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Identifier
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cpj0272
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Title
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The Cooper Point Journal Volume 10, Issue 14 (February 11, 1982)
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Date
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11 February 1982
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extracted text
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COOPER
The Evergreen State College
OIyinpia, WA 98505
Arts & ·Events
'VoIume 10 Number 1 4
February 11 , 1982
MUSIC
FILM
February 2-7
Singer Joe Williams will be at Jazz Alley for
a one-week engagement. Accompanied by Ihe
Bamey McClure Trio , 4135 University Way,
Seattle, Info : 632-7414,
Thursday, February 4
A special rescheduled showing of "Word Is
Out" will be presented by EPIC, GRC, and the
Women's Center. "Word Is Out," Is a warm,
intimate and entertaining film presenting the
ille stories of 26 lesbians and gay men interviewed in their homes, 7: 30 in Lecture Hall 3,
repeated Friday, February 5, at 12 noon in
Lecture Hall 3,
February 3-6
The Pamela Moore Band will be playing at
Popeye's Restaurant and Tavern . 2410 W.
Harrison, ~iy. Info: 786-9290.
Les McCann Quartet will play at Parnell's ,
Known for his recording 01 "Compared To
What " at the Montreux Jazz Festival , 1970,
Info : 624-2839, 313 Occidental Mall , Pioneer
Square. Seatt le.
Friday , February 5
Friday Nite Films presents Shameless Old
Lady, 1966, France, B&W, 95 min, Directed by
Rene Allio, The first film base on a story by
Berlolt Brecht. Influenced by American
cinema. "A detailed naturalistic account of an
old lady who breaks out of routine before she
dies, and a fable about the serene function of
change in life," A Biographical Dictionary 01
Film, by David Thompson , Lecture Hall I,
TESC , 3:30, 7, 9:30, $1 ,25.
February 4, 5, 6
Carnegi e's presents Jerry Michelson on jazz
p,ano . No Cover. Corner 01 Franklin and
Seventh ,
Saturday, February 6
KAOS-FM Bluegrass Festival wi ll be at The
Evergreen State College in the Evans library
lobby. 10 a,m,-7 p.m., guitar contest, arts and
crafts, workshops, open mike, scramble
bands and more , Concert with The Muddy
Bottom Boys at 8 :30 p,m. Inlo : 866-5267
, Tickets : at the door.
The Southfork
Bluegrass
Band
will
be
playing
this
Sunday
at
the
KA05-FM
Bluegrass Festival.
I
I EVENTS
ART
Monday, February 8
EPIC presents "The Rise 01 Fascism ," a
lecture by Tom Rainey , presenting his view
into history, Also showing film Triumph of
the Will. Lecture Hall I, TESC. 7:30 and Tuesday at noon in CAB 110, FREE ,
The Blue Heron Center lor the Arts, Vashon,
WA,
prese nt s an exh ibition of fine wood-
working by Ken Waits, Fiber Works by Anna
Bastin, and Ceramics by Kim Wolston, Opening reception 10 be held Thursday, February 4,
at 8 p,m" exhib it closes February 28,
THEATER
Tuesday , February 9
Mel ba Marbles presents The Debbie Snoot
Adventure Series, Episode #1. "The Mysterious Dixie Caverns." An exhibit, performance.
experience, CAB 306, TESC, 11 a,m ·8 p m.
Sponsored by kaos , Admission SOt,
The Abbey Players are forming an orchestra
for their musical comedy "Guys and Dolls ."
Anyone interested in auditioning lor the
orchestra or wants more intormation,
ca ll
352-0374 or 459-8092.
At TESC's Gallery Four ,through February
14 . a mixed media show 01 contemporary
Native American art by Gail Tremblay and
posters by Rupert Garcia, At TESC's Gallery
Two through February 7, a memorial collection 01 wood SCUlpture and drawings by DaYld
Gallagher,
At the Artist s' Co-op Gallery, Marilee
Snyder and Zelma Graves, oil paints , 52<
South Washington , Olympia.
At Chi ldhood's End Gallery, 222 W, 4th ,
Olympia, "Sick and Twisted, But Funny,"
February 5-28 , reception 7-9 p,m" February 5,
"The Illustrated Human Condition," by Barry
Senter, and batik and solt sculpture, "Life Is
a Circus" by Janice Arnold,
DANCE
Saturday, February 6
If you happened to be at the Apple Time
Toe Tapper, you remember how much fu n you
had and how Carl Wesler, the caller, made the
seeming ly intricate, easy, Well , you haye
another chance to sharpen your skill and
mingle socially at SNOWTIME TOE TAPPER
at SI. Johns Episcopal ChurCh, 1413 20th,
Olympia at 7:30 p,m, live music.
COMING ATTRACTtONS
Wednesday , February 10
M<lynard Ferguson will play at Tumwater
High School. Admission $6 , Ticket info :
943-0680.
Friday, February 12
Leo Kottke will play at the Moore Theater at
7 and 9 p,m . A master of 6- and 12-string
guitar. Joining Kottke on the bill is singersongwriter John Stewart.
By OS OeZube
The Geoduck swimmers sunk Portla:1d
Community College, Friday, but gol
dunked in th('ir second meet of last weekend. The DU. ks swamped PCC 70-50 in
the first two meets, last weekend. Mary
Beth Berney and Evetree Tallman, a long
with the reSI of the team, swam their lifetime best times,
Both Berney's and Tallman's times qualified them for the National Association of
Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) Championships
Austin St, John who still needs to trim
one-tenth of a second from his best time
to qualify for the championships said that
he would "qualify or die" when he races
at the Duck's home meet this weekend .
On Satunday the Ducks raced again,
this time against Lewis and Clark, Southern Oregon, and Willamette, Even though
they placed last, Coach Robbie Johnson
said that he thought the Ducks did well as
a whole last weekend,
He said that competition was especially
tough in our conference, because three of
th(' top twelve teams nationwide are in
our district ,
The Ducks when interviewed en masse
said that thp competition was tougher the
second day , One member thought that
having granola and yogurt for breakfast
Saturday morning may have had an effect
on the team.
''They (PCC) are on par with us," commented one Duck, but " Lewis and Clark
are ranked ninth in the nation, according
to Coac h Johnson ,
This Saturday the Ducks will be hosting
Highline Community College, Lindfield,
and possibly Ft. Steilacoom Community
College, at TESC's Recreation Center.
Timers and runners are needed for the
meet, as well as spectators. As one Duck
bluntly put it, "no one comes to our
meets," If you would like to volunteer,
call x6534 before Friday at 4:30 tomorrow,
Warmups for the meet begin at 12:00
and the meet itself is scheduled to begin
at 1:00,
Hey kids,. ,
You can win a
teddy 'bear
or a
fuzzy puppy
Enter our first annual
Valentine's drawing
TESC Bookstore
Sunday, February 7
The Olympia Film Society presents The
Passion of Anna, directed by Ingmar Bergman,
Sweden, 1970, color, 99 min. , subtitles,
Starring liv Ullman, Max Von Sydow, Bibi
Anderson. An intricate circular story of one
broken marriage being cyclically reenacted ,
This is Bergman, you know what to expect.
Showtimes: 7 & 9: 15 at Capital City StudiOS,
911 E, 4th ,
Monday. February 8
EPIC presents Triumph of the Will with a
lecture called "The Rise of Facism" by Professor Tom Rainey. 1936, Directed by Leni
Riefenstahl. 120 min , The official film record
of the Sixth Nazi Party Congress held at
Neuremberg. Germany, 1934, Commissioned
by Hitler personally who had just become
chancellor and Fuhrer. Begins with the Fuhrer
descending from the clouds just like the
Messiah and making his way through the
streets amid scenes 01 quasi-religious adoration, A powerful piece of propaganda by the
officially appropriated "Film Expel') of the
Nationalist Socialist Party." Banned at the
time in Britain, U,S,A, and Canada, Lecture
Hall I, TESC, 7:30 and at noon on Tuesday in
CAB 110, FREE,
Tuesday, February 9
Medieval Etc, Film Series presents Brother
Sun, Sister Moon, 120 min, Color, Directed by
Franco Zefferell!. With Graham Faulkner, Judi
Bowker and Alex Guiness, Based on the life
of St. Francis Assisi , By director of Romeo
and Jullat, Good for pot heads and paCifists ,
A lovely, perhaps insipid tale of love and consciousness, Lecture Hall I, TESC, 4, 7 & 9:30,
$1,25,
Classifieds
JAH RASTAFARI-one light that shines brighl
for \Nortd peace-Give thanks and praisesSelah
FOR SALE: Rare Rainbow Boa Constrictor,
male, 5'12 feet. $150 Includes cage and extras,
Call Marjorl 943-5063 eve, and weekends.
WANTED: 100speed touring bike 20-21" frame,
Call Jocelyn 352-3466,
AM/FM/PORT. CASSETTE PLAYER for sale.
New in box, $225. Call David 866-2757,
NONPROfIT ORG.
U.S. POSTAGE
PAID
OLYMPIA, WA
PERMIT NO. ~5
FOR SALE: '59 Volvo '544' sedan . 13,000 ml.
on rebuilt motor. Good body but needs paint.
