-
Identifier
-
cpj0277
-
Title
-
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 10 Issue 18 (April 8, 1982)
-
Date
-
8 April 1982
-
extracted text
-
I'
Arts & Events
,Thursday March 4
Gallleo, a Bertolt Brecht drama which offers
a savage analysis of the life, dreams and
convictions 01 the 16th century astronomer,
opens at 8 p.m. in the Experimental Theatre
of the Communications Building. The play.
presented by Evergreen Student Productions,
stars graduate Joe Rice , is directed by student
Lewis Pra tt , and will run March 4, 5. 6, & 7.
Ticket s to r the production are $2.50 at
. Yenney' s Music, the Evergreen Bookslore and
at the door 0 1 Ihe Communications Building
beginning at 7 p .m .
Wednesday M.'rch 10
Members of Ihe Evergreen College Community Organization host a half-day tour and
luncheon program with the Friends of the
Gallerfes and Friends 01 the Library . . Activities
begin at 10 : 30 a .m. and include an indepth
tour of the library, and a tour of the galleries .
Reservations may be made by calling ~128
or ~565 weekdays.
Art proposal s by Stephen Antonokos,
Richard Haas , George Segal and Andy Warhol
will be ex h ibi ted from March 4 to 14th at the
H ill Gal lery. Kittredge Hall , University of
Puget Sound . Models and d rawings of Ihe art
proposals as well as photographs of the
artisls ' prev ious work wil l be displayed .
Gall ery hours are 10-4 Monday through Saturday. 1-4 Sunday .
April 8, 1982
I'
Senate Criminal 'Code Bill Condemned by Speaker
Singer and co mposer Gretchen Christopher
will perform her own songs, including the
million-record sell er, "Come Softly To Me ,"
Friday, March 12 at 8 p .m . in the Recital Hall
of the Commun ications BUltding. Admission
is free.
Heuve l
cast of Brecht's Galileo work well to produce powerful drama in traditional costume and ho nest
The Chi ld hood's End Gallery p resents
" Tucks , Folds. Grains and Groove ," an ex hibi t
01 cl o thi ng and cl ot h pictures by Lo rett a
Sharpe and lu rnit ure and SCu lptures in wood
by Fred Paxton The gatlery is o pen Monday
Ihrough Satu rday from 10 : 30 to 6 . Sunday 12
10 5 . al 222 Wes t 41h . Olymp ia .
Ffldn y Nlt e Films prese nts If
dlfected b v
LlnJ s"y And erson . U .K . 1969. 111 rr" n ut(' s .
co lo r. S taffing Mal co lm McDowel l. Chfl"tlnc
Noonan Ric hard Warw ick . Th e film takes a
real 15 tl c a nd
s urrealistic
loo k
at
a
Monday . March 8
Cl aSS ical gUitarist Farrel Born and Musica
Viva Chamber Players present an evening 01
c los s lc al mU SIC sponso red by TESC's Women's
Cenl er In th e Reci tal Hall 01 th e Co mrnunica·
Ir nn ~ BIJddl ng a t 3 p .m . Admission IS $4 fo r
'" I IJf jp nl s. 'f,4 50 fo r non -s t udents The event IS
p.-HI 1)1 the Wom en In th e Performing Art s
EPIC o bserves International Women's Day
With a disc ussion led by Pro fesso r Stephanie
Coontz co ncerning wome n's figh t s and the
labor movement and w ill show th e film, " The
Workplac e Hus tl e" Lec t ure Hall One. 7 : 30.
Free
~I't l ' "
Tuesday . March 9
/l " ll )l,cd media ex hibit 0 1 two- and Ihr ee-
studen t s ~a \l e the ir day . Lec t ure H a ll Onp
d unt'n'donal work s c rea ted by s tudent s 0 1
vl Slll nq l ac ully art i s t Lynda Rockwood ope n s
III G;! tl E.' f Y Two 01 th e Ev an s Libra ry. with a
r f'Ce ~lton hom 2 to 4 p m In Library 2300
3. 7 an n 9 30 AdmiSSion
Selec tr ·l
$1 .25.
sc ulp 1
pieces range
hom
lar ge
o ut door
' '' ~
Saturday March 6
In Sl ef' 1 10 tw o- and Ihree( 1 Imc n~l l..Ir\. t! c rea ti ons 10 cas t paper and cast
br u nn· ! hr~ cx hl bl! r e mains o n disp l ay
Ihr o ug tl M ...tJ Lh 28 .
" Materials in Conflict " will be presenl ~u III
the EVE:rg'ee n Li brary. Ga ll ery Two thro ugh
March 28 w' th a preview Sunday . MarCh 7. at
2 p .m . Thp px hi b,t includes art work s In
pa ste ls. CQl an llCs . canva s. sheet m etLl I ann
clay Call 866 'J075 for hours and lurth pI
The Wa " "n gl on Sla te Capitol Mu seum pr€"
! ·h lbit
entitled " The Museum as
Collector. Permanent Collection , 1871-1982 ."
a sclec t HHl 0 1 49 works of a rt do nated o r pu rc h i:l sc d by the mu se um Th e exhi bit include~
i n form a ti o n
pa lllllll yS. so m e g loSS a n d ce r am iCS as w ell
Wild Rose S.B . play the musrc 01 th e Brltl sll
Isles . France. Apl'a lachia. New Engl and and
French Canada usmg the hammered du lc imer
English co ncertind and fiddl e as lead in stru ·
ments at the Olympia YWCA. 220 East Union
doo rs open ;J1 8 n In .. open mike at 8 ' 15
main ael f o ll o w s Au rnl SS lon . $2 .50
all (1 reC ipients o f the Govern or"s Award 01
c.:.J lnm0.nri;\Ii o n H o ur s are 10 to 4 . TIIP,sda'v
se ll !S dll
a~
The Arti sts' Co -Op Gallery leature s Oil
pa inter Pau l Lambert and sumi paint er Nobu
Burm er 3S Artists o f the Week beginning to ·
day . Gallery IS open Iro m 10 to 5 Monda,
thr oug~ Sa turda y at 524 Soulh Washingtun
downt ( Nn O lympia .
sClilp tur e pfincipa,ly by Washingt on ar ti s ts
through Friday . 12 to 4 on weekend s. A preview
anet recepti o n Will be held today Irom 1 . 30 10
3 . 30 Th e ex hibit will be o n view till March 3'
at 211 Wes t 2 1 s t Avenu e. Olympia .
Folk singer Pele Seeger will give one per·
lo rma nce at th e Moore Theater . 1932 2nd .
Sea ttl e. at 7 ' 30 . Ti ck ets are $10 and $12 and
availabl e at th e Bon The event is sponsorE'1i
by the Floating Homes A SSOC iati o n . to whos~
f ou nd e r . Terry Pet tu s. the co ncert "
dedi cat ed
Guitarist Earl Klugh presenls his unique
style of jazz-influenced music at Ihe Moore
fhe ater in Seattle Friday, March 12. in two
performances, 7 and 10 p .m .
