who havp bee n ou t of sc hool for a number of years ca n expe ri ence a great dea l
of stress during the transition .
But relax. You have' come too far and
h<lve ri sked too mu ch to get where you
are ri ght now to let stress " m ax" you .
Here are a few ways some of us have
helped ease the tensions of college life
,md have put ourse lves back in control :
1. Get som e physica l exerc ise. Use the
Recreation (RE C) Center. Swim six laps In
the pool and take a sa una. Frazzle your,,,If on the ra cq uetball court of lift a
couple of weights .
2. Take a wa lk around campus and concentrate just on what your body is doing,
nothing else. There is something miraculously therapeuti c about focusing on your
own well-being for a few minutes . and
be selfi sh about it. You wi ll feel worlds
better about yourself, why you are here,
and what you want to accomplish.
3. Take a few hours off from studying,
even if you feel guilty about it. Drop the
pencil , throw it if it makes you feel better.
O nce in a rage of self-doubt and di sgust, I
ga thered up all my art suppli es, threw
them into the firepface; got a glass of
vvine, and enj oyed watc hing them burn .
a very expe nsive catharsis, to be sure, but
once I cou ld afford new materials, some
great work came out of that experience.
We don't recommend destroying your
academi c material s, that is a bit mu c h;
but slamming the books closed and
stomping out of the room to do something ent irely devoid of study is a pure
del ight and a refresher too . Pick a handful
of blackberri'es and sit in the sun for 20
minutes. Make a wickedly thi ck sandwich
and read five pages of a favorite novel.
W e guarantee that you will soon be back
at the study table, relaxed and able to
concentrate again, just because you gave
your mind and spirit a breather.
4. Call another student from your academic program and tell that person you
are feeling the pressures of the class . He
or she may feel stressed too, and mutual
ca maraderie works wonders . Or simply
take a few minutes to relax and visit with
other students over a cup of coffee in the
CAB. Thi s is not wasted time but one of
the reward s of campus life that can be
revitalizing.
5. See either your academi c advisor or a
faculty m ember in your program Tell
them you are experiencing enough stress
to stop three bull elephants, and ask them
to recommend some options . These
people have two things immediately in
common with you: a) at one time or
another they have -been students too, and
b) they want you to succeed .
b. Call or drop in to speak to someone
at the Counseling Center, a free student
health service located in the Seminar
Building. This is not a cop-out or an admi ss ion of defeat, but a show of strength .
Academi c life can be stressful for anyone.
It is different than any other lifestyle you
may have ever had, and you shou ld use
every resource available to you to maintain a healthy balance and outlook. The
counseling staff are caring, wonderfu l
people, both profeSSionals and student
interns . They, like your faculty, are there
to assist you in any way they can.
7. Most importantly of all, surround
yourself with supportive family members.
and/or friends . Involve these people in
your new experiences if you can . Evergreen provides cu ltural and recreational
opportunities as well as educational ones
-and they can easi ly be shared with
others.
ss e-
with a
Protect
f'''1c.
;t(
Dear Evergreen student,
"Four dollars will bring
the Cooper Point Journal into
your home every week for
one year; keep in touch with
Evergreen from the students'
perspective. Order your subscription today! Send your
name, address, phone number, and $4.00 to Cooper
Point Journal, CAB 305, The
Evergreen State College,
Olympia, WA 98505."
free checking ad
Ex~e Card
ALTRA Kits include
Everything you need
Plus you can save
up to 60%
Deposit box for only $12 a
Free
friendly
0Ja 11100 - 1110 p.....ollday UIllIlrtda"
c,o.,lOn\l(L\ On.
- The Evergreen State College
Loan
LooaW ba me-au I0Il.
Malcolm St il son
MAry Schreiter
nc.
* We've got aeverBl wa.vs get
earn Interest.
* 24Washington
hour
The
(over 48 locations In
a.nd soon nationwide).
*
your valuables
Safe
yaa.r.
* Applications
* Cashiers checks, monsy orders, traveler checks.
* Pay-By-Phone
* a.nd., of course,
service
ba.nk1ng with
(:
~
'.'''. ....,
Debbie Robinson , Gretchen Hendricks Linda
Fraidenburg
.
'
Opa JO'U 1000_ todq 1114 In 1II1lel, J01I tab
\he b"de out of·1MnJrI
tD
.'
.I
TN-lIMB
.
Since the inception of the College we have been concerned about the care and safety of our
students. We can both remember discussions before we opened our doors to the first class
regarding the College's providing the best possible student insurance coverage. Those early
concerns have become increasingly vivid with the exploding costs in medical care experienced in
recent years,
We recommend that each of you review any personal insurance policies that may apply to you
to be sure you have some form of reasonable health care coverage_ None of us is immune from
injury or sickness, As an active student we urge you to carry some form of health insurance coverage,
If you aren't currently enrolled in a health insurance plan we recommend that you consider our
student plan, It provides for both a basic benefit to cover first dollar costs and major medical to
cover those costs in excess of the basic benefit on a coinsurance basis.
~.J~
.
en Winkley
THE HARTFORD
$100,00 Deductible Major Medical
00/20 Co-Insurance with some basic
benefits paid in full
Rates per quarter:
Student only $31 ,05
Student plus dependents $86,40
GROUP HEALTH COOPERATIVE
Rates per quarter:
Student only $160,68
Student and one dependent $291 ,84
Student and dependents $438_30
BnUl801lll4 .dtdullluk Iw fht 0UIer ~tloDi to _",uin
\lit LaoIJ-OlJmpla ana.
The deadline for making an insurance request is October 2, 1981 ,
See the Student Accounts office for more information 866-8447,
1 CENTER
SEWING
-
Free Catalop
AVAILABLE
943-8130
We Rent Sewing Machines
jld !-!<'
14 Cooper Point Journal
SERVICING REPRESENTATIVE :
GRIFFITH-HUNT-BURWELL,INC_
407 Water St., P,O. Box 1608
Olympia, Washington 98507
Phone: 943-4500
Sept. 24, 1981
Sept. 24, 1981 ' Cooper Point Journal page 1S
,
Welcome from the Deans
Hello. And Welcome, from the Deans.
Welcome to Olympia . Welcome to
Evergreen.
Welcome to the land of the smiling
geoduck, of popcorn and brewer'S yeast,
of students aggressively addic ted to
Wendy's chili .
You are now dropping into a swirl of
exc itement, confusion, depression, elation,
endl ess idealism , almost endless cyni cism,
chaos, crazy roadblocks , so many helping
hands one hardly knows where to turn.
You will hear, as you lurch through the
halls Registering and O ri enting, multitudinous vers io ns of The Evergreen Dream .
All of them are tru e.- Most conflict with
eac h othE'r It 'is all very confusing. It al l
really does work .
r orge ahead.
For Illost of you who are new to EvergrE'pn . the most immediate cri sis will be
that thE' nUlllbpr of "op ti ons" open to you
;;PE'IllS so much sma ll er than what you
would f illd at Brand X That is the inevitabl e price we all pay for designing a
cur ri culum made largely of interdisciplinary program' . and Insist ing upon concentrat loll on on ly one course of study at
,1 t Illlt.:'
TIlt' ta cu lty comm itment to programs,
to Ipalll·teachlllg, to interdisciplinary
\\ur"- to Integratlvt' learn ing is all very
1(,,11 I acu ltv dl'iagrpe about the detai l"
.1Ild \ () lJ \\ III d"cover a great viuiety of
"pillion <l11c! appro,lc h aillong them But
111 ,,,,, , nnllllltn1entc, I lust li .,tpei ,1 rE' quill'
" ', 11 . ,wei th,'\ haH' rl;',11 ef[pch , th(' y exal t
,1 "I I( l '
\'H, ~,' I tor I ll" PrlCf' you PilY is d
,Iu,er n ,l,1I 10lhhql With your facult y
,111ci 1t'1I ,\\\ <;[uclf'llh. cl gt'nulllc attention
10 \ 'll Jr ()wn 1111'5P'«' and talent, ancl
Ill ·,'d, d ,helm!' for tul l co ll eglcllit y Wit hin
\\h,ll
I.H
.
photo by J.E Knauth
It is well worth what you pay in
lIoptions."
The other major hassle to besiege you
in the next few weeks is jargon "seminar," " Module," "Self-evaluations,"
"SPLU Labs, " "Academic Fairs ." Keep
- asking questions . It will all come clear. It
really does make a lot of sense.
The Deao ~ are supposed to administer
all this stuff. The four of us combine the '
jobs elsewhere done by deans, department
chairmen, deans of students, budgeteers,
division heads . You would think that the
last thing we would want is students dropping by with questions.
You would be wrong.
A lot of what we do, day in and day
out, is respond to students .
Sometimes it is a lot of fun . Sometimes .
it is a great pain . In either case, it is our
job
So, if you have an unresolvable hass le,
come see us.
The most important part of O ri entation
will be the Academi c Fair, you r chance
(unlieard of at Brand X) to move around
among the faculty and their programs
testing the water, looking for a home. We
can't urge you too strongly to take advantage of that. And we will be posted up on
the staircase of the Library in case you
need our help
And later in the year, you can always
get an appointment.
O ne request. It is in the nature of things
that mostly we get complai nts Bu t most
of you will be having the limE' of your
li fe - confusing maybe, but f'xh il arating
beyond all expectat ion . When things are
going well, when you just had the best
sem inar of th e yea r, when your fac ulty
just gave the most ex, it ing lec lure everbuttonhole us, will yuu l And let us know?
Good luck .
- Richard Alexander
Welcome from the
Third World Coalition
The Third World Coalition would like to
take this opportunity to welcome all
people of color to The Evergreen State
College . We would al so like to inform you
and the rest of the College community of
the function, services, and activities of
our organization.
The Third World Coalition is one-fourth
of an administrative unit on campus
entitled £ducational Support Programs."
Th at office is headed by Ernest 'Stone"
Thomas, who is also responsible for overseeing the Upward Bound Program, the
learning Resource Center, and K.EY
(Keep Enhancing Yourself). Our office is
staffed by Kim Bingham, Secretary,
Ubrary 3204; April West, Coordinator (on
leave) ; and Steve Bader, Interim Coordinator, Library 3208. Our phone number
is 866-W34.
The Coalition became an addition to
the Evergreen community during the
1973-74 academic year. It was conceived
by students, staff, and faculty to improve
the quality of life for people of color at
this institution. Since there was little
confidence in the traditional Minority
Affairs and Ethnic Studies departments
most colleges and universities possess, an
organization was designed which was
more consistent with Evergreen's philosophies . That organization started as the
Minority Coalition, changed its name to
~e.I.::;(,::;r\::;:;;:::,1.II!:lE';::;"="::;p::;llP:JI~:l'~I==:==:3",,,e.<i!=:=::;:;;:::JUE,lEJI==:;:;:;;::JU:l1l:1=:=;;::;;JH3CelG;;;;;::;;;;;;SIElGI;;;;;::;==:llEEIIK:;;;5;;;;;::;:JCJeI!lI'==:!!E:3I'm r.,~~,~'-,:>~~a>%""=-'<W<"";;''''-''''''>'''''"'=~,~'''r'"'''''''''''''''""';" "'<';""""""""";";"'-"~""'""""'~'-"*""";;;;~
~
J
j&w&I'Y··1 Dear
ottexu
~ i
J r) C
Ii
WOOd w0 r R
~'i:.~'·
b~ ~ et.s
ru
WI
8
N
IN
lliJIi-f!3I
We're not a .castle
~
Dear·
ed
~ _. Well I made it to school. Evergreen is: (a) not qUite what I expect
t but even better. (b)
not only not quite what I expected, but so awful
8 ~
that I want to come home immediately . please send me a plane ticket.
. t (c)
just as nice as when I visited.
Most of the students are (a)
just like me ... I told you there were
ii' other hippies still alive. (b)
disgusting, dirty, spaced out ra~lcals.
!!II'
(c)
a little different, but I consider it part of my ed~.JCatlonal experience.
student housmg (please send. me
"
I have taken up residence in (a)
;
some cookies) . (b)
an apartment in downtown. C?lympta (the rent IS a
J
~.' little more than I expected .. . hint, hint). (c)
a tlPI m the woods .
~
My roommates are (a)
delightful and have introduced me to a lot .of
wonderful people. (b)
scare me, and haven't taken a bath the entire
*- time I've been here. (c)
playa lot of Grateful Dead music (that's rock
nor the YMCA for that matter.
~ Ii
Mond4y . Saturday 10::xJ . 6:00 / Sunday 1200·500
222 West 4th / Olympia. WA
@'
~
Just mark an "x" in the appropriate boxes and your letter home to mom and/ot'
dad will be done and in the mail in a jiffy.
••·'::'"
W·
as 5 ware
I
The following is a form letter fot' those of you who are new to Evergreen.
III
Northwest Crafts
Mom and Dad
1
I@!
Stretch & Sew Fabrics@
has a
Terrific Idea
We'll send to your home or club
a marvelously talented person
to demonstrate how you
can 'create simply smashing
fashions in one-half the time
using the Ann Person™ Method
of Short Cut Sewing™
'E"
II
I
~'.
'.
,.
and roll mom).
I have signed up for 16 hours of (a)
Balancing Mom and Dad's Checkbook 101 . (b)
Hangover Recovery 102. (c)
Lacey: Culture, Myth,
and Reality. (d)
On Becoming a Radical (e)
Parachuting: Make It
or Break It.
I sure do miss and love you ..
~
We're first "to admit living on
campus isn't like having an
apartment in Tumwater or a
house on the Eastside, but we
try to make our variety of apartments as comfortable as possible in the least expensive ways.
From one and two person
studios to duplexes with a total
of five variations, we provide
many conveniences usually billed
as extras at other places. All of
I
I
your name here
,.
t~,:~:~:::e:e:;::!\:one~ ~~ llli~i!
~
Y. _ _ _
SOUTH SOUND CONCERT CO. PRESENTS
THE LEGENDARY
BLUES BAND
She'll also show you our incredible
collection of fine fabrics and tell you about
the latest fashion trends. (And you 'l l
receive a special hostess gift. )
STRETCH &SEW
Fabrics'
Center
©
Sew. Inc.
Stretch &
1980
FRI. & SAT. - OCT. 2 & 3 - , . P.M.
.a."''I'S
352-3456
786-9290
2410 Harrison Ave.
Olympia
our units are fully furnished, and
have wall-to-wall carpeting, free
utilities, free phones, free TV-FM
cable, and nearby laundry
services.
There are seven different
types and lengths of rental and
lease contracts. Generally speaking, the rental contracts are for
shorter periods, cost more and
can be broken with less financial
burden. Under the rental contract, you rent one bed in a unit
and housing selects your roommate(s) according to your appl'ication information. Lease contracts are 10% 'to 12% less
costly than rental agreements
and are for longer periods of
time. Under a lease agreement,
you lease an entire unit and then
you decide who (if anyone) lives
with you in tt'\e other beds.
Lease contracts can only be
transferred or subleased to
someone else; you cannot break
a lease without paying the full
rent for the full period you agree
to.
If you'd like more information
about living on campus or are
having trouble finding a place to
live, stop by the Housing Office
or give us a call at 866-6132.
We'd like you to live with us.
They backed the great MUDDY WAT£RS in the 70's; toured with
the ROLLING STONES, now they're returning to POPEYE'S.
Capital Village
400 Cooper Point Rd.
the Non-White Coalition, and finally to
the Third World Coalition .
The term " Third World" was born out
of the late sixties and early seventies,
identifying all ethnic/ minorities striving
for equality and a better way of life,
under a single unified banner. We feel the
term is reflec tive of our goals and
obj ect ives.
The Coalition is here to ensure complete and equal access to th e unique
opportunities available at Evergreen. In
addition. we try to meet the needs of
Third World students by providing referral
assistance, academic and social advising,
and cultural activities . We also serve as
an informal umbrella organization for all
the Third World student groups providing
Doth resources and guidance when called
upon . In the past, we have sponsored
large campus-wide events such as Indigenous Peopl e's Day, to small informal
workshops dealing with topics ranging
from cultural awareness to resume writing
We also have a study room and meeting
room/lounge available on request .
It is our hope that Evergreen will
become a place for all peoples to live and
learn in harmony. Until we reach that
goal, we will continue to work with the
College and Evergreen's Third World
Community to make'sure it becomes a
reality
Advance tickets available for
. $5 at POPEYE'S, RAINY DAY
RECORDS, and BUDGET TAPES
AND RECORDS .
$6 al the door.
Sept 24, 1981
1-"1~t' 11> Cooper Point Journal
Sept. 24, 1981
- -~.-
Cooper Point Journal page 17
Evergreen From A to Z
Coordinaled Sludies: As opposed to
uncoordinated studies, a full-time
cour se of study, in which several disciplines are brought together under
one subject
Ev~ns: Dan t he man, President of Evergreen. He was governor of Washington
for 12 years (remembered as "the
golden age") before Dixy , who was
before Spellman , who is governor now.
Evans was Washington's most popular
Crisis Clinic 24-hour Crisis Line:
352-2211, Business 754-3888. Provides
a 24--hour telephone cri sis intervention
service foe persons in Thurston-Mason
Campus Direclory: Has the phone numbers (usually correct) for every person
and organization on campus, sort of
People on the staH, faculty and admIn -
Academic Advising: If you kno w wha t
you wa nt to do wi th your Ide, but d o n' t
know what yo u w ant to do next quar-
te r. ta lk to these folk s. the y can he fp
vou deC ide fh e o ffi ce IS located With
i stration have their own number s.
counties. Serves as ~ major information
and referral service' to match persons
to the resource best suited to meet
their needs If you're wondering if a
servi c e exi sts to meet a special prob-
le m , thi s is the place to call and ask
Students in the dorms are assigned
numbers that are really only the numbers of the ir rooms . These do not
o t her ~ t uden t clna enro llment servi ces
o n the f,rCit floor o f the l ibrary (a ll
, b3 12
ber for B204 will always be the number
for B204 regardless of who lives there
(dn updated ver') lon of th l;' Adv is ing
Career Planning and Placement: What-
Resou rce G Uide . AARG) A usefu l
booklpt that will we ll parn Its place In
the bottom dpsk drawe r (n ever throw
pvpr you're going to do after gradua -
o ne away, or you'l l just have to get
have information and advi ce on career
anoth e r)
exploratIon, lob hunting, and graduat e
sch ool placement. Aboul the only postgrad option they don' t cover I ~ we lfare
t'on , thpse peopl e can help you They
Publi s hed by Ac ademi C
Ad VISing, It contains the wh o, what ,
whe n , where, ho w . a nd wh y of facul ty ,
staff, a nd a cadpmic resources Ava il able at Ac ademic AdVI sing
1 hpy sponsor lot s of goodies, Including
coun se ling sesSions , workshops, credit generating courses and have listings o f
up-to-date career opportunities. Loc ated
onlhe firsl floor of the lIbrary. Call.61'lJ
Academic Credit: There are no letter or
number grades here . Credit IS obtained
whe n a student fulfill s his or her academIC obligatio ns Credit can also be
Cashier: II B 11Ob, just down the hall
earned through past experien ce (see
from the registrar, this is where you
external credit), by examination, or
through tran sferrmg from another msti-
pay your bills, and pick up your c hec ks
tuti o n (Those o f yo u who have been
!'e m es ter students ; bewa re You ' ll
probably losp out on a credit or two.')
Child
Prolective Services: Hotlin £>
7'j).{)b 13, Capital 5000 Bui lding, Olym-
pia , WA 98501 . This offi ce handles
Crrolt is measured in standard quarter
hours . The maximum IS 16 hours per
c ases of
severe neglect,
nolestation
and/ or suspected abuse of childre n
quart er. with
1ro hours being the
magic number for graduation
Tht=' staff
includes outreach workers '
who will go o ut and talk to families ; If
SituatIOn s are seriOUS , staff will be
ALANO club: 215 N Capital Way,
Olympia, WA 98501 , 75l-9'l34 prOVIdes
a meetmg place , companionshIp, and
accompanied by poli ce
<allege Aclivilies Building' ("CAB," as
In "we wo uld catch a taxi") The "stu-
assistance for alcoholi cs Requirement
for eligibility IS a deSIre to stop drinking
d e nt uni o n " building at Evergreen ,
whll h Inudentally has no student
union Contains the offices of many
Alcoholics Anonymous: 352 -73 44 o r
stude nt group" the Dell and the Evergreen Cafe teria, a non-functional TV
lounge, a ride board , a study lounge, a
roof deck , till' rad,o ,tdllOn (KAOS) ,
7 5J -Q<·H 4 , 24 ho urs. prov lde\ referral
o;erVI Cf' tor those who thmk rhf'Y may
have a drinking prublem
the S&A offi n-, vpnding machines, and
Am Resourc:e Cenler: The Arts Re-
o ur o ffi ce A real " hotspot " of campus
"ac tivity" ,t lunch time and on Wed ne sda ys (ask an o lder sludent)
source Center IS a o:;tudent organization
loe att'd on the third floor of the library
(3215) They are re sponsible for art
events, poetry readings, films , speakers
COG : (C o mmltt E'e on Governan c E')
Oocumf'nt Tht'i document \ pt s down
and the publicati o n o f l"iterary magaz ines Any Ideas or efforts are welcome, especially If you 're Interested in
the po li cy for
~ove rnan c e
at TE SC and
tor community dedslon makillg. A cad t"ml( di sput es and gri evances should
working o n a 198H12 literary magazin e
be ,etlled by It> procedures and gUIde--
ASH (Adult Student Housing) There's a
waltmg li st for apartments in this no
Iln p 'i Cop ,e<; ar e a vailab l e at tht'
Inf or ma t Io n (pnter
man ' s land a c ross Driftwood Road
from campus (See article, page
)
College Recrealion Cenler: Located lust
soulh (I e, loward the dorms) of the
Asian C~lition: The A sian Coairtl o n 1\
an o rganilatlon with member'ihip open
C ~H building
Contains a large SWimming pool . complet e with a separat e
di Ving well, w eight rooms, racquE'tballJ
all ASI a n ami Pac ific Island students
Its fun ctIon is to edu c ate the TESC ami
O lvmpia community a s to the needs,
10
event'. and has opened a library of
books , films, and periodIca ls o f concern to ASIan people Please feel free
10 stop by the ir o Hi ce at LIB 3209 or
call xhOB
Bank : South '>cund Nat Io nal Bank has
a bra nc h o ff ice o n the second floor of
the CAB Hours are 11-12 ] 0 .
Basic Progr~m : Interdi sciplinary coordinated studi e s progra m designed for
first -year coll ege st udents and recent
tr an sff'r students A word to the w ise
many basic programs run at a slug' s
pace, at the first signs of frustration
and impatienc e, move on t o something
more challenging, no matter what your
advisor says.
Bicyct.. Shop: Located in the basement
of the CAB, the shop loans tools and
gives help and advice on any bicycle
repair problems . Take the elevator
down, no stairs , call the Activities
Office to check their hours .
lIooUtore: Located on the second floor .
of the CAB, the bookstore carries all
books used in prOlUams and modules,
and lots of others besides. They also
CatTY film, art supplies, records, cards,
under
new manaaement ... see article page
Pacific Northwest Electric Power and
Conservation Planning Counci l (He
was chosen for his intelligence and
integrity .) It 's nice to have friends in
high places, especially when they're
such nice guys
DTf (Disappearing Task Force) : Any ad
hl.,....,.1 Credil: Evergreen is one of the
few schools that recognizes the School
of Hard Knocks and accepts transfer
credit from it . This is serious, if you
have had educationa l experiences of at
least 12 months duration in employment, volunteer work, or independent
study, you can get Evergreen credit for
it. You must submit a written document at
thi s learning
to
the
Prior
Learning Program in Lab I 1024 . Apply
in your first year back, before you forget everything. Contact Paul Marsh,
x6296
I
hoc committee which is forced to
make recommendations on a particular
issue or function . Anyone can call for
a DTF to be formed . Requests for any
" non-tnvlal" matter s should be carried
out in consultation with the Evergreen
Income .
Food Services: The Evergreen Cafeteria
run by Vonda (see page
) located on
the first floor of the CAB. They offer
meal plans, and pay as you go services.
The servers often look just like mom .