Asking $550, Call John 943-6531,
IS THERE ANYONE out there who can fit into
a pair of Levi 501's (buttons and straight legs)
with a waist of 30 and inseam of 29? Call Rick
at 943-2478.
BONUS GEAR: Bike helmet, front bag union
generator, wet suit. Must self cheap! Tom
352-3466.
FOR SALE : Darkroom print dryer. Nlkon enlarging lens, other odds and ends. Please call
Eric 866-3576,
ASTROLOGER, Charts read. Guidance In
relationships, personal groW1h .and spiritual
evolvement, Classes offered. Sliding fee
scale, Beverly, 943-0154,
FOR SALE: Nikon Itn, Complete outfitexcellent condition-5 lenses, many extras,
Please call Corene 866-3576 or 886-0253 ,
VACATIONS: Olympia's BIO Band Sound
KEEP DRY, One Gortex/one 60/40 shell raincoat for sale. Call Jason 352-3466.
I'M SICK and tired and I'm not going to take
It anymore!
Students Call For St
By John Bauman
Washington coll ege and university students will have professional lobbyists
working fo r them in Olympia next year, if
efforts to organize it are successful.
Greg Sobel, p resident of the Washington Associat ion of University Students
(WAUS), and other student representatives
on WAUS announced the formation of
the Washington Student Lobby (WSL)
Monday on the steps of the stale ca pitol.
"Students have been bear in g the brunt
of the state's financia l pinch," said Sobe l,
" The Washington Student Lobby will seek
to rebui ld support for equal access to
quality higher educat ion."
Funding for the office wou ld come
from a $1 per quarter refundable fee to be
billed with tuition. This will raise about
$200,000 annua lly, according to Sobel.
Connie Gray, Evergreen's representative
to WAUS, said that students are now
ci rcu latin g petitions on campus in an
('ffort to get signatures from a majority of
Evergreen st udents, Once these signatures
are collected the petitions will be presented to the Board of Trustees and the
Board will be asked to let the $1 quarterly
fee be charged with tuition
" The petition drive started l ast week
and it's going real well . We have until the
end of the quarter, but w e want to get it
done sooner," sa id Gray ,
Lobby
Gray sa id that the goal is ~o open the
o ffice next fa ll. The office wi ll be open
all year and wi ll have a staff of about five,
Sobel said that the WSL wil l have
off ices on ca mpu ses around the state,
Th ese offices wil l distribute political
information to student s. WAUS, as an
S&A funded organization, cannot do any
politi ca l work, This limits Its usefulness to
stud ents, Sobe l said, The WSL will eventually replace WAUS .
"Students on campus have not been
getting accurate a nd c urre nt po li tical
Information , the WSL wi ll have a communi ca tion s person to get that informat ion ou!," he said.
" Prior to eac h state election, WSL will
publi sh the voting record s of all the legislators - which wil l speak for themselves,'"
according to Sobel.
When asked how wide a rangE> of issues
Ihe lobby wil l address, Sobt' l said that,
, the purpose is to support higher educaI ion, " bul that the lobby v.. )u ld address
other issues, such as the '. tatp's fiscal
:Jroblem, if they affected high ;~ r education .
The lobby would be run by d board of
directors that will include _rlrf't' or four
,tudents from eac h public co ll ege and
university, according to Sob€Petition drives will start ~.-\I week on
other, campuses , Thp presideill and Board
01 Dire c tors of Western' vVashington
Univer~ ity havp al ready appnl,l'{j Ihe plan.
Greg !::.utlcl . Student Union Pr""' ldent a t WWU, acted a;j rI ' oderato, t1r~r1 . !f~ed mosl of i ne QIJf-'~ i l on!:.
at the Siudent Lobby pres s ("'erenc(' To his letl Std'1ds Parker Tn.' ..
a s!uden1 \lI Cf-:·['~t-'5 1 (jent
,It :he Unl\lers ily of Wa s t'lln q l ~
S&A Funds Distributed
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By Pat O'Hare
Morris and Gish are director and associate director, respectively, of the Institute
for Creation Research , based near San
Diego, The In stitute is financed solely
from private donations ,
Milne has debated Gish and Miller has
debated Morris on the same subject in
previous engagements , Before you ask
who won , there is no method for scoring
a debate; those who witness the event
can judge for themselves .
Gish has a degree ii+-biochemistry fro m
Berkeley and Morris received a degree in
hydrauli cs from the University of MinneMilne has degrees in entomology
and physics and Miller's background lies
in biochemistry ,
The debate will take place at the University of Arizona in Tucson , and a fairly
standard methodology will be followed ,
Each person will have half an hour to
present their proposition, alternating
between evo luti onist and creationist,
After a five-minute preparation period,
each team will present a joint 15-minu'te
rebuttal.
There is a chance that the debate will
be video-taped, in which case, Milne said
that he would try to bring back a copy ,
Milne said that he and his partner
would base much of their argument for
evolution on the merits of the fossil
record . He sa id, from past experience in
creationist-evolutionist debates, that the
creationist argument constitutes more of
an attack upon the credibility of evolu-
h"".·
.III t he propos('c\ budge" and deCides ho\\
Illu c h m o ney will be al lo crlt('d Th ... approved budge" are then s('n t to the iJo,ud
0 1 trustees for fillal approval . The bO,Hd
of trustees dQ('s have the power 10 v('to a
budget but has not been known to ever
do 50.
IInyone can start a stud('nl gro up and
pelition S&A for funds , so if YOll have a
good idea for a student group and wnt 10
get funded next year, do it now, the
spring allocations are starling l
Milne To Debate Creationists
Evergreen faculty member, Dave Milne,
will be travelling to Arizona this Friday
for a debate on evolution versus creation .
Milne's partner in the debate is Ken
Miller, a member of the science department at Brown University in Rhode Island,
The pair will argue for evolution in a
debate with Duane Gish and Henry
Morris ,
IWI(" 1('.1r/1 S&'" h.l' I' ;; cigel .i l: !)(,) '1 1111' , 'p ring dnd mid-I p,l r
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lor Ih(' foll OWin g '. hool \ , ,lr TIlE-' l~ l :' 1"dr a ll ocation,> tire lor _:rOlltl, I h,lI did
,,,I get funded ill!' pr",I Ol,' ,p rl n\ ~ or
",.OW groups wh l( h
nol '(' ql,' ' . , ... d
'nonf-'\, bptorp
I hprt' arE' already ,1boll t .. I 'lud'''1t
~roU[J, u,ing 1l10re th all 'fo -IUO ClOO 0 \ , _
,A
' Ionev IIltholi gh t llM " l'lOft' 111t' '" 'v
h,1I1 S&A ha, ,'ver gil' '1 Olll , ,1pt'r,l[lIlI1.11
111c\ ,a l~l \ (0'" have ,1 11(' lip , "lid ' \ nil
;.1rnpr , whl< h bring' doVl n t ilt' .It IlI ,d
" lrc h a~lIlg power, of ' ,' pot.
r he S&II board (on'l -" o f ., 1\ slUden I"
Ind one 5taff member Th e board rp\ Ie" s
~, ota ,
tionist theory than a proof of creationist
theory ,
Creationists, he said, deny the accuracy
of methods like carbon dating in determining the nature of the fossil record ,
" Creationists argue that fossils are found
in the order that the organisms drowned
in the grea t flood, " he added .
The great flood he refers to is the O ld
Testament account which prompted Noah
to build his ark. This would imply that the
fossil record developed over a much
shorter period of time than is c urrently
accepted in scientific c ircles .
A geologist at the Institute for Creation
Research, Dr. Steve Austin , said that
these beliefs are held by some proponents
of creationism, He said that another situation some creationists point to In advancing their argument is the lack of
transitional fossils - the " missing link ., "
Milne said that there will be fewer
creationists seeking the public spolli ght
and fewer assaults upon state legis latures
in the future b ecause,"
we [e vo luti onist debaters) are beginning 10 learn how
to handle them "
HE' believes that the creat ion!>!.s will
take thei r cause to the grassroots lew l
where, he feels, they are more like ly to h. ,
successf ul.
Master Plan Called "Straight Jacket"
By OS DeZube
KEY
The Evergreen Master Plan was reviewed
and received heavy criticism from the
administration this week.
The Master · Plan, formulated by Th~
EVl:'rgreen Master Planning Team (TEMPT),
a group of twelve students and two
facu lty , was completed last June and is
now in the process of final review.
Mator Land Areas
if""",,,,,,f.
o
Members of TEMPT said that they were
ciisturbl:'d about the way the review
proCI:'SS is being handled by the administrati o n.
" "lot to in clude the authors in the
rt'view process exhibits poor managerial
I udgment and a lack of respect for thl:'
st ucien t planners' work," said Dan Gorham, a TEMPT member.
Clust e r Areas
Corporat ion Yard
lOS Acres
The 1981 plan was deSigned to replacl:'
the migi nal Phase I and Phase II Development Plan as tht' primary planning guide
ior h ·t'rgreen's building and land use.
1110' c riticisn: s of the plan involve
langllagl:' tlsage, environmental polici,'s .
proper nr(Kess.in presenting the plan , and
thl:' statu , of the students as " professional
f,llanner,
""egotial ', )ns between r EMPT and the
,,, I'llinistriliion have begun . but may not
h, · trultful
'. , :r! l),lO i'on, o n!' of the students who
!"PD.l ,·d the document said that TEMPT
I' \ '. I: , m~ to modify the plan, but
Of,t
ri ' ." '\ allv .