Sw iss o rganist Guy Bovel perfo rms at SI.
Mart ln' s Abbey Church Saturday, March 13 at
8 p .m .
Sunday March 7
Briti s h
boardi ng sc hoo l and three unruly seniors wh o
tal l to co nform The rep rl'ssive condI tIon s a nd
pain 0 1 rebplli on 01 Ihe situation are docu·
mented and Ipad to a Vio lent end ing when Ih e
By J. W. Nielsen
Entroplc Follies, and even ing of original song ,
dance and drama will be presented in TESC's
Experimental Theatre, Communications Building , March 11, 12, 13 & 14 at 8 p .m . The production inc l udes ragtime music and dance , a
serious one-act play, comic mime, reggae and
·blues . Tickets for the event are $2 .50 and are
avai lable at Yenney's Music and at the Evergreen Bookslore .
The Porce lain Art Gallery is now displaying
over 150 hand painted porcelain pieces by
members of the International Porcelain Art
Teachers and World Organ ization o f China
Painlers associ ations . The gallery is open
from 11 a .m . to 5 : 30 p.m . Tuesday throu gh
Saturday , and is located at 5130 Bos to n
Harbor Rd . NE . Olympia.
Actress Judith Espinola and faculty historian Tom Rainey presen t " Radicalism in the
Pacific Northwest ." a history whic h wi ll in cl ude dramatic represen lation s of progressive
Seat tl e ac tivl t s Anna Louise Strong as wel l as
diSCUSSIOn o f radical movements in th e Northwest during the years before an d after the
Bol shev ik Revolut ions. The event will begin at
8 p .m . i n the Recital Hall of the Communication s Buildll1g and i s free .
.
Medieval . Et c . Rim Se r ies presents The
Private Lives of Bi<abeth and Essex . 106 min·
utes . Co lor. Direct ed by Michae l Curtiz . Stars
Bette Davis. Errol Flynn . Olivia deHaviliand and
Vincent Pri ce. Based o n Maxwe ll Anderson 's
ptay. thi S hi s to ri ca l drama documents the love
affair a t Queen Elizabeth and Ihe Earl of Essex,
who schem e against each other for pOlitic al
power . Lec ture Hall One. 4. 7 and 9 : 30 p .m .
Admission is $1 .25.
The Olympia Film Society present s The
Ruling Class . Directed by Pet er Medak. U .K.
t 972 . Co l or. 150 minutes S t a rring Peter
O·Toole. Alastair Sjms, Arthur Lowe. The fi lm
sati rica lly attacks the abuses of class privi lege
w h ile makin g tran s iti o n s f ro m mu s ical
comed y t o abS lirdi sl black hum o r . Peter
O'Too le pe rf o rm s interpretations of personages from Jesus Christ to Jack the Ripper .
Sunday , March 14 at 6 : 45 and 9 :30 p .m. 911
East 4ih. O lympia.
John Hartfo~ an d New Grass Revival w ill
be at Parker's in Seattle lor one show only
Sunday, March 14 at 9 p .m . T icket s are $8 .50 .
New rock band Vacations play live at
Popeya's SJnday , March 14 at 10 p .m . Admi sSion is $2 .
Ho lly Near will perform her un ique repertoire o f women 's fo lk songs together w ith
Ca rrie Barton III TESC's Library Lobby at
8 p .m . Wednesdav. March 17 . Ope nin!! will be
"We Three" (Kim . Judy & Sarah) . Tickets are
$6. available at TE9:::'s Women 's Center.
Rai ny Day Records and the Rainbow .
Rich and Famous
1'111 at ional
Continued irom page 9
Wrong Thl' ,upt'rii< I,ll 'Imilarity proven
onlv In bt, wt,htul thinking on my parI
(.Im,iI "nowl('cJgt" ('fu cial themes were'
I'ltl! h"d upon in Rich and Famous : thl-'
111Ipd< I of fir'l lovl ' 011 <111 sub,equent
l<lv," In ,,1 ill II I(lV, , rl-'ldll OIl, hip, realil\'
\., 'r,u' ! ,Ill I .1'\ . 1m (' ,lIln ,exud l perverStrll '
I, >u, 11< ,<1 upon . Y"' , buI never dll owed II ,
tI, 'V( 'lop 10 I ru II Ion Hl'n< ... f hl' f'xplosiv,'
II1111.ll I 01 .1 (am,)1 Knowledge or Iht'
,'[(>II! 1"INon 01 .1 Night PortC'r i ~ who ll ,
,lh"'111 III Rich ane! 'arnoll.'
II <heln 'l hdV" 10 hI' thill W,Jy Bprgen
.\llli 1\1 ",'1 ,ln' lillI' ,Icln'"e, and ,eemIllgl\ IIllpl ll gl'llt . ,1ft I< (11 ,1'" womf'n Wh y
Ihl 'll do," I\I 'rgl'n ,1I1('rnd ll' lv cli ng. whll1e
dl ld bill hi Why dIll" lli "(~ 1 n'l1l,l in rln
nipple throughout l Why , oh
whv . (" ,In't WI" Sf'(' strong, loving, mature,
,ophi,ti"lteo dnd intelligent women on
Ihl' '( rf'l'n l Yt'~. I know - because films
,1rf' Illad!' by men. But that's too easy an
,1n,wpr. though it is of course a good part
0 \ thp amwer . hE'causE' even in movies
I,md boob) by WOI11E'n. the hero ine likE'lv
,h nol wind ... up eithf'r dlone. raped
dllrl.'or Illurdf'n'd I'm thinkin g o f Mr .
(,()odbar and Lo ving Couple, hew
1 don 'l hav(' ,IllY <In'wers l'lll wri tin g
Ihi ' I11m ll y 10 VOII'I' d l<lmE'nl : , ick <lnd
Iln 'eI I dm 0 \ Ihi, f,m l' III w hich onl y hdli
1.11 0( "1 101 lilt> <hdr<1( It'r, I "'Pl-' are
l"lIt'il l. vI,10 1(' and illulll lnd ling 1 hi , sdd
,1.11(' tll .1kp, thp pXCP jJllon, mor(' powerlul .
Iru(' Iltll thilt', prpttv ,,11,111 (omiorl
IIldl'\'cI "n' l it l
Real Food
Lunch and Dinner Special Too!
• Fresh Ingredients • Reasonable Prices
Garden Om.'ett• .
. .. 3.50
gr.an p.ppars, onions
mushrooms, cr.lm chll..
Plrlnhls' Omel.tt• ..
3.75
SIUSlg', fit. ch .... ,
black olives
... . 3.25
R.uben .