(See Deli, SAGA, and The Corner)
a quarter, or as littl e as once a year,
students must write self-evaluations,
fa c ulty evaluations , and program evaluations . The first ones are hard to
write, but by the time you're a senior
you'll be the Hemingway of evaluations The final week of every quarter
provide offi ce space for environmental
organi zations , have a library, a vertical
Contr~ct, Individwll: When a hit man
fil e. and a periodical rack . We show
film s, sponsor events , speakers, and
is hired to rub out
One student
working/ learning with one faculty
under a formal agreement stating
objectives, purposes and activities
(i .e . contract) .
Cookie L~dy : Every Thursday the
Cookie Lady mysteriously appears in
the lobby of the CAB. No one knows
where she comes !Tom but her goodies
are addictive . Tread lightly. Sometimes
there on Fridays.
CoopentiYe EcIuaotion: Coop Ed helps
students to combine college study with
on-the-job experience. Coordinators
help students locate credit earning
internships . Located in LAB I, 116391
Cooper Poinl Journal: We have no
comment at this time. If intereted
stop by our office on the firsl floor of
the eJlB next door to the cafeteria.
Sept. 24, 1981
Cenler: We
pet itio ns, have a news show on KAOS,
and an issue c o lumn in the CPJ . There
are many o pportunities for involve-
The Gay Resource Center: Serve s the
need s of TESC and c ommunity lesbians,
gays , and bisexuals. Sincere straights
are welcome too. We do counseling,
information, rap groups, and have a
library . Call x6544 for hours (literally)
or stop by LI B 3210.
ment here , so come in and join us!
Our office IS located on the firsl floor
of the CAB , or call x6764
GeoiIucks : (pronounced Gooey ducks)
This delightful beastie is Evergreen 's
mascot, after winning out a close election with Evergreen's other favorite
animal, the slug. They are karmacally-
herareen Time,: Three hours and
fift~n minutes behind Eastern Standard Time, another universal excuse, or
the average of four times shown on the
dock tower. These two definitions are
not necessarily related.
spiritual and very misunderstood. The
only way to capture one is to dig into
the snd, throw the beastie into the air,
and smack it with your shovel. But,
we'd never do that to our darling
mascot, would we!
E - . r - VUI: Need to jar the 'brain
cells, while dW1)pin, your &rOCeries on
the sidewalkl Ride the Everareen Van,
a student-<un bus serviCe that operates
at nllllt in conjunction with IT (under
"I"). See how many people you can
fit in the van and watch everyone ~
off 10 let those sittln, In the back ~
Geoduck House: Where the sai lboats
off.
(and we mean wide) of music, spoken
word, and public aHairs programming.
They ar e always looking for people
(>tudents and non-stude nts) interesled
In being on the air . .
oriented animals , non-competitive,
rowboats , kayaks, canoes and Walt";
Niemiec (head 01 the Marine Lab) can
be found .
Learning Resource Center: PrOVides
ac tivity , Everyone is welcomed to joi n
Hospilal: St Peter's, 413 N. lilly Rd.
Call 491-9480 . Emergency room 4567287. It's the only one. In case of
emergency you can also call the paramedics at the FIRE/Emergen c y on
campus number 3333
In case of
emergency ca ll 911 . You can also call
the M in or Emergency Clinic at 9432310. They 're at 1020 W . 5th St . on the
westside They arp open from 5:.3012 p .m ., Mon<lay-Friday. noon t o
m idnight o n weekenc1s . The offi ce
c harge for d routine visit is $24.
individualized help with reading, Writing, and study skills for Greeners on
both a walk-in and module basis . They
do thi s through self-programmed
in the activities and workshops that go
on there .
Health Services and The Womens
Clini C will open September 28. Al l full
and part-tIme student> are eligIble for
mec ial c are. Health Services provid es
c are for a ll general health con cern s, ill-
Libr~ry loop: The loop in front of Red
square, really the -McCann Loop, but
called the Library Loop because it
doesn't go there . Not to be confused
with the Dorm Loop which doesn't go
to the Library either.
Inlormalion Cenler: The info center is
in that little room across from · the
Bookstore on the main floor of the
CAB. They c ollect and disseminate info
about Evergreen You can pick up all
sorts of propaganda there. Stop in .
they've got the bus schedules too.
Interlibrary LIWI: If the TESC Library
doe'n 't have it, librarians can usually
get it from another library through
(you guessed it!) Interlibrary Loan .
Inlernship: (See article, page
) 00campus (usually) work experienc e
undertaken for academic credit . (Is
there any other reason to work')
Arranged through your friendly cooperatiye Education Office (under " C") .
Informalion Services: Not to be confused witli the Information Center,
Information Services handles it's own
prof>di,inda. The college's news bureau
and its publications . Director Judy
McNick le oversees writing all news
releases aboul Eve rgreen for the
external media (including all ,tudent
activiti es that seek publicity), writes
and edits the college Newsletter and
Happenings, which comes out on Fridays; and oversees publication of the
colle gp catal9g, Evergreen Time s, and
all othe r major publicalions . Her offi ce
also supervises the Information Center
If you need help promoting an eve nt .
or if you've got an intere sting academi c
recent grant or award you think merits
telling about, call Judy at 866-612H
(LIB 3114), right after you call the
Cooper Point Journal at ,6213
Innerplace: Center for spiritua l exploration, primarily collects informal ion
about our world religions and occul t!
spiritual philosophies. Its purpose is to
give the student a place to go when
pursuing one's spirituality. To encourage interest in spirituality, Innerplace
offers workshops and lectures throughout the year, conducts meditation
twice weekly, and provides special
interest studies . This year Innerplace
will offer two retreats into nature's
The graphic facilities are
located in Seminar 2150, and are available to students who are working on
projects such as posters, flyers, signs,
symposi urn in the spring on personal,
social and planetary community. Regular meetings for Innerplace will begin
soon; join lIS at LIB 3225, Of call 116144.
Red Squ~re: The main government
plaza in Moscow t he longest demonstration ever held there lasted 45
seconds. Also the red brick plaza in
front of the library . The red brick was
ch05en so thai If anyone evel fell off
the buildings it wouldn 't slain . Red
Square is rumored to be riotproof and
the red bric ks don' t show blood stains .
Residency: If you WISh to bec ome a
rpsident , d ose your eye s, click your
hee ls three times , turn around twice .
and repeat to yourself four times,
MEChA: Movimiento Estudianti Chicanos de Aztlan, is a Chicano student
organization that combines a concept
of self -identity, cultural heritage,
hi story and contemporary chicano
student activ ities . They educate Evergreeners and Olympians about the
Chicano e xperience , and are here to
meet the needs of chicano students
that the normal resources fail to meet
Please contact them at x6143 or stop
by LIB 3206.
Met~1
Shops: In the Lab Annex (between LAB I and II) for heavy metals
work ; LAB I basement has tools for
more detai led work . These facilities are
primarily for academic work
Mini-Medi~:
Much activity and media
equipment available for student use
LIB 1302
Modular HoUli,. (the mods): Those
suburban duplexes near the Rec Pavilion are four-student apartments run by
housing .
If yo u don 't do thpse th ,ngs yo u'll end
up lIke some of the older I.t.\lde nts
hdve been gOing 10 TESC for ten yedrs
andhavp.:"ill not Qualif,ro for rt'"idf'nry
SIN: <; tudC"nt Inform a tion N e two rk ,
meet s every o lher Wednesday , to dlS-
P..I-Time: An academic work load of
less than 12 quarter hours .
Pe": The oHicial word from Security is
NO pets in any buildings or anywhe re
on campus Security says the beyond
"the bathroom ' in the grass problem,"
loose dogs are responsible for the
lowered deer population and a
decrease in small wildlife, and have
been biting folks on campus . We're
sure it's not your pooch though,
because you've left him to be pooch
sat in Security's kennels . The kennel is
in back of LAB I and is open virtually
any time of day or even ing. Warningl
Sec urity p lans to " vigorous ly and
asse rl lvely" patrol for loose pooches
this fall.
Portfolio: (1) Your record of performance on file WIth the registrar. (Ye s, all
the world is a stage.) It contains self
and faculty evaluations, program descriptions or a copy of your individual
contracts . (2) Your own record of performance : contains all of the above
plu s examples of your work-papers ,
slides of art pieces, tapes of music ,
photos of performances or shows, etc.
Potluck: What you take when your Ihe
last perso n to register. Or a social gath ering in whi ch everyone bring~ a part
of the meal . Evergreen is potl\Jck city .
Printm~king ub: Good fac ilities for
silksc reening, bookbinding, photo e tching , and letterpress, ele. , located in the
basement of LAB II .
Process : An Evergreen catch word,
process can describe anything from
what happened in a lousy seminar
("our group's process really sucks
")
to all the conditions of someone's life
(" the proc ess I went through this
Quarter.")
Prior Learning Programs : Provides ways'
to earn credit at Evergreen before
UpSIde Down Degree l'rogram )
Provost: Ryro n Y o ut ~ i s Evergreen ' s
provost . The provost is the person who
i s ultimately responsible for everything
to do with academics . S/ he is al so
Academic V, ce President.
HERG (New Evergreen Resource Guide) :
Published by the Counseling Center,
NERG contains descriptions of social
service resources at Evergreen and
around the Olympia area .
Involve students
Retreal: When you re alize the deans
and fac ulty have left to plan next
attendi ng, but
year ' s curricu lum Re membe r when
mom and dad used to go away and
at .6220.
your
One
Progr~m Secrel~ry : The person WIth Ihe
goodIes Assigned to work with a group
of facu lty , these resource persons have
an une nding patience for people who
call every five minutes to ~ee If lane C
Filc ulty " in yet. They have all the
forms you need to be a suc cessful
Evergreen er,
yourself Involved with governance at
fvprgrE"en .
from
i s supp o sed to be
fhe network need s
support ; please cont act
l avme
UJAMAA: Is Swahi li for cooperat " e
econo mics Th e UJAMAA society exist s
to devplo p a nd re inforce Blac k con...( luu ~ ness and to ~cure their selfdet ermination as a foundation 10 this
a different
soc lPty They provide a friendly atmosphe re for Bla ck students to meet and
talk with othe r Blac k student s Located
at 11~ n07 or call x6781
Upside-Down Degree: Th" program
About $6() of your tuition
each quarter goes to S&A . The money
is then distributed through the Services
and Activities Fee Review Board, cornPrlSed of one student, one faculty , and
one staff . S&A funds just about everybody, including the CAB and Rec
Center, KAOS, Driftwood , the vans,
and even us, the CPJ As far as we
knew the PAID positIOn (internship) of
S&A Coordinator is still open!" Even
The Comer: Located on the first floor
or is that t he second flool a t " A" Dorm
award s credit 1m a previous Iv earned
tec hnICal or vocational degree. Student ~ (]ccepted IOto the program, must
tn the (you cou lda- guessed it) corner
follow guidelines, and wil l take m05tly
They serve politically corrp c t and
wholesome food and drink , while
IIbf.ra l arts for two years , here at Ever-
Third World C""lilion: Is Evergreen's
answer to a minority affairs office . It I ~
an administra tive office designed to
e nsure _Third World Individual s on
campus complete and equal ac cess to
all edu c ational opportunities and
serv Ices off('red by Ihe college
The
coalition provid~ referral s, academic
and social adVis ing, and campus-wide
cultura l/educational activities Th e
For more info about the job, or S&A In
general, stop by CAB 305 or call x6220 .
coalition alS,Q acts as an umbrella
Ofganlzation (and we don 't have to
S.A.G.A.: If you think that Ihis stands
for Slop and Gastrointestinal Assau lts,
you are probably a transfer student, or
suffering from overexposure to acro-
nyms . "SAGA" IS short for "Kamadesaga," the Native American name for
Geneva, NY., where the corporation
began in 1948. The cafeteria here is
called SAGA, and run by it, but has
ils own unique style and tastes (liter-
ally) far better than any olh...,. SAGA
cafeteria anybody we know has ever
eaten at. They're responsive to notes
left by the side order window . Located
on the first floor of the CAB
Security: Those men and women In
blue that chase the Sasquatch monster
from behInd the organic farm . They
handle security problems Register the
serial numbers of your valuables with
them . They also act as a resource for
legal and law enforcement info (i .e .,
one place to go when you're hasseled
unnecessarily by other law oHicers).
Located in LAB II (but not for long)
116140.
Self Help leg.1 Aid: A walk-In clinic
and resource/referral library for the
Evergreen Community Student staHers
assess you r problem, and advise you
on possible courses of action. Expect
to do most of your research and work
yourself; hence the nam e self help.
LIB 3324, x6107
Self.paced Lumina Unil (the infamous
SPLU) : The SPLU's are usually found in
their native habitat, the SPLU Lab, on
the first floor of LAB II . The SPLU's are
not a pop band, but rather a collection
of "technical resources" (i .e ., computers, souod-on-sound tapes, video do
hickeys, etc.). Also habitating the SPLU
Lab are typewriters, computer terminals, lisht tables, a sewing machine,
glass blowing, and much, much more .
Must see to believe l
Seminar: A scheduled group meeting in
which students are taught how to hold
in gas, after having beans for lunch,
for at least an hour and a half . In
addition, a discussion is scheduled
within a specific learning prOllram.
Seminars are essential to the Evergreen
education, and as a resull are nearly
inescapable.
51 ... : The darline creatures which liven
the walks of our school. Slug slime
can be removed from feet or ooller-
skates with a ' crowbar soaked in
gas0-
line (just kidding). (Slug slime does not
come off; once you step on a slug you
are branded for life .)
50daI Contnc:t: Available at the Information center (see "I"), these documents outline the principles of social
conduct for work and life at Everween.
green . Contac t Jan Krones at the Prior
l earning Programs offIce in LAB I 1024,
.bOll
student run NEVER, NEVFR, NEVER
steal their dishes
disinterested are encouraged to apply.
up
Reaution Pavilion: That big brown
concrete tent located on the edge of
the soccer field (ever Iry to put stakes
through a concrete tent!) . Contains :
two tennis/basketball courts, backboards for tennis practice, and two
bathrooms.
Voluntary Service Lisl: Sign up at thp
Inlo Cente r (second floor CAB ) to ge t I
i ssues that
person
I" ave you the house l OR when an
academIC program take s off for oth",
Activities
seminar room . (See e~ternal credit and
American Students' needs . 'NASA's purpose is the education and creation of
Indian awareness. By recogni z ing and
embrac ing cultural differences in a
positive manner, they hope to alleviate
racism, prejudice, and other social ills .
NASA strives to strengthen and perpetuate the Native American culture/
heritage through involvement with
various tribal communities, reservations
and organizations around the Pacific
Northwest. For more information stop
by the NASA office al LIB 3217 or
call1l6024.
5emrnatf> Information on
every seminar
1Il
spraying .
Lawrence advises vets on their GI Bill
fund s Cal l him at x6254 (see VA upna le for latest on these fund,) .
Siudent Accounls: The friendly but oft-
library
S&A (not SNA) : Stands for Services and
yo u've e ve n darkened the door of a
NASA: The Native American Student
Association exi sts t o serve Native
Rubber Stamp and In the Same FIeld
You' re Studying The second are prf"ferable , but often hard to find The
other; work well in a pinch
s.howlng mOVlei or occasional entertainment , often student originated . It IS
Leisure Eduulion Workshops: Non credit classes, everything from photography to Chinese cooking, are sponsored by Leisure Ed . Registration for
the fall is Sept.21-Oct. 9 Ca ll x6530 for
Lost ~nd Found: If anything is lost, go
to Secu rity, x6140, and the Information
Center , x6300.
.
vises students' work in an individual
contract. They corne in two flavors '
vot e, open a bank ac count, and change
your car registration Thpn walt a ypar
parts to work and play
envIronment
Veter~ns Aff~i .. : Located on the first
floor of the library, Veterans AHairs
has a limited quantity of Agent Orange
avai lable to those vet, who may have
missed out on Its original
Spon.... : A facu lty member who super-
confused offire at thE> rear of the registration area on thp fir st floor of thp
assessment of needs . LIB 3401 xb420
more information .
Questionable entries into housing have
been alleged by students, especially
those busted for dealing drugs, so read
carefully.
Ihere 's no place like Evergr""n . Get a
state ID or dnver ' ~ li cen se, re ~l s ter to
materials, tutoring assistance, and
projec t to describe or you've won a
environment , and sponsor a major
Gr~phlc.:
Older Sludent:Older Students (meaning
in relation to how long they've been at
Evergreen, not how old they are) tend
to have certain qualities which di,tinguish them from freshmen and tran,fers. Look for these telltale signs:
Someone who doesn't play with the
squirrels, someone who steps on the
slugs (on purpose!) between" A" Dorm
and ASH, a womyn with at least a
quarter inch of hair in the underarm
region and who hasn't shaved her legs
in two years (you'll know), and men
that never call a womyn a girl due to
behavior modification techniques
Org,onic Farm, The: Located at 2712
Lewis Road NW, Evergreen's organic
farm is a living laboratory where the
emphasis is on combining "book learnIng" with "hands on" experience in the
areas of anima l husbandry and wifery,
beekeeping, plant propagation, gardening (you coulda guessed), aquaculture,
construction and other farm-related
Aid: Responsible for scrounging money for deserving students. They
also have a bulletin board that lists on
and off-campus jobs. Located in the
Enrollment Servic es Area . Nice people
who love a good tearjerker. Warningl
With the advent of the Reagan administration , basic gra nts are expected to
dry up like slugs in the sun.
Evalualions: The method by which student s and fa culty determine academic
progress , and whe ther or not credit
should be awarded . As often as once
Resourc:e
an antenna . They oHer a wide var.iety
Gri""ance Procedure: As outlined In
the COG Document (Under "("), the
whole process of sett ling disputes, from
informal mediation, to the Evergreen
Council , and/ or Campus adjudicator ,
to Hearing Board, to lawsuit
Financi~1
time.
En,,;ronmenlal
tion c oordinator, x6042 .
1(A000FM: A non-commercial, community, listener-sponsored rad io station
located on the third floor of the CAB
or 89.3 on the dial . It's that radio station you pick up so well, even without
mornings. Please call x6200
Full-Time: Academic load of 12-16
quarter hours . No relation to Evergreen
is set aside for evaluation writing and
faculty c onferen ce s.
projecb
open o n Mondav evenings and Friday
Friday Nile Films: The people that l,ve
In the corner of the Cooper Point
Journal office . A self-supporting film
series on friday nights (nol nites) .
Usually at 3, 7, and 9 30 p .m Costs
S 1.25 . Refreshments often provided by
the cookie lady . (See "C.")
Group: A mode of study ,
usually full -time, in which a group of
students agree to work/ learn as a team
with one or more faculty sponsors
under a contr~ct SIgned by all. otte n
student -generated ; generally on an
advanced level.
are working on
such as poster s, flyers, signs, etc
ServIce, avai lable for a fee are phototypesetting, headlining, and production
services by the staff . Use of the waxer,
li ght tables , lucygraph , drawing board
and consullation with the staff i, free .
For detai ls ca ll Shi rl py Greene, produc -
Health ServiCes and The Women's
Clini c are open 9-4, Monday through
Thursday. The Women's Clini C is also
~rp.f>n
Communi~lions Building: Located just
west of the Rec Center (pull out your
maps, kiddies!) thi s building houses an
dent s who
ness and minor injury.
Council (look under E) .
Driftwood ~y Care Center: A learning
center for both preschoolers and col lege students . The center primarily
serves children of low-income, full-time
students, who depend on the center in
order to attend college . The staff
depends heavily on work study, interns ,
and volunteer students interested in
early childhood development and education . If you like to work with chil dren call the Center Coordinator,
Virginia Brian at 86&-6060 or 866-6220.
Parents may pick up applicat iom for
their chi ldren at eJlB 305 . Children
accepted must be 18 months to 4
yea r, 11 months old and may attend
up to six hours a day . The center run s
from 9 to 4 with an hour earlier or
late r by permission . The fees are based
on a sliding scale of the parent's
Graphic", The graphic facil itie" located
in Seminar 2150, are available to stu-
hergreen Polilic.1 Inl""""lion Cenler:
A student group that disseminates
poli tica l information through fi lm s,
lectures, workshops, and their library
of leftist materials . Located in LIB 3220
or call x6144 .
fre<> A me rp $2 will gPt you a loc kpr ,
Contr~ct,
page 18 Cooper Pojnt Journal
Directory Assistmce: Those' who know
where you live, your phone number,
what you had for dinner last night , and
how often you shower. LIB 1103 or
call x6OOO.
and iI. seri es o f unlimited c lean towels,
o ne at a lime Thi S facilitv eplto miles
th(' country club atmosplll're of Evpr-
including five studios for audio engineers, a TV studio, recital halls,
experimental theater, practice rooms,
and tons of other goodies.
Geoduck T-shirts, candy, PMS
Deli, The: They have espresso and
c appachino Looks like a Deli, but
doesn't really smell like one, think
about it
Located on the second floor
of the CAB.
for danCin g, karat e, et c. , and a ho tly
d l~putp(j set of locker room s (ask an
nlripr 'i tuopnt) Sturient " r an us.e It for
Impressive array of facilities for arti sts
I
Deans: There are six of them . Library
Services (jovana Brown), Enrollmeflt
Services (Larry Stenberg) and four
Ac ademic Deans .
handball courts . a mu lti purpose room
problem s and c ulture o f ASian Amencan s The ASian Coa lition srx:-nsors
work shops III cultural awarene ss, art ,
organi zat io nal sk ill s, speakers, cultural
State's two representatives on the
Evergren Council: The dedsion-;"aking
body outlined in COG III (under C).
The counc il is composed of 15 students , 10 staH and 5 faculty . It is
responsible for charging DTF's (under
D), and acts as a liaison between
various facets of the TESC community.
c hange with new occ upants. The num-
Academic Advising Handbook, AAH
governor and most political observers
agree that he could be re-elected now
with no prob lems . (We'd all vote for
him.) He is also one of Washington
etc. Services available for a fee are
phototypsetting, headlining, and production services by the st!,H Design
e xplai n t he needs for umbrellas In thp
Pac ific Northwest) for the Third Wor ld
student groups, providing advocacy,
a dVISing, and technical assistance
They publish a newslptter, have a stucWnt lounge (LIB 3205) and a study
lo unge (LIB 3216) . The Third World
CoallllOn IS staffed by K,m Bingham,
secrela ry, LIB 3204; April West , c<Xlrdi nat or (on leave); ' and Steve Bader
(Inte rim coordinator) LIB 3208 Call
x6014 for more info .
Third World Women: Is organIZed to
fulfill th-e ne eds of (you coulda
guessed) third world wome n EspeCIally
thosp who'e; ~pP'C"ial needs arp not mpt
by any oth e r womyn 's offI ce on
campus St o p by LIB 3211 or call . 6034 .
Tides of
Change: Is
a
colle c tI ve
wompn'" production c ompany . They
..pon o;,or (" on c ert~, ski ll sharing, work -
sho ps, films , dances, and di scussions ,
here at Evergr een and in the Olympia
community They are actively seeking
new collechve members . Watch for
thplr event ", or contac t them through
WAUS (Wa " hington A. sso c lation o f
Umversltv Student s) Deal s With the
\ harPCI intprp'ih ami c on(ern~ o f student, '" o ur S IX, 4-year state collpges
Evergr""n, U of W, WSU, Central ,
rd~tl'rn and W estern WAUS represenlal lv(>'i from (>ac h school m eet m o nthly
on anp 0 1 th(>' Oi i); C ampu~p'i
The ( Oa lltl o n \ etforst are aimed at
reprpsentlOg <; tudent interests at the
~Idt(' legi slature
The group gather~
Infurmatlon and provuip c, input at
pubhc m eetings and h earings wherp
ISSlJP'i affec ting higher edu cation are
being di ~c us sed
Evergr een 's repre5entative to WAU~
" Recky Sco tt She carr use all t he he lp
Ihat she can g..t from other student s If
you arc intertl's ted in helplllg out , leave
a mess age for her at the S&A o tt ice,
866-6220
Women's Shelter Program ( Harbor
Ho use ) Harbor Ho usp ..(35H)593) helps
wome n with or withOUt" children who
need to leave then ho m es, women
who need sh e lter III oth e r town s,
women who need support, women who
need shplter in other t o wns, wompn
The Women's Center x6162 .
who nPed suppurt , women who net>d
advocacy through publi c service infor-
TlPI: Yes, Virgin Ia, some Creenprs do
live III tipis i~ the woods Tents too
mation agen c ies , and women who
want to talk to someone who is f amiliar
with their situation If you are a victim
Referred to as " T" dorm, these delightful dwellings are said to be a great
e xperience . Prerequisites include a
fondness of dampness and insects, a
predisrx:-sition to mildpw growth s on
the skin, and ability to work propane
stoves and lanterns.