" ,t ' gOIng to gut thl' mtent of th!'
pld'
\\1:' ma,
have prohlems reaching
il>':" "11 1en! , ' he sa id
' \" ., PreSide nt for Business, Di ,k
Sch\\ , :l/, said that changes . must b.,
m,lci. hE-' tore the rlan is accepted, even
th ough I i"lill approval lil:'s with the Board
0 1 Tr ll, ll't'S.
1-1 •• compared the plan to a straight 1,1 ( 1.. (>: . labeling it as a " no growth" plan ,
III ,1 , .-I of recommendations he sent to
Il. ,,, Ir 1"111 eva ns las t week
-----
OCAL I: 1ft fEE T
13.2 A.c res
o
~ l>'
-.rn' ~
-,'"·r
South Campus Woods
257 Ac res
~
Director of facilities, David Wallbom
also <;aid that the plan needed revision .
"A master plan should be a planning
.]o,urnpnl and not an absolute; it needs
'[1 !,dV(' guidelines and be flexible," he
,did
i),Ii1I,on <;a id that it is hard ,to separate
Illdn,lgl'ment and planning decisions . He
'ilill Ihdt the p lan contained "cluster
,W'.h . · dn idea gained from the original
pl'"lIllllg dqcuments . " W e outlined wherp
,lrt'd s should bp. I t's flexible in that we
,.'t Ollt poli' II'S that need to be looked al
·,hen 1l1.1Ilnlllg for new fa editi f" " he sa id .
The toughest job
you'll ver love
We admit it. It takes a different kind of person to be a Peace Corps Volunteer.
We won't mislead you with glowing pictures of exotic lands, The hours as a volunteer are tong , The pay is modest. And the frustrations sometimes seem overwheImmg,
But the satisfactions and rewards are immense. You'll be immersed in a new culture,
become fluent in a new language, and learn far more about yourself than you ever
expected ,
..
You'll also discover that progress in the Peace Corps is measured in small accomplishments. Such as rural health clinics established in Kenya, -Irrigation systems built in
Upper Volta, Fresh-water fish ponds started in the Philippines . .
The progress may seem modest , but to people in developing nations who have
never before had clean drinking water, basic ,
health ca re, or enough to eat , the Peace Corps
brings a message of hope and change .
We invite you to look into the volunteer
opportunilies beginning this year in 65
deve lopi ng nations. See our representatives
for detail s.
i=
-
PE~CE
CORPS
.
FIG,
MAJOR CAMPUS LAND AREAS & CLUSTER AREAS
1he use of cluster areas would , for
examp le, place a marine lab on the liIAd
already used for marine biology studies,
hy the college's bay-front property. The
"core area" of the main campus would
be used for future housing needs, and so
on, with each cluster area , containing
rel atpd buildings .
Sc hwartl sa id that he felt TEMPT had
given too much consideration to environm ental conservation He said that he
thoughl the land should be conserved,
but not at the expe nse of academic
planning.
LJanison ,a id that the plan WdS not
overl y ' .. mllive. Ar ademi c needs of the
(o ll eg.' " ,hall be a primary consideration
when dl've lori ng and managing campus
l<lcilitil" dnti land, " dcc ording to thp
M.1Q(' r 1'1.111 [)O( lInlPnt Natural MPa ,
, h,lll ,11'0 h(' pre'l'rved rel <ltivf' ly from
hlll1li1l1 iK l lvltl\ '" a( corcllng to the Ma, ter
1'1.111
An()t lll'I' dl sdgr< 'pnH'nl stemmed from
Ill<' w o rding of t ill' rp ( o rnmendation '
made> In til(' plilll
" W f' talkpd a boul sha ll / should and
must / may bl' ," sa id WallboOl . Thp
language' of th(' Master Plan conta ins shall
and l1lu st as opposed to should and may
be bf'rau se should's and may be's don't
c a~ry as mu c h weight, ac c o rdin g to
Danison.
" The policies should have to be followed," he sa id .
The lack of clarity as to the status of
TEMPT as a student group or professional
planners has also cau~ed disagreements.
Schwartz said that the group did not
always act like professional planners ,
m e ntioning a presentation before the
Board of Trustees as an example. He said
.
The SAGA Of The Great Bagel ~per
By Ben Schroeter
IImllllllll!!
5-
Feature
3
that TEMPT introduced ideas to the Board
without checking with the administration
first. Schwartz and Wallbom both said
that professional planners ·submit their
ideas to the administration and then allow
the administration to present them to the
Board .
Wallbom sa id that TEMPT was primaril y
a student .group and that they didn't have
t he pxperi ence . or the sa me f rame of
reference as professional p lanners
Danison agreed that it was indeed a
learning process and that TEMPT wa, a
st,ldpnt' group, but he pointed o ut that
TLMPT 'igned a contract with the co llege ,
and thilt o ne of the faculty members is a
proiessional planner
" Wallbom was upset that WE' didn't
illwd\' follow procedurp," he sa id , but.
hp .Iddpd that Tl:MPT may haw ' bE'('n .1
iltll,' nV!'Uf'illnll ' at timps
t h" week 1 ['MP 'I ' and the arim i nISlr~
tl()1l ,11'1' (/i sc:I, 'ing I hl' p rocess!'s by whi ch
(h,lllg'" ( an be mdclp in tilE-' M as ter Plan
')( hw,Jrtl said thill onp pm sibl e COlirsE' o f
.1, tion wou ld b(' to hil' ~' on e of thp TEMPT
, t ~ldpnt' on a half-t ime ba"s, to r omr let(·
npgotiat ion, o n r hange, in the Master
I' lan
Another opt ion mentioned wa s th e
hiring of professional planners to repeat
t he work done by TI:MPT . Danison sa id
t hat hiring professiona l planners would
result in rubber-sta mping of the adm ini stration', desires
Danison hopes that the first option will
~ chosen . He sa id that modifi cat ions are
agreeab le to TEMPT if it means that the
pliln could be utilized instead of being
discarded.
Copies of the M aster Plan are available
in the library archives and at the Facilities
office, Lab II.
The Board of Trustees quickly authorized
the contract and it was signed in t:My
of 1971.
There has been some controversy lately
The contract was for a boarding plan
about what you can and can not do with,
where students could purchase 19 meals
a bagel in .the CAB. You can buy them
and you can eat them, but don't forget to . per week for $12.50 on a quarterly basis.
When school opened in October of 1971,
. bring your own cream cheese! No longer ·
319 students were Signed up for tbe
will the bake sale people be able to offer
boarding plan, well above the minimum
you cream cheese with your bagels.
of 199 students required in ARA's contract.
Campus Activities rules and regulations
The food service was then located on
for food vendors states that only baked
the fourth floor library (which was about
goods may be sold, "No cream pies,
quiche, pizza or .cheese and butter spreads the only building finished by that time)
and meals were served on paper plates
may be sold." These rules have been in
with plastic utensils. This did not seem to
effect si nce January 1, 1982.
please the students, who had their own
A bagel with cream cheese or butter is
kitchens in the dorms, and by winter of
interpreted as a sandWich, and a sandwich
1972, just one short quarter later, only 80
is not a baked good. Evidently SAGA has
students were signed up for the plan.
a monopoly on food and they only allow
It began to look grim for the unapprecibaked goods to be sold.
ated food service that the college was
So, SAGA has a monopoly on food at
losing money on. Larry Stenberg, our
The Evergreen State College? I s this a
beloved Dean of Student Services, recalls
bummer? Thus, I set out to learn how
those early food service days. They didn't
SAGA an interstate instituti onal vending
have very good management or much
comp~ny) came to control all the food
flexibility in the menu, based on student
on this college campus.
and faculty interest, Stenberg told me.
To understand how SAGA gained con" It was partly the college's fault [the
trol of Evergreen's food, I must take you
iood service didn't work weill, we didn't
back to the pre-TESC days of 1970 when
require a board plan, we constructed
hip-boots were fashionable in the muddy
apartment dwellings with kitchens . It was
woods that is now a college campus.
the students' choice [not to use the food
Evergreen needed food service for the
service]. I t's hard to tell is it was ARA
future students then, and negotiated with
Slater's fault or just students getting into
a dozen different food serv ice vendors
self-sufficient living and l,Ising their
about handling Evergreen's hungry. By
kitchen facilities."
February 3, 1971, Evergreen had received
On January 11, 1973, the Board of
five proposals, one each from ARA Slater
Trustees held a meeting and decided to
Food Service, SZABO Food Services,
terminate ARA's contract and sign with
SAGA Food Services, Service Systems Inc.
SAGA who had the next best proposal.
and Interstate United.
On F~bruary 21, 1973, SAGA took the
Then in the great Evergreen tradition, a
reins on Evergreen" food service by signdisappearing task force (aka DTF) was
Ing a contract whirh inCluded exclusive
dispatched to view the five sacred pr<r
privi lege to all food sold at Eve' llreen . .
posals . Both the DTF and the staff recomSo back to the 1982 bagel cnsis. Some
'
mended to the Board of Trustees that
of th~ bake sale people are distressed by
ARA Slater be given the food services
the situation. Paul Reed, who is oitpn
contract on the basis of their lowest bid
found in the CAB peddling home-bdk.'d
and experience in college food services.