.3.50
Fresh Spinach Sllld .
Ch.ese Burger Dllu.e wlfrles ... 3.15
3.75
Blue Chilli Burglr w/frlel .
Blcon 80 Ch .... Burg.r wlfrlll . 3.75
HUlvos Ranch.ros
... 2.95
with hom II frllli
. . ... 3.25
Fish 80 Chipi
. . 3,25
Fllttucclne AI Pelto
gl~le breld
Laslgnl (mlltlesl) .
. ... 3.25
girlie breld
SlutHd Vegetlbl.. . ..... .
. .3.25
girlie bl'lld, brown rlci .
Filet of Fresh R.ef Snlpper
3.75
grilled, french fries
p~
406 E. 4th Ave. 786-9769
921 NRogers
Olympia 1,>4{'1~
(across from the train station)
M-Th 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Fri 10 to 10
Sat 10 to 6
Closed
NONPROfIT ORG.
U.S_ POST AGE
'PAID
OLYMPIA, WA
PERMIT NO_ 65
Volume 10, Number 18
Coming Attractions :
Friday March 5
COOPER
~ Evetpeen Stilte College
OIympiil, WA 98505
I,
I
\
"
Iri an attempt to gather support against
a Senate bi ll whi ch may cripp,le constitutional right5, the Executive Director of the
Committee Against Repress ive Legislation
(NCARL) Frank Wilkinson, gave a lecture
Monday afternoon to a gatherin& of students at the Evergreen campus .
Senate Bill 5.1630 ca lls for a change in
the Criminal Code and will affect journalists, anti-nuclear activists, peace activists, and . others wishing to express their
First Amendment rights .
The bill is the 4th generation of a criminal code bill that was originally presented
to the Senate in 1973 by President Nixon
and Attorn ey General John Mitchell.
S 1630 is sponsored by a bipartisan group
of senators that includes Edward Kennedy
(O-Mass.) and Strom Thurmond (R-S.C)
According to Wilkinson, the 848-page
bill was approved in 90 minutes by the
Senate JudiCiary Committee on November
18, 1981 . He went on to say that he believed that a majority of the Senators did
not even read the bill, whi ch will go onto
the floor of the Senate on Apri I 19 for discussion by the full Senate.
As reported in the February 25 Cooper
Point Journal. the new Criminal CodE'
would make it illegal to "physically interfere" or to " incite others" to evade military servi ce during war time. Obstructing
il government function such as giving mislE'ading directiom to a postman or making
. .I misleading statement o n a government
questionnaire could result in federal
prosecution with sentences _of up to six
wa rs and a f ine up to $250,000.
S.1630 also targets anti -nuclear activist,
1m ,pecial invest igation and prosec ution.
To .cut a barbed-wire fence at a nuclear
fdcility or to take part in any other attion
that creates " property damage" could
result in up to six year, in prison and a
$250,000 fine.
If passed, the bill will establish a commission to set up strict guidelines for sent enc ing, create higher maximum sentences, abolish parole for certain crimes
and provide for " preventive detention" of
suspects before trial. Wilkinson claims
that an F.B.1. agent or a policeman couid
simply tell a judge that the suspect was
"dangerous" and the suspect would be
denied bail, if the bill is passed.
"Preventive detention" laws are also
used in South Africa according to a black
South African poet, Dennis Brutus, who is
a gu~st scholar at U Mass in Amherst.
Brutus, who is being ordered deported by
President Reagan for his involvement with
the boycott of the South African soccer
team last fall, commented on the "private
detention" section of 5.1630, saying that
it reads almost word-for-word like the
"preventive detention" statute of South
Africa .
In his lecture Monday , Wilkinson
warned students about the power of The
Moral Majority in Washington, D.C. He
said that the Moral Majority, "formally
submitted 22 amendments to 5.1630, most
of them are aimed at trying to wipe out
such victories as the womens liberation
movement. "
In the past 60 days, Wilkinson has traveled to 22 states lecturing on college
ca mpuses and to various other groups.
The organization he represents, NCARL,
was formed in 1960 as the National Committee to Abolish the House Un-American
Activities Committee. His group was
labeled a " communist plot" but as time
passed, the group gained support from
prominent Americans . During the 1960's
Congressional opposition to HUAC (House
Un-American Activities Committee) grew,
but it wasn't until 1975 that HUAC was
eliminated as a standing committee.
Wilkinson was black listed out of his job
as an official of the Los Angeles Housing
Authorit-v during the early 50's by California 's " min·i -HUA C." Later, he was
arrested by the F.B.I. 'in 1958 after he was
invited to Georgia, by Martin Luther King,
Sr .. to circulate a petilion amongst black
clergy . HI" was subpoened to the UnAmerican Activities Committee where he
Wci' held in contempt . He appealed hi s
(<1St> ilnd finally lost in Iht, Supreme Court
bv d vote of 5 10 4. On hi, W.lV to pri son,
he ,tatE'd thl' Civil lib\'rti('~ credo by
which he IiV(', h" litt'.
" I hdve madl' thi, I i .... 1 Anwndment
(h,lllenge ot thl' Un-Aml'rt< <In A( l ivities
(nmrnlltee .1, <1 matter 0 1 f>P"Olldl (on" lI 'n( p and Ihe rp~Jlo lbtbililY WI' <111 sharp
10 tJpfl'nd thp Cono;tilullon (lg,lIn,1 all
l 'Ill'mit>,
We will no( ',lVI' trpp 'pPt'ch if
IV( ' ,lrp not jlrt:"IMrpd to gu to jdil in its
1I<'I('n>;(' . I Jill prl'par!'d 10 P,1\' that pri ce."
Wi lkin,nn .1sk('d , tud!.'tl! ·. t o writf' to
flll'lI S"l1dtors dno dsk tfu'lll quesll ons
It'g,1f( ling S. 'lfllO Ht' 'did, " I 'm convinced
I h,1I Il~t t (' rs hilvt' an impa, I If you don't
" t\ 'volt' yE''' or no ' You\'(' got 10 <lsk an
l'ltl'llIgpnl qupstlon
thl' "til rf'quirE' his
" ,'11.110( ') ,tdft to look <11 tl\(' bdl. "
1-394 Group Sponsors Bank Protest
"
By Pat O'Hare
"Go back to your cages, you'll be the
first ones out when you need electricity! "
an elderly woman in a passing camper
yelled at Olympia members of the Don't
Bankrupt Washington Committee, who in
conjunction with ratepayer groups
throughout the state, designated .Iast
Thursday, April 1, as "Sea-First Draw Day."
The protest focused on urging accountholders to withdraw their funds from the
Seattle First Nationai Bank in response to
that bank's participation in a suit against
voter Initiative 394 (Don't Bankrupt
Washington).