Tofu: This soy bea n curd product
IS
nearlv impossible to escape at fver-
green, not that you'd want to It gOPS
With everything, and will take on the
flavOl o f anything It is cooked wit h
Yo u may not carp for It plain but do n't
give up, it get, betl er
I
of domesti c abuse , please do yourself
a favor , and call Karen at the above
number Harbor Hoose is also in need
of volunteers and will srx:-nsor internships After hours the Crisis Center can
contacl Harbor Ho use for you (See
under "C " )
WORKSTUDY: This is a progra m to
rai se poor students into the ranks of
Ihe working poor . That's right , if you're
roar. the y' ll gIve you a job, so you can
remain poor Find out fro m finan Cial
aid if yo u're eligible , perhaps vou too
can jo in the hundred s of other Greene rs
who I'ay Ihe lr renl late eve ry m o nth .
Vending Machi.-: Located on the first
floor of the CAB, right outside of the
CPI oHice, where the people inside do
not carry change. There's coff~, ice
cream, sodas , chips, cookies, and
possibly candy, by now . The candy
machine was vandalized twice in one
week Ihis summer, and as of Sept. 1
tllere was no chocolate (sigh) . There
are also those people who force Car>adian coins into the Cigarette machine,
to which a hardy, "Who are you to
stop me !Tom buying cancer sticks if I
want to!" goes out Io-from all smokers
on campus ,
Yurt : A frame house, usually with
plastic walls, we think, bul we know
they usually are found in Mongolia Of
in the woods around TESC. Definitely a
way to get back 10 nature, without
having to give up electricity, due to
the miracle of extension cords. The
staff admits near total ignorance on
Ihis matter, we all live in plaster homes.
Sept. 24, 1981
Cooper Pojnt Journal page 19
II
I
Ir----~-------------------------------------------i1
>
lEse Bus Service
II
:I
I
intercity
tratlsit
II
I
I
I
Administrative
Offices:
1401 S. Eastside St.
Olympia, WA 98501
Evergreen Vans:
753-8310
866-6220 :
I
j
1
I
(
eo"l.o.L&c1 (?no ...
- [Ibrary
,.,. 'S'
Non-Booic Reference
The Evergreen Library Is exceptional in the
variety of materials other than books that are
avai lable for you to check-out. There are films
slides, tapes and records, games, maps,
'
molecular models, and even art prints. Things
that you might not be able to buy, but that you
can borrow! So check into the library and Check
out the "non-book" collection.
Periodicals , Documents
The Periodicals/ Documents area provides
access to over 1,500 magazine and journal titles
and thousands"of U.S. documents received
through the depository program . Back issues of
periodicals are ;lvailable on microfilm and copying
faC ilities are provided .
I
I
I
I
I
Qj
Media Production Center
The Media Production Center has the equipment you need to transform your raw media
materials into finished products for your program ,
portfoliO, or personal project.
Photo Services
Photo Services offers custom production
services and technicat assistance for students ,
lacully and staff. Whether you have a quick queslion or a major academic production project, the
experienced staff at Photo Services can either
proVIde the answer or tell you how you can save
by prodUCing your own materials.
Eastside
Co
g
Co.!
Marge Brown . Wyatt Cates
Lucy Enriq uez Karen Gose
U
Mud Bay Rd .
"0
FARES:
oe:
Westside
Qj
'"
.t;j
(Drivers Cannot Make
~
.!2
____ IT #41 day serv ice and Sunday day van
Regular
(Age 18 & Over)
Capitol
Senior / Handicapped
(With IT Reduced
Fare Card)
0.
(Sunday day van serves the dorm loop)
'"
U
_ _ _ Evening IT #4.1 and Van A route
"',;
-
-
Youth
(Age 17 & Under)
-Evergreen Van B Route
'-"1.,,,1';'"
25ft
50ft
$10
10ft
20ft
$2
15ft
30t
$6
Child
(Age 5 & Under/With Adult)
Tumwater
Bob Haft, Kaye Su ll ivan
tnter1lbrary Loan
Interlibrary Loan provides you with access to
materials from over 2,000 libraries . If our library
doesn't own what you need, I.L.L will find it
for you .
Day passes not accepted on night runs.
1
1
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
1
I
I
I
. Monday-Friday #41
Depart
4th
Capitol
6:45 a.m .
7 :05
7:25
7:45
8 :05
8:25
8 :45
9:05
9:25
9:45
10:05
10: 25
10:45
11:25
12 : 05 p .m .
12: 25
1 :05
1: 45
2:05
2:25
I
3:05
3:25
3:45
I.
I
I
I
I
I
I
2 :45 '
4 : 05
4:25
4 : 45
5:05
5 :25
5:45
6:05
Sat. Service #41
Harrison
&
Division
6:51
7: 11
7:31
7:51
8:11
8:31
8:51
9:11
9:31
9:51
10:11
10:31
10:51
11 :31
12:11
12 :31
1: 11
1:51
2: 11
2:31
2:51
3:11
3:31
3:51
4 : 11
4:31
4 :51
5:11
5 : 31
5:51
6:11
Arrive
TESC
7:01
7:21
7:41
8:01
8:21
8 : 41
9:01
9: 21
9 : 41
10:01
10 :21
10 : 41
11 : 01
11 :4'1
12:21
12:41
1 : 21
2:01
2 : 21
2:41
3 :01
3 : 21
3 : 41
4 : 01
4 :21
4 : 41
5:01
5: 21
5 :4 '1
6 :01
6 :2 1
Division
Depart
Library
Loop
705
7:25
7 : 45
8 :05
8 : 25
8 :45
9 :05
9:25
9 : 45
10 : 05
10 : 25
10 : 45
II : 05
II : 45
&
Harrison
7 : 15
7 : 35
7:55
8: 15
8:35
8:55
q: 15
9 : 35
9:55
10: 15
10 :35
10:55
11: 15
11: 55
12:35
12 :55
1:35
12 :25
12 : 45
1 : 25
2:05
2:25
2 : 45
3 :05
3:25
3 :45
4 : 05
4:25
4:45
5:05
2 : 15
2 : 35
2:55
3: 15
3:35
3:55
4: 15
4:35
4:55
5: 15
5 : 35
5 : 55
6: IS
6:35
5:25
5 : 45
6:05
6:25
Arrive
4th &
Capitol
7: 21
7 : 41"
8:01
8:21
8 :4 1
9:01
9:21
9:41
10: 01
10: 21
10:41
11: 01
11: 21
12 :01
12:41
1 : 01
1: 41
2: 21
2:41
3:01
3 ':21
3:41
4 : 01
4: 21
4 : 41
5:01
5:21
5 :4 '1
6:01
6:21
6 :4 '1
Depart
4th &
Capitol
Harrison
&
Division
Division
&
Elliott
8:05
8:45
9 : 25
10:05
10:45
11 :25
12:05
12 : 45
1:25
2:05
2:45
3:25
4 : 05
4 : 45
5:25
6:05
8:11
8 :51
9:31
10: 11
10 : 51
11 :3]
12 :'11
12 : 51
1:31
2 :11
2:51
3:31
4: 11
4:51
5:31
6 : 11
8:13
8:53
9 : 33
10: 13
I
I
I
'
Dorm
Loop
I
I
7:00
8:00
9:00
10:00
11:00
7 : 07
8 : 07
9:07
10 : 07
11 : 07
7: 10
8 :10
9: 10
10: 10
11 : 10
7 :16
8:16
9:16
10:16
11: 16
7:22
8 : 22
9:22
10:22
11 : 22
7:30
8:30
9:30
10:30
11:30
4 th
Capitol
6 : 40
7:40
8:40
9 : 40
10:40
11 :40
Harri so n Division
Divi sion
Elliot
6:45
6:47
7:45
7 :47
8:45
8:47
9 : 47
9 : 45
10: 45
10 : 47
11 : 47
11 :45
I
{.~
Saturday departure times
IEve r yt hin g same as Monday through Thursday 6 40 to 11 : 55 but there is one more
run wh ich follows the A route .
4th
Divis ion Division Dorm Library Division Division
arrive
4th
4th
Capi to l Harrison Ellio t
Loop
Loop
Elliot Harrison Capito l Wilson
4th
Capitol
11 : 55
12 :00
12:08 12 : 10 12 : 16 12:22
12 :3
L_~
11
2 :40 12: 45 12 : 47 12 : 55
I
1
I
____________________ _
pilgl' 20 Cooper Point Jou rnal Se pt 24, 1981
-:25
9:05
9:45
10 : 25
11 :05
11 :45
12:25
1:05
1:45
2:25
3:05
3:45
4:25
5 :05
5:45
6:25
8:33
9:13
9:53
10:33
11:13
11:53
12:33
1:13
1:53
2:33
3 : 13
3:53
4:33
5 : 13
5:53
6:33
8 : 35
9 : 15
9:55
10:35
11 :15
11:55
12:35
1:15
1:55
2 : 35
3:15
3:55
4:35
5: 15
5 : 55
6:35
8:41
9:21
10:01
1.£l:41
11:21
12:01
12:41
1:21
2 : 01
2:41
3:21
4:01
4:41
5:21
6:01
6:41
Dorm
Loop
6:55
7:55
8 .:55
9 :55
10:55
11 : 55
Library
Loop
7: 00
8:00
9 : 00
10:00
11:00
Division Division
4th
Harrison Capitol
Elliot
7:10
7: 16
7 : 08
8 :1 0
8 ;16
809
9:08
9:10
9:16
10:08
10: 10
10 : 16
11:08
11 :10
11 :16
ilndrea Winship, Peggy Cahill , Hester
Tracy Hamby, Woody Hirzel . Craig Hickman
Electronic Media
ElectroniC Med ia encompasses the College's
audio and "deo production faciliti es located both
in the Library alld in the Communications Lab
Building . We have some of the best equipment
ava'iable. housed In custom-deSigned facili ties .
with professional s taff providing access and
instruction .
Judit h Esp lola, coordinator, media services
1
1
1
I
I
I
I
1
I
I
I
I
Char Davies, Dick Fuller. Ken Wilhefm
1
--.
,)
o,
-
Got Nothing To Oo?
1
I
4th
Wilson
7:22
8 : 22
9 : 22
10 : 22
11 :22
B Route Sunday Evening
9th
Division Cooper
4th
Division
Pt.
Capi to l Harrison Mud Bay
6:40
6:45
6:47
7:40
7 : 45
747
8 :40
8 : 45
8:47
9:40
9 : 45
9:47
10:4010 : 4 5 1 0 :47
11 ' 40
11 : 45
11 ·47
I
I
I
I
Processing
The Processing Area receives books from
Acquisitions and prepares them for circulation .
This entails ordering cataloging on an automated
data base, typ ing labels for the spines of books ,
property stamping books, and filing the cards
into the card catalog for patron access . We also
bind and repair damaged books.
1
I
1
I
1
I
I
I
#41 IT Monday-Saturday Evening
Sunday Evening Van A Route
111 :40
11:45 11:4711:55end
A Ro"fe done by van 7 nites
IFriday
8:21
9:01
9:41
10:21
11 :01
11 :41
12:21
1 :01
1 :.41
2:21
3:01
3.: 41
4:21
5:01
5:41
6 : 21
Arrive
4th &
Capitol
I[,.l ve
Arrive
41 h
Hdrri so n
Dorm
Library Divis io n
4th
L
",·-d".c:p-"it-'.ll:.cl--,l",,).c:iv",i""
s i"(-l:.cnc_---"L"'o"'u"'p'---_-'L"'ll"'o"'p'--_H~a"_r!_'ri",so=.:.n--,C=a pit 0 I
855dm q:OO
9:10
9 : 15
u .. 0
0 :45
u : 55
10: 00
10 : 10
10: 15
10 : .. 0
10 : .. 5
I 0 : 55
I I : 00
11 : 10
11 : 15
II · .. 0
I I : 45
I I : 55
12 : 00
12 : 10
12 : 15
12 . .. 0
12 .. 5
12 : 55
1 : 00
1: 10
1": 15
1: .. 0
1 .. 5
I : 55
2 : 00
2 : 10
2 : 15
2 : .. 0
2 : .. 5
2 55
3 : 00
3 : 10
3: 15
.~ .. 5
3 55
4 00
·L 10
4 : 15
J :"O
.. : .. 0
.. . .. 5
4 : 55
5 : 00
5 : 10
5: 15
5: .. 0 .
5 : .. 5
5 . 55
b 00
6 10
6 : J5
Mud B.
arrive
Library Cooper Division
4th
Clevelnd
4th
Loop
Pt .
Harrison Capitol Emerson Capitol
6:45
6:47
6:55
6 : 45
7:55
7:47
8 : 45
8 : 47
8:55
9:55
9:45
9:47
10 : 45
10:47
10 :55
Division Division
&
&
Harriso n Elliot
Loop
6 : 40
7 : 40
8 : 40
'1
9:40
10 : 40
1:33
2:13
2:53
3:33
4:13
4:53
5 : 33
6 :13
Depart
TESC
Division
&
Harrison
Sunday Day Van Service
B Route Mon - Sat Evening
Monday through Thursday depart"re tim es
.
Mud B.
14th
Division Cooper
Capitol Harrison
PI.
1O~ 53
11 :33
12 :13
. 12:53
Arrive
TESC
Division
&
Elliott
Acquisitions
Acquisitions buys all of the print and non-print
materials for the library collection . You can be a
part of the process by filling out "Library Purchase Request'· form s for items you would like to
see added to the collection. If your reques ts are
approved by the Selectio n Committee. we will
order the material as soon as possi ble .
Cataloging
Cataloging is in the bUSiness of making library
materials accessible Ihrougll the card catalog . We
describe items in terms which are usefu l to the
maximum number of users . and which conform to
s tandard library of Congress practice . Determin·
ing who is res ponsible for a work , choosing the
subject headings which describe the w0rk and
assigning a cail number to it are our primary
tasks .
FREE
Media Services
At Evergreen. st udents , faculty . and staff have
access to media eq uipment for use In all sort s of
academic proJects . The Media Services area includes the Media Produ·;tion Cen ter . ElectrOnic
Media , and Photo Services. More 'mportantly , you
have access to staff knowledgeable In all areas of
media planning and production . reaay to help yo u
prepare programs for use ill classes and portfoliOS.
THE BACK ROOM
Although seldom seen by the public, these
areas are essential to the functioning of the
library .
Cooper
Cleveland
Dorm
Library Cooper Division
4th
Loop
Loop Mud Bay Harrison Capitol Emerson
6 : 55
7:00
7: 07
7:10
7:16
7 : 22
7:'55
8:00
8:07
8 :10
8 : 16
8 : 22
8 : 55
9:00
9:07
9:10
9:16
9:22
9 : 55
10 :00
10:07
10 : 10
10 :16
10 : 22
10 : 5511:00
11 :0711:1011:1611:22
11 55
(
Sunday on ly
I
1
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
1
I
I
1
1
I
-----------------------~
-----_._ .
"
"
'1
,,,
When you're on your coffee
break, or between classes, or
catching a bite at the Spar,
pick up a copy of the CPJ
and find out What's happening on campus, in Olympia,
and around the world. Each
week the Journal brings you
the very best in news,
commentary, reviews, and
the most complete calendar
of arts and events in town.
Read the Journal and find
out about all the things
Olympia's daily doesn't want
you to know about. Keep
your quarter and put it
towards a cup of coffee. The
Journal is free, and that's
still the best deal around.
Sept. 24, 1981
Cooper P~int Journal page 21
Living in Olympia
Eastside
Dorm Life
By Geoff Kirk .
The secret for survival in the dorms is
the abi lity to adapt to extremes. Especially
extreme lowering of cleanliness standards.
During the first week of school the four
concrete shell s - called A, B, C, and D stare at eac h other, empty 'and lifeless.
Then, fl ooded with a mass of students,
they burst to life and become dorms.
Dorm life is life with 600 neighbors By
applyin g early (1957). or being extremely
lucky , you can snag a room on the top
f loor of B, C, or D . They have private
kit chens and high ceilings .
All the dorms have at least one elevator, known as Otis, stairwells, brown carpeting, and tan wall s. D and the top three
fl oors of A are quiet, C is sensual , R is
hu ge stereos and elec tri c instrument s, and
A i, pdrt ie, On eac h fl oor there arc
meti culou s and nw ~ sy , cacophon y and
aphony, tranquilit y and confli ct
Housi ng off prs two ways to get rooms,
the Unit Lease and the Rental Contract In
the Rental Contract a bed is purchased in
il room for a cert ain length of time (one,
two or three qu arters ) Prile, vary , depending on th e length and the type of
room , fro m $93 for a three-person apart ment to $124 for a five. The Unit lea w
allows you to rent an entire room or
apartment for subl etting or yourself. Tlwy
range from $1 78 for a two-person studio
to $55b for a fi ve-person apartment. Unit
Leases are only offered when there is a
surplus of rooms Advantages of rental
contra cts includ .. : Ie,s respon sibility and
depos it. Unit Leasps are che apt~r per
month and yo u pi ck your roommate. Suhlet t ing, whlie 'c he'aper, doe,n' t (ount
t ow ,~ rd s room priority .
Vo u and YOUI roommate' will ,> oon know
pach othl'r, Insidt, ilnd out , dnd «'rt<1ln
things - like tlw ir monopoly of th., , I<'r.'o
,lI1d hdthruolll - will gratt' on your nl'rv(" .
Vou Ill,W W,lnt to h',w. " but dnn 't givp up
I h('\ ( oulci be trYin g to forn' yllll ou t
'\ ' ,1 ( ollnter try th l" " n1('tl)(>(I,
1ll ~ lIll " I , ' ,lllri p,""" ill tl1l' 1111(/<11., 0 1
\\(111" U,( ' your r""IllIll.lI<'\ tY i>"\~ rl l"r .
, 11 ' n 'C) . ,\I1rl all Y utl", r P(h'>I'''IOI1', ,h II
th,'\ w"rt' yn ur, Al tpr pullin g up 01 ( hol rlll '
'1\1 d l1 ... f Hl pt-,.., tpr, kindl~ l d t (Jll Vt'r.., dtl o n
aho ut your r,', ('nt con vt'r <; ioll to ),ll ,lI1i'l11
Chl unlt nH 'ssi lH'" ( ,\11 work Wi th th(' ,lid
ot tret' bo\ clo th," hut rpnlt'l1lbpr th, '
I-lousing (Ontr,l( t prov i,>ion <1hout <li'll1l s'
,a l for "1 ' \1 (!" ivp lilt h "
\Vh lc h pr!',>pnh d pmblplll , wholt is
l' \((',~ i vt'. an d in tl1l' 1: d S(' of noi,>!', " un
rea,onablp" i I play mu sic livp ,md r('(ordpd , "Imos t ( on stdntly and h,1Vf'
re( !l vf'd c omplc1int ~ at every hour and
pvprv volume l('veL My advicp i, to go
ah('ad ami playas loud as you want dnd
if ,Hl yonf' calb to complain thpn turn it
down . NOi se is a major part of dorm lif(',
whi ch can be ildapted to. I WilS sleeping
through fire alarms by my ,('cond month
of dorm life.
Social life in thf' dorms is centered in a
few places: community kitchens, the pool
table, the TV room, and The Corner . The
Corner is a hOUSing-run restaurant that
features live music , tasty food, and beanbag chairs. If you want to start a conversation here, mention your hitchhiking trip
to Oregon or your desire to " focus on the
experience of my aura."
The TV room looks like the gorilla cage
at the zoo. Meshed wire under plexi -glass
isolates it from the traffic flow. Crowds
converge for " Star Trek, " "M'A'S'H ," and
"60 Minutes ."
The pool table can be found on the first
floor of A dorm. People wait in line to
play pool , while others play foosball , pingpong, or stare down at the pool match
fro m the second floor. To make friends
here ask who's in line and offer or bum
cigarettes.
Community kitchens are found on every
floor above the third , except for the tenth.
I nside are three refrigerators, two stoves,
shelves, cupboards, and a large trash can
that fill s in ,econds and molds during the
res t of the year. Every kitchen is different
Some have funny signs - "genius is always
accompanied by clutter" - or duty rosters .
Others cover their windows with paper to
prevent intrusion into private rituals .
Beer and breadmaking, studying and
'>creaming, these are the kind of experi ences that melt together into memori es
that you will carry with you long after
you leave college It's like living in a
Ho liday Inn.
pilge 22 Cooper Point Journal
Landlord/Tenant Act: Tenants, Know Your Rights!
Li fe in the Ashes
b y OS De lube
AS H is a no man's land . A place for
thme caught betwf'en the conveni ence
and low cost of living in the dorms and
the urge to I ivf' somewhere bes ides at
sc hooL
The rent ca n be lower than in the dorms
and you get your own room to boot. Thi s
wilS a biggie for me, aft e~ having a roommate divorce me (sorry Kim) ilnd move
out , only to be repl aced by an intense
phy sics studf'nt , who was then replaced
by another writer. I began to feel as
thnugh I wa s living in a revolving door.
M oving to ASH meant that I picked out
my own roommate" and lould kick them
out , lWl duse I was the holder of the lease
Thf're is noi,e at ASH , but it is different
from t he noi se of thp dorms . More often
thdn not , it r('sembles the noise found in
low.'r in( omp apartment> in the city .
Husband, and wivps fight IIlg, babies crying, di"o bl aring frolll the IlI'ighbor's '
-., t p r(;'()
WllI'n you IiVI' in the c/Ofl11' , the process
invo lVl'd in g!,tting rid of the noise is to
Ojll'n your Window and \ ( rpam, " Turn it
down . <1 " hol(, I" In an Ach'ilt Student
HOU'>lllg Situation , thi s is obviously not
.lppropfloltl' Subt Ipr methods are called
lor, ilk l ' heginning 10 tYI )!' ev('ry time you
h" oIr d h,III -' I" ,,'d ritl '(lIllin g through
tIH ' WolII
I •'" " r-known \)('n(,\its of living at ASH
, HI' tlw D,lIly Olympidn coin box di sp.'n ' l'r , Y"S W I' h,lVl' ,1 Sunday paper,
wild., ,111 ()I till' ppon, in the dorms and
M( )1)" h,lVl' to g() downtown for their,
I hl'n tllPn' is ddri('d status of living off
(dlllpl" . Whl'll someone asks do YOll live
on (dlllpUSi I can proudly reply, " VUK
NO. I IiVI' in ASH ."
Tiwrt' i, d wdiling li,t d Illill' long at
ASH, ('spt'riallv if Y(lll want a on€- or
threl'-beriroom ,1P,lrt ment. Speak i ng from
pt'rsonal knowledgf' I ran Sdy, it's worth it.
The.
l.iHI~ House.
If)
th~ Woods
By John Bauman
Living on Cooper Point is far out. Far
out of town, too far to walk to school,
far from all troubles and cares. A little
house in the woods near the water is the
ultimate Evergreen chic. It's close enough
to nature to satisfy the romantic souls
among us . For the more ambitious and
less politically correct student, it's within
sight of the real goal , a big house in the
woods on the water. But for any student,
if you want to be cool , a little house in
the country is a good start
The bulletin boards' at school are good
places to look for a house, also at the
food co-op. Word of mouth is the best
source of information . Most of the good
(i .e. cheap) houses near school have been
rented by students for years . Many of
them weren't even occupied before Evergreen opened. Some come with a history,
some come with a name, like " Tree Frog
House" or " Butterball ." I f you see a house
you like, tell the person you'll take it right
away. If you don't , someone else will.
There are some things that should be
by John Bauman
checked.