Photo by John Nielsen
rolls told me, "It seems ridi culous, now I
bake the cheese into the rolls" (to get
around the ru Ie).
"Cookie Lady" Kristin Wortman had
been selling bagels with cream cheese for
five years in the CAB.
" i'm selling about half the amount of
bagels I used to sell with cream cheese,
but they've (SAGA) been very ni ce
actually. They don't have to let us sel l
anything People Ciln bring their own
cream cheese or buy it at the Deli ."
SAGA food service director Vonda
Drogmund has been at Evergreen since
1973 when she started as a food serv ice
,ecretary. Drogmund has put in a lot oi
effort to flu ctuate the menu to i:vE'rgreen
students ' tilstes by offering things Ilkt'
veggie dinnprs, which ca n not bp tOllnd at
o ther SAGA operations
SAGA is a cas h operation, not il bOdrding pl an like ARA Slater was, SO It \ Vital
to prepare food people will buy .
" If you don't like how the fo(.lloob,
you don't have to buy it," Drognlund said.
" We're doing pretty good, I thlnh peop le
are happy ."
When I queri ed Drogmund about
whether she spPCliied no cream cheese
ior the bake sale p.'ople, Drogmunu to ld
me it was Campus Activities dt'clsion.
So off I go to talk to Campus Activ it ies
director Lynn Garner about the "sandwi ch
'nterpretaion ," Garner stdted that , . rhe
Idea of that interpea tion of the po l It v is
:0 allow Vonda [Drogmundl some Input
mel thus enhance cooperation bet\, een
\ nnda and the food vendors."
S&A board memlwr Bob DaVid added
: h,lt the rule s are lor what tht·\ '.an sell
without spe, ial pl'rn1l Ssion, ,llld it .1
vl'ndor wanted to , pll cream ( h" ese thE-'\
",,,uld have to get \'onda ', Pt'IIlIIS'ilon .
rhe probl em is th.!t the fo. ><:1 velldors
don't want to ask V' lI1(la for pernll"",n
hecause thf'Y tP,lr ' l1dt VOllua ma\ db Ide
to di scontilllll ' Pt'rIlIISSIOIl to sell b.,kl:'d
goods too 1111 ' \'f' ndors ,.rl'n't sure \\ ' J
makes the ",[f'S '" why . ,lIld thl'\ d(,n '
Wllnt to In d ~ t'"
.I\/e~
\1\
<'0 1·1 I{)o~ , 1,1.." you'll IList h",, ' ' 0 buy
Y< H.lr (t\ ' q c rt-dill cht:\ese tor \ OLJ ! I" · )rite
hdgpl
' lust d:l<lther SAGA.
Open JIlIlIOCOum MdaJ ID4l1t 111 JIll, JOU ab
UlI b"118 out of NnJdn,.
* We've got several
*
w~ to get free checking IIl4 earn interest.
24 hour ba.nk1ng with The Exchange Card ( over 48 locations in
Washington and soon nationwide),
Protect your valuables with a Safe Deposit box for only $12 a year.
*
* loan Applications
* Cashiers checks, money orders, traveler checks.
*
*
Free Pay-By-Phone
and, of course, friendly service
Locat.d ID DlD-OAI loe. OpeD 11:00 • 1:10 p.1L
IIo1dh low
KolIdaJ UIra lrIdaJ. 7M-SM8
.aUoul JIuk IIu Ilw nIIIr kIoaUou to .... J'u III
u.. r...,-OlJmpla INI.
The Relried Brothers , John Rosetl, John "Eppo" Epstein , and Daniel Maguire. in conjunction with
the Apple Jam Outreach Program donated a lunchtime concert to the Olympia Senior Center on
Monday February the Bth .
classifieds
FOR SALE: English wool Duffle Coat, 38 mens,
new $70; 9T1all truck canopy, short-bed, used
$100; wood Kayak paddle, a ins. righi, used
$60; Kayak float bags (4), $15; 2 Spray 9<irts,
used, $12, $14 , call Denise B6EHl274.
Capitol Skiae
.
Sea...
FREE TRIP TO MAZATLAN. MEXICO
DURING SPRING BREAK 1982
107 E. St.te
Air· Boat DIve
»7·41»
~ ------
INFORMA nON TABLE: CAB Lobby
Feb , 16, 9:00-3 :00 p.m.
Feb, 17, 9:00-12:00 p.m,
FILM SEMINAR :
Feb. 16, 4:00 p.m .
Library, Room 1407
INTERVIEWS :
Sign up in advance in Career
Planning & Placement Office
ALL WAg TRA"£L BEIItIIC£, IIID.
~.
S .. O .... ING C£NTI:II
OLYMPIA , WASHINGTON
W£STSID£
843·8701
. • 43.8700
Hole in your head?
We may have something in your size! lESC Bookstore
Pd)!"
! Th.· Cooper Point lournal
Last year we took over 4,000 students in
6 weeks from 50 colleges and universities.
We need reps on your campus that are
willing to work during their spare time in
return for a free trip. The trip for Evergreen
State College is March 20-27. For more
information call Tony or Dennis on our tollfree watts line at 1-800-528-6025.
February 11, 1982
February 11, 1982
,
i
The Cooper Point journal page 3
.
With Gevirtz
Letters
Open Letter to Bruce scott
Dear Brucie :
I hav!" always been admired for my
abi lity to take criticism and my sweet
disposition, but your calling the bookstor
a rip-off really hurt my feelings .
I was already depressed over the winter
blahs , getting over the flu, and plus that
my dog is. very, very sick. The only thing I
reali, had going for me was my job, and
vou had to i nsul t that.
If you had ~ust come to me, I could
have explained that the PUBLISHER sets
the price of your textbook and the publishing industry has increased the costs of
books by 58% . Your textbook costs the
same in every other state-owned college
bookstore. We cannot undercut CWU or
{,WI Ft . Steilacoom.
YOl : ,aid that we deflate th, ' price of
'our books for buy back . You get 50% 01
he CURRENT LIST PRICE back on any
book heing used here again. A price increase ovpr the year also increases the
dl110Un i vou get back . U~ed books cost
?~ 0." 1('" than thp new, no matter what
, 'n; I.'ge store \ ou use; textbooks .,11 cost
! h, ,~me ,
, • vel) thol.,-:h we price supplies 10%
Ib, UW suggl "' ;'(j r.. t.lil, you go ahead am
';I ':O[10rt \ (1, I ' jucal chain store. 1ry to g('1
h"l11 :0 'PI ,1,11 order a book, or find a
rd'" "~ '. ! ",hTl'ln , or even a copv of thp
, ,' ;. ,\ '1'\1 yor~ Tllnes
5incprely yours
L.lura Noll'
Bookstore Man,',,:, ,.
'\ m De Walker Revished
TO \, 0 S Del..
~
FRI ."
" niol1 Shop eWdrd, of ~_vprgrp(1I
rR( ).. ., \ '.:,hll1gtO'1 I :leratitl" of Slalf'
) nljl/',)"PP"
I \. 'I:
~... ,....
' '1.11
+n
.
.
'.
'
patient's reactions to the hanging condom
act: At.least not.publically. In ·fact, she '
was the funny lady who was responsible
for the signs and entire well-being of the
Dear devoted readers, and you are my
waiting room.
dear devoted readers, SplJrtz is back!
And, while I was waiting fm my turn to
Contrary to a!1 those nasty rumoreflying
be inspected, the funny lady came out
around out there, Spurtz has not been .
and hung a new sign . The sign said, "We
fired. Spurtz has quit her job as Produc- ..' ._·_'tiave Lambskins!" The first thing that
tion Director and Managing Editor but she
came to my .mind was "We Have Dancewill still be your devoted columnist. Then
skim-'-for sheepish dancers." And then ,
Spurtz fell deathly ill. But the editor
oh yeah , lambskins. I've been wanting
called and asked me to continue writing
some for the seats in my car. But this
Spurtz . I'm really glad you like it so
couldn't be it. So, I asked what in the
much . Thanks to all the support, a new
world are lambskins?
hair-<lo and a few pain killers, Spurtz is
The funny lady's face took on a glow
feeling much better.
and she grinned at me while she scurried
On my first day back I went to the
around looking for some tacks to hang
the sign . "lust a minute and I'll show
Women's Clinic/Health S~rvices to make
sure I'm fit enough to write. Walking Into
you." Her eyebroWs raised mischievously.
the clinic I bumped into a huge movile 01
She tacked the sign to the wall, stepping
colored condoms with little paper birds
back to make sure she had it straight. And
silting on top of them.
she returned to her place behind the
Aft~r recovering from my shock I stood
counter.
staring .11 the well-hung (from the ceiling,
I walked to the counter. Thank God, I
thai i~) wlorful, erect shapes full of som!'
was thl' only one in the waiting room . A'
thing II1distll1guishable but bulging. I wa~
I leaned over the counter, I saw a ball
the on" pE'rson in the waiting room. I
flying back and forth down the hall. I
could WI' the woman behind the countf'r
rf'memtwred drama clas~ in 8th grade
writlllC: luriously and answering phone~
wherp w{' had to pass a ball around the
and I ,v()ndered if shE' was secretly takln~
room a\ " (oncentration game. That musl
a surw\ iii peaplt·s reactions to this
be thp doctor~ g€'ltlng their concentration
obtr'"I\,\', ubscene, intriguing decor
up to go In and help a patient.