A member of the Don't Bankrupt Washington Committee, John Howat, and
several volunteers passed out leaflets and
spoke to account-holders at Seattle First's
Olympia branch . The response was varied .
Some stopped to li sten, seemingly unilwarp of Initiative 394 or the counter,uit. A few said that they were withdrawing what they had, or that they had already withdrawn their accounts, while
others quite openly disagreed with th~'
protest. Most took the leaflets politely
and walked through the double glass
doors somewhat oblivious to Howat's
comments.
Howat pointed out that Initiative 394,
which would put the final approval of
larg~nergy-project financing in the
hands of Washington voters, passed last
November with 59% of the state vote and
by a margin of more than 2 to 1 in Thurston County.
By seeking to overturl1 1-394, he said,
Seattle First is clearly demonstrating a
disregard for the will of Washington
voters.
On December 4, 1981, Seattle First
National Bank, MQrgan Guaranty Trust
Company of New York, and Continental
Illinois Bank and Trust of Chicago filed
suit against 1-394 on the basis that it adversely affects interstate commercial
agreements (bond sales) made in 1975
before the initiative became law.
They argue that on this basis the
initiative is unconstitutional.
These three banks are bond trustees for
the Washington Public Power Supply
System (WPPSS) plants 1, 2 and 3. Seattle
First Vi ce President of Corporate Communications Art Merrick said, " As bond
trustees for WPPSS 3, we're a financial
referee between WPPSS and the bondholders-responsible to in su re that both
sides live up to the agreement. "
"It is our legal opinion:· he sa id,
.. that (Initi ative) 394 changed the
,,:round rules and it's in the best interest>
o f our bondholdt'rs to test its const itu tionality "
Hp argued that Spatt Ie First " nlE'rei\
iu lfilling the terms of its 1971 busines,
dgreements. The bank handled a billion
dollars worth of bonds for WPPSS 3 in
1975-the plant is now nf'ariy 45 %
completed.
Merrick sketched a hypothetical scenarIO, " If the voters reject bond otferings on
Iplant) 3, it doesn 't get completed and no
elec tricity is generated; no revenue i<
created and therefore no payment (to
bondholders) is generated."
'· Every law that is passed has to stand
the test of court," he said . He added that
the last six initiatives were tested in court
and of those six. four were dec lared
unconstitutional.
Merrick said that " Sea-First Draw Day"
had not been very successful. He sa id th at
the bank had suffered less than a mi ilion
dollars in withdrawals .
The Don't Bankrupt Washington Committee has a different vi ew of the fi gures.
They estimate that over $11 million has
been withdrawn in Gravs H arbor County
alone. Howat alleges that Seattle First
isn't repor ting withdrawal figures accurately.
There is some confusion as to exac tly
how much has been withdrawn from the
bank over the 1-394 su it because Seatt le
First recently came under fire over the
issue o f its Sout h African investments .
Grays Harbor resident Tom Fairchild
stopped to talk with the Olympia-branch
protesters . He supported their cause and
said, " Nobody shou ld spend my money
without my vote." He sa id he wit hdrew
his account some time ago after he found
out abou t the b,mk's investments in South
Africa .
continued on page 10
Letters
dom of choice, then make up your own
mind on what should be done about the
shape our country is in right now. This
country now has a lot of problems but
there are answers without high taxes, unemployment lines or the loss of freedom .
Joan Gilmore
Lacey, Wash ,
Wallbom's Management
reflect the trauma and the time required
for healing. Recovery is a life-long
struggl e.
Support groups provide 'an atmosphere
of trust based on confidentiality and cornmitment. Sharing my feelings with others
helps me to validate my own. As soon as
"au start talking about vour ex()priences,
it's amazing how many others have peen .
. :,), ,,(cu.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR:
I read with interest your artic le on the
res ignation of Dave Wallbom . The morning of February 24, a local radio stat ion
aired a story that stated Wallbom and the
college administration had come to a
" mutual agreement" about Wallbom's
terminiltion . The release cited incidents of
mismanagement by Wallbom in the
custodial and security departments .
Your article states that Wall bam " may
ret urn to Evergreen to do some teaching
in management. " I assume that the radio
news release and your artic le are both
official administration relea ses. Seems to
me there are extreme incon sistencies in
these two stories. Why shou ld Wallbom
be leaving because of poor management
practices, and on the other hand be asked
to ret urn to teac h management?
My persona l assessment reveals that
most students could teach him more than
he wi ll ever know about management.
A former TESC employee
Red Scare
Eclitor
On ,\1ar.-h 2, 1982, a woman named
i\\argclre! Papadreau was on the Today
shol\ "e" 0cating socialism in this coun try
To li"' '' l to her it sou nded like the only
ilnsw.-r to our unemployment problems a"
well ih our overa ll economic problems. I
hop.. tlw AmE'r ican people won 't be too
quick 10 de u'pt these poli cies should thp\
be gil ,'n the choi ce . because " ALL THAT
GLlFI-R .., I'> NOT GOLD."
Our i orefilthers saw what cou ld hap!)t'n
III til(' II ,tUr<' ,0 the\ wrote the Constitut!on and tlw De( larat ion of Independ ent{'
to protp, t t he p,'ople at thi<; Great
Countr\ We all rPild them In school but
ewrvo,w' mind s should b, ' ref res hed by
re~ dll)g them ag, lIn . If you beli f've sociill Ism is the lVay to go, fir st do a little
'lu dY lng before you agret' to give our
Cons tltutl onill rights away
I I \'()u want to know who rea ll y control,
thi s cou ntry read ' None Dare Call It
Cor,spl raq/ ' b y CMY Allen . If you wilnt tn
knOl\ the solution to our eronomic problem<; read " The Miracle on Main Street"
bv F. Tupper Saussy And last but not
least , If you want to know why my nanw
w ill be put on the I RS " hit li st " as a
vio lent person for wr iting this letter,
" To Haras,> (Jur People" by ConreJd
gre,,,nan George H,lllsen . Please read
these books whil e vou still have the free-
What Evergreen Council?
I::ditor
What is the funct ion of The Evergreen
Counci l] Unfortunately not a lot of you
know the answer. The Counci l serves as a
pla ce where peq~le from the three main
groups on campus, staff, faculty, and
students , can get together and discuss
issues happening and affecting us al l. The
Counc il is a communication device for
th e three groups and can also help when
there is a problem on campus .
The new COG document, which is the
governance gu ideline for the Evergreen
ca mpu s, out lines Ihe procedures for any
grievance process and gives The Evergreen
Counc il significant responsibility In such
m<ltt e,.; We ~erve as a watchdog : inves ti gating, medi ating and recommending
anwv('r~ to issu('s thilt affect all of u s.