Each fall students from all over the
Most important is heat . The winte(s
country converge on Evergreen. After reghere are cold , and heat will be your
istration they turn towards Olympia, in
largest expense after rent. I spent one
search of housing. like an expanding mass
winter in a house that had an oil stove for
of primordial ooze, they engulf the Westheat. Not only was it inconvenient and
side, filling all the available housing. The
dirty, but it was inadequate On one
mass of students reaches the hill, but
occas ion we had to spray it with the fire
keeps growing, it slides towards downextingui sher. (A landlord who provides a
town . It oozes past Mark-It, stops for
smoke ala~m and fire extinguisher knows
breakfast at the Spar, then continues to
something you don't.) Heating oil costs
the Eastside. Here the overflow from the
too much ($132/ gal. as of 7/ 5) . No matter
Westside finds shelter. Home at last l
how you look at it , oil stoves are a bad
It's true that the Eastside is often a
deal. If you end up with one ask your
second choice after the Westside, but
landlord to replace it with a wood stove.
don't let that affect your opinion of the
He probably won 't but what the hell .
Eastside. I t's a fine place to live, just a
Al so , d,k him to add insulation if it is
littler further from campus. The bus ride
needed. A, k him to let you live there
to school takes about a half an hour as
without payin g ren t. It doesn't hurt to ask .
you have to transfer downtown . Riding a
In additi on to heat probl ems, the house
bike takes con siderably longer, but a bike
I li ved in two vears ago had water probis. nice te have for getting around town .
lems. All was fin e until one day I turned on
Fortunately, most of what you need is in
th e kit chen tap and got mud. Black water,
your neighborhood .
one of the worst things one can wake up
Ralph's Thriftway is the biggest superto in th e morning. We boiled it and drank
market. They have a large selection and
it in pl ace of coffee, then called the land- . their produce is usually good Some
lord for advi ce. He told me how to flush
peopl e claim that their cash registers are
out the tank with water and thereafter I
part of a capitalist plot, but that's no
had to do it every month or so. Later, I
reason not to shop there. The Washington
If'arned that some greeners who lived
state liquor store is at 417 Plum Street.
furth er up the hill had build a sweat lodge
The public library is on 8th Street between
next to a creek in their backyard . They
Adams and Franklin . It's open most
would build a fire in it and work up a
evenings until 9 p.m. The post office is at
good sweat. Then they'd roll around in
900 S. Jefferson St. The National Guard
the creek and slap each other with tree
armory is at 515 S. Eastside St. If there is
branche .. Any connection between this
ever a riot at Evergreen, you can hitch a
and our water problem is something I
ride with the National Guard . They'll be
don't ca re to speculate on .
going right to it.
h cess ive funkyn ess can usually be
The houses on the Eastside are generally
avoided by renting a newer house . In a
pretty good. In .the one I rented, the back
new house there are usually doors where
door entered into the bathroom, but this
you would want doors, windows that
is not standard . There are some beautiful
rimp, dnd more than one electrical outl et.
vi ctorian houses on the Eastside, parti,cuUnfortunately, the houses in a student's
larly north of 4th SI.
pri ce range tend to be dull . The interiors
,iii look just like ASH .
Capitol Hill
By th e Editorial Stafi
Westside
Ily Andrew Uerby
Rl'al status for an Evergreen student is
to livp within two block s of the food
co-op Olympi a's Westside has the highest
conce ntration of off-campus student
res idents (exc luding ASH) because of its
lrieal loc ation (between Evergreen and
down town) and reasonable housing The
Westsid e also has a good transit service,
an acclo' ssibl e business district, and an
atmosph ere that hints of country living.
Olympia has grown more in the past
six years than in the 20 preceding. The
further one goes west, the more modern
(and expensive l ) the hOUSing. Decent
affordable housing is dwindling, confined
to those older neighborhoods whose
economic heyday has come and gone.
Many of the houses are in bad repair
because their landlords cannot afford to
fix them, besides, everyone knows that
college kids wilf rent anything! With careful shopping and carpentry skills, it is
possible to make a house a home, at least
until graduation .
The most popular area of the Westside
for students is also the oldest, the northeast corner. The neighborhoods haven't
changed their appearance much in 40
years . Nearly all of the streets are bare of
sidewalks . Consequently, the residents
walk the streets for exercise and amusement. Nearly every city block is bisected
by an alley where wild blackberries grow
in abundance. A few street walkers also
stroll along the alleys
When one resides on the Westside there
is a noticeable feeling of community
Westside residents are a diverse lot and
include : long-time area residents, newcomers , senior citizens, large families with
children, newlyweds, singles, immigrants,
Native Americans, middle-class incomes,
welfare incomes, and, of course, students .
All live together without animosity
because of a strong feeling of neighborhood pride and al so because they ignore
each other .
Regardless, the Westside is a comfortable place to , live and can be as interesting as you are inclined to particpate.
Many students have purchased Westside
homes and have become active in local
politics . It is ironic to think of them as
our future landlords .
The numbers are dragging by
9th ,
10th. Vou 're not ilt the right bu s stop to
catch the numner eleven and the bus
streams past you . Oh darn, a street with
name, that " another block
11th, 12th.
A car zoom s by and a kid leans out the
window yelling, " #&!& #&It Greener,
shave your armpits l " God, you hate this
stretch of road .
vou trudge five blocks further, you spot
your house acros s Capitol Way, but you're
trapped at the crosswalk . No one is
a-
By Thom Richardson
In an attempt to provide the Evergreen
community with a better awareness of the
law, the Self Help Lega! Aid staff is writing a series of articles dealing with Evergreen students'most common legal problems. SHLAP is located in Library 3224,
Or calJ 866-6107 .
Students, like most low-income, transient groups, usually rent nousing. And
like most low-income groups, students
usually have an incomplete knowledge of
the law. This general overview of Washington's 'Landlord Tenant Act should help
you avoid problems with your landlord.
Make sure that both you and your land·
lord understand which type of tenancy
you have. The two main kinds are monthto-month tenancies and leases. A monthto-month rental agreement exists when
either party may terminate the agreement
at any time. All that's required is written
notice at least 20 days before the end of
the rental period . The landlord may also
raise the rent at any time by giving 30
days notice.
On the other hand, a fixed-period
tenancy, or iease, is a written agreement
specif)'mg a period of time in which
neither the rules of tenancy may be
changed unless both parties agree to it
The title of a written agreement doesn't
count, the wording of the agreement
does, so read it ''-drefully. A month-tomonth rental agreement may require that
you stay a certain period of time (under
penalty of losing your deposit, for example) yet still allow the landlord to evict
you with 20 days notice.
Some provisions of a lease or rental
agreement are illegal or unenforceable,
including :
• an agreement to waive your rights
under the Landlord-Tenant Act
• an agreement not to contest a lawsuit your landlord may file against you
• an agreement to pay your landlord's
attorney's fees in situations not authorized
by the Landlord-Tenant Act
• an agreement which limits your
landlord's responsibility in situations
where they are liable,
• an agreement to use a particular
arbitrator in case you and your landlord
use arbitration to settle a dispute
• an agreement allowing a landlord to
take your property if you get behind in
rent
• an agreement allowing your landlord to enter your place at any time witht out notice
• an agreement that you will pay for
all damages to your place, regardless of
who's at fault
• an agreement that you will pay
" double damages" if you're taken to court.
Tenant's [)uties
As a tenant, your obligations include:
• paying the rent, on time
• obeying all laws applying to tenants
• keeping your place clean and'
sanitary
.
• disposing of your garbage regularly
• paying for extermination, if infestation is -your fault
• not intentionally or negli!lently
destroying or defaCing the structure
• not permitting a nuisance or waste
• except for "reasonable wear and
tear," restoring the place to its original
condition .
Landlord's Duties
The Landlord-Tenant Act specifies certain responsibilities for each party. Among
other things, your landlord must keep the
place clean and safe enough to meet all
health and housing codes. To get repairs
done, it's best to give the landlord some
kind of written notice-the sooner the
better, as it can be as long as a month
before your landlord is required to do
anything. He or she must begin repairs
(save in extenuating circumstances)
within :
24 hours if the problem is extremely
hazardous to life or if you have no heat
or water.
48 hours if you have no hot water or
electricity .
7 days if the repair can be made for $75
or one half of one month's rent, whichever is less.
3.0 days in .all other cases.
There is a mechanism for dOing the
repairs yourself, deducting the cost of
labor and materials from your rent. There's
also a way to hire someone eise to do the
work, again deducting the cost from your
rent But, there are some clearly delineated steps you must take before deducting
anything from your rent Visit the SHLAP
office for help, or conduct your own
search, but do so before writing a che<;:k
for a smaller than agreed-upon amount.
,I
.'
'.
respecting your
as a pedestrian. You
dash across the street and drag yourself
over the curb, watching as the car that
just barely missed you goes flying down
Capitol Way with your backpack (complete with books and term paper) hooked
to the bumper . You think to yourself,
"Richard Alexander will never believe
this ."
Tripping past your friendly neighborhood professor's children , bikes, and dog,
you step squarely upon the back of his
cat.
.
No you have not entered, " The Twilight
Zone," but rather its closest neighbor,
Olympia's Capitol Hill.
vou know which houses the students
live in .. the ones with lawns a foot high,
fir ewood stacked outside, and a beat-up
Volkswagen van parked out front with
" Live Without Trident," and " Save
Ni squally" stickers holding together its
rusted bumper.
Those of you who are politically active
will find a wide variety of right-wing
lobbyists living within a stink bomb's
throw of your front door. Aim carefully
because there are coL;ntless politically
correct liberals in the neighborhood, too.
Both tenant and landlord should make
absolutely certain that both parties understand the terms of the tenancy, a,nd that
these terms are in writing. In particular,
resolve these questions together:
• How much is the rent, and when is
it due? Is there a charge if it's late?
• If there's a deposit, what kind and
how much is it? Where will it be kept?
And how and when will it be refunded?
• Who will pay for what utilities?
• What are the rules on pets, guests,
parking, etc.?
• What repairs or changes does your
landlord agree to make before_you move
in?
• Is it a month-to-month rental agreement, or a lease? If it's a lease, for how
long does it run?
Proper Notices
Rent increase-a landlord must give
month-to-month tenants a written notice
of a rent increase at least 30 days before
the end of the rental period. For example,
if your landlord wants to increase your
rent on May 1, they must give you written
notice at least 30 days before the end of
April. In other words ; on or before March
31 However, your landlord may give you
a 2O-day notice to move out, coupled
with an offer to retract it if you agree to
pay the higher rent.
Change in rules-a landlord must give
you 3o-days notice before a rule change
can take effect
Tenant's intention to move-you must
giv~ your landlord written notice that you
will terminate the tenancy at least 20 days
before the end of the rental period. Thus,
if you wish to move out by May 1, you
must give written notice to your landlord
by April 10.
Eviction notice-To evict you from your
premises, your landlord must give you
proper written notice. The waiting period
before the landlord can file a lawsuit
(called an unlawful detainer action) to
have you leave varies:
• 3-day notice to pay rent or move
out
• 1o-day notice to comply with the
terms of the rental agreement or move out
• 3-day notice to move out for
destroying property or creating a nuisance
• 3-<lay notice for trespassers
• 2O-day notice to terminate tenancy
For the 2O-day notice, the landlord is
under no obligation to provide a reason
for wanting you to leave. They simply say
they want you out. Your position may
change should the landlord accept rent
from you during these waiting periods.
Again, to determine exactly how, visit the
SHLAP office, or look up the law yourself
Privacy
Except in emergenci.es, your landlord
must receive your permission to enter
your place-for any reason . He or she
must give you two days .oral or written
notice. However, you can't refuse entry, if
he has a good reason. Good reasons
include :
• inspecting to check for damage or
repair problems
• making necessary repairs , alterations, or improvements
• providing necessary or agreedupon services
• showing the place to prospective
tenants, buyers, or repair persons .
Leaving
Rentots with a lease may move out at
the end of the rental period without giving
notice. If you stay beyond the end of the
lease period, you become a month-tomonth tenant
Those with a month-to-month rental
agreement must give the landlord written
notice at least 20 days before the end of
the rental period . It can be hanq delivered
or sent (before the 20 days begin) by mail.
Thus, if your rental period begins on the
first of each month, your landlord must
have received written notice by September 10 in order for you to move out by
October 'l
Your landlord may only evict you with
an unlawful detainer action . Other
methods, including a lockout, a utility
shutoff, or taking your property are illegal.
Contact the police, or the attorney
general's office for help if you think you
are the victim of an illegal eviction .
Landlord/tenant relations are covered
by Chapter 59.18 of the Revised Code of
Washington (RCW), a copy of which is
available in the Evergreen library Many
types of tenants are excluded from the
act, including dormitory residents . To
determine whether you are covered, look
up the dct in the RCW's, or see a popular
explanation of the act, such as a book
entitled Tenant's Rights (Isenhour, Fearn
& Fredrickson) It's available in the SHLAP
office, the library's reference section and
in the college bookstore.
--------~~~-----------------
~~----
: Olympia Pottery and Art Supply, Inc.:
~
•• Art Su ppl ies
~
: Oils, Acrylics
~ Brushes, Canvas
~
1822 W . Harri son
Olympia, WA 98502
Olympic kilns :
Wheels, Books
Clay, Glazes
943-5332
~
: We Deliver
••
~
studio
" Welcome Back, Evergreeners "
~~~~~~~~~£~~~~~~~~~~~
~
1.200. peof.l
oL~rnpio,wa
943-9B49
&.-t 090
We specialize in hand-thrown homemade
pizza pies, We have excellent Soups,
salads, sandwiches, breads & desserts.
Beer & wine.
Headquarters for Band and Orchestra Instruments
21 Y,.
I.~"'.
I. Itef."
""'Ie
1UM$ TO
fiT YOU,
IUDGI,
FEATURING
FAMOUS BRANDS
SUCH AS: Conn
ArUey Yamaha
Takimine Ovation
Suzuki Roth Randall
CB700 Memphis
And Other.
305 E , 4th DowntOwn Olympia
MUSIC CENTER
GUITARS · AMPLIFIERS
AND ACCESSORIES
• Musical Instruction
• School Instrument Rental Plan
• IMtrument Repair Service
• Music
Our hours :
./""
open 11 am M-F
open 12 noon Sat , Sun
dose II pm Sun-Thurs
dose 12: 30 Fri & Sat nights
352-8051
Sept 24, 1981
Sept. 24, 1981
(
Cooper Point Journal page 23
the
evergree,n
Getting Around
Parlcing Lot F
•
lege
OIympia', Washington 9B505
•
Recreatl~n
Central
Stores
Shop •
Pavilion
!
By Jo hn Bauman
I'm sure that a lot of new students are
saying to themselves, " Okay, I'm here,
now how do I get away? " Here's how to
get around, going from the bottom of the
heap (wet gym shoes) to the top (Cadillac),
HITCHING
Hitc hhiking is a very good way to get
between Evergreen and downtown , You
can even get to and from the eastside, but
this is less reliable. The tri ck is to stay on
the route that the bus follows When
school is in session there is a constant
stream of greeners going back and forth
on this route, and they often pi ck up
hitchers , ,
Another advantage of thi s route is that
if school is not in sess ion, or if you have
unusually bad luck , the bus will pventually
come along What the hell, ,get on , It only
costs a quarter and yo u don't have to sit
on someone e lse' s groceri es
THE BUS
IT ha s lust begun a new and very confU Sing schedul e. They run between 4th
and Ca pital and ca mpus every 20 minutes
betvwen 7 a.m . and 10 45 a,m " and
between 145 p ,m and b p .m Retween
' 11 a.m and '1 30 p m , the bu ses run Ips5
often DUring the even ing t he serv ice i~ •
prov ided by IT and the Lvergree n Va n ::;!
Sep art l( Ie page
BIKING
<=>
Ridi ng a bikf' is one of the best W<l ys to
get around t lw O lympi a ilrea, th ough it
tak es sonw gf'tt ing us€'d to , Where I (ome
from It 's fl il t, so I fou nd ill l the hills rather
ann oyi ng at iir,t . I m('a n, you go to dll
that effor t to climb ow r one il nd right
away yo u haw to ~ t il r t cl imbing thf' next.
A rlil~'I C sisyphean situ at ion, if you' ll
excuse t he mythologl( al allusio n, (Yo u
mu st exc use me, my t'dU,il t Ion has bee n
in tc·rd isc ipl i nary)
The oth er Im pedinlf'nt to care-free
cycling i, the rain , During the sc hoo l year
it " usuall y rai ning But o nce yo u havc
bought a good poncho and become
reconcded to the hdh (,] 1,1 (',II11 U'l. vou
wd l f l nci that a b icy cl(' w ill provlcll ' ,III til"
mobi lit y yo u npcd ,
With a good bike you can go w herever
you like, w henever you like, It almmt
never gets too co ld to b ike, To get to th e
wes tSide you can go out t he park way to
Cooper Po int Road, then down Di vision to
Harri son. I prefer to go down the westside
hill to downt own o n 4th street instead of
Harri son, a, there is almost no traffi c on
4th , Fourth street is one block south of
Harri son. Be very careful going down this
hill, beca use there is a good c hance you'll
have to stop at the botto m .
Another way to get into town is to take
the Parkway to the bike path, whi ch
parallels the Parkway in the woods , This is
a very pleasant ride. The pa,th ends on
Mud Bay Road . Take a left on Mud Bay
and you're headed right into town . You
,m ' also headed right to Safeway, the
rlosest supermarket to campu s if you are
biking
A few necessary accessori es: fenders,
you rea lly need to have fenders to keep
from spraying water all over yourself in
the rain ; yo u sho uld al so have lights,
Street lamps are few and far betwee n on
Cooper Point. It's muc h safer to bi cyeie
wi th li ght s and reflectors. Rear view
mirror~ are another good idea. These
thing, arC' great. After you put one o n
you'll spend th e first few mileS looking
bC'hind mor(' than looking ahead . There,lf ter you'll wonder how you m anaged
without o ne.
tuiti o n. If thi s is the case, you are required
to carry in your car a certificate to this
effec t. These are available from the
registrar .
Concerning gasoline, most of the noname, self-service stations haye prices
within a few cents of each other. As of
thi s writing, the best deal in town is the
M obil station at the corner of State and
Pear . Their gas is the cheapest in town, at
$1.28 a gallon I don't know how long
they will maintain this low price, it's
worth a trip to the eastside to check it out.
On the westside there are several
stations with gas at $1 ,29,9 per gallon ,
U,S.A. i.s on Black Lake Blvd, south of
Capital Mall . They have the largest flag of
j
any station in town , They also have the
innovative features of a truly modern gas
station: digital pumps and a pay-fromyour-car system on the way out.
All you have to do is move your gas
tank opening from your fender to your
dashboard and you'll be able to fill your
tank, pay for your gas, even clean the
inside of your windshield, without unfastening your seat belts , Yankee ingenuity
lives at the U,S.A. gas station ,
Gull and jackpot are both on Division
and both have $1 ,29.9 gas, At first glance
you might want to patronize Evergreen,
our namesake, Forget it, their gas is $1 ,31
If you're going to buy cheap, you might
as well buy the cheapest.
,
To Organic Farm
1
i
To fiDeI Everp'Mn OIl
tbe tint tI'7 takeI aD UperieDeecl Jl&vfptGr. J..
on. .tlfd.nt from the
MJdweIt put it, "All
Rapid t.reeI look aUb."
Ther. are ••v.ral
waya to pt to the amPUl, t!ut it_ ~ belt If we
ItidI with juat two - a
North appro.eh and •
I
I
1;
'. ,'
., • • 4 ~" . "
<=!
<::l
;:,
Q1
Walnut
Rd ,
mod, c:oadDue for a couple 01 mIIea uutilrou _
a lip "Student, ReaIde_." Turn left here.
ThIa puta you OIl a nice,
wiDdIDg IltUe I'OId IIDOIII
the tr.... Wh.n rou
_
to a atop alp. turn
left and proceed alowlJ.
Mod dwellers- You wiD
lee a .'gn, "Modular
BOIIIiDI. "Turn left bere.
Dorm d_Uera - COIltinue throuP a MCODd
atop and turn left at
"Realdenee Balla."
(See Itar for COl rHpODdIng point on mapa)
N
r
VICINITY
: Capitol Skin S
I
Scuba
MAP
one mile
r----------------------,
NO MAnER WHERE YOU ARE
I
This ad good for :
Now at Two Locations!
AND
\
Drive along 101 for
two or three mIlee uutil
you _
an .zit lip,
"Th. Evergr•• n State
CoUege." Tllte thla .zit.
You're getting there
now . You are OIl the
lovelJ eollep park-r.
To get to rour dorm or
cmEXICO ~ONlcrO
BEER
-.j
Angel...
photo by lE , Knauth
Legion & Pear
754-7871
""...
Ol)-mpla on 1-5, tab.zit
.. 04 - Ab.rd •• n, Port
Angeles - whieh puts
you on Highway 101. U
you are c:oming from the
Soutb (Portland) to 0l)-mpla on 1-5, take .zit
no, - Ab.rde.n, Port
If you plan to drive to campus during
the day, you sho uld have a cl ever little
item that prevents bri ght yellow o il drums
from attaching themselves to your car
a parkin g permit.
Permit forms and sti ckers are availabl e
in the cashi er's offi ce, located down the
hall from the Registrar's counter on the
first fl oor of the Library Building Permits
may be purc hased quarterly or yearly .
You'r other option is to pay the daily park ing fpe There is no fee after 4:30 pm
(one of th e rea l advantages of being an
evening stu dent ), for summer parking, or
parkin g durin g c la ss breaks (weekends,
holidays , and vacati o ns).
When yo u vi sit the cas hi er's offi ce, be
sure to have your dri ver's li cense, vehi c le
reg istration and li cense pl ate numbers, as
well as the co lo r, year and model of your
car , Ask about specific arrangements for
carpool vehicl es, handi capped drivers,
and owners of two cars who will be alternating t he use of them in driving to
ca mpus,
The parki ng lo ts are well-patro led by
our eag le-eyed Sec urity staff , so unl ess
your favorite color is yell ow and you have
a penchant for large, immovabl e o bj ects
loc ked o n yo ur ca r, bes t you viSit the
cas hier, post haste l
DOWNTOWN
....
~
South appl'Oleh.
U you are coming from
the North (Seattle) to
By Chris Fitzgerald
Unfortunat ely, to have '{ruly unlimitf'd
ml Jbility droun d here you need to have a
(.u
If you have a ca r, O lympiil seems to
hI ' Ill'xt door and Sea ttle becomps nparby
I () park o n any r ampu s lo t requires a
1"'11 11 11 Ih .. " , ( Ihl $40 ,1Ilnu.:tlly, 'j, II>
'1 11,Htl ·r1 y. 'j,1l 11H ltlthl y <1l1d $ 0, (1 ddd v 11,,1'
01 pl'rlllll il l t he cas hi er's offi ce . The d,l il y
rdlp ( .In be' l)d id il t th€' inform ati o n boot h
III I ll(> pilrkin g lot.
(',11' 0; in till' 101 With out permit s are
I.:lv( 'n w,trni ng no ti ces by Security . Aft er
" 'v('rol l wd rnin gs thf'Y chain a barrel to
Yllur ( ,Ir ,
I',H-k lng ,I t AS H 'i, limited to res idents.
wh" ,u p provl d,·' d Wit h bumper stickers for
id('nti fil dtion If you arc visiting ASH you
can pdrk 111 their lot but if you do it regulil rl y thl'y'li have your car towed .
If you come from out-of-state, you may
W,lIlt to gpt il Was hingto n state dri vers
li u ' nse Thi s is required if you ever want
to gpt re sidency , The drivers license tes tIng stati on i ~ at 715 E. 8th St. You can get
lilt'me p lates and have the t it lp changed
at 12th i1n d f ra nk lin , dow ntown, or o n the
wl'., t ~ icl e, at W es tern Aut o on the (orner
o f Division and Harrison .
'.
u-.
PARKING
DRIVING
To Mud Bav Road
TO Mud Bav Road and Freeway
:
I
I
I
I
WESTSIDE
1807 W. Harrison
754-7251
OPEN MON .-SA T.