II ",dn't stop with the while, green, rPII
Oh YPilh, lambskins.
and \' 'lIow condom~,though . Sex-orient',
Tht' iunnv Iildy turned around from
signs 'ill(>d Ihp room. "WI' have condoill',
iumblrng wilh a box in the ('orner.
Do Vf ,ur' " Wi' Sell Speculums for Self"Would \ Otl believp that thev are natural
EXilIt tln<lliol" " "Lesbian Health Care."
(oncior1l,r
"1\1." , dnd R.tpe." "Facts About Rape."
I laugh.>d Now ~vergrepn, thf' hilvt'n 0'
"Crt, "I ilOn ~ymptoffi'; of Sexually T ran~n,,,ur,l lll" . h,l~ everything
milkd Dise<l.,es." I hill! stepped into an
" ~t"'. ,1110 thE-V're mad!' 01 rt'allambsklfl
Iv"r~It'PI.1 "I pt'~-Play-I/(xtor Paradise."
You (i1n "wn rpusl:' them She pulled
,>(1 1M I haon't 'flok!'n a word . I was
om' out of Iht' littlp blu!' plastl( contain!"
ilu mE' 10 1PI' I Slimy . lik" ,till ondoms
,uppm.>d to go to thp ('ounter and tell h,
1>1\ " <ln1(' ,lnd admll Ihat I had entered
WIr,H do vou expplt' Bul IhpSt, (an be
I hi · 1)f'rVI~r~I' haw'n
u'I'(1 ",\., 'r and ovpr agam .111 vou do I~
' II I hilvt, i1n dppoinlrnent
,. And
,11(" it III ,1 glas~ 01 \\i1t!'r when VOU'f('
'.I'u,,1 di.llogut, begdn
don,· Wa,h it latpr 01-1 COD'
,,>h., oldn'l spt'm Ih(' tvpe that would Iw
1\, I turm>d "w,!\ lrom the (ounter I
spc rp' ~ · taking a <lIrvl'V ()f incoming
rt'i1li/"d Ihill thl' 'Iring on tlTr-'hangrng
"I< '
.
.
. Opinion
•
-'.
inl.egislature~
By now you've probably seen the
buff-colOred flyers or you have been
asked to sign a petition. If not. than most
likely you'll be approached soon by a
. supporter of the Washington Student
Lobby (WSL) .
The student lobby is the brainchild of
the Washington AssociatiOn of University
Students, an organization of student
union representatives from throughout the
state. Modeled on successful student
lobbies in several other states, WSl would
have the funds to support a full-time professionallobby in Olympia.
The students desperately need someone
to fight for their rights at the Capitol. In
the past two years, tuition has increased
'75%, and more increases are in the works
right now. On both the state and federal
level, financial aid programs are being
systematically gutted. This means you, or
a fellow student, may not be able to
afford school next fall, and will be left to
compete, without skills, in an already
depressed job market.
~
The Legislature's fiscal bungling caused
this mess in the first place, and their
refusal to institute tax reforms only makes
it worse. What they don't seem to realize
is that cutting higher ed. budgets is a
short-term solution which will only compound the problem in the long run. Washington State badly needs to build a more
diverse economic base to stabilize an
export economy too dependent on wood
products. The only way to do that is to
tram a highly educated and skilled workforce to attract tfle high technology
lamp had a diaphragm tilting ring 'on the
end of it as a handle. These people are
really into it: sex everything!
As I went in for my examination, I
noticed an obtrusive red box on the
doctor's desk with big yellow letters that
read : SEDUCTION . Wow I Finally, at the
end of the session, she asked if I had any
questions.
"Yes , what's that SEDUCTION box forr'
"Oh, it\ a game . Want to see? One of
the other doctors gave it to me. And I'm
not even married. I~ that a message?"
Shp opened the box and pulled out a
gamE' board <'no 10h of game ('ards The
players werl:' loxe~. and studs. If you
loathe the person on vour right. move 20
spat e, If vou only dl.,likp him . mov(' 15
spat P, If YOIi art> .;Iightlv atlr.lfted to
him. movl' 10 'Jl<ln~s . And II YIlII w.lnt to
haVl' an aiialr with him , lakp him Into thl:'
l'lI'droom
.1\, I 1f'1I Ihp Oili(!', IhPrI' Wf'rp (!<)( tor,
pld\lI1g (al( h rn thl' hall ,md Iht' tl ni1~
1,10\ 1,lughing .1, I paid I\nd on mv wa\
oul tl1l' door I rPdll/ed Ihal all thp (1n don), on thp mobil!' had nilmes on II e"m
Pun" . '>urlf'r<tud, Rough Ridpr, R,lrpba ;:k ,
Rpa( hprl\ttf'r ,111 Ihl'. I half t'XJlt'( II'(I
to 'I~' ,1 \Ign on the d(Klr thdl 'itld. " No
'>h'lI". No Shirl , No lprv,,, .. Mdvbe Ihp
IW 'l1v I"flv will mdkp 0111' lor 11)\ n..,,1
industries of the future. When the legislaturecutshigher ed., they are robbing our
future prosperity to pay for their past
mistakes.
Our legislators would like to believe all
students have wealthy parents who can
afford to foot the bill for higher tuitions.
This is not the case. Evergreen has many
older students, vets, single mothers, and
minority students whose chance for a
quality education, and consequently a
successful life, lies in the hands of insensitive and short-Sighted politicians
It's time we tell them what we think .
It's time to form a student organization
with the clout to fight for student rights.
The cost is more than reasonable-one
dollar per quarter would be charged to
I:'ach student, and would go to a central
fund controlled by a student board of
directors.
Any student who doesn't believe in the
goals of WSL would have their money
refunded - no questions asked . Not on Iy
will a professional lobby be funded in
Olympia, but each of the four-year univer,ities and colleges will have their own oncampus chapter to encourage students to
~ ake part in WSL.
We cal'1 no longer afford to sit back and
loly watch as higher education, The Ever~reen State College, and ultimately all our
,IVes, are hacked apart in the legislature's
continuing effort to ignore reality and
Ignore their esponsibilities . The Washington Student Lobby is a timely, wellorganized attempt to unite our efforts in
>;upport of our colleges and our futures.
/'I" (
'''''"111 ~
.' }~ .
\.\
.1,)"ld like ' (' I I"P thi, opportunttv
ano rna~, \ lU a~arp of Ollr
IP" ~ ' " 1,!:Ion 01 lOur drtl' I", concerning
'h,· h , ·. " .. · \' .111 [).. Walk"L " tllation
\\ ., ( d".: ·'adlh "f' thaI many long and
'ru -rr.l t rn. hour'
re.,p" rch Wf'nt IOto
th!'st' .,lom', and :)llOgi~g olli Ihe details
" \\'1'11 ,b VOll h :\,p i~ "n Inoi, ,,' ion of
.()ur dedit .Ilion to lo<: ,nal i,m K\ ' ~p up
.1 , good ' Ior~ ,1n': )hdnks agdin
AI Warl",r
Stew~n K.. nl ,
Diane LUI: i
Larry Sava!!(
Keith Coker
Wally Pr.· tel
Evalyn Poif
tn
It . ''1~, ' . III
"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, ph6ne number, and $4.00 to Cooper
Point Journal, CAB 305, The
Evergreen State College,
Olympia, WA 98505."
Life in
Iiv'DS Deluht>
students of Capitol 'High School, you
know tht' OI1l'S who loiter in the parking
Sunday morning. the Spar i~ crowded .
lots latp on Saturday nights?
but I don't mind bpcause it's ~unny oul
I tried my hardest to look like your .
and approaching 43 degrees.
average Josie. I .shaved my armpits, and
I hitch up to the counter and say what
borrowed some clips tor my hot curlers.
I say every Slinday ·morning, .. ,( wo eggs
Then I got really serious, and put on
over easy. hash browns, toast , .. offee, and
makp.. up and a skirt. Walking through the
a large tomato juice, please."
halls of Capitol, with my .gal pal Karen, I
began to interrogate the kids . What is a
I'm juSI about through the IOmi~s whpn
I rpalile I've already made my iirst mistypical Greener?
We approached a group of four girls,
tak.. The toasl is whole wheat. I prefer
dll dressed in "Calvin's." What is a typic(li
m~ carbohydrates albino, thank you. I sip
Greener like to thpm?
my coffee and wonder if I look that mud
'They have a different philosophy and
like a " Greener."
way of thinking. It's how they go about
Regulation blue jeans and a buttonthings." said one.
down shirt don't e)(aC~IY I it. Maybe it',
"Thi>y"ti'ke to go down to the Gnu Deli
myhalr? Ever since I I t the clips to my
wearing army blah colors and ·boots .
hOI curlprs, I haven)- ooked the same.
they don't wear nice clothes," said
My socks aren't eyen wool , and the
another.
waitress couldn'(have possibly seen my
./
armpits.