I am the moderator of The Evergreen
Coune i I for this year and I have noti ced a
la< k of ,.,lrticipation, es pecially on ~he
part ()i thf' student>. If any of you have
bI"", wondering about the lack of student
go" 'rnment or opportunity for stud!'nts to
pitrt., ipalP in ~vl'rgreen ' , governancl'
,ystl'm, Thp ~vergrpen Council is thp
place to p<lrticip<lle, I haw faith in th('
(l)lIIlCi l , thi~ group hil S pot!'ntial , hut it
, ,111 't work without pilrticipants .
I would likp 10 c1sk .III of you, stdll .
I. .. lIity, and , tu<il'nt \, to comp to ,I" ever
' gn"'n ( oun, iI .m~·ting on WPdnp,d, IY,
Aprrl 211, ,11 1: 10 p .m . in CAB 1011 I he
( .,,"" iI will hI' holding i1 m.,.'llIlg and
.I11" r thp 1111·,'1111g w. ' w ill h,.vl' .. d.scus"Oil p. 'rrod lor vou to ,lSI.- "n~ qlll"ti o ns
'"~ gl\" ,lilY, omm"I1I, vou m,l\ h.. vl>. '1hp
C()lIl1' iI wou ld «, .. lI y ,'pprr', •.rt., your
p.lrl" .p •• II()11
1111' ( "lin. rI II .. , 111" .. nl t(J work lor YOll
.IIH I ()nly V(J(J (.111 rlldkl' It vV(Jrk
((II1I\II'(;r,l\
I v.'rg,-cI 'n ( t>llll( il Mo<it'r,1\o,
Rape I Incest Support Group
A I <'I tl'r to th .. hl'rgr"l'n Community :
WIll''' I .rrrlvl'd la,t t,III. I Inquired
,1boUI .I r,lp" ,uppmt group for women at
n-S( I h"ft, wc1sn't onp. With the prevaIl'n, " o t r .. p.. and incps l thi s is surprising.
Pw\pnti on ,1,lssPs ,lrt' popular. But what
bout ,upport after thl' idct l
"""lI,l l .. hu se is particul ,lrly uncomfort,lhl. · .... society ovprloob Its impliration , I h(' duration ot thp ,,,sault does not
The Cooper Point Journal
Editor: 0 S DeZlIb"Managing Editor: Katie Lieuallpl1Editorial Page Editor: Tom Seha,lf
Photography Editor: John Nielsen Associate Editor: Roger'LpVon Dickev
Reporters: [r i ll Kenny , David Goldsmi lh , David Gaff , Bob Davis, Pat O'H .. n'
,\rthur Wf' ~t . Lew is Pratt, and Karen Heuvel Ad"erti~ing Manager: Patrick M cMilIlU'
Business Manager: De,i ref' Amour
Karen
Lewis
The Cooper Po int Journal is published weekly for the students, staff and faculty of
The ~v e rgreen State Coll ege. Views expressed are not necessarily those of the co ll ege
or of the Jo urnal's s'aff Advertising material contained herein does not imply
endorsement by the l ournal. Offices are located in the College Activities Building
(e AS) 104 . Phone : 86&-6213 , All announcements for News and Notes or Arts and
~ \'c nt s shou ld be typed double-spaced, listed by category, and submitted no later
than noon on Monday for that week 's publi cation . Al l letters to the editor must be
TYPED DOUBLE-SPACED, SIGNED and in c lude a daytime phone number where the
author may be reached for consultation on editing for libel and obscenity . The
ed, tor reserv es the ri ght to rej ect any material , and to edit any contributions for
I('nl.;t h, co nte nt and sty le. Display advertising should be received no later than
Monday at 5 p .m for that week's publication ,
"
A support group for Evergreen women
who have exper ienced rape/ in cest has
been formed . We will meet every Wednesday, during Spring quarter from 910:30 in the morning. After April 21, the
sessions wil l be c losed to faci litate trust
within the group. At that time, inquiri es
.w ill be referred to the counse ling center
for one-an-one support. Women who have
been sex ual ly assau lted whether in the
recent or distant past are welcome to ca ll
or drop by the counseling center (x6151,
Seminar 21(9) for more information .
A member of the
Rape/ Incest Support Group
Leap of Faith
loth,' h1itor
What a joy to see women communicating and caring for each other on stage.
A few sexual caresses with a lot of fun
exposure to the realiti es of lesbians establi shed the palatable points of this profoundly professional performance last
week . The humor and shock value of seeing women touch women was definitely
needed for a heterosexual audience, and
while our local audience was mostly gay
and Green, the deeper thoughts and
issues of the play were supportingly
provocative
Scene One: Take One-"Lesbians in
Bed" -Isn't this the way almost everyone
on the homophobic side of the taboo
barrier defines women who dare to intimately express what they feel towards
each other l One of a woman's leaps of
faith is a se lf-acceptance of who she is
and how she can best be true to herself.
Sometimes this leap is out of the closet
and into a bedroom where honest ex- C
changes between herself and her loved
onp can occur. And when this leap is
dr'niPd , or someone else's values oppress
hpr , then regression back into the dark
( kN,t of lonely sil ence retu rn s.
An dltern ative : Take it if you can" C('ldxate love." Isn't this what a lot of
women everywhere are hoping to do as
they open themselves to the wider spectrulll of feelings within themselves and
activille their abiliti es to communicate
honestly to one another? Leap of Faith
demonstrates that there are too many
violences , I ies and secrets contained within the estab li shed order, and that women
have the ri ght to choose and create harr
pier endings. There are many more possibiliti es to explore and unlimited realities
to ac tuali ze when a woman begins with
giving herself the right to be happy and
demanding that she be given back the
sa me qual ity of love and respect she gives
out .
For some Leap of Faith was too whimsical and inadequate in advocating politicill actinn nr confronta tive tactics toward
.1 bigotPd sociill norm. Each of us may have
learned tram ~mma and Louise that there
are many realities , each of us selecting
and creat in g the ones most advantageous
to our personalities and sensitivities and
talents. The important cha llenge put
before us in this play is that we learn to
awaken within outse lves an honesty that
can be lived out with celebration and in
the company of our choosing.
-A Collection of Women's Thoughts
Knock Your Socks Off
Editor :
It happened. After a year of wondering
why theater and dan ce productions were
at bes t mediocre here at Everblue, I had
my socks rolled down by Entropic Follies .