11 A.M. TO 10 P.M.
I
WINE
I
I
ONE FREE SCUBA TANK AIR FILL
certification and current V, t. p , sticker required
Value $175
Send $5.00 for a PPD variety pack of 12 condoms or write for a descriptive
Coupon expires Nov. 1, 1961
I
Supplies- Rent al- Classes
107 E. State
L ______________________
_II
Air - Boat - Dives
' 357-4128
"When you're ready to eat authentic Mexican food, think of
Mexico Bonito .. . you'll find a little bit of Mexico right here
is Olympia and you may even order in Spanish!"
.
Mail Order Form for condoms, foams, jellies, books, posters, and more!
The Rubber Tree [206] 63l-4750
Dept. TESC
4426 Burke Ave_ N.
Seattle, WA
A non-profit project of
Zero Population Growth
Seattle
98103
Sept. 24, 1981
page 24 Cooper Point Jo urnal
Sept. 24, 1981
"
~:
Cooper Point Jo urnal page 25
The By No Means Definitive .. .
Is There Nightlife in Olympia~
,
Guide to Eatin_ Out
.
Places to Eat
By Lawrence Stillwell
The other place you'll probably go to a
lo t is the Rainbow Started byex-G reeners,
it is almost excl usively a Greener bar.
Good beer, fri endly owners, good juk ebox,
and a sometimes interesting crowd of se lf,
important individuals. Very regular, very
Evergreen. Even loca l hipsters jok e about
the Rainbow being a gay bar. It isn't,
quite. Borders on boring, unless you're
With fri end s. No rowdiness, no fight s To
reli eve the tedium, buy a copy of North west Passage and laugh at it , but not too
loudly. New York West. Expensive la zz
mu sic so metimes . Rates an 8 if you 're incrowd and a 6 if you're like the rest of us .
The antithesis of the Rainbow is the
nex t bar up the street , the Nine-Ball Run ,
o nc(' bpttpr-named the Wh y Not Tavern .
Rowdy , raunchy , and wretched. I went
then> OIl(' Chri stmas night beca u'ie it was
th e on ly pl ace open and cou ldn' t even
fini,h my beer, it was so Eugenp O'Ned
oepr~'ssing. Good jo-jos and 'lots o f yo-yas
Th rPdh of vio lence . Forget it. A 2.
Go to the Gnu Deli if something
interes ting is happening, which after many
dull yea rs is finally becoming a likelihood .
Local rock , lazz , and assorted stuff . The
pri ces are decent now th at they have draft
beer ami have traded in the Irish noseflute
mU SIC fo r good rock and roll. Elitism is on
its way out there, fin ally. Astair'S gets a 2
and the Deli a 7 when the music is good
The Brothr:rhood, next to the Mandarin
Ho use o n Cap itol W ay, isn' t a bad pl ace
Greeners have traditionally been afraid of
i( possibly because of the rumor that o ne
was once thrown through a window there.
Like an earli er revi ew said, he probably
deserved it. Do n't go down there preac hing soc iali sm just because it's the Brotherhood and it's in a Labor Temple bUilding.
Good, homemade burgers and sandwiches,
o ld-fashioned pinball ma c hines, shuffleboard and pool, etc. Good place to avoid
Green ers, but go with a friend or you'll be
very self-consc io us. Rates a 5,
The other two taverns downtown are
McCoy's , just east of the Eastside Club,
and Charlie's tavern, up Fourth Avenue a
few more blocks . McCoy's is often' lively
but still unexc iting. It's the kinH of place
you'd go into if you were a regular guy
but you never do gecause you know you'd
hate it. People do get drunk here on
weekends , Charlie's Tavern never has
more than six people in it. One wonders
what secret source of funds allows it to
stay open all these years? L.ooks dead.
Besides that, the two places look identica l. Maybe some guy named Charlie
Mccoy owns them both. Charlie's' gets a 3
and McCoy gets a 4,
General Introduction
What else is there to do in O lympi a
except drink7 It's the water, the rain , the
boredom , the sea rch for a fun night offcampu s that drives you to drink, if you
have a ca r. Even if you don't you can take
th e bus or van downtown, but you ' ll have
to mi ss last ca ll or walk home.
Hang out at the bars weeknights, weekends, It sure beats what is jokingly refe rred to as " on-campus social life. " And
except i o r th e Evergreen bars, there are
some great places to avoid Evergreen stu dents and try to forget that you just spent
a whole week surrounded by blabbering,
simpl e-minded purists of various types
ilnd oescr ipti ons. Bars are a cyni cs best
iriend , and I should know .
Blit you muq be 21, or able to pass as
such . 10'5 are chec ked often , but not
always . A friend says she's hung o ut at
t he bars si nce she was 17, but there's a
new liquor Inspector in town and the cops
have been raiding taverns on weekends
lately .
Don 't get a bartender in trouble l Alway ,>
( arry an 10 ano don't get rude if you're
not served bec au se you don't have o ne
Some Green ers seem to expect to be
beli eved o n the basis of their good loob
or th eir father's cha rge ca rd . Thi s is a
good way to m ake yourself, and other
students . unwelcome downtown . Carry an
10. Ano be polite Like a handmade
sign in one bar says :
House Rules
1 The Bartend er is always ri ght
2. I i Bartender IS w rong, refer to Rule 1/1
More th an half of O ly' s 30 bars are
downtown . Like all bars in W as hin gton
state, they fal l into two ca tego ri es :
ta vern s, which serve o nl y beer and Win e,
and lounges , which also se rve hard
alcoho l and mi xed drinks. If you're from
out-ai-state you 'll probably find this di Stin cti o n pointless and annoying at fi rst,
but it's a fact of nightlife here and you 'll
" get used to it.
Downtown Taverns
The best bar in town : bar no ne, is the
4th Ave. Ta v, next to the State Theater.
Comfortabl e, casual atmosphere and a
regu lar but varied crowd. Just enough
(u rrent o r ex-Greeners (mostly ex-) to let
one feel accepted, but not so many that
you feel like you're on campus . Bi g TV
sc reen, pinball, pool, darts, and a good
jukebox w ith lots of oldies and more on
the way Big pitchers for $2.50 and $3,
good beer, and the best bartenders in
town . Bo, in particular, is a livi ng legend,
having survived three different owners.
Time will tell what t he new owners will
do, band -wise , and atmosphere. Ignore
the Greek statue; for now the 4th Ave
rates a 9.
What used to be t he best place in town
IS now almost sole ly a biker hangout , t he
t astside Club, up Fourth Ave nu e, a bit.
!Jabe, the o ld owner used to give the
plac e a lot of charm and persona l attention. He di ed on SI Paddy's day and his
widow raised the pri ce of quarts from
$1 2S to $1 75 The draft beer here is like
beer-f'l avored soda pop. Evergreen and
downt own intell ec tuals don' t hang out
here anymore, but they used to all the
tlll1e . Lots of pay-by-the- hou r pool t abl es
dnd a decent jukebox Worth a visit,
lIn less you're a woman by yourself . A
mal e friend of mine was badly beaten in
the bathroom recent ly Rating down from
.19 to a 5. Too bad .
page 26 Cooper Point Journal
Downtown Lounges
As you float up and down Fourth Ave.
between taverns, you may want to stop
for a hard drink in o ne of the lounges in
the backrooms of th e cafes you'll pass
Here is a hidden aspect of down-and-dirty
O lympi a ni ghtlife The China Clipper and
King Solomon 's both feature mixed drinks,
soft dark imitat ion-leather seats, and a
dimly-lit smokey atmosphere. The peopl e
at both are usually degenerate and drunk.
But at Solomon's they are usually friendly
and happy, w hil e the Clipper's customers
seem more si lent and miserable . Solomon's is the place to go; you can get a
double martini there for $1 .50 and you' ll
know you 've had a double m artini . In
either place, you' ll know you've been in a
dive.
Dive further down into Ben Moore 'sI hear it's okay, and the drinks are the
cheapest in town . The High·Climber Room
Sept. 24, 1981
at the back of the Spar is all white men "
watching sports on a big, fuzzy, off-color
TV sc reen. Pleasant if you 're into TV
sports. Always nearly empty except for big
games. It gets a 5, Clipper gets a 4, Ben
gets a 4, and King Solomon's wins the
Fourth Ave . sle'aze-Iounge award with a
resounding 7 +.
'
Go vernor House succeeds in its attempt
to be a step or two above the sleaze bars
but is less fun because of it. Best chairs in
town . Pinkish-orange' lighting and a
yellow-lit fountain with water that looks
like bubbling you-know-what. A 4.
Capitol Bar and Grill . Up Capitol a few
blocks, across from the Dairy Queen, this
.place draws Oly's smokey state-government version of the beautiful people.' A
nice sleazy place with a regular crowd ,
jaz z piano, and couples kissing in the
corner. The day's P-I is taped above the
urinal. No draft beer but the bar whiskey
is better than Carnegie's, and cheaper.
Good place for a secret rendezvous . A 5.
Carriage Inn , Down by the 1-5 exit
ramp, this ptace has traditionally been
known as the state capitol's meat market.
Now it's owned by Rib Eye restaurants
and has a 24-hr. dining room. Happy Hour
is 5-7 p.m ., M -F, and all drinks are only
$1. Bands and dancing every night, but
the music is too loud to talk above and
not good enough to really enjoy or dance
to . For lOt in the men 's room, you can
" resore that fresh after-shave feeling, "
with Brute, Musk, or English Leather.
Order a Horney Monkey drink and "you
may find out the reason for the name"
Rates a 5.
And the last lounge in town is Carnegie 's,
Oly's classiest joint, a converted public
library endowed by Andrew himself.
Books still on the shelves, marble tabletops , a fireplace, hypnotically-slow swirling ceiling fans , the town's Inca Pisco
.
monopoly (try it), and a mostly dull ,
pseudo-sophisticated crowd. No draft
beer, no pinball, folk and jazz music. Still
a classy joint. Rates an 8'/ , if you can
afford. And you ca n't beat their meat at
dinner.
IIlso Downtown :
A lso downtown are two bars With live
music regularly. Avoid Astair 's unless the
bilnd is great, which is unlikely They do
have an amateur comedy night; which I
hear ca n be pretty good. Prices are high,
and th e atmosphere is mundane,
Eastside Survey
The Town. Tavern is the best Eastside
bar. Small, neighborhood place with a
friendly owner-bartender, a regular crowd,
and the best pri ces in town. Great popcor n. Rates an 8.
The Boulevard Ta vern across the street
is okay but boring, full of burnt-out old
folk on their last leg. A 4.
The Maplebrook Inn, out Martin's Way
a ways, is livelier, with bands on weekends and occasional fights, Lots and lots
of antlers on the walls and a sign: "The
horniest bar in town ," Probably true. A 6.
Out Martin Way a little further is the
Bailey Motor Inn and its Voodoo Room
lounge. People get knifed and hustled and
robbed here, supposedly but it seems
tame . lively, semi-smokey, probably a
pick-up joint. Lacey hicks can be more
fun than Evergreen profs. Oly Tech t-shirts
and cowboy hats. " This is what my
Granny Hall would call a real lounge."
A 6.
Once Around the Westside
Woe to the Greener who can'n ot leave
the Westside at night, for he/she is in a
veritable wasteland . The Westside Tavern
is dull and characterless, with stale Jimmy
Buffet on the jukebox and a crooked
"NS3" sign dangling from one tack . Lousy
graffiti A 4.
Popeye 's is better than Astair's, but
again , on ly worth it if the band is good.
Good burgers and a game room . Beer
prices skyrocket accordin g to the quality
of the mu sic. Bands on week ni ghts, but
better ones on weekends . A 6,
But head west young student and find
The Two-Mile House, also called Spud
and Elma's. Spud's can also be reached
from campus by way of a pleasant 45minute walk down Kaiser to Mud Bay
Road : Turn left. Can also be reached by
tak ing the " B" van. Pool, shuffleboard and
a rough, but decent, crowd , Great graffiti:
"Greener women are hairy" and "Greeners
suck fish fins ." Beer a barg~in at $2.25 for
a big pitcher. Many gambling games. No
more bands on weekends , though : " It was
too mu ch trouble." Guess even the cowboys get too boozed . A 7.
Further west out Mud Bay Road, across
from The Bfue Heron Bakery is B(lzz's
Tavern . Keep driving. Buz z's smells like a
bathroom and looks like a basement
rumpus-room, complete with bar. Shuffle- '
board domin ates the room. The walls are .
drab and empty. A pitc her costs $2.75
here. No graffiti. Usually either dead or
empty or too rowdy-crowded . Wins a 3, or
a 4, ~f busy
But keep going west toward Shelton
and turn off the highway at 'Steamboat
Island Road and go to Character's Corner .
This place would beat out the 4th Ave
Tav if it was in town. Great atmosphere;
interesting signs and posters, honky-tonk
piano, and a very friendly, elderly bar- . ~
tender. Lots of room, with small tables of
people talking - an unpretentious, unscary
'place. M en in cowboy and tractor hats
and women all over 40, Fresh oysters,
clams, deep-fried mushrooms. Sign :
" YCJCYTBFTJB." Ask what it means and
act with honor when told . Three miles
beyond Buzz's . Rates a 9.
Life Elsewhere
The Westwater Inn on Highway 101 has
a disco lounge, with a record booth and a
revolVing chandelier. Free taco bar some
hours. Trails End, in Tumwater is supposed to be fun ; you can watch a live
rodeo or horse show while you sip your
drink. A local legend There's also the
Oly brewery tour.
Charlie's: This Capital Mall bar and
restaurant is not the usual "mall bar." The
high ceilings give an open air feeling,
accented by slowly spinning Tiffany fans .
The quiet, relaxed atmosphere is cosmopolitan, and infinitely more civilized than
any other bar in Olympia .
Final Tips
The " microscope" you see behind every
bar is a quarter di spenser. Those punchboard s are gambling games and are in
every tavern in the state. Learn how to
ro ll th e bartender for musi c. You do it
with di ce . Learn to like draft beer. Don't
please, be an obnoxious Greener. You ca n
buy beer to go at any tavern , but it's
cheaper in a store unless th at store is a
7-11. l ega l closing time is 2' a.m. Bar time
is about 12 minutes aheild of th at and last
ca ll is usu ally 20 minutes ahead of that.
Bartenders like to get out on time. Drink
up.
I
I
j
1
l
1
~
• 1
1
I
This article is by no means intended to
be the definitive guide to dining out in
the Olympia area, and no slight is in·
tended to those restaurants not mentioned; we just haven't gotten around ·to
trying them yeti This guide is based on
our own random experiences; seeking out
other good places to eat is up to you,
Happy hunting!
EI Sarape - 4043 Martin Way, on the
crosstown bus line in Lacey. This place is
highly recommended if you like M ex ican
food ; homes tyle, not fast food , The prices
are very reasonable , the servi ce is fast,
and the food is great. What more can we
say?
)0 Mamma's -120 N. Pear. This p lace
looks like a house on the inside, but it's
something else inside, It has incredibl e
atmosphere. The food is primarily of
Italian extraction , but has been taken onto
tangents that would make it unrecogni zable in Italy . No matter, it's good and
moderately priced . We es peci ally like the
vegetarian pizza they prepare with a
white sauce.
La Chaumier au Lac, " The Little Hut at
Capital Lake" restaurant is located in the
famous Capital Lake Bathhouse/Snack
Bar on Water Street. We think it's th e
best restaurant in town. The food is
delicious, no matter what you order, and
the prices range from $2.50 to $3, for a
dinner that is too big for most people to
finish. The view of the lake is beautiful,
and enhanced by the Vietnamese music
in the background. The dumpling eggburgers are an inexpensive, quick snack to
grab while you're waiting for the bus back
to campus .
The WYCA is a good place to get Vietnamese food on Tuesdays between 10 a.m .
and 1:30 p .m. There's a different meal
served every week, of three kinds of food,
plus tea, It cos ts $3 a plate,. and the
profits benefit Southeast ASian refugees .
The Mandarin House-ll1 N. Ca pital
Way - Thi s restaurant, across the street
from the #41 bus stop, has a full menu of
great. How many places can satisfy all
these cri ted a?
Herb and Onion-517 S Washington
The cooks at the Herb and Onion stay
away from processed sugars and flours.
The menu features homemade soups and
entrees, bakery goodies from The Blue
Heron Bakery, and amazing desserts. The
H&O's quiet atmosphere is accented by
mani cured decor and table settings. A
classy place to take a date.
A TRIBUTE TO THE DAVIS'
BROWN DERBY
by Stephen Charak
Mandarin, Szec hwan and Cantonese food.
M ost item s are moderately expensive in
price The all-you-can-eat lunc heon buffet
is a good deal.
The Gnu Deli, at 111 Thurston, is a
deli/ restaurant/ coffee house and generally
an amiable environment for friends to
gather . At lunchtime one can devour a
~ood meal for under $4, drink a beer and
chat away
.
At least a co upl e nights a week, the
Gnu has live local music. On Monday
nights at open mike, closet tal ents are
offered a place to come out and air . The
people make it happen .
Gnu's crew is pleasant and smiling
beyond the call of their business duties.
The Gnu Deli is a lively asset to downtown Olympia, and has proven to be a
likely cure for the ' 'I'm starin' out my
window wonderin' what to do tonight"
blues.
Mexican Bonita - 901 E. Legion Way &
Harri son Ave. W, .,-- (This is a review of
the eastside loca tion o nly .) The restaurant
is a small brick house one block eas t of
Plum . '1ts atmosphere is pleasantly subdued and the servi ce fairly good. The
It is unfortunate that the coming group
of new students will not have the opportunity to eat at the Davis' Brown Derby.
The owners, Martha Davis and Rayma
Sullivan closed the doors on June 28, 1980,
ending an era that began in 1934.
For 46 years the Derby was a fixture at
the corner of 10th and Capitol. Its setting22 stools around a counter and a simple
black and white tile exterior - was deceptive. Those viewing it for the first time
might mi stake it for a greasy spoon. Far
from it, the Derby served consistently
high-quality food. The homemade cakes
and pies, particularly the German c hocolate cake , were good enough to make
many organic food freaks compromise
their eating habits. The soups, especially
the potato and tomato, were usually sold
out long before the 8 p.m. closing time .
More significant about the Derby was
its atmosphere. Often there would be a
wait for seating. The close quarters led to
an intimacy unknown in most publi C
places : you had to talk to your neighbor,
and the person standing behind you (you
did want to leave at some point) . The
Derby was one of the few places in
Olympia where townspeople and Evergreen students tol erated, and even liked ,
each other.
The passi ng o f the Derby has left a big
void. in O lympi a A few other places have
come close, but none has, or ever will,
repl ace the Dav is' Brown Derby.
serve a full line of Mexican food at varying pri ces; all of which is good.
The Place - 244 M adro na Beac h Rd .
NW - Thi s cafe, loca ted one block north
of Mud Hay Rd ., has a tri endly workingman type at mosphere. Besides the usual
fare, they feature a limited M ex ica n
menu A ll di,hes are reasonably priced .
Cafe a la Mode - West FOllrth St. in
downtown O lympi a Feat ures a whole
foods menu , lots of vegetarian choices,
,IIlO hon1f'made in' cream dessert<; . The
L lf(' a Iii Modp is co llec-t ivp ly run
Piranah's comes close to capturing the
essence of the Brown Derby This' is no
coincidence. Many of the menu items are
similar. The seating - though roomier
than the Derby - is as cramped
The choi ces li sted under the " toothsome special5" are all tasty and reasonably
pri ced. The clam , egg and creamed
chicken are exce ll ent. The lasagna , at
$2.50, is a bargain I highly recommend
Piranha's. The tood is excell ent and inexpensive. The menu is varied enough to
sati sfy vegetarian s and carnivores alike .
The peopl e are friendly The hours are
TESCBOOKSTORE
FOR YOUR EVERY ACADEMIC NEED
/
'"
10 Things to Do After Dark
If You're Under 21
1. Take a flashlight hike down to the
bay. Splash your hand in the water for an
added thrill. The flashlight is mandatory if
you want to hike down through the
woods, For more excitement, turn off your
flashlight half-way down, and see just how
really dark those woods get at night, If
you can't find a flashlight, walk down
Overhulse Rd. and bear left towards the
dead-end road until you reach the bay.
(Mike Bueg calls those glow in the darks,
noctolusas.)
2. Adopt a pet slug and train it to do
tri cks for your family and friends.
3. Have a dinner party or a potluck in
your new home.
4. Go to the Friday Nite Films on
campus .
5. Stay at home and entertain yourse lf
by thinking of all the money you're not
spending on booze and cover at some
cheesey bar.
6. Check out the happenings at "The
Corn er" on the first floor of "A" dorm.
You can also shoot pool in the basement.
7. Do your laundry. (I know it sounds
disgusting, but you have to do it sooner
or later)
8. Go for a swim and sau na at the Rec
Center.
9. Learn a language at the Self Paced
Learning Unit (SPLU) Lab.
10. Walk around the dorms and li sten
for a f loor party. When you hear it, foll ow
the noise until you can see it.. Then smi le
and say, " Hi· there! " to everyone. Chip in
for the keg, talk, or just hand out in a
corner and stare. Greeners are friendly
and snobbery is virtually unknown, 50
relax and have a good time.
TEse Bookstore
We are your bookstore .
- Recycled books 25% off
- Supplies discounted 5%
- A wide variety of newspapers
- Now open on Mondays and Tuesdays
until 7 p.m.
Add YOUR name to the bookstore drawing
for school supplies and other goodies
-book bag
- sportswear
- dictionary
- pen/pencil set
- reference books
-and more
Starts Sept. 28. The drawing will be held on Oct. 15.
,
Sept 24, 1981
Cooper Point lournal page 27
The By No Meam Definitive, , ,
Slumming for the Politically Correct Wardrobe
Guide to Eating In'
By John Bauman
What's easier for a new Evergreen student, choosing an academic program or
choosing a grocery store? These are both
difficult choices. Choosing a program is
like betting 0'11 the horses, one tries to
make an informed choice but in the end
it's a gamble, and your stuck with your
choice. With a grocery store you can
always change your mind, and shop somewhere else next time. Still, the new student is provided with far too little information on shopping.
I nto this informational void now strides
the Cooper Point Journal. Open your
umbrella and sit in the shower as we take
an imaginary walking tour of Olympia's
grocery stores.
Downtown is one of the traditional
Greener stocking-up spots, Mark-It. You
have to write the prices on the goods
yourself, and the prices are generally a
I ittle lower than at a full-service supermarket. The Evergreen bus stops right in
front, so this is the most convenient place
to pick up a few things after doing errands
downtown. You always see some Greeners
here.
Thi s Evergreen landmark may soon
become a victim of progress. It may be
torn down to make room for a six-story
highrise offi ce building. If you ever see .
the manager looking a little blue, you
Also on the Westside is Peterson's
might want to say something cheerful to
foodtown . This is a good place to shop if
him, like, "If they build a highrise here, I
you are in a hurry. Take the bus to
think this supermarket should get the top
Division and Harrison, you've got about
floor, you were here first."
20 minutes before the bus comes back. If
Another traditional Evergreen place to
you miss the bus, or you're not in a hurry,
shop is the Food Co-op. It's on the West
go around the corner to the Asterix . They
side, at the corner of Bowman and Rogers
have very good coffee.
The Evergreen bus stops on Bowman and
On the corner of Cooper Point Road
Division . Walk a few blocks east on Bowdnd Harrison is Safeway. This is the
man to get to the Co-op. This is the place
closest store to campus if you're riding a
to get local produce, organic foods, bulk
bicyde. Their prices are a little higher
grains, etL . Non-members pay 10 percent
thdn some other stores but they have just
over thE' marked prices . Joining the Co-op
about anything you could want .
costs $5 for initial membership and $1 a
Mark'n'Pak is on Black Lake Boulevard
month for two years. The monthly dollar
just north of Highway 101. This is another
is a loan that is returned if you leave the
. store where you, mark the prices yourself.
Co-op.
by OS DeZube
They have items in large sizes (such as
gallon cans of tomato sauce) that can
save you a lot of money . It's not on a bus
line, though .
Ralph's Thriftway is on 4th Ave. at the
top of the hill. This is where you'll probably shop if you live on the Eastside.
Ralph's. like Safeway, is a modern stateof-the-art ~upermarket.