"They all have long hair, carry backpacks, wear lohn Lennon glasses, and the
So what 'is it that makes us all instantly
women don't shave their legs," said the
recogn'izable as "Greeners"? It couldn't
third.
be my out-of~state accent; people from
"They all hangout at Safeway with
Maryland don't have accents. So how do
food stamps," said the fourth. "And when
the waitresses in the Spar know we're
they're not there, they're at home listen" Greeners" and therefore assume we want
whole wheat toast, sometimes erroneously. ing to KAOS play freaky music," chimed
If anyone could tell me it had to be the • in the first ,
"They're just so typical, they walk, they
never drive, and they all have beards and
mustaches," said the second.
Instead of asking if the women had
beards, we moved along to another group.
We found a boy and his girlfriend leaning
against the lockers. What was a typical
.
Greener to them?
"They're weird in the head, not very
popular at school. They don't have to be
converted, they just fit in. They don't
want to make it in the big world ," said
the girl.
.
.
"Gay people go there," said the boy,
"Typical Greeners don't necessarily want
good grades, they're into natural thingS,"
he added.
.
We took our leave of the two, and
wandered outside. Leaning against a wall
were two girls. To them a typical Greener
was a women,who was skinny, gay, wore
a back pack, but np make-up, was not
very feminine, and wore a dark watch.
I guess the real question is not, what
makes us all instantly recognizable, but
rather what decade do Olympian high
school kids and the waitresses at the
Spar live in?
The Cooper Point Journal
Editor: D.S. DeZube
Managing Editor: Katie Lieuallen
Writers: lohn Bauman, Carrie Gevirtz, John Nielsen , Pat O'Hare, Ben Schroeter,
David Goldsmith, Mark Christopherson. David Gaff
Graphics: Karen Hueval
Business Manager: Desiree Amour
Advertising Manager: Patrick McManus
Photographers: John Nielsen, Paul Stanford
Productioo: Shirley Greene, Shelton-Mason County lournal
The Cooper Point Journal is published weekly for the students, staff and faculty of
The Evergreen State College. Views expressed are not necessarily those df the college
or of the Journal's staff , Advertising material contained herein does not imply
endorsement by the Journal. Offices are located in the College Activities Building
(CAB) 104. Phone: 866-6213. All announcements for News and Notes or Arts and
Events. should be typed double-spaced, listed by category, and submitted no later
than noon on Monday for that week's publication. All letters to the editor must be
TYPED DOUBLE-SPACED, SIGNED and include a daytime phone number where the
author may be reached for consultation on editing for libel and obscenity. The
editor reserves' theright to rejeCt any material, and to edit any contributions for
length,content and style. Oisplay advertising should be received no later than
Monday a~ 5 p.rn. fOr that week's publication.
P,I),:"
.~.
,
,
0.
··"-''' ,o;!'n .-
-t
The Cooper Point Journal page 5
Tht· Coopt'r Point lournal February 11, 1982
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..II
J'
Arts & Events
On Golden Pond: Bring a Hanky
Monday February 15
MIyagikai, a traditional .apanese per'ormance group will perform from noon to 1 in
the Recital Hall, FREE
MUSIC
Film RevieW
By David Goldsmith
On Colden Pond, directed by Mark
Rydell
On Colden Pond is an absolutely warm
and loving movie; a metaphor for decline,
for those final years when there is little
left save reminiscences . Sadder st ill is
when these reflections are already beginning to blur as though seen through
antique glass. This is the tragic aspect,
and the source of power in the film : the
inevitable decaying of the human body
and mind .
,
~orman and Ethel Thayer, played by
Henry Fonda and Katherine Hepburn,
return every summer to their cabin on
Golden Pond in the New Hampshire
countryside to bask in the peace and
solitude befitting their golden years. The
years have been good to them , as they
have been for each othe~ but this summer
there is a spector stalking them in their
blissful retreat The specter is death.
Indeed, for Norman Thayer at least, this
may we II be the last summer on Golden
Pond.
The decaying, in the guise of creeping
senility closing in around him, is portrayed with incredible realism by Henry
Fonda. His helplessness is something more
terrible than any manner of ghost or
monster could ever be. A sunny outing to
pick strawberri es is turned into a frightful,
heartwrenching odyssey of terror when he
gets lost on the same path he has been
traversing for countless summers. Th is
performance is almost certain to win for
Henry Fonda, the next Academy Award
for best actor.
Hep burn 's performanc e is less poignan t
and far less tragi c. She is the epitome of
sweet strength; the woman any man
Music Review
Piano Quintet Corf1)letel.y .Musical
By Mar" Christi; pherson
SCHUMANN : Piano Quintet in t-Flat,
Op. 44; String Quartet in A, Op 41, NO. 3.
The Alberni Quartel with Thoma s Rajna,
piano. Produ ced in London by Simon
' Lawson Bach Guild/Vanguard Records.
Although this album was released in
1975, il is being reviewed here as a new
release. under the assumption that C'wry
good record dewrves its d"y (A lso, il ha.,
on Iy now beE'n received by "AOS-FMI I
RobE'rl Schumann was Ihe> greatest
structuralist of the Rom,IIlI'. · period ,1nd .
with the arguable excepllo" of BeethoVl'n,
its most proioundly introsp.·c tive musi( 1<111
Th e Pianr Quintet, oftt'n ,,'garded a'
Schuman . '., maste rpi ece, was compo,pel
during th(, pa rl y happy YE'ars with h"
wiie CI,,,a i 10 w hom hE' eledicated Ihl'
pipcel, befOrt, the shadoIA year, of tipprp,·
sion and ultimate ma·dn('" . It h ,111
elegant plE'Ce, "',(rillllE'd but h,lflPY , it I'
sOnH'lVhal rf'min " cI' nt of hi s hero MOlarl
but In no WdY unOriginal
'1h(' fi r'! t11ov( 'nV'tll I'> III loyanl und
lyrica!: "II ' rad lat f" IPV rl1ll1gs g(,'t mor. ·
refleclIvl' In thl' '. 1' " n.' movement oul
Peter Gilmml.>ncl " Iitier notE'S poinl oul
" by nl.> m('dn,> funl 'I"il l " Sunshim-' f'X plod e, o n l ,lP thi rJ Jl1OVf'ment, wh('",
exubl 'ra n( I' gPI1l-'ra ll ~ reigns suprt-'mp
Therp .I rE' son v' loud., III thi s mOVell1l'I1 '
but th('v aren I ' dPPY clouds. Schum,lIl11
didn'l pl'lceiw Ihlngs (or fep lingsl as o!!
d imensiona lly as that . Theft · " d grea t
deal of cou nterpo int dnd "fugul'-Ing
BRDDy ......
PIIRTRr:
171"12
DAILY
Groceries
Fresh Produce
Fresh Meats
Imported Beer & Wines
Sundries
'Magazines
Self Serve Gas
7 a .m, -12 p
---wou ld want to share the end with . Together with Henry Fonda they make a
most winning team- as good as Tracy/
Hepburn , Bogart/Bacall or Allen/ Keaton
This combination is all the more amaz ing
in that the actors are by necessity dealing
with a theme perhaps a bit too close for
person al comfort.
This appl ies as well to the fatherdaughter relat ionship portrayed by Henry
and Jane Fonda. An artfu l parallel theme
is developed when the younger Fonda
ret urn, to Golden Pond in the hopes of
finally e,tablishing it rapprochement with
her dad . But is it not already too latel
Who is lef t to become fri ends with now only the shadow of the man she has
feared tlnd hated for better than 40 years
By David Caff
dl ,out " III thE' fin dl m ovem ent , culminating
111.1 rt' marka blt-' codd that turns the entire
"",k into a pprfec t, I)f'autiful circle
',I humann', string q l "lftets are gcnprilily
r, 'C:· ,,-d,-<cl as nllnor worb , mere tec hni ca l
('\,,,, ISP' . TI" , mdY well bt-' tru t' III the
of th(·' fi1'1 two, but the o ne perlorn ll'd ht'f(' hy rlw Allwrni Quartet - hi,
thlld <1 1)(1 lust - - I' a ))O\\t'rful eXl l'ption . It
is .In inlr"'))l'( l ive, sonll'wha t brooding
y('1 ddin ltl'ly pusitiv\' work , ,I bil slranger
th,lIl the Piallo QUlniet (in f,l('\ , astonishin >.:ly ('x l ll'rimt-'11t,1 1 for d Romanti, -t'rd
(, 'l1lpmi ti()11 1 hlll , uprpillply d( cpss ibll' It
Ih, ' t"I'I1I1'1 ''''rk is Kedbldn, this OIl(-' I'
("rt, ;lI1 lv HI :t)IHl . I.ikl' MOliHt's "Oh ., (H1" lIi ('I" lr/£' /. It i, d deeply pt-'rsonal
1""" '111 '111 dlld proof thdt confess ions of
lilt' "'Itl IlI'l'd not - ind('ed, at tln1PS mu, 1
no t ; ," ",i ttt'n with worrk It i, ,I
m,hl, · " It 'l t' "nd ciPSPltp illY bombd,ti(
'-,WII ll:' r/ I' I)('vpr prf'tpntious cll .111 .