It happened, and remains etched on the
600 or so witnesses who packed the tabl es
for four nights. I went twice,
The quality of the 24 acts ranged from
tolerable to inspired genius . To me, the
critici sms I've hea rd from a few hardboiled eggs mi ss the point. The show was
entirely composed of original, studentgenerated pieces and integrated successfully in a few short days. The intri ~ate
technical demands went from nowhere at
the dress reh earsal to almost water-tight
1l,1g\' 2 The Cooper Point lournal
April 8, 1982
Letters
by opening night. The bar scenes were
Doonesbury incarnate and gave the show
astounding integrity and depth , Lordy,
there were more than 50 performers
So if you missed, you're flat out of
lu ck. You'll ne'ver exper ien ce atomic fleas,
gull turds, Mr. Blues, the Oly WA Dittys,
the one-man jungle, Jerk-off Johnny
Suicide, the tapdancing cosmic hitchhiker, Blondie on a crescent moon and
the ,Geoduck Rockets. That's not even
mentioning the seven dance pieces, the
uptown cynica l bean sprouts and that
astoundingly artsy M.e (who was that
guy anywayl). ,
So, when there is a show in town , turn
off that TV and shu t that book . In smalltime performing arts there is rarely a
second chan ce.
As for me, I'm still rolling my socks
back up (They're knee socks I J.
Roland Moni si
CAB Lobby Slobs
Dear Editor:
On Saturday, March 13, I wa5 on
campus because of a group of business
educat ion teachers who were having a
conference here. I he U\tl lobby was a
mess. Obviously the patrons of the Deli
the night before neglected to throw their
trash into the provided trash cans. This is
a common problem and seems to be getting worse.
We see trays and dishes from Saga left
allover campus , candy wrappers along
others. I f we move the furniture, let's put
South African
Investments Examined
Thanks From Bruce
[X'dr I vprgrpen Community :
Hrun' and I would like to thank the stlldell\-;, staf!, far ulty and administration,
who h"v(' b('f'n very helpful and surr
portiY(' during thl' past year, in having
Bnll (' V,1Il De Walkpr reinstated in hi,
posit lon.1\ rhp ~v('rt.: reen State Col lege
ilnd th,' h,'lll VOli gav!' m with your
dOI1,lt IO'h
ilru(,' .lIld I (oulrln't hay!' donI' It with ..
"" I \ Ill' pl'opl ..
I h .. nk vou ,Igdirr,
!Irlil" dlld l'.lt V,rn 1)(' Wdlk,'(
By Roger Dickey
Because Evergreen is examining its in vestment policies, Vice President Dick
Schwartz spent March 29 discussi ng
Seattle-First National Bank's investments
with bank officers. He conc luded that
under present Board of Trustee's gUidelines there is no reason to withhold Evergreen fund s from the bank.
The qu es tion of bank inv es tment
poli cies, parti cularly relating to money
loaned or invested in South Africa, was
raised in the December, 1980, Board of
irustees Finance Com mittee meeting.
Sin ce then , staff members have examined
the pos iti o!1s ot her co lleges have taken on
hank investments .
" The Cabinet has been discussing (bank
,nvestments in South Africa) for about a
month," Administrative Aide l eanne
Chandl er expla ined . "They wanted infor.mation on which banks h ave South
African investments . There was some
initial feeling that we should pull out of
tho~e banks. The cabinet is presently
,tudying the feasibility of that."
Dick Schwartz said that Evergreen does
not directly invest in any banks. Funds are
invested in guaranteed secu rities which
banks offer. When Evergreen funds are
ava ilable, bids are requested from local
banks . The bank offering the highest
interest rates rece ives . the investment.
Schwartz said it is possible for the school
to reject the highest bid if there are other
considerations affecting the bid .
Irate
I dum
Ildving sp.. nt Illdll\, long arduolls hour..
,()II .. 'ting <; ign,!turps tor Initiative :194I )Oll't Bankrupt Washington, and kf'f'ping
ilb:'!',I\! of Sea-First's lega l cha llenge of
144, I ,,\n no longpr , in good filith, kpep
111\
ount It s,ldd!'ns m(' to hdv!' tn
Idkt · "'lI( h an pxtrt'nlt ' nlP{\~lIrp as I h,'lvP
hdd .In d( (Ollnt Wit h S.. d-I·irst Nalion,,1
fl,,,!1.- lor ovpr I'll'v,'n yt'ars , bUI our phil ",,)phll" an' d',lIlll'tll ' ,111\· oppo,ed
1'1 lurth,'r prot.,>! . I w .11 d" 111\ Utlll'ht
I" p,'r,udd(' tdillily , irlt'lld" dlld "gnltl( .lnl
"th.. r' to ,11'0 ( 1o,,' thl'ir Spd-I irsl bilnk
,I( ( ou .lh
In addltloll , I w ill pm ouragp
th.'m to bank with th eir comppt itor R,lillll'r N.1tion,ll B,rnk
I ll' I("pd you will t ll1 d 111\ ' tr,ln,,!ctlon
( :rrd - .11 \ pi", P'
1\'t lln,1 L.vnn Walkpr
.f(,
,.,
~~
Education for Madness?
Fditor '
I look around me and I see students
w.llking and talking, playing ball, selling
hOI1lP-lllade goods , wearing o ld clothes ,
giving away pups. I observe students
spf'aking freely and wearing clothes that
remind me of 1%8. In the stai r wells of
the dormitories, the walls are covered
with murals and words the like of Hesse.
In my classes and seminars we speak of
the dilemmas of a world in which people
easily destroy themselves, others, the
minds of our children . I am being taught
to use my mind creatively, to be an intel lectual. I have learned more at The Evergreen State College than I cou ld have
imagined. I had no idea of the multitude
of things I might see, once having learned
HOW to see, how to use my mind. Now I
am frightened, for myself and for the
other minds Evergreen helps produce. Will
we be driven to madness by the thi'ngs we
have learned? Will we remain helpless to
u se our awareness for the good of
mankind?
I question the practical application of
education as I see fellow countri es at war,
whil e the people next door purchase their
third Ca r. Whilst Ameri can famili es have
six children and protest legalized abortion,
the "-dust chi ldren" sired by our soldiers
beg and steal for a living in the streets of
Viet Nam.
Will my fellow students and myself ever
learn enough to cease the sorrowfu I errors
by reali zi ng our role as not merely Amer icans but as World Citizens?
I implore the students of thi s univers ity
to keep in mind that the world is in dire
need of our knowledge. I ask that eac h of
us look into our hearts' for a way to make
ou r education facilitate world peace and
harmony .
Mary G . Rhode
walkways and a general disregard for our
environment. This negligence translates
into staff time and lost equipment, which
translates into dollars.
Lost dishes and si Iverware must be replaced. This cost becomes part of the
overhead in food service and is passed on
to us, the consumer. The College custodia l
service is operating with fewer staff
because of budget cuts . They shou ld not
have to spend their limited staff time
picking up after members of thi~
community.
Laura Nole, bookstore manager, said to
me not long ago, "We should all try to
help eac h other. " It is so true, Let us all
try to have a Iittle consideration for
i
Good on any Wednesday of your
choic~
in the month of April.
DOOR PASS
I!l
(ADMITS ONE )
(This is a mailin~ list special,
so have your frien ds sign up now
on POPEYE'S mail i ng list. )
I!l
2410 W, HARRISON, OLYMPIA
.