The Olympia Farmer's market is on
Plum and Union, downtown. They're open
on Friday and Saturday mornings . This is
a great plac~ to get fruits and vegetables .
There's also people selling handicrafts and
baked goods. There's a Vietnamese stand
whi ch sell s these deep-fried, sweet, beanpaste pastries. They're kind of hard to
describe, but delicious . The Farmer's
market is open until the end of October.
Red Apple is across from Petersons and
the Asterix. They have health food and
vitamins and all that kind of stuff.
7-11 is on Division and Harrison too.
There's also one on the Eastside. They're
pretty expensive, but after midnight where
else can you go?
I can't leave out the Handy Pantry. This
store is on Division Street. It's the closest
place to campus where you can buy
DMSo.
Now you're in the know about food
shopping. After a day of waiting in registration lines you're prepared to wait in the
check-out line of your choice. Of course,
experienced Greeners know that all the
good grocery stores are in Seattle.
Alternative Businesses
Hy ChristorllPr Steilrn,
Partner Dancing is Fun.,.
Swing
Foxtrot
Samba
Cha-Cha
Rhumba
Tango
Waltz
Schottische
Polka
and. of course
Cotton-Eyed Joe
and the
Cowboy Two-Step
. . . and Easy to Learn
Let us show you how!!
New classes begin the week of Sept . 21st
Olympia Ballroom
116 E. Legion Way
754-9852
A Cooperative IS a member-owned and
run business . A collec tive is a business
wlwrt' management decisions are made by
tht' members .
Advantages include lower prices in
buyprs' collect ives, avoidance of a
middleman, and the feeling that you have
control of the money you spend . There
may also be political reasons for shopping
at (ollertives and cooperatives. The
following is a list of cooperatives and
collectives in Olympia
The Blue Heron Bakery is collectively
run. Located on Mud Bay road, the
collective's products are also available at
local stores. Their breads cost less per
ounce than more widely known brands.
The Cafe A La Mode is located on 4th
Ave . by Water SI. Their reasonably priced,
vegetarian menu Includes whole foods
and yummy ice cream .
The Olympia Food Coop, on the corner
of Rogers and Bowman is the largest cooperative in Olympia They specialize in
whole foods .
The Community Skills Exchange, located
in the rood Coop, but a separate entity,
arranges skill sharing.
The Community Gardens is a city cooperative to provide garden space for those
in need of plots . For more informiltion
call Rick Stern at 866-8001 .
The Cooperative Pottery Studio is
located on Pacific Ave . in Lacey
The Cooperative Day Care Center/
Seamboat Island Preschool. 6240 41st Ave .
NW, has one paid coordinator and
sc heduled volunteer help from parents.
The Owners-Builders Association aides
people who build their own homes.
Contact Charlie Lutz through the Food
Coop
The Farmer's Market, a produce market
on Plum St., is open on Tuesday, Friday,
and Saturday mornings every week in
October.
The Hard Rain Printing Collective, 119
N . Washington, does everything from
offset to T-shirt' printing.
Matrix is a collective which prints
Ol\,mpia's Lesbian-Feminist magazine .
For the Best in Whole Foods
Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
Now Featuring
Olympia's Only Authentic Wine Bar
,
j
Seattle has a number of great shops
where Pendleton wools are still only
$3.50. Unbelievable but true. Armed with
a few extra dollars and a bus ticket to
Seattle, you too can strike out on an
expedition and be on your way to having
a politically correct Evergreen-style
wardrobe.
All the shops listed below are along bus
routes, most of which are within a few
blocks from the Seattle Greyhound bus
station.
The first stops are the two biggies in
the world of thrift store shopping - the
Goodwill and the Salvation Army. Both
are located south of downtown. To catch
the southern stores, catch the #27 on
Stewart St. and buy an all-day pass. The
more energetic can walk five blocks to
3rd Ave. and catch the #7 or the #39. I
usually save my energy for shopping and
transfer after the .#27 turns onto 3rd.
After the bus turns onto Rainier, keep
an eye out for Dearborn Way. The Goodwill is at the corner of Dearborn and
Rainier.
The main store is the size of a warehouse and filled with goodies. Check the
men's section for blazers and pinstriped
shirts . There is a separate section with
jeans and corduro\, pants. There is also a
section with antiques and vintage clothing
and rows upon rows of used books .
To get to the Salvation Army from the
Goodwill store, catch the #7 or the #39
back downtown (i .e., cross the street).
Ride this northbound bus to 3rd Ave . and
walk over one block to 2nd Ave. and get on
a local southbound of just about any
number~Be sure not to get on a southbound express or you may end up in
God-only-knows-where.) Hop off at 1010
4th and peruse the Salvation Army main
store.
>
The blazers are only $3.50 here and
prices tend to be lower than at Goodwill.
There is a large antique and vintage clothing section here also. The basement, long
a secret even to veteran shoppers', has
applicances and furniture.
Next thing you'll want to do is stop by
the Greyhound station and stow all those
goodies you've bought in one of the
lockers at the station. Thi s will save you
You have to walk to the back and across
the hassle of lugging it all over town and
to get into the main clothing section
it is on your way to the other shops in
Three blocks further up Roosevelt Way
north Seatt le.
is The High Hopes Thrift Shop (6814
1'0 get to the station catch a northRoosevelt Way) . Run by the Ameri can
bound bus (i .e., don't cross fhe street), get
Cancer Society, this place is a scream,
off at Howell, unless the bus turns onto it
due to the ladies who staff the store. It's
(or Olive Way) and walk up to Eighth St.
like shorping with your mother. "How
The bus station is on your left. If the bus
about thisl" they ask, " It looks like your
turns onto Olive or Howe'lI, hop off at
size l Do you need a swimsuit?" Disregard
Eighth and the station is right there.
the fact that they tend to pi ck out hot
After you:ve dumped your stuff, walk
pink miniskirts witli snoopy patches , and
over to Howell and catch the #72 North .
pia\, them for what they're worth . National
Look for an express bus, if possible. Ride
Geographirs are piled up to the ceiling in
to 65th Street. This bus will pass through
the back room . Open 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
the University district, and for those so
weekdays and Saturday, 11 a.m.-4 p.m.
inclined, there are a lot of great used
When you 're done with these shops,
record stores and bookstores all up and
walk back over the 15th Ave . and cross it .
down University Ave.
Get back onto a #72 going no rth . Thi s
Right across 15th Ave . on 65th SI. is an
ride is a long one, but well worth it,
organic grocery store, a great place to buy
because you 've saved the hps t for las t.
fruit or juice for a pick-me-up . Al so on
Ride out to Lake City , keeping an eye
15th Ave . is Kitchy Koo just a few feet
out
for 125th. That's where you get off to
north of the bus stop. Browse through to
go to Valu e Village . (If you'rp driving you
see what's new in leopard-skin clothing.
might wa nt to stop at KE'mo\ Gt'neral
Walk west (i .e., across 15th Ave.) about
Storf', 11tl46 I <l k£' City WilY . but clon ' t
three blocks to Roosevelt Way Right on
bothl'r
gptt ing ot f till' bu s for it .)
the corner is Vintage Clothing (6501
Value Vill age' at 12'i48 L,lk(' City Way ,
Roosevelt Way ) Thi s tiny sho p has (you
i, Ill\, favor ite thrift start' . Run by thp
guessed itl ) vintage clothing and accesNorthwp,t Center for till' tV\Pll ta ll y Rt'sori es. Not for those on a tiny budget,
tdrdl'd , thi' pld CP i, fill ed to tht' brim ,
bla zers and suits run from $24-$50, dresses
with a ll tho<;(' politi ca ll y correct clothl's
are $5-$30. They have a great se lecti on of
you' ll bl' npeding It also has a grea t
thin silk ti es (whi ch are a bit overpriced),
selertion of infallt ,lotl1<''' dnd domes ti cs.
silk shirts, shoes, evening dresses, hat s,
rhey have small sizt', (i.e, anything under
jewelry, etc. This is the highes t-pri ced
a sizt' 44) and tllP racks arC' arranged by
shop on the tour, and a bit over my
, i Le, whi ch comes as a great rei ief after
budget. It's a good place to find outfits
ploughing through all those too-big sizps
for special occasions, like a WW III party .
everywhere else.
Just up and across. the stref't is the
There's a section of uniforms, army
Cloud Nine Thrift Shop, run by SI.
fatigu es, shirts from Joe Blow's Garage
Stephen 's Church. It's only open Tuesday,
with Mike stitched on the pocket , etc.
Wednesday, and Thursday from 10 a.m. to
Some of the p.i.'s they have are incrpdibly
4 p.m. They have the regu lation thrift
sexy .
store good ies. It's small, but not too bad
To get back to the Greyhound station
for it's size. If you 're not careful you'll
miss the back half and the closed-in other . <1I1d Olympia, just cross the street ,1I1d
catch the #72 back downtown . I f you 're
side of the shop, where all the clothes are.
The Elusive Hawaiian Shirt
By Jeff Cochran
Most of my wardrobe has been worn by
~omeone else; it's cheaper that way. In
Olympia there are several secondhand
stores, and I have found bargains at each.
What follows is my guide to used clothes
shopping in Olympia.
The Salvation Army Thrift Shop, at 109
N. Columbia, is the best of the secondhand clothing outlets. They have ~Iothing
for both sexes, The prices are the lowest
of any used clothing store, and the people
that work there are exceptionally helpful.
The selection varies from the marvelously
tacky to the truly luxurious. The merchandise is tagged with the price and also with
the date it was put on the rack. After one
month the priCes are. cut in half, and you
can plan your shopping accordingly. I
suggest that you snap-up the luxurious
item when you find it, as it tends to stay
in the store, freshly cleaned and pressed,
on Fridays. It is put on the racks on Saturdays and Mondays which are obviously
the best shopping days.
i= MeAT
women and men. Mike likes to specialize
in pre-fifties clothing, and some real gems
can be found. The selection is always
small, and always unique. Prices vary
from reasonable to incredibly expensive. I
purchased a sailor's blouse from the 1900's
(possibly earlier) there for 95t, Clothes are
put out on an irregular schedule, so you
need to go in only every other week or so.
Steamboat Becki's (213 E. Fifth) is a
small shop with clothing that ranges in
size from child's seven to adult. They
carry primarily women's clothing, and the
o
~_nA"
II .,..I11111 . . . . Test Preparation
. . .rMW. . Sceclall sts
Since 1938
~1'l
EDUCATIONAL CENTER
For information, Please Calf:
Seattle (206) 523-7617
~
Soup & Salad - :auy 3 get 1 free
Carpenter Ant &
.
Mike Cook's Second Hand Gihs, at 10&
E. Fourth, also has clothing for both
fashions are student oriented (lots of
peasant wear). The prices on all their
clothing are good, but they handle some
handmade women's clothes in enjoyable .
colors and fabrics at amazingly low prices.
Foxes, Ltd., at 406 S. Washington, and
Glad Rags and Goodies, at 117 Legion
Way, are two consignment shops that
carry exclusively women's clothing. The
prices tend to be moderate to high, but
both stores have sales going on now. For
people who enjoy sixties mod, Glad Rags
has a number of black, turtleneck
sweaters right now at a very reasonable
price. Faxes has a small selection of
antique clothing that is probably the
finest quality that you' ll find in Olympia,
but you pay for it. And for you discriminating college students, Foxes asked me to
mention their selection of fine, used furs .
And finally there is the New Life
Mercantile at Fourth and Capitol. Before
you buy anything here, you might want to
look into who these people are and just
where your money will go (see the Daily
expose of Nov . 20 on the Foundation) .
As a rule I never buy more than one ']!jt
belt there ina year
NAT'L MEO BOS
ECFMG • FLEX· VaE
NOB. NPB I • NLE
The UncoIl.' I0Il ExtermInator
A~~ 963-98018
rhe Treasure Chest, at Division and
Ilarrison, is another shop that carries
dothes for both men and women. A lot of
the clothing that is sold here is sold on
consignment which means that the prices
tend to be higher. The selection is also
not as large nor as varied as the Salvation
Army, but goodies can be ·found . At the
Treasure Chest you must be careful to
look through everything, because the
bargain clothes have been hidden in
reams of polyester leisure wear.
LSAT • MCAT • GRE
GRE PSYCH • GRE BID
GMAT • OAT • DCAT • PCAT
VAT. MAl· SAT
Herb&Onion Coupon
rlUt Her1l&-"On1oD
In the Olympian by the Park
worried about missing the station, just sit
ill t he front and ask the driver to alert you
when shC"s passing by the station .
Well , there it is, complete with direclions for the less sure-footed, non-c ity
tolk . In one Saturday you can be only a
'l11a ll amount poorer, but very rolitically
correct
All Types .of Pest Control
Minimum in OlemlcaJs Used
Envirorlmental satety EmphasIzed
Cost'Quite Reasonable
718-0100 In Olympia
~ LeftBan.JIcJoIu
.........
......,6U.as
..."..,
Sept. 24, 1981
page 28 Cooper Point Journal
Sept. 24, 1981
Cooper Point Journal page 29
Wash and Where?
Gearing Up for a Draftl
Doing the Laundry
By John Bauman
What's happening with the draft these
days? If you are a draft age male this is
probably a question you are interested in .
What kind of answer you get, of course,
depends upon who you talk to.
From the military's point of view, the
draft is another weapon. To the United
States today, the value of a weapon is it's
deterence value. According to Sergeant
Robert Powers, of the U.S. Army Recruiting Office, "Any war in Europe, and that's
where we're talking about, would be over
. There's a lot of
in two to three weeks
firepower over there." Any European war
would be over before the first draftees
reached basic training, Powers said, but
an unusual Soviet buildup would be
detected immediately by satellite. It
wou ld be this sort of activity that wou ld
trigger a draft call-up.
Reagen does not want to go back to a
draft, Powers said, but neither is he going
to dismantle the machinery already in
pla ce . The system is necessary " to show
we have the reso lve to ca ll people up ."
rhe Se lective Service System's inou ction ma,hinery is now being created and
prf'pared tq be able to draft men on the
~ hortes t poss ibl e notice. They are trying
to recruit local draft hoard s and are going
Llhead with pl,lns to " prec lass ify" men
with permilllent Illt-'ntel l or physical
disabi l ities .
In Congress, the draft legislation con, idered most likely to pass is HR 1500,
IIltroduced by Rep . "Sonny" Montgomery
(0 Tx) This bill would establ ish the
Indiv idual Ready Reserve. The I.RR
would all ow for the drafting of men for a
12-week training period .
The Reagan administration is following
many policies that could make a peacetime draft justifiable. According to Glen
Anderson, of the Thurston County Draft
Counse ling Center.
'They're de-emphasizing the recruitment of women while at the same time
increasing manpower all otments
rhey're going to let themselves be forced
into it," he said .
By Stephen Charak
Doing the laundry is an arduous task . It
is even more difficult if you don't have a
washer and dryer and must rely on the
good graces of the friendly neighborhood
laundromat. Few people like doing laundry; almost no one likes schleping a box
(or pack, or bug) full of dirty clothes to
be washed.
Washing clothes at a laundromat has ih
hazards . The suspense builds as you plaCl'
the coin, in the slot, . Will the machillf'
workl There are few feelings worse than
puttlllg a quarter into the coin slot in the
dryer, turning the knob, ano staring as
your clothes Just SIT there (espec ially if it
was your last quarter) .
Or melybe your clothes do tumble, and
you Sit back with sa tisfaction watching
them turn. Tht'n you open the door on ly
to find the clothes stili wet because tht'
hea t didn't work . And how many times
have you sa t , ;;taring frightfully as your
washing f!1achines sputtered and waddled
during the srin cycle .
Th(,re's no sense dwelling on the negafive Doing wash is part of life, and for
mmt students, going to the laundromat is
our on ly choice. We do have ou r stylistic
difft'rences. Many peop le have no preferen< t' for the time of day they go. Others,
likt' myself, tend to go early, chief ly to
avoid the crowds . (Many times I've gone
at (, .1 .m . and have seen other Evergreen
studt'nts .who also exppcted to be the only
Oil(' th~,re) Many people wait until they're
ou t of underwear and socks before they
S(J( cumo to the task. Others go regularly,
usually onct-' a wf'ek
rh .. chart b('low li sts the locat ion and
hours of tilt' Icllllldrornats in the area .
I hmt' who don' t have a ca r often choose
10 go to tht' pldce rlosest to them . I knuw
.1 \t'W p!'opl .. who bring their bundles on
th, ' ous and t,lkp it to the Dorms . (And if
you live in the Dorms, this is the obvious
early in the day, I have awakened people
location for you.) The Ash laundry used
in both places.
to be the " in" spot, until the management
The task is yours, as is the choice. So
limited its lise to residents .
fill up the laundry bag and be a part of
Generally, the prices are about the
the wide array of people killing time playsame all over. Expect that the dryers will
ing cards or reading back issues of People,
take at least 20 minutes to dry your
.
Time, or Christian Life. Settle back . It will
clothes.
all be over in a couple of hours. Don't
How do you decide which laundromat
forget to bri ng extra quarters.
to parade to if you have a c hoice of two
close byl Hours are one way. The Wash
Tub and the Legion Way Laundry are
, Legion Way Coin-Op Laundry
open 24 hours. The two Norge laundries
416 Legion Way
are not. Reliability of machines is another
facior The differences are few however
The Wash Tub 1214 Harrison
If you go to one laundromat a'number ~f
Both locations are open 24 hours .
times , you' ll know which washers and
Attendants are on dllty during the day.
dryers to stay away from . Unfortunately,
you may have to learn the hard way .
Norge Dry Cleaning Village Coin-Op
Personally, I prefer the Wash Tub. It's
Eastside -122 N . Turner
frt-'p of thp dry-c leaning fumes of the
Westside - West,ide Shopping Center
Norgp places . It has the large washers
Hours :
which are reliable . I t seems to be less
M-F 7:30 a.m.-9 pm
inhabifed by weirdos than the Legion Way
Sat. 9 a.m-5:JO p.m
Laundry , though because I do my laundry
Sun . 10 a.m.-530 p.m .
Westside Center
2104 W. Harrison
(corner of Harrison & Division)
Phone 943-3820
(
412 S. Cherry
943-3650
Open 7 days a week
8a.m. - Sp.rn.
Self-help in this context means that a
person comi ng into the office will be
expected to do all the leg work he or she
, is capable of . That implies ca lling the
appropriate bureaucrat, writing letters,
and/or checking the statutes - with staff
help if- necessary. SHLAP staffers then file
the information that helped you, so that
future clients will be better served. By the
way, SHLAP assistance is free - no mean
feat in the age of ReaganomiCS!
The type of cases 5HLAPers most often
Beer and Wine
Making Equipment
Home of Low, Low Prescription
Prices
_ .. ONE OF OUR BEST TIRES!
.Olympic Brano Vitamins
arE' UNCONDITIONALLY
Cuaranteed
Coupons good through
"atllrdav On. 10, lY81
STRESS fORMULA WITH ZINC
A high potency B-complex formula
with added zinc, and vitam ins C
and f
60 tablets
Usual pri ce $4.57
$2.49
VITAMIN C
RENEGAD
60 RADIAL
.-.
'=y.
'68" .=
BRIO/U
SIZE .
...-va
PlUS F.E.T. 2.411
2 +2
$2.99
1,(0) mg
100 tablets
Usual price $4.57
PRICE
'''10115
8"110115
.............
H"IIO'In
Vitamin-Mineral formula
12 vitamins 10 minerals
in therapeutic dosages
OUR VERY BEST fORMULA.~::::::;=~
for health and vigor
100 tablets
Usual price $7.87
now $4,98
.
SIZE
FRIIO/14
GRIIO/14
ULTRA THERAPEUTIC
!'OLnn.. ....GlASc
II
VITAMIN E
$3.19
4((J unit
Natural Source
Bottle of 100
Usual price $4.57
VITAMIN A
page .30 Cooper Point Journal
10,(0) units
Bottle of 100
Usual price $2.49
JIlin TRY.
1DAILY
""J2
Cropping
Enlarging
Copy Negatives-
1.14
2,.
1.21
3040
RENEGADE
.--
70 RADIAL
..-:-:::;......--:.:. ,..'. .
.=.. ·69":=
.:.
. ... .....
,.....
"US,., ,..
~
"''I •• ''
.....
,.."..1'
....
n'
,'
Groceries
Fresh Produce
Fresh Meats
Imported Beer & Wines
Sundries
Magazines
Self Serve Gas
417 So. Washington Sl
Olympia, WA 98504
(206) 940-5696
365 days a year
anO-bivision N,W,
help with in clude landlord/ tenant , traffic
cita tions, simple pro-se divorce proceedings, and adm ini strative cases ranging
from the food stamp program to Evergreen
itself. They are also trained to know at
what point a client should see a regular
lawyer, sin ce tile se lf-help approac h does
have limits.
SHLAP rests on the theory that by
making the body of the law the restricted
domain of profeSSionals, its fairness is
compromised. SHLAP attempts to break
down that barrier and bring at least part
of the law within the reach of lay people,
and in so doing increase its fairness.
The SHLAP office is located on the
third floor of the Library building, in room
3224. The phone number is 866-6102. Stop
by or give us a call if you have any
questions,
The way you want it
because
we do the printing right
here at our store,
'RI',HSIi
COLOR PROCESSING ON PREMISES
In by 9:00 am - . Out by 5:30 pm
(35 mm film only)
open Mon.-Fri. 8-6
Saturdays 9-5
7 a ,m,-12 p.m ,
$1,39
.--...
1\
,~,----
-
:'.--
)
" It
d"n 't w.Inl ,1 dratt you (I he' II,'r
tlV" poli l l( <l IlV ," s,mj Andprsoll .
" I hi , IS th., Illml Import all t point, bl'( dliSe
111<' h.lIv" , dllei Ihos,' who bpnefit oy .1
elr,Ift ,Ir(' .II IiVI' politiC ally ." Ander<;on
',11(1, " I Ill' 'lIIti -elraft 11l0venlPnt iSlI 't g()in g
t() h,IIIP. 'n lInlt'S<; people Illakt' it h.IPIWI1 ."
Pointillg out th,1I only Congres<; Cil n
,ILlt hor l /!' .1 draft, he UI ged young men to
1I1.1k" thplr VII'W' knowil to their
CongrPsslllen .
C lt'n An<il'rson can bl' reached at the
Dr ,1ft Counst'l ing centpr ,\S7 -3404.
'it'rgl'.lnt Power, can be reached at
4')(,· 11>11
I \\dll t l(l gl\ l' th" II"''' IIlIlIIb.'rs
It quc',tIOI1('d, 10 hI' ,1I11ong thl'
Iwopl .. ,lltl'l tl'd o\' Iltc' 'vVolll1c1n su it I:VI'Cl
If til" (il,e " won , Illl'n' " now le!-\i sl,ltlon
Ill,torl' Congrp", til .1I would l'xt> lIIpl til l'
,>SS frolll till' priv.I l \ .1( t.
On IlIly 20, lYU1 , till' SSS hilnr!pr! oVl'r
to til\' lu stlCtc' Dl'pdrtllll'nt tht> CldlllPS of
134 alleged nOIHP!-\i,trelnts Tlwrf' havp
ot-'en no indictments .1" yt:t . " !hese are
people who publicly scm! l 'lll not rrg 1st,cor'
in!-\. The S5S seeks to USf' them as an
ex.1mple," '>a id A ndprsoll, "Even the gov('mment admits that 30% of the affected
mpn aren't regi .. terin!-\ . rhere" no Wily
tlwy call prosecute 30% of the drelft agt-'
or
dOli
,-:('1
',111 (' 1.1111 1,
\()lI
.I (
r;"""'''''''''class'itiedS~i''",~'''~~-:"---~---.
"
r •.
~
The NOrlhwest University of Metaphysics Fall
,~, Schedule begins Sept. 28th with Metaphysics,l':
MeditatIOn, Yoga, Visualization-Creative Mantfes-11
taf ion, Melaphysical Heal ing and Numerology M
"" classes. Plus Retreats, Workshops and Halloween l1i
? Psychic Fair. For information call 943-5239 or f.
p57·8692 .
. ~
I
~
For Sale. 1965 Dodge 1-Ton Van , 225 Slant 6.