R,IIIl ' i, 'lI p('rb III the Piallo QUIntet .
robu'l ,1'1( 1/ 01 delicate ,IS lilt-' mood dil tate', All I th.. A llwrni QUdrkt is cert ,linll
up to lilt' (), . •" 1011 o n oot h pipces , thE'Y
ar(' l'vpry hl l " , good as th(' Bud,l))PSI .
II you Wish In ht-'M m l "" thdt, l or"
r h,lIlg(' . is nHtil,'r , hal low nor pret enl i(II " . 111 ,11 ( ,Ipt l "' " gel1UII1\' sphf're" of
\' 1)1< 'il ondl ( [)mpl (,\IIY Wi th out resor ting
Itl dill ' , ... It -Il lll'''l ll '' trll /.. ' . ,lIld - bl'S! 01
.111 - i, c Ol llpll'tl'l v ll1u,ica/ . h\ ,til 111(',111 5
I"ph i or tl " , f('( 0,.. 1 Mu'l Itk(,l v it will '-1I 1
"Ill Ihlfl g \ou·v., b" " 11 II sl<'ning to l'lll'l y
,.I,,'
Charrrpa.gf\~
'Fn-u.l\V')\ 5-Cj
.
~..,.w~;.O'1\~
352-23"'9
The screen tension between them is
electric; nurtured no doubt by their offsc reen relationship .
Mark Rydell's direction is unobtru sive;
he has the good sense to let his cast
shine, unobstructed by any heavy-handed
visua l techniques . Dave Gruisin 's score,
too, is simp le, bittersweet ; it harmonizes
well with the action.
Thi s is a tear-jerker folk s, so bring
pl enty of hankies. You may even find that
this is one movie that will stay with you
With a theme so universal, and acting so
superb, not a few of you may well leave
with a renewed determination to try to
make a friend where there was on ly a
parent before To make a friend that is
befor E' it is too late.
Sunday February 14
Iris Hill and Black Label will both play at
Popeye's 2410 W. Harri son, Olympia.
Tuesday February 16
Peace Bread and Land Band , Ra i nbOW
RestaJJrant, 4th and Cotumbia, 9 p.m., $2 .50
origina ls, improvisalions. and instrumentals
Evergreen 's "Trumpe ter Teske and the
Troups" presenl Dixieland .azz, noon CAB
mall. FREE.
ART
During the month 01 February the pa intings
01 Marjorie Munzinger of OlympIa will be on
display in the gallery area of the Lacey Public
library. College and Lacey Blvd .
The Artists' C<H>p Gallery, at 524 South
Washington. Olympia. wi ll be leaturing as
theil' artIsts 01 the week . oil painters. Mary
Benda and Sharon ', ~ '..
""~-21 20 .
"A SALUTE TO MID-YEAR BLUESOR AIN'T FEBRUARY THE PITS," is the
ti lIe of npx t week's coope rative and crea live sc ulptu re co ntest. Open to any team
01 fo ur or more students, the scu lpture
whir h be~ t depicts the theme in the
all l)tt ,·,ci f'ight square feet , and is capable
oi wltl1';lilnding t he w eather for a week,
w ill W II ' all sorts of goodi es, inc lud in g
I IPf' tic k(·' " to t he B(~a ux A rts Ball Sign up
,It S&A (j,i icE' on thp third f loor of the
CA I~ In ad v, nce .
Mesopotamia is not a bad album but it
is not up to the standa rd s that the 852's
have sO for themselves previously. Mesopotami,1 is a six-song, low-priced album
that run, a littl e over 25 minutes. They
seem to be trying to prove on thi s album
that the~· can play their instruments and
be seriol- s also. Fred Schneider is on ly on
two track, and his del ightfu l rud eneS5 is
mi ssed or four of the six songs.
The firs ' side consists of Loveland
Oeep Sleep, and M esopotamia . Lov~land
is a pretty ~ood song, and Mesopo tamia
is the best ,m the album. Deep Sleep
doesn't sound like the B5 2's at all . It
sounds lik e 'Nhat somebody would come
up with if they mixed Patt i Smith's vocals
with th e David Byrne-Brian Eno dlbum
My Life in th e Bush of Ghosts.
'
The second si de starts off with Cake
the third gCXX:: so ng of the album, and'
ends with two unappea ling songs, Throw
That Beat in the Garbage Ca n and Nip It
in the Bud . Cake is the one song w here
Dilvid Byrne's presence as a mu sician can
be felt. The guitar is so familiar, that it
ca n be nobody but Byrne. Cindy Wilson
also imitates Byrne's Quirky vocals on
the song.
VOLUNTEERS ARE STILL BEING sought
fo r the phone-a-thon . Help the development off ice ca ll all of Evergreen's friends,
and you' ll get to make a free five-minute
phone ca ll anywhere in the continental
U .S. at the end of the ni ght. Call Sue
Washburn, 86&-6565 for more information .
Wednesday February 17
Sea Kayaking the Alaska Inside P"ssageNrangll to Glacier Bay , 8 p.m., Lec lure Hall
One. $1 .
EVeolTS
Thursday February 11
Help with your '82-'B3 Rnancial Aid form .
noon , CAB 110, sponsored by Rnancial Aid
office. Bring partially completed FAF, or start
from scratch .
Habakkuk, a multimedia presentation based
on ·the Old Testament book of Habakku. will
be Slown at · 6 p.m. in the Experimental
Theater. This national award-winning presentation is sponsored by the Geoduck Christian
Fellowship. ~EE.
Friday February 12
South African apartheid policies will be
discussed by Henry Isaacs, chief representative to the Unit ed Nationsfor the Pan Africanist Congress of Azania , 3 p.m., Lecture
Hall Rve. presented by EPIC.
Rght Rre with Water, an open stage evening
of songs , poems , stories. and snacks, 8 p.m ..
CAB 306, sponsored by Innerplace.
A DIVORCE SUPPORT and Sharin g
Croup is forming in O lympia . Thf'se meetIn gs, which are open to perso m w ho are
,ontemplatin g or guing throut,:h divorce,
will be held on W eunesday evp nin gs from
7:30 to 9:30 at the Tl.ur'>ton Count y Court hou sE' Comp lex in Ol '!mpia , 11u tl cling 3,
Room 1m7 ThosE' who have bpI'n through
divorce and arE' having pl"lolpm, ddiu, tln g
to their new statu '> arp ,ll so tllVl lI'd 10
att f' nci Jo in them and , har.' "x l)('rt('n, es.
i ee lings, problems and so l. ltl o n' In a
supportive, underst anding ,:l lllm pht'rp
Therl? IS no charge for mpmb, ' ship and
partic ipati on For morC' in formation , cal l
Jen ni fe r Micheau, 94 '3-5802 or 866--',107
DTF/GOVERNANCE ll1f'et in gs th i ~ wppk
in c lude Board of Tru , tE'es, Thursday, reb
11 (today), 1:30 p.m ., LIB 311 2, and tl1('
S&A Fee Rev iew Board, Wednesday , Feb .
17, noon, LIB 2118.
This Week's Friday Nite Film
Viva La Muerte
-MCAT • CRE
GRE PSYCH· CRE BID
CMAT • OAT • OCAT • PeAT
VAT • MAl· SAT
NAT'I. MaD BOS
NOB· NPB I • NlE
The Washington Environmental Council i"
sponsoring a ToeTapper Country Dance r,t
SI. ..bhn's Episcopal ChurCh , 20th and Capi'ol
Way . All dances are taught, all ages welcome.
Donation is $4.00 at the door, proceeds 9" to
the Wa:; Legislative Program .
Aquatic theater comes to the camp us pool
when a California experimental troupe called
Nightfire present S' an original production of
'Surface Tension" beginning at 8 p.m. in the
Campus Recreation Center. Tickets $3.
Shelton Rosen's Ned and .lick . a warm and
witty drama will be presented by The Performance Circle, Gig Harbor'sresident theat er
company . Performances at 8 p.m. on Fridays
and Saturday s and 2 p.m. Sundays. Ihrough
February 27 . For reser/alions call 858-9229.
KAOS Continues " The Land " series with
"land Use Planning- It Almost Works." 7 :30.
89.3 on your FM dial .
Sunday February 14
Harp Seal Siaughier Protest Demonstration ,
Dlnadian Co nsu lale. Plaza 600 Bldg, Seatt le.
10 a.m.-3 p.m .. call ><6270 lor more inf0rmation .
.LM
Saturday February 13
"Three Mu sketeers ," Recital Hall 6:30 and
j p.m .. sponsored by Driftwood Day Care
$1 .25.
Sunday February 14
Special showing of " Hiroshima 'Me"
Amour,''' 7 and 9 :30 p.m.. Lecture Hall On~
This love story about a French woman and a
.apanese man after the bombing 01 Hiroshima
is presented asa benefit for the French Culture
program. ticket s: $1 .25
Monday February 15
"The Blood of the Condor" presenled- by
EPIC Lecture Hall One, 7 :30. and repeal eo
Tuesday al noon in CAB 1to. FREE
ruesday February 16
" Tale of Two Cities" Lecture Hall One. 4, 7.
& 9:30 p.m .. $1.25.
News & Notes
I
j
I
February 11, 1982
Tuesday February 18
Tuesday's at Eight presents faculty economist Dr. Russ L1dman offering "An Anatomy
of a Recession: A Social and Economic
Autops y," 8 p.m., Recital Hal" FREE.