~
During the quarter ending December 31 ,
1981 , 14 investments were made. Seattle
First received ten . Rainier bank got the
·,t her fou r.
Art Merrick , Vi ce President of Corporate
Communications for Seattle-First , said the
bank presently has on ly one loan in South
Afri ca. He said that any loans made in
S(,uth Afri ca mu st be benefic ial to the
P,Kific Northwest ec onomy, through the
Import or export of goods involving
Northwest firms. The loa ns must not
support racial di sc rimination in that country .
John Coburn of Ra ini er Bank 's World
Banking Divi sion said the bank ha s not
made any South African loans in severa l
wars . Th ere is sti ll one loan outstanding.
The Church Council of Greater Seattle
hd'o been trying to cbange the policy of
lo c a l banks on investm e nt s in South
'\fri ca. Tina Fields is head of th eir task
torce. She is concerned that Rainier and
,>pafirst have not made a publi l commitment to hllman rights in South Af ri ca.
" What we wanted and sti ll want is a
(hange in their policy statements . We
want a statement that they would not
,eek loans (in South Afrir d) until the
majority popu lation in South Africa enjoy
tul l human ri ghts ."
Seattle-First does not a'grpe Ihat economic embargo will achieve equality for
South Africa's blacks. In a letter to the
CPJ, Seafirst Public Affairs Office r William
Gor jan ce wrotl' : " Seafirst's South African
lending policy is based on the belief that
;1 total cutoff of United State~ trade and
investment in that cou ntry wou ld do more
harm than good
We believe that the
most promising path for South Africa involves greater econom ic strength for the
bla ck and other oppressed groups in that
country . We beli eve th at an embargo of
I hat country would achieve exactly the
opposit e re sult. "
After three years of negoti at ions with
Seatt le-First on this issue, Ms . Fields remains hopeful She exp lain ed that Seattl e-
THE DEPARTMENT OF AMUSEMENT PRESENTS
THE LEGENDARY
BLUES BAND
,
LJoors open at 7
Music: 8 till dosing
,
[
I
Thurs. Special Price:
241 O'Horrison Avri .
Olympia
786-9290
'5 Advonce , '6 Door
Fri. , Sat.:
'6'· Advonce, '7'· Door
Ad..,once " c ite" ot Fopeve ' s.
Rainy Dey Reco"rds. , TESC
8ookstore & O.J ' 5 Sound C"y
at Sou'" 50und Center
.
..
2 1 ondo .... r
'
\
it back when we're through . Our empty
cups, plates and wrappers we'll deposit in
a nearby trash container, We can all
return our trays and dishes to Saga.
The Evergreen campus is a beautiful environment. Let's participate in keeping it
that way .
Donnagene Ward
Conferences
An Outsider's Response
In response to K.C Audette's article on
Alaska: who the hell are you so angry at?
Alaska is. part of the United States and
whether you like it or not, people have
the right to live there, even if they weren't
born there. I sympathize with your feelings regarding exploitation of land, but it's
happening everywhere - not just Alaska .
What concerns me is your attitude toward
" the Outsiders." Should a person be required to stay in the state s/ he was born
inl
You say, "Alaska purges itself of those
who would," then you say "exploit our"
and " interfere with our. " Is it the climate
and land of Alaska that cleanses itself, or
is it narrow-minded people who deny
others the opportunity to make a new life l
I tried to sort out what you wrote into
"
something constructive, but couldn 't get
past you r anger, and the message of stay
out of Alaska .
I don't know why you came to Evergreen and Washington, I'll assume it was
~cause you wanted to learn and perhaps
improve your life, I've li ved in the Northwest since I was born, but I don 't immed iately conclud e that people from other
areas of the world who come here are are
out to exp loit the land, or steal qua li ty
from my life, thougb in fact they may
Open your eyes . You ca n' t pro hibit
. people w ho are not born in Alaska from
living or moving there. No matter how
much it may feel like it -A laska does not
belong only to Alaskans, just like Washington doesn't belong on ly to Washingtonian s. Alaska is not a possession, you
ca n' t put a barb-wire fence around it. I
don't think I know any A laskans - if they
,]re anything like you described , or the
image I get from your word s, I'd def initely
remember . Because I've never met anyon e
with such anger and lack of compass ion
You might want to get off your highAlaskan-horse, learn to accept and tol erate, weak and strong, non-A laskan s, and
maybe try to put all that anger into something constructive .
Kim Bussell e
I/V tld t-~ rn ess
Hlver SChoOl IS .,pon so rl nt; firSI annual Evergreen poo l SLALOM Of r ,So(U IOa 'f
Here Debbie Olson teaches E. . . erg ree n student Ray Ki rby proper w h ltewd t E'f • '\ l llfl g
t)rll~U(' · . r' or more Ifl f orrnd tlo n , Crl ll 8f)6- 653() ( 'Ir 8f36-828~
' . , ,, I t)
.'.
I Ir, 1 h,ls been Loopprative but a change
.t! tllanagement pos itions in the bank has
n'. !'ntly delayed meetings on the issues .
Rainier ha s not been coope r at iv e .
R,linier will not t<llk to us about thi s,"
,'.1, helds statpd .
Ci ti zen presslIrp is important , according
to Rpverend William Cates of the Churc h
Counc il. " It\ made them more aware.
llwy'ye had to look at the i"Lle and make
<1 d,'cision ."
Tma Fie lds also thinks that crtiLen pr!'s,urt' is especia lly important at this time.
"5. nce Reagan has been President, w e've
had officia ls from South Afrita (visil the
UnitPd States) and the South African
~ocn'r team has played here . The bdnk s
,Jr( ' II''' lik ely to develop a po li cy statement that criti cizes the governmpnt of
,>outh Afri ca. The climat e being generated
by thl' leadership of this count rv is one
I hd t is supportive of the government of
Sou th Afri ca."
10c,1I bank s drp not usually im'ol\ed
' " .n ternationa l In Vl'stment <; . Steven ,\.o\\,er
,)1 lumwatpr St,lte fl ank f'xIJlainerJ Ih"ir
;''''Iti on . " Wp hd ve a moral po li L\ !hat
1,,< .11 money stdV' loca l W e Invest ,',I( hm
: h""ton County if po"ible, and nl'\er
""I,icll' the State of Washin gton
Thi s
d(}(', no t includ e mon E'y i n t ederal
"" urities .