•.:;..'
.""
",
;;
home, or for hauling equipment such as
musical .instruments, garden machinery, furni·
ture, etc., etc . Dual rear wheels - good lires
and shocks - Engine and running gear in
great shape. $1000. Call 866-3745 after 5:00.
@ Easy on Gas. Great for conversion to mobile
1
'lite P,ook State
t7' •• _
106 E. 4th
.
754-7470
Used & Out of Print
Ild
l
r.
j"
J_
rtI., 'mfJia. . )AXiSn:iJU1torL
"""'tJ r'"
-0
Bought, Sold & Searched
10:00 to 5:30
Mon.-Sat.
j:::i:::::::~:::::::~::':~:::::~;::':::;:;:~;::~:':':;~:i=~~:;::::'~~:::~::::::::::::::>~:::::!:::O::::~:::~;:;:;:;::t::"{;::: ::m.:::::;:;::::::;.;;~;::~::::
Get The
Personal Touch!
2. .
n ..
.,..
H"DDy .....
F.E.T.
""
n ...
Self-Help Legal Aide
Self Help Legi) I Aid means just that. An
S&A student organization, this service
began sOlTle years ago as an academic
program and has evo lved to its current
role . SHLAP staffers help members of the
Evergreen community to decipher the law,
as it applies to their specific problems .
Open M-F 10-8
Sat. 10-6
Sun. Noon-5
Ph one 352-3988
II ~
...
- ----
}
;
Cork'N
Crock
RAUDENBUSH
MOTOR SUPPLY
Thi5 is not seen as likely by Powe ,
who observed that the se
es are ur
rentiy meeting their recruitm
is true, he said, that the Def
ment has put a cap ·on the re
. ment of
women while it investigated whether they
could perform the necessary tasks required of a soldier .
The possible reasons for a future draft
ca ll -up are .unpredictable, but the
possibility for a draft is undeniable
" Any dratt age male who wants to be
anything other than an obedient soldier
shou ld contact a draft counselor immediately," said Anderson, " You can't wait
until there is a draft."
On December 20, 1980, the SSS prepublished it's propose regulations in the
Federa l Register These regulations provide
the best idea of how a future draft would
operate, but they have not been approved
by Congress and it is poss ible that the
actual regulations will be different
Undf'r thf' rroposed regulations , in the
eve nt of a draft all inductees would be
cla" ifi ed l -A. When they rece ive their
indu ct ion lett er th ey wi ll have 10 dilYS
from th e datt-' the letlt-'r wa\ mailed to
apply fo r rec lassiflciltion. This will involve
going to a pmt office and picking up tflP
Cias"fl ciltlon I nformiltion Book let '1hi,
bookll't, which won't be ll1ade ava ilabh '
unlil th e draft is Instituted, conta in.' forlll
'J , the apr>lication for recl,bsific.Jtion
Rega rding conscientious objectors , tht-'
propowd rf'gulations arf' , illli lar to til!'
Vietnam era requirements . " I·or con'>titutional reasons, they ca n't tightpn up the
requirements, so they're tightening U[l thE-'
procedural aspec ts, " said Anderson .
The on ly case sti ll in the courts is
Wolman vs . Us. , which chall enges the
Selective Servldes right to demand socia l
sec urity numbers . A federal court ruled in
November 1980 that the SSS could not
require registrants to reveal their soc ial
security numbers because of the protection of the priva cy act.
fhe case is now on appeal before the
Federal Court of Appeal s in the District of
Columbia, with argument to be heard thi s
fall. So currently, registrants who haven't
Olympia, WA
Handy Pantry
THERAPEUTIC MASSAGE
- eases muscles and nervous tension
by promoting
- stimulates circulation by assisting the
return of blood to the heart
- aids elimination through stimulation of
the kidneys and large intestines
Mon.-Fri. 10-6
Sat. 10-5
357-9470 202 W. 4th
Sept. 24, 1981
Sept. 24, 1981
,.
., .~
;.L._
Cooper Point Journal page 31
Messy Arts. • . Messy Fun
Rise and Shine Campers
by Mike Helms
.
Welcome to Washington .. , .
October is generally an excellent month
for hiking and climbing in. the Cascades.
The bugs are generally gone by now, the
days are still nice and warm, the nights
are crisp and cool and there are a lot
fewer folks out there. If you are n'e w to
the Pacific Northwest, here are a few nice
hikes and climbs to introduce ¥ou' to our
area.
Snow and Gem Lakes
The Snow Lake hike begins at the
Alpenta l Ski Area parking lot at Snoqualmie Pass . Hike the Pacific Crest Trail from
t he northwest corner of the parking lot up
to and acrms t he Snow Lake divide
(2 '/ 2 miles) . On your left are exce ll ent
views of Denny Peak, The Tooth, Bryant
and Chair Pea ks. From the divide. descend
the trail to the east end of Snow Lake. By
Cascade standards, Snow Lake is a fairly
large lak e and is one of the more popular
SnOfJualmie Pass hikes so don't exoect to
bP alone W elcomed solitude can be found
at Gem Lake, another mile and a half or
so by trail around the north side of Snow
Lake. The hike to Snow Lake is roughly six
miles round-trip with about 1000 feet of
e levation gain to the divide . This is a nice
day hike for anyone.
If you are interested in a bit more
sol itude, more spectacular scenery and
are willing to put forth a bit more effort ,
1023 Coptol
35Z-1900
c.u
w.,
AhMd F.. Tok. Out _
FIRSI' EDITION
then visit Ingalls Lake. Located on the
eastern slope of the Cascades, Ingalls Lake
IS more likely to be warm and sunny
during the month of October. To get
there, take Interstate 90 across Snoqualmie
Pass to Cle Elum, Wa., then go north on
route 97 (toward Blewett Pass) for seven
miles and turn left on the Teanaway Road
(county road No. 107). The road ends in a
parking area 23 miles later at the Esmerelda
Basin. From there follow a marked trail
across Ingalls Pass (at 2 miles) to the
south shore of I ngalls Lake, three and a
half miles from the trailhead. This lake
sits on the east flank of Ingall s Peak
(ele. 7662') and gives an excellent view of
Mt. Stuart (ele. 9415') to the north . If you
have a fi shing rod, take it, there are some
nice trout in thi s lake.
Mt. Rainier Nationa l Park
Two of the most beautiful hikes in the
Park start from the seldom visited West
Side Road which leaves the main road
(State road #7) one mile after entering the
Nlsqually entrance to Mt. Rainier National
Park . Both the Indian Henry's Hunting
Ground and Klapatche Park-St. Andrew's
Park trails are excellent October hikes and
both provide unsurpassed views of Mt.
Rainier.
The trail to Indian Henry's leaves the
West Side Road at 4.3 miles. The trip to
Indian Henry's is roughly four miles and a
short spur trail leads to Mirror Lake. This
is a lovely hike and well worth it, if only
to cross the suspension foot bridge.
There are two equally enjoyable tnils
to Klapatche and St. Andrews parks
making a memorable loop trip if you
take two cars. The most direct trail begins
at St. Andrews Creek 11% miles up the
West Side Road reaching Klapatche Park
after 2V, miles. St. Andrews Park is only
three-fourths of a mile southeast via the
trail through open meadows.
A slightly longer but more scenic trail
to St. Andrews Park leaves the West Side
Road a mil e beyond Round Pass and leads
up to St. Andrew's Park via the South
Puyallup River and Emerald Ridge .
Expect to see deer, marmots , goats, and
pOSS ibly bear o n any hike in Mt. Raini er
By Davis Inness
administered is record preening, reefer
cleaning, and football , baseball , etc ,
It's possibl e to leave Evergreen with any
games (in season) . Here, however, while
number of priceless treasures . .. tents,
you're waiting for the football stadium to
china , si Iverware solar coll ectors bentbe built for the Board of Trustee' s enterwood chairs, dia~ond wedding ri'ngs,
tainment , you can find distraction from
timbalis , banjos , water wheels , flower
the academic grind while enriching yourpots, parkas, photos, stained glass winself both psychically and materially by
dows, sculpture, kitchen utensils,-etc.,
explo
ring and utili zing the following nonetc., all custom made to your own specifiacademic fac iliti es.
cat ion s, all crafted to your personal stanMetal Studio - When the Europeans
dards. No labor costs, you pay for
discovered the Tierradel Fu geans (but
material s onl y.
before thE'Y wiped them ou'l ) they were
Evergreen was intended to provide a lot
surprised to f ind that these people, who
of hands on experience . says so right
knew
nothing of clothing or fire, worE'
there in that slick catalogue you got for
jewelry
. Personal ddornment seems to be
signing up. There's also an emphasi s on
to
human nature.
basic
something ca lled "self-actualization"
The 211 Metal Studio was set up by
which is coll ege talk for " do it yourse lf ."
students in 1973, to be used primarily as a
One of the things theY"'don' t talk about in
jewelry lah . The shop was set up with an
the cata log is "occupational therapy ."
extpnsive vari ety of tools and equ ipment
Occ upat io nal therapy is a term
to fab ri cate a wide var iety of jE'wf'lry
more commonly assoc iated with ot her
form s. TherE' is ce ntrifugal and vae ullm
form s of state instituti o ns, but o nce you
cast in g. enamelin g polishin g ((<lbac hon).
spE'lld enough t ime involved in curri cul ar
and fa ceted stolle cutt ing _ Sil1l p tlll'n. th ('
ilC' ti vitip<;, occ- upatio nal t herapy takes all a
(.lpac-it if" and hori zo ns of tilt' shop h,wt'
wholE' npw meaning.
l'xpa nded . S,lIld ca~ tin g dnd brMlI1g <1 r('
Now at m ost colleges around thE' statE'
,1lso pos<ihlp t he(('. dnci ,tuden b ha v,'
about all t he rli,trac-tion therapy that get s
National Park. There is a $2 per car entry
fee to Mt. Rainier unless you get there
very early in the morning. Oh yes . . . don't
forget your camera.
Climbing
Fall is rock climbing season in the
Cascades . Summer has dealt harshly with
the volcanoes leaving most routes on
. them badly broken by crevasses or bombarded with rockfall.
Most rock climbing centers around the
town of Leavenworth, Washington, 50
miles east of Steven's Pass. There are
literally hundreds of climbs in this area of
all degrees of difficulty. There are several
guide books to the climbs in this area
which are available at local mountaineering shops_
Peshastin Pinnacles. are a group of sandstone towers located in Dryden eight
miles east of Leavenworth on Highway 2.
They offer a variety of routes, 5.0 to 5.10
in difficulty. Most routes ill the Pinnacl es
are in the 5.5 to 5.8 range and many are
bolted .
Caslfe Rock is a large gran ite extrusion
located two miles west of Leavenworth on
Highway 2. There are many routes on
both upper and lower Castle Rock ranging
from 5,4 to 5.10.
To get to Snow Creek Wall drive six
miles south from Leavenwarth on the
Icicle River road to the Snow Lakes trailhead then hike two miles up the trail to
the base of the wall. Most routes on Snow
Creek Wall are long and hard, grade IWs
mostly, ranging from 5.7 to 5.10.
Climbers can camp free at both Eightmile and Bridge Creek campgrounds
located at miles eight and nine on the
Icicle River road.
Three fun alpine climbs worth mentioning are the south face of the Tooth the
northeast ridge of Chair Peak and the
sou.th face of I ngalls Peak. All are easy
class five climbs and can be climbed in a
day. They are all accessible from the trails
mentioned earlier. - .
Some guides to the mountains of Washington are available in the Learning '
Resource Center and the Unsoeld Center
on campus.
Dear Norma
Dear Norma :
I seemed to have lost my li bido. I mean
I haven't the urge to, you know, in six
weeksl Is thi s unu sual or does it happen
to all Greeners i
Signed,
Perplexed Sophomore
Dear Perp :
Have you really looked for your libido?
Maybe it's under that Tupperware ® bowl
in the back of your fridge, maybe Linder
all those dirty socks in your room? Try
putting up noti ces on the bull etin boards
aroulld sc hool, or a classified in the CP).
If you try all this and still can't find it
don't give up. Borrow someone else' s un'til
you rs show up . If anyone sees Perp',
libido wandering around campus, please
bring it to the CPJ Office
Norma
Go Geoducks, GO!
By Jan Lambert z
Animal CraCkers . 1930. ser'Jed as a prime sou rce of Inspi ra t ion tor alilhe
Ma r x B rothers fil ms which ca me after It ,r,.,•., II C elc/JI;HlOllul r nl' Mit •• P'or."('t S Adam SIlI' 19 7,) 1
6 Eggstraspecial, Eggsquisite Eggs
80mlettes
6 Salads
15 Sandwiches
10 Burgers
Soups
Numerous Diet Busters
Our Specialties
Coffee Company
Beverages
Imported Wines and Beer by the glass
Homemade Desserts
late Night Dining Alternative
tn.
Mon-Tln•. 7 a.m.-12 a.m.
Frl. Sat. 7 8_m_-2 8.m.
Comer of capitol Way .xl Union
"YOCM' Home Next to the Dome"
352~1900
page 32 ~ooper Point Journal
The men's and women's soccer teams
are entering their third seaso n of competiti on and th ~ ir first season in the Northwest Co ll eg iate Soccer Conference. Willie
Lippmann wi ll return to head up the
men's sq uad and Jacques Zimicki will
coac h the women . We're looking forward
to the best season yet and wi ll host 15
home mat ches starting with the men's
season opener on Saturday, September 26
against Pacific University at 1 p.m. and
the women 's first contest against UPS on
Sunday, Sept . 27 at noon - both games
on our home turf .
.
Coac h Larry Neilson announces a full
slate of invitational meets for the men 's
and women 's cross crountry runners beginning with the season opener at
Whitman Co llege on September 26. The
cross country runners will be participating
In the Wednesday afternoon running club
fun runs as a part of their training and
will be available to assist recreational
runners with tips on technique and
training.
Lew Powers of Olympia has been
selected as Evergreen's first official sailing
coach . A sailing club is being formed for
both a racing team and recreational sailing. The club will race in intercollegiate
and recreational regattas this fall gearing
up for a full season in the spring - includIng a TESC-sponsored regatta on Budd
Inlet.
Coaches Don Martin (swimming) and
Alice Parsons (tennis) say that it's never
too early to get ready for winter and
spring competition . They welcome in-
used the shop to cast temple bell s, fins
for hi gh -tech, small-scale hydroelectri c
turbines , to c hip flint and obsidian arrowheads and tools, to build solar coll ec tor
parts, fuel alcohol st ills and build and
rE'pair mu sical instruments
as wpll as
15-30 wedding ring s a year .
A ver-y important serv ice students can
provide themselves is repair _Wire fram e
glasses, jewe lry and other small metal
devices can be repaired for t he sh9P fee,
75 cent s a day
SPLU Lab - The SPLU lah is located on
till' first floor of the Lab II building By
the door is a sign that says " HE'ware l Th e
packages i(1 t hi s roOI11 may 't>lf'ln strurt
withinl11 lnu" '~' " (,\n . an . •HI'
)
TIl(> SPI U litb is a ,tor,lge and rE'tri eval
pi au' lor hllndrerls of 5pif Pilcpd Ll'arn ing
Linits In 11111\1 (. phy<; ic<;, typ in g, l he mi ~ try.
anthropology. hllsiJ1("s. art , biulogy , math ,
p'vr hology. COl11p utl'r 'Clf'nn '. I rp nch ,
Chinl'''', SP,1111 , h. 1,lp,1I11''' '. It,llian. ph l>togra phy .1 11( 1 p( nno:ll i(,
1\ I\,"OUI',' C,'nl<'r ('OIlIPUt"f t(,rI1l1na h .
I'rogr,1Ifl pl.lllll lng . (h" III1 ,try Idhuril torv .
NMR 111,1 " ' P('l -lf()ph o t" I11\'t {'r. ml ( ro-
Dear Norma :
What do Evergreen men have in
common with Amoebas? A. They're both
asexual.
TO: Norma
FROM : Joe C Newteacher
Re: My confusion
What can a new instru ctor expect from
Evergreen students? I am so confused
about what I'm going to actu all y teac h .
Any point ers for mel
.
quiries from students who may be con si dering swimming this winter or playing
tennis In the spring.
Anyone who is interested in parti cipating In a sport should contact Jan
Lambertz at x6530 or drop into the
Recreation and Athletics office on the
third floor of the Recreation Center for
more information .
There are recreational and athletic
ac tivities for everyone through intramural s, club sports , and interco llegiate
teams . Even if you are a beginner or are
not the" athletic type" there are fun and
healthy sports available, and the varsity
athletes will be glad to share their
knowledge with you to help you improve
your ski.!ls. Hope we see you out on the
playfields this falli
JCN
DedI' lo p C. Npwlt>JL her,
Wh,lt (an you pxpec t from fv ergr een
, tudl'l1t , 1 The best of everyt hin g and
lit E'r Jll y ':lI1 ything . You'll probably be
work ing w it h other Instru ctors w ho' lI ,tell
you what'> go in g on. -provided that th ey
know
Here's somp pointer, :
1. Alway, have the books for seminar read
at leas t twir e
2. If you are still unfamili ar or don't
understand the materi al, assign students
to lead your se minar dnd refuse to speak .
Say things like, " This is your ed ucat ion,
I've had mine," or "What do you think?"
I f worse comes to worse , start a conve rsation about why people study the subject
at all. Then beglll to tell the group about
how you thought yo u'd find the eternal
truth by study ing it.
3. Be prepared to defend your paradigms
and syll ogism s ruth less ly. It helps to co llect a set of groupi es to aid you with this .
Greeners w ill tell you w hat they think and
not hesitate to rip you apart. Don't let
them .
4. Don 't take it persona ll y if lots of folks
leave, or worse fa ll asleep, during your
lectures . This is especia ll y true if you
hold class before noon. They are notorious ly bored with onp-way comm uni cation
and tend to sleep late no matter where
they are. Cood lu ck I
Norma
PRELIMINARY COMPETITIVE SCHEDULE
Home Games Fall 1981
Men 's Soccer
Sat. Sept. 26 vs Pacific University at 1:00
Sun. Sept. 27 vs Bellevue CC at 2:00
Fri . Oct. 2 vs Everett CC at 3:30
Sat. Oct. 3 vs Trinity Western Coli. at 1:00
Sat. Oct. 10 vs PLU at 1:00
Sun. Oct. 11 vs UPS at 1:00
Sun. Nov. 8 vs OSU at 1:00
Sun . Nov. 1 vs Whitman at 11 :00
Women's Soccer
Sat. Sept. 27 vs UPS at 12:00
Wed . Oct. 7 vs PlU at 300
Sun. Oct. 11 vs CWU
Sat. Oct. 17 vs Pacific University at 11 :00
Sun . Oct. 18 vs Lewis and Clark at 10:00
Sat. Oct. 31 vs Whitman
Sun. Nov. 1 vs U of Portland
-,
\\'t.\ ,. "II I'1 "\ l'd w ith (l ay h" Ii,f! ' dllcl
11"11,'11111, '1 th. , l un 01 ( hang ll1 g h fl ' " I
l l1 l 11P\ l!()( 1 to "11,lIH' . . \\'(' f in d pl tl(I"dn ~ III
l ""lu l /1 11('1 till' 11f, 1 Ilring. th" ( 1,\ \ I"k, ·,
1 )1)
. . (·o pt ' ... , drdttlll g l'quipnh. 1nt , . . l,win l!.
1\\," hill"'. gld " I'lh. typ('wr ll< 'r, .
lor' ,\f1d h,ll.Hl< p, [,(,,111")
( ,tI , lILl
W ildt dDt', ,til th,,1 IIlt',W I II .... '> 1'1 U lab
louk , lik,' Ont' 01 11ll' " Modd -Ci,,,, ro()I11, ior -th('-y<'d r-2tXX1 " 1 V 'poh th" t '>perry
1{,lllci u,<,d to ' pon,or y<',lr' ,lg0 . you 'll
IllId (umput,'r t, 'rmill al" t,'( hn it ,1 1 ,'quipnll'llt . lOU, h<" . II',unin g , t" tion, . ,Inti ,h('if upon ,Iwll of d ll tio n.lfy-, i /Pd • onLlim'" ho ldi ng films iln d (d,,(' tt (', for
tlH ' It'IHni ng ... t ~ 'tl()I1'"
I h",(' IlllO(llldtiun Ih\( kd g," t" k,' vou,
,I.,p hy , 1,'1', Ihl ck,lg(' by Pdt J.,,, g(' . Ir<)m
h<'i-~If\lllllg to quilt' delv,\l1( ,'d 1,'v"I , 1\,_
l ilt ' 11 ,1 11"H ' ... u gg(H,h , you . . t '\ yo u r ow n pdt ('
Dear Norma :
Why does everyone here keep telling
me that I should be eat ing Toofew? What
is it anyway, and why shou ld I eat it if
there's not enough to go around? Does it
have something to do with supply side
economics?
New and Confused
Dear Confused :
Ask an older student about it. We also
suggest you look under Or" of Evergreen
A-Z. (See pg. 19.)
Dear Norma .
Why do all the women around here
have hairy armpits? It's di sgust ing. Don't
they SE'II razor s in the bookstore?
Crossed ou t l
I (If' ('\,Impl", ,nllW P'\( kdg", , how ,t,'pily-,l<'I' ,l id!' in<tn l( tiOIl' for op, 'r.ltln g
1l111 ( h 01 til(' I'quipnll'n t 111 th,' " l'll l. With
IdP" , <upplying n,lIT,ltioll 10 fur th, 'r
If\:,lr u< l io n
C"tting u,,,d 10 till' 51)1 U t,lk(', I'"tl('Il<,'
11lt'«,', d computer pr Ogrdll1. " I IN!) II ,"
which (an h,' v('ry coniusin g <It lor' l Ii you
hav!,n' l any ('xppripn('p with comput E' '' It
will t'ventua lly li st il il thl' avail<lb lp SPll)"
or help you spler t the> OIlPS that wi ll SE' rVl'
you bf'st for what you want to know .
The student aides are vpry helpful . but
tl1(' important thing to rempmbpr i, that
you dr<' only limitpd by your own ahility
Th .. SPlU Jah ran h"lp you pu sh back
those limit s_
201 Pottery Shop - With each step in
pottery there are surpri sing transformati ons. If 'You dig the clay yourself, as you
can from loca l clay banks, washing out
the impuriti es reveals surprisingly bright
colors of clay _
~J('ITndll(' rH
Sept. 24, 1981
-, '
-'
(h (I!' ~ ln g lfOlll
.... tclrll'\.\..HI' , rcll kll ,
r llu cl
II)
()f
\'(uthp ll\l\'rlr p l t'r , \lTH (~
11\(·1'< ' .11-,' ..It" 11'1< . g<l, -fm ·d . and prflnltl ve
W()o<i -tlf( 'd kil", II"rlm ur ieickfout
1)( )11, ,1" w h"l'k 1001, an d glare" are surr" lIlld,'d hy " Iripndly staif w ho ,\III hE' lp
you l11<1kl' ,Iflything you want 10 make,
from Thermal mas' solar co ll ecting ti les.
III .1 lull port plain tah lp sE'rvice. or if you
,m'n', amhltHlII' , thil' bane of the sl'r ious
,\(II't. Ih,' humble ashtray _
Photu Lab -- Located on the second
Ilonr of tlw I ihrary . th(' community dark
room is pro.vid,;" for non-academic use by
,tudpnts, staff , and O lympians . It's ,111
, 'x«('IIf'nJ facility in which to praces,
hl,]ck and white fi lm and make your own
"n lar gpments I quipment use and (hemi( ai, arp suppli ...d w hen you pay thl' daily
lah f'Pl', and thl' darkroom is oppn 12
hOUr<; a (\d Y
The Deli and the
Cafeteria have a deal
for you ...
(a la BreaUa , t of (hJlllplom J
D'>ilr Student s.
If you have a qu('stlon m " probl f'm,
pleasE' writp Dea r Normil c/ o C:PI. CA ll
305, TFSC. Olympi a, WA 98')0';
Love Norma
WORD
of
MOUTH
You can buy a book of
meal tickets worth $150
for only $130!