Saturday February 13
Ernestine Anderson at Popeye's in Olympia,
a benefit for women's sheltertrape relief. $8 in
advance, $10 at the door, tickets sold at
Rainy Day and Music 6000, and the YWCA.
ECFMG • FLEX. VOE
•
Olympia, Wf4.
Time Management workshop sponsored by
KEY-Special Services, noon LIB 3510.
Friday February 12
linda Waterfalt , popular Paci'ic Northwest
singer, composer. and recording artist, returns
to campus 'or a 9 p.m. concert , second 1I00r
EVans library. Accompanied by Scott Nygard,
one 0' the hottest lIat picking guitarists this
side 0' the Rockies. Waterfall will 'eature her
original compositions, combining her unique
blend 0' acoustic 'olk with soft rock per'ormed on acoustic guitar and Wurlitzer keyboard . Tickets: $3.
pm
~f~~Ull Ch~dg~
365 days a year
The B52's are : Ricky Wilson-guitar,
Cindy Wil so n-vocals, Keith Strick land,
drums dnd guitar, Fred Schneider-voca ls,
and Kater Pi ers on-voca ls and bird calls .
Rick y Wi lson , Kei th Strickland, and Kate
Pierson <llso play bass and keyboards .
ME'sopotamia is thei r fourth album The
fir'l two albums were produced by Chris
Blell kwell of Is land Rf'cord s, who is also
know n for signing the Wailers . The B52's
third album , ParI y Mix, was a compilation
of three songs from eac h of their previous
tlVO ,dbums David Byrne produced their
n('w album, and he also plays guitar, bass,
sy nthes izPr, and percuss ion .
Apparent ly, the album was recorded in
S"ptpmber, but probably hasn't come out
unt tI now becillise of the summer rel ease
0 1 I',lfty Mix . Rumors had It that the B52' s
VIIP,," treading Ihe S,l l11e path as the ralk ing I Ie'ad s, and it was true . The 852's hilW'
Im t ll1uch of the ir originality and spont,lll"Ilv by ddopting the sa me path. They
t"Is" d more conventi onal stance o n
MI',opoiamia by using a bass , instead oi
,1 kE'ybuo1rd bil'>' . They .also don't use nontr,1(litional instruments for effec ts, as they
h,1\ " opt ore' Me.m potamia ends up sou ndin g .IS onp wOli ld SU SPE'ct , like il cross
bl'tIlPt ' n th., II S.?\ ,lIld David Byrne,
IA hi, h ,t I" . rtw II11 POrt,1I1t t hing 10 con ' Id<'f hlllVl'v ... r , is tholl tht-' B52's havl? no t
vi,ibl .' g,lilll'd dnyt hin g, nnd that they
h" vl' lost mu. h o i thE' ir ongillality .
Women's Center business meeling. 5 p.m.,
UB 3216.
.an Steintz will perform at the Capitol Bar
Grill, 1075 S. Capitol Way, Olympia.
B 52's Have Lost Originality
Du\Y\e,T 10-2 prr.
page 6 The Cooper Point Journal
&
Music Review
'11.
3>10 Division N.W.
Handy Pantry
Thursday February 11
Anita O'Day with .bhn Poole, drums, Dave
Peck, plano, and Bob Beerman, bass at
Parnell's, 313 Occidental Mall, Seattle.
I
l
Thi s sensational first film by the famed
avant-garde author employs violence and
sex as a means of revolutionary purification and liberation . Only re cently released
from its French censorship ban, it is a
paroxysm of anguish, a scream for liberty,
and probably one of the most feroc ious,
violent films ever made.
Reminiscent of Bunuel and Kozinsky, it
mingles, in hallu cinatory images, the
rea lity' s and nightmares of a 12-year-old .
boy growing into manhood at the moment
of Franco' s vi c tory (the film's locale though never identified - is clearly Spain,
while its intent is anti-totalitarian in an
international contemporary sense). Every
few minutes it veers from uncertain
rea li sm into the boy's imagination, beset
by monstrous tortures, violence, death,
and a primitive sadism that engulfs the
spectator precisely because it does not
impose upon, but merely activates his
own subconscious fears and desires. The
unspeakable mystery of adulthood, the
secret temptation of the sin of sex, the
inexplicable terror of government, and the
monstrous suspicion of the mother's
,denunciation of the father to the authori-
ties are fully revealed in the boy's
anguished hallu cination s.
This is a document of a Catholi c ado lescence at a time of civil war, replete with
blasphemous, scatologica l, and incestuou s
in cursions . Its nightmare sequences involve photographed television images and
manipulated color negatives, creating an
unearthly, expressionist ambiguity that
makes the horror more pervasive for being
indistinct. Our subconscious immediately,
oblingingly supplies our own phobias to
render the nightmare effective. Parti cularly horrifying is the repea ted use of a
m elodi c Dutch children's tune; given the
co ntext, it assumes unsuspected hideousness, c hanging into an ominous metaphor
of innocence so iled by corruption .
That the fi lm is filled with Arrabal's
own obsessions is both undeniable and
inevitable. Some therefore have been
tempted to write it off as a narcissistic,
pathological document; in reality, however, having passed through the monstrous turbulence of his imagination, we
are restored, through violence, to a
possible hope, a steely new humanism of
the seventies, informed Oby Franco,
concentration camps, A-bombs, and
Vietnam.
TWO WORKSTUDY POSITIONS Me
()pt' n in the Stucl f'n t Accounts (llfl'p If
vou are interested and workstudy qual it IPd , pleasE' contact DaVid lucid at /\('('-1>44B.
BilL HUCKS, il 1<)7<) ~rJdU,l t(' ,md
tormer S&A Coordinator w ill I", 11<'f(' to
t,l lk with studf'nt, "bo ut tIll' ""'f( hdllt
lIl(lrine indu, try . A numlwr o f t,lIlk,'r' and
t f('i ~ htf'rs art' i ntt're<; tf'd I n hiring some
good seamen and women Bill wtll talk
w ilh , tlKI, ~ nt s f rom .I-r, Jllll . o n I l'llflldry
1'1, ill L11\ 2116 Sign-up I, requlf< 'd With
th" Carp ... r Planning ;md PI,1( Plnl'n t Ott" (,
POSITION AVAILABLE lor handl( ,IJlped
pPr'ion ina wh~lchair a, I raining Coord inator with Inter--C ity Transit. Possibility
lor an intern ship . Contact Ca reer Planning
& Placement, 86&-Q 193, LI R 1213, for
more informat ion .
Internships
0'
Variety
IntemSlips
Ealonville, WaSl.
Cooperative Education ha s just received
information about possible inlern!tlips Spring
and Summer Quarters with a witdlife park.
Intern!tlip possibilities are as follows: (1) Developing an orientation to Ihe park using video
with dialogue; t2) penning illustrations for a
nature trail te xt and educational packets; and
(3 ) developing educational packets for elemenlary and secondary students on the animals.
birds and environment of Ihe park.
All interested students !tlould contact the
Office of Cooperative Education as soon as
possible.
8 a,m. - 9 p.lI!.
weekdays
10 a.m , - 7 p,m .
Sundays
THE DISSOLUTION PROCESS. Ho v to
Il lf(' (.Il1d I lr(') an Attorney, Tax Co,',(,'IU."IlCl" of Divorce , and DeprE' ss i cn
M'lIld,~' ·ml' nt and Conr i I iation Cou nsel int,;
, If(' ,onll' of thp tOPII ' that will be rov ('n,d ,), par t of " Coping W ith Di voru ', " a
olw-day wtlfk shop pn";pnt ed bv DivorcE'
Consul t Ing and Rpfprr ,II Sf'rvicf-'. Speakers
.I t thp INorhho p, whl r h w tl l tdk" pi au' on
Silturd,lY. I'"hrllilry 1\ ci t 3'i.\0 f)m ton
Hilrbor Rd N Ie i r()m 1\ ' \() .1 III to S pm ,
wtll inclucjp Pat fl CI<l M orga 11 , O lympia
attorr1f'Y ; Kathy ('001110" tax con , ult ant,
Ma ry Stf'phenson , concili ation counselor ;
.I nc! a group of divorcpd pe r ~ on., diSCUSSIng " Wp've f)een 1 hrough I t and Survi ved ."
A $30 reg ist rati on fE'e covers materia ls,
,ofiee and tea, and mornin ~ ;;nacks .
Pilrticipants should bring a brown bag
lunch . For more informati o n, ca ll Kat hy
Coombs, 357-7541 or 352-7539.
Radio Operation and News Intern
Port Angeles, Wa<'ll .
Student intern will work with commercial
AM radio station . Emphasis is on news galhering and reporting, however the intern!tlip is
flexible enough to permit an intern to gain
lirst-hand experience in virtually all aspects of
commerCial broadcasting. In addition to news
gathering and writing, student may be involvlld
in control room procedures, announcing, production, engineering, broadcast law, sales. and
general office procedures.
Prefer student with some experience in news
writing .and an interest In radio broadcasting.
1-3 quarters, hours negotiable, volunteer
internSlip with mileage and expenses paid 'or
covering news or ~eclal events.
open euery day
WESTSIDE CENTER
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February 11, 1982
The Cooper Point Journal page
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