So, when you're studying and don't
feel like cooking. , . or you had to run
for the bus and you left your lunch
behind, .. or the bank is closed and
you don't have any cash on hand,
you can still use your meal tickets
at the:
Books
Z35 N. Division
352-0720
Small • Friendly
Service orient~
Evergreen Food Services
Meal tickets sold in the cafeteria
SePt.:., 24, 1981
"
( I,
, ""1I'thll1g II >-: hl,''- Ifl ,<lIm and i(',·' ,clll'
1\ ,ng tll ho ld
11",t of ,111 I' >-: I.Vln >-: I" lfll tlng \\ ll h dull
1''1lfld" til" t h,l \1 " I ll<' , ""' I, tf'l l( \ " I too
Ihl( k ,"lilli . or too thlll pam ,1 h,' hdtlt'r,
,lf1d 1111'11 "'I' ln g tl1<' c- h,lng,' "I:,'r \UU i irt>
IIIl 'fl1 dg,li n Dull y .. ll o\\, h, ·, i "-f1(" br igh t
>-:1'<"'11 , Wl l h trdil, 0 1 rpd . light I,l\ !'ncipr
p()wdl'rl'd ( "h,dt 111'( om", h.-. !I, .1f11 hluE' .
,,"d vol( .lfl l< ,I'h 1)('( OIl1 !" ,1 rl( I, , " fl c','
I1row n
In til(' 211'1 ( " '.-,\1)'1(' Iluilrilm:, .1 1", hy
till' 1,1'" ,Ll lf ()n . n, ', 11 till' ,t(',1111 pI. 1111 yOll
l .l11 thro\\' 1'01,. ,liP' . \d" 'S. pldt, ·, . dnd
Il"'.ld I1m\ I,. ,I' Y(lU pl"'l '" You '.111 ( 0 11 ,I ,u, t h.. \( ·, . Iii," , pldtll'" . ,mel ,( ul plure.
,III ,I' ,I pi,""' " y"u
1h"I(' .11'<' room, to bu ild por C('I,If Il .
Cooper Po int Journal page 33
~~~~] ~. ~w.~~~~»~:~~~~~~%~~~~~3~~'·~~~~~~~~~.~~S~~~~~I~~~ , , .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
.~
Friday Nile Films
'g
.~
I'"
i
Changes in Evergreen Bus Schedule
t.
.j
By Nas h Perkins
-
--
Monday-Friday
7 a.m noon Aml'rican Traditi o nal
Noon-l p.m . Public Affairs
1 pm-7 pm . Classical World lolk
Contemporilry
,
7 pm -l0 . JAZZ
10-midnlght ROCKII I
'Til Dawn-17llll71l
Weekday featuret tes '
4 30 p.m : KAOS Alternative Npw,
9 .JO pm . Reader's Theatre
Saturday
7-10 C l a~~ic/l aZl
10-12 .Women 's Issues
12-2' Cinema Theatre
2-5 Hispanic
5-7 30 New Relea sf's
7:30-10: Reggae
10-1 2: Rock in Opposition
'Til Dawn Oldies
11 \ f'asy to bt,( OI~W iI part o f KAOS
IN I I M, till' li <;tpll('r-<;pon<;ored , nonCOm nH'f( ial (olllmunity rariio ,tat ion .at
h,'rgr('('n . Wht'lher you're intpr('~tpd In
musi( , publl( ,lffair~ , rddio theate'r or
,>om(' hI/am' mi xture of unhea rd-of pass ibil ltl(" , it'" ('asy dnd fun to g('t thp training YOIl n(,pd by bf'coming a KAOS volunteer YOII (an do a sing lf' "on-air" show
or I,v.. out your fantasi es to be the "toP10< k-of-boss-ro(k ." KAOS can help you
rea li/t , your goa l easi ly and effpctive ly, in
a r('la x('d, supportive atmosphere.
.
Tlwre are many skills KAOS Cd n help
you dpvelop. I:very qUdrler the station
offers il ,ix-week workshop in radio production , ", well as on-going individualized
t«'Iining on the air. If you want to do
man' than ,pin discs and talk with
marhl." in your mouth, KAOS encourages ,
ewryOlw to Iparn othf'r skills - grant-
KAOS provides students and the community with a unique opportunity to use
the tools of broadcasting to voice their
concerns and interest, and provides the
li stener with a low-pressure listening
writing, fundrai sing, public relations
alternative.
writing, editing, reporting, engineeri~g
___._. KAOS receives support from student
and d.. <;ign, personnel and system manfees and from the college. About oneagpmcnt, evp n mundane ski ll s like typing
quarter of the money that keeps KAOS
and filing
going com~s direc tly from contributions
. You name it and you can probably do'
and li stener subscriptions . So even if you
It at KAO~ . And if you 're a student, KAOS
lust like to listen 10 the radio, you can
" rf'ariy to work with you in deSigning an
still be involved with KAOS by ~ ubscribing
acadl'Ill IC contract, whether your field is
to the slatlon . Subscribers receive a memmanagement, sociology, communications
bership card good for discounts at all
musir, or sanitation . KAOS offers a uniqu~
KAOS-sponsored events, the monthly propnvlronment to put your learning to work
gram
gu ide mailed conveniently to the
and lets you work as you learn.
'
front
door,
and discounts on KAOS t-shirts
KAOS is comm itted to "alternative
and other goodies. Subscriptions are $25
broadcasting" in its truest sense. A memper year, $15 for senior citizens and $100
ber of the National Federation of Comwi".
gain you a life-long sustaining memmunity Broadcasters, KAOS is one of a
bership
and the endless gratitude of the
handful of stations across the country that '
station .
will teach anyone about radio - no matter
Does this kind of life look interesting to
what their background or' training.
you?
If you want to get involved in comCoup led w.ith this "open-access" policy,
munity
radio in any way, come by and
KAOS j:mont,zes alternative programming
talk to us arod se~ the new studios. KAOS
- local news dnd public affairs, music by
is located in room 304, on the third floor
local musicians, lesser-known COmposers
of
the College Activities Building. If you
and artists, music on small, independent
can't make it in person, call 866-5267 or
record labels.
866-6073. The manager, operations manager, or engineers can help YOU with any
questions you might have about becoming
Involved with KAOS .
Point Journal Raffle
OLYMPIC
OUTFITTERS
1st Prize : Tent valued at $13200
BwEHErnl~
3rd Pri ze: Bake Go'ods
va lued at $15.00
2nd Prize : Dinners
va lued at $45.00
mud bay- pottery4th Prize : Pottery valued at $10.00
'-If'rv icp
- Wp bripfly did a "Cooper Po int Run "
during the su mmer which was ,llmost useIps, and very inconveni ent. W(' ,topped it.
I dm in the procp<;s of try ing III figurp out
d way to servi ce areas no t on thE' two
('VC'ning rout ps . I f you have any ideas
pll'd >(' write them down and put tilPm in
Ill!' RII<; <;ystem mailbox in CAB m5
Ill" sc hedu les are in th E' paper and -on
1111' hu, enjoy your rides and if you h aw
sugges tion, pass thelll on to til(' bus
'V'i I 1'111 .
·U .
•
•~
~". .,
Get a head start III tile retail management field With the top company in tile
Industry and. at the same time, earn
extra Income. JOIll us . a diVISion of
Tandy Corporation (NYSE) and later
step into your own store management
upon graduation .
Our Store Managers' earnings IIlcilJde a
share of the store 's profits . Troose
Managers who completed our trallling
program three Y£>ilrs ago averilged over
$14,000 their first year as Managers .
betwe£>n $' 9.000 and $20 .000 their
secon d year and over $20,000 the third
year. It you feel you are above average,
then earning potential is even great.H.
C.II m. 10 le.rn mOEe .
&tadle /haeH
A DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORA TlO
AN EQUAL. OPPuRTuNITY EMPLOYER
page 34 Cooper Point Journal
IT'S BETTER ...
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
etUOt1.
J J
DINNERS: WED.-SAT.
SUNDAY BRUNCH
AMERICAN COUNTRY FARE
SERVED IN VICTORIAN ELEGANCE
EXCELLENT WINE & BEER SELECTION
FRESHLY PREPARED MEALS 56.50-$12.50
Please call for reservatioD8
SEVEN GABLES RESTAURANT
1205 W.
Dr.
352.2349
'" to be Dead than Lonely
Allow us to find the right person for you
In your area or elsewhere. Religious,
General, Senior Citizens, classifications.
September 25 (Fri) DIABOLIQUE France 1955 BW 92 minutes. Directed by Henri Clouzot ('Wages
of Fear" ). Simone Signoret, Vera Clouzot. Thi s film has become in recent years somewhat of a
cult, and if famous for its suspense and shock ending. " Hints of the dark and perverse invade this
Clouzot thriller. of psychic terror and veiled sexual aberration."-Kit Parker. PLUS : LAW AND
ORDER 1949 Mighty Mouse cartoon.
October 2 IN THE REALM OF THE SENSES Japan 1977 Color 115 minutes. Written and directed
by Nilgisa O~hima . Tatsuya Fuji, Eiko Matsuda. In 1936, d geisha was found ' wandering through
the streets of Tokyo clutching the severed penis of her lover. He had died some days earlier and
she had taken his genitats as an assert ion of their continUing passion for each other. In the Realm
of lhe Senses reconstructs this true story of Sada, the gPhha, and her lover, Kichi . According to
Oihima, Sada was one of the first women in lapan to have her sexuality made public. The
mention of her name is still synonymous with the breaking of sexua l taboos in Japan. "A beautiful
film . Probably the most thoughtful "York of and on erollc ism yet created ." -Charles Champlin,
L.A Timf's . PLUS : FRICTION a Japanese punk rock short
October 9 SOME LIkE IT HOT 1959 BW 121 minutes. Directed by Billy Wilder. Marilyn Monroe,
Jack Lemmon, Tony Curti s The boys pose as girls (to escape the mob) and ioin an all-girl band
fronted by a ukelele-playing vocalist, Monroe (at her best). featur in g the song " t Want To Be
loved By You ." Curtis is in his element and Lemmon is priceless. One of the best American fi lms
ever made. Absolutely hilarious PLUS ' SOMEWHERE IN DREAMLAND 1936 Color Classic cartoon .
October 16 COUSINE, COUSINE France 1976 Color 95 minu tes Subtitles. Directed by JeanCharl"s Tacc hella . Mari e-C hri stine Banault, Victor Lanoux tt's the story of Marthe and Ludovi c,
cousins through marriage. and their acquaintance tha t develops into friendship, and their friendship that blossoms into love, all as their family look On in <"'rnay "Quite po>sibly the most
accurate representation of happy , healthy sensua lity t have seen on film" -New York MagdLine.
PLUS . a 1':)26 Hal f{oach comedy A PAIR OF TIGHTS Silent
October 23 0 LUCkY MAN! U K. 1973 165 minutes Color. Directed by Lindsay Anderson. Starring
Mal colm McDowell (fresh frorn "A Clockwork Orange") . MUSIC by Alan Price. McDowell is the
lucky man of fat e and des tiny on his journey through life. "A triumphant film . It stands as a
unique creation , one of the finest film s of the post-Strangelove decade. It is a sparklingly witty
and heartbreakmgly percept ive film . t anticipate seell1g It again and again ." -Judith Crist No short.
Showtimes will be 3(10, 7 00, and 1000
October 30 THE HAUNTING 1963 112 minutes BW Cinemascope Directed by Robert Wise.
Julie Harris, Claire Bloom The setting for thi s shocking study 111 terror is a monstrous Victorian
manSion that dominatps th .. livE'S of four people ' an anthropologist who hopes to prove the
eXlsten( c of the supernatural, two young women, one endowed with ESP, and the skept Ical heir
to the estate. PLU S. a spooky short starring The Resident s, HELLO SkiNNY.
All films shown in Lecture Hall One at 3:00, 7:00, and 9:30 unless otherwise indlc~ted . Admission
is $1.25 unl ess otherwise indicated ("It Came from Outer Space" will be $1.50)
jfIeblebal (ftC. jftlm ~trtt11
t
ftll ~uart£r 1981
SHtCHINlN NO SAMURAI (SeYen Samurai)
19&' 141 min. B&W
Dlrocted by Al<ira Kurosawa:
original title: Shlchlnln no Samurai;" produced by Shojlro Motokl; photography by Asaichl Nakai; music by
Fumio HayasaIta. VVlth Taltashl Shirnura, Tashiro Mlfune, Yashlo lnabB. J~ dialog with English subtitles.
SEVa. SAMURAI is an exultant concoction of ~ture, rorTW1C8, action, humor, suspense and colorful
chanlcters-fast-paced and totally absoItlIng. The plot is about _
skilled fighters recruited to lree a farming
village from the scourge 01 a bandit army. But plot is only a small part of the pleasure of SEVa. SAMURAI . The
sarruaI are exactly the kind 01 men K~ admires and belifMIS in, 90 the passion and energy that he
usually expends on calls for social action can be fully d<Noted to dynamic staging, ~tlon, camera style,
and to maintaining unoeasing ~t.
'
lltE PRIVATE UFE OF HEHRY VIII
U.K. 11933 95 mins. B&W
Directed by Alexander
Korda; ~ by Lajos Biro, Arthos VVI""","s; cinematography by Georges Perinal ; edllad by Harold
Young, SIeflhen Harrison ; costumes by JoiYl Armstrong; music by Kl.f1 ScIvoeder; London Films: Players
0w1es Laughton, MI!r1e Oberon, Elsa I..anchester, Robert Donat, Binnie Bwnos, Wendy Ban1e. This droll romp
tIlrocql Tudor intrigue is pro/labIy the most famous Bntish film _
made. It established the ~ of Cha<les
Laughton, made Sir Alexander Korda tha tWling of filmdom's financial backers and made Donham Studios an
international conter for film production. Laughton's performance as King Henry VIII is a sight to behold - while
dovoc.wing a roast chicken, one lMloIe joint at a time, he tosses the rarI18ins <:Her his shoulder, muttering
"rTBlnIIfS are dead, no consideration for anyone"! Char1es Laughton 'NOll an Academy Award as Best Actor of
1936 for his .,a,oable portrayal 01 Henry. Alexander Korda's production is as rich and lavish as historical
aca.ncy allows ... making this classic an eYer-fresh experienoe.
October:!O
Now.IIbaI 3
1ltE WAR LORD
1965 Color 1~ minutes
Char1ton Heston, R1c1wd Boone, Guy
Stot:kwaII, RoaarTwy Fonytfl, MIuioe Evans. Dlrocted by Fnrrklin SchaIf_. In this tCMa1ng adYantUAI epic,
Owtton Heston plays an 11th Century Norman chieftain, returning to his homeland from the Qusades, given
as a cbmtIuI ~, dominion <:Her a nwshy strip of land on the Shores 01 the North Sal. He Is to rule the
oountry's ~s as well as protect them from the Frisian pirates who periodically raid the area. In an
untII*Ing rnedNMII bIt1Ie, .flre. bat1erIng ram and Invasion tower are fought oil with burning pitch, grappling
hook IIw;I ~I.
Ilbe.,lbaI17
CARNIVAl. IN FlNCIERS (La Kermersse Heroique)
Franoe/1935 95 mins. B&W
French
dialogue with English suIlIlllee. Directed by Jacques Feyder; 9CI'M1pIay by Benwd Zimmer, from a story by
a.tes Splat; dl."otO\ji1P1Y by Henry Slnding; edited by Ja;ques Bnllquln; musiC by louis Beypts ;
CXIIIturneII by G.K. BIn:Ia; Rims Dlacln.lnterfilm Studios. PIa)"ers : Fnnooiae Roaay, Alerme, Jean Murat,
louis JoIMiI, Lynn o-s, MIcheline OIeiAII, MIwys w.dIlng, Glrette GIUlert, Mlrguertte DucoInt, Bernard
lJIncreI, Alfred Adem, PIemII...Iby, Art.... DIMIre, MaroeI Carpentier, "'-'dar rJl4scy, 0aJde Sanl Val,
Dalphin. h Is 1616 In FIancIer.J: King Philip 01 SpIIIn rulee as a benign despot. IUnars abound that the "benign"
1*1 may be !UljecI to .-smant, for the king Is sending troops to raise taxes. Our "mod<" hero is the
n-.yor 01 • t<Mi1 in FIancIer.J who, along with his councilmen, trembles in his boots. Our true "heroine" Is the
wife 01 the n-.yor. He says to her, · I~ matters do no oonoern _ ' " EYilry men In town echoes that
_,a,l, and all the _ _ bristlel VVlth wli and ctwm the women _
the town from oppression, win t8><
iUlleI, and - ' 98\18 the rrayor from being buried all .....1
Gal Geoducks, Gal
StrE:'tch you necks when the tide is low.
Siphon high,
squirt it out,
swivel all about.
Let it all hang out'
Radio Shack oiters the opportunity for
you to start your career working part
time With us , while you're now In
COllege .
September 23 (Wed) IT CAME FROM OUTER SPACE 1956 80 minutes in 3-DII The story is by Ray
Bradbury and the title tells it all. It stars Richard Carlson (50's sci-fi star), Barbara Rush, and
Russell Johnson (the Professor from "Gilligan's Island"). Everyone gets their own pair of 3-D glasses
that trey get to keep. but unfortunately admission will be $1.50 (sti ll cheap!), 25t more to pay for
the glasses. PLUS short HISTORY OF THE CINEMA 1957. Showtimes will be 9:30 and midnight only
October 6
Go Geoducks Gal
Through the mud and the sand let's gal
Siphon high,
squirt it out,
swivel all about.
Let it all hang out l
LEARN RETAIL
MANAGEMENT PART TiME:
, ..
1{;0000Ir
It's Sing-along time, folks I Here it is,
our own Fight Song, written by our own
Malcolm Stilson . If you want to hear the
melody ask him to sing it, but not too
loud, he works in the libraryl
f1 :. t·',j'£fl·~:~:~;?;;:~1tdi1
'.
•
IN THF
Fight Song
n ,.
- . ,-
I
'Wi" U!
Geoduck
Sunday
7-12 : Clas" c
12-2 Po('try
2-4 :30: R&B/ Jazz
430-6 :30: Broadway
6 :30-7- 30 : Vietnamese
7:30-10 Gay Spirit
10-12 Slide Whistle
'Til Dawn O ldies
...
Return'i ng students wi ll no doubt notice
some changes in the good old Evergreen
Evening Van Service and the IT #41 TESC
Route. New students will not know what I
am talking about but remarks from the
old students are sure to inform you that
something ha s happened .
Yes , it is true, IT took over half of ou r
Evening Van Service on July 6. It is no
longer like an exper ience in a sardin e can
when you rid e on the 'A' Route . You can
leisurely ride on a big bus, maybe in a
seat to yourse lf, with Stuart driving you
along the road. It will feel funny at first
to be sitting without someone on your
lap, with ba ckpacks , wet raincoats, and
other paraphernalia wedged against your
body, and chattering vo ices blasting your
ea rs; but you ' ll get used to it.
The R va n is ali ve and well and willing
to take you down the B Route path as
you please. Don't panic when you see the
van 's new paint lob, which makes it
impossible to hide who we are as we pass
through town territory . Notice the
machine situated .between the front seats;
there wi II be no more quarters thrown
into SAGA cups ! Fare boxes do appear
out of place but the convenience to the
drivers is worth the oddity. We won't get
change anymore, 50 remember to save
your quarters for your fare and your
laundry in the dorms.
No doubt the IT takeover and the fare
box in the van will appear as the malor
changes in the evening bus serv ice, but
there are other changes too :
- For 15 cents extra, bikes can be put on
the rack that is on the van . We Cd n fit
two bikes on every run to or from town.
We hope this servi ce wi ll be usef ul ilnd
not in co nveni ence the bu s too mu c h
- We servi ce 11th Ave . and KaisE'r Rd .
('very ho u r to and from town
- We now wait downtown for ten minu tes
pvery hour and no longer wait at tl1P
dorm loop. Don't mi ss us as wE' r OIll(, and
go at t hE:' dorms. No more driver brp,'Ib
eat in g treats ilt ThE' Corner
- WE' dre trying to crea te pas se, ht-'Iwe(·n
(,Vl' ning IT and the vil n. I hi, ,hould be
h.Jpppning by Fa ll
- Dav Pilsses are qill not good on til\'
pvt'ning busp,
- II does not run on Su nday. twrgrc('n
V,m, do thE' Sunday day il nd E'wn ing
September 21 (Mon) THE THIN MAN 1934 BW 91 minutes. William Powell , Myrna Loy, Maureen
O'Sullivan . Written by Dashiell Hammett about his relati onship with Lillian Hellman, this depression era comedy began the popular string or " Thin Man" movies. Powell and Loy play the sophiSticated couple who drink cocktai ls, exchange insolent remarks and solve murder mysteries. PLUS :
1940 Ub Iwerks cartoon BLACkBOARD REVIEW. 7:00 and 9.30 only
AND COME TO
Olympia Outfitters
117 N, Washington
Downtown Olympia
943-1997
Oeoerrber 1
CATMENNIE THE GREAT
U.K. 11934 97 mins. B&W
Directed by Paul Clinner; scrgerlplay
by LJIjos Biro, Arthur WI"1JIIII1s, MaIchior I...engyei (with t.wjorIe 0iB\s); drwnatOQnlJlhy by Georges Perina!;
edited by Stephen tWJison (with fWokI Young); I1"USic by Ernest Toch; 981 daslgn by VIncent Korda; produced
by AIexMdar Korda for London Films; a lklilad Artists ~. Players: Douglas Falrtxwlks, Jr" Elizabeth
Flora ~, Gerald Ilu MaurIer, Irene VIW1brugh, Joan Gardner, DIwla NapIer. This was one of the
IIMsh British films 01 the HO),s thai aeernad to herald the 8fTIvaI 01 BrItain as one oIlhe wor1d cinematic
glints. In this ~ Hungarian-bom Paul Cli",. was gNen a free hand a-rd an ~e budgat by the Korda
brothers, who ~ also responsible lor the IandnW1< film " The Private Life 01 Henry VIII." Clin_ cast hi. wife,
ElISIIbath Bervner, In the title role as)he passlonate but tragic ~ 01 Russia. Douglas Fairtlanks, Jr., Is
wetklast as one 01 Catherine's 100000, but the real star 01 the film Is the setting, under lhe brilll....t hand of
VIncent Korda. Palaces, battlegrounds and royal charrbers ~ C819fully nICnJBIed for the camera, and the
,.....It Is 8 film thai Is enormously rich in detail a-rd pmsenoe.
aavr-,
Daoerrtler 15
THE lION IN WINTER
1988134 min. Color
Dlrocted by Anlhony HIney; produced by
Martin 1'011 ; ~ by JMI9S Goidn:wrL baseqon his 'l1Iay; 1lhot0QnlJlhy by Douglas Si()()()fT'be; music by
JoiYl BarTy. WIth Katherine HepbI.m, Peter O'Toole, Jane Merrow, John Castle, nmothy Dalton, Anthony
HoPIins. TwetftlH:entury England is the setting for this story 01 IOWI, arrtlitlon, conspiracy and politics It is
the tale 01 the lusty PI....tagenel family, specifically the rivalry 01 Henry It's lour 9Oi'IS as they scheme for control
of the throne. Peter O'Toole is Henry II and Katherine HepIlCM'n (who won an Oscar for this role) plays EII*1Or of
Aqultalne, Henry's wife and frequent opponent. The mingled IOWI and hate theoo two share, as they balance the
needs 01 the kingdom, the loyalty to lamily and their own deep affection for mch other, keeps the 111m sparl<lIng
throughout. HepIlCM'n and O'Toole are perfectly rratchad as the battling but roYal couple; It I. a moment for two .
01 the finest actors in scrgerl history to display their ability, and they do so in memorable perfOl'TlWlO9S.
Playwright JMI9S GokInwI's dialogue is swift and . .thentically medieval without becoming labored or
an.:hronlstlc. The New YorI< Film Q1tlcs votad this the best lilm 011988.
mlJrte, ~b£n&j}tne·tbtrl!'
FREE INFO: Write W.H .S., Dept. c.PJ.,
Box 1131, Merlin, Oregon 97532.
1.25
Sept. 24, 1981
Sept. 24, 1981
:,...
.:"''''''''
Cooper Point Journal page 35