Ronna Smith at
11'lnk (wh ich h"s iI
thp bank does not
111('nt s outside tlw
South Sou nd National
branch at TE SC), sa id
currently ·have investUnited States because
(onse rva tiw il" .11 poli cie, " WI' in yest
In " Ifl' ,p( urrtips. To go out 0 1 the ,'"lIl on ,
p,lrti cul ari y somew here lik "' Sout h ,. -\tlle "
w()uld not be t()nw; tenl With th,1\ IJu li e\
'>h,' sa id Sout h Sound dOt's ha\ (' 'onw
oll t-of -qate in Vf'Qllwnt s LInd ,I ,..-k h()lclf'rs ,
b,,1 attl'mpb to kee p bank funch .n the
1,)( .. I f'conomy
Stevenson's tJ3icydes, Ltd
474 Cleveland Avenue
Tumwater, WA 98501 • (206) 352-0707
'I'lRED or, 'I'j-{.E; SAiliE 0 LD
KIND OF BIKE STORE??
We think we are DIFFERENT!
STEVENSONS specializes in
top quality RACING and TOURlNG
EQUIPlViliN'I', at hone s t prices!
We carry only Quality ~quipment,
including PEUGiO'r bicycles and
frames, EDDY IVLERCKX framesets,
and our own STEVENSON FRAIVIES
manufactured on the premises.
We also offer complete service
by Olympia's most experienced
personnel.
STOP BY AND SEE WHAT OLYIVIPIA'S
ONLY ENTHUIASTS BIKE STORE HAS TO
OFFER. WE DON'T THINK YOU'LL
BE DISAPPOINTED!!!
Located in the Tumwater Shoppin
Center between 4 QUARTERS and the
MASON JAR.
I!!~CYCLES
r:;l)..
"PEUGEOT~
April 8, 1982
The Cooper Point Joornal
page 3
News & 'Notes
KAOS Auction Nets $500
"AOS rece ived bids lor oxygen, coneIolll' , .:m d politi ca l footba ll <;. in their
.1Illlual Sprrn g auction last weekend. The
nn n·( omnwrcia l station located at TESC
r,lN'd 'lbout SiSOO during tilE' auc tion .
,\It hough t IlE'Y hild hoped to raise closer
tll $1~n() . Station Advisor Mi chae l Huntsbergt'r ,a id Ill:' \\'a, 1)leased
'11 \e hundred bucks is Si500 bucks . We
Ill','d till' IllOllPY ," he sd id Irank ly. " We've
d O Il t' \\(' 11 ('!l ough o n otlw r Iundraist'rs to
IlId, LIP ,OIllP at thl" , 1.lCk '
" -\():i 111U,1 r.l lSt' clos p 10 $7,OO() of it,;
\ ("Ifl\ :l>21l .t)()(J budgpt TIl(> polil ica l foot b.ll1 J' lglwd b\ t llP .Washln gton Legi>laIun ', \\"11 1 10 Iht· highest bidder tor Si15
,,-\()~ .11", ,llIcliolleci thrt'p gu im'd pi gs,
,llld .1 b,,,k('l h,lll ' Igned b\' Ihe SOlli rs .
\ 11 Ill'lll' \\ l'rt' clon,lIed b\ tilt' bU Si ness
' ()IllIllUIlIII . IIhl Ch Dt'veJop lllt'nl Coorcli -
nator Ka ren Heuvel sa id gave the station
about $500 worth of goods and 'servi ces .
She said thp items that were not bid upon
would 1)(' rpturned to Ihe bu sine>ses
Onp il em never bid upon wa'> thp
mystpriou, blark box, wh ich li stpnt'r..
hpdrd l 'lllit tin g slrangp sounds, bu t whil h
was never identifi ed. The box was kept in
the station during the auction, and was
fr equently the sub ject of plea s for money
" ju st bid one dollilr and we' ll te ll you
w hat the bl ack box is that' s making the
sound ," sa id Huntsberger at o ne point
du rin g the aucti on . Th e bid never came
in , and Huntsberger sa id that he w ill
never reveal t he source of t he sound
beca~se of it.
A dollar was promi sed to th e statio n,
but in return they had to promi se to pl ay
Lawrence Welk for the ca ll er. Usually,
playing "s leazy li stening music " (as KAOS
ca ll ed it), until a ca ll er makes a pledge, is
one of the tactics used by the station
during auctions and marathon s to generate pledges .
The auct ion is to be fo ll owed by a f il r
fundraiser next month, and t he Spring
Marathon starti ng May 14.
KAOS Goes Stereo
'\ tt.' r III (l '1',1[' 0 1 (!t 'ld \', KI\()S- tlll I'
l.!Oll1g , l l'rt" ,\ 11 01 Ilwl l' ,urrpnl Pqll iP'
11Wlli :' ,I,'r,'{) but tl1l' «(llllIl IUllilv raeli, ·
"tdt H )1' If d
dfl ·d
ell
1L)\
\\d'"
undbll' to .l!1
,1"11" .I<1 ! 11 ,1 IrPqU <'Il, \ modulator W,I '
111I: ' '"",,1 The 1110 1111., ' \\ :11 I11pasurp hUI\
IlH!. I, '11 till' P{)i l 'llI l,d p'1\\('r 01 IllP rael i(J
.. t, tf li ',l I '" ht ' ll1~ lI"t'd
<I."
'11' Idul.llor \\'.1' \1I ,1. I11,' <I 1,1';1 I ,""
,1 " I ', \1 111')(' 1, "11"( 1 III Ill<' 1I,'lei III : 11,'
"
11 ~ ',!1
" t .l ! IiHl
1t il l d "I '
1\( /\ t "or
1\11{ iI,H ' )
HUIll\lwrgl'r ,a iel that the te'i t w ill be condUl Ipel Wi th till' diel of a qaf l mpmher, h"
'dr, ,lll ci " (' II (ddio. lllP ,Iaff membpr will
clrr v, , .rr'Jl IIHI Ill<' Olymp ia arpa, li stening
to Ihl' ,1 .tll(lIl ,\!lei H'porting Gn the CB
" hdl h,' h.'<I[' . Ilunt.<; hprg .. r ,<lid that th.,
1" ,1 dd Y would he fill ..d apprupri,ltply
w il h I",t p,ltlt'rn " and thelt li '>lpnpr'> w rll
h,' L!IV"ll advanc (-'d w,Hning'o .
'\\,(,'r, ' gOlllg 10 elo th(-' te .. ts, th{' 11
1111'[1 ,11 h,' d 101 ot hruhdhd dlicl w(-,' II '< 'I
111" ci.r l' , 10 go ,1.'r"1) "
()n I Ill' dd y that KAOS goe, stereo,
1"le 'llI 'r, Will h., trPdtpd to d fu ll day of
" Iun , I('reo ..o und .. "
Il ullhhl'rgpr C'xplainpd Ih(' difft'rPll' p
hC'lwO"'1l th(' cu rr('n l mono broad cas t and
01 , I, 'ro '() hro<!(kil"
" II you hdvP Iwo 'ipE'akpr'i , you gPI all
Ill<' IllU\!C oul of pac h '>peak er w hen
li ,tl'll lll g to 1110no With stprpo t he mU SIC
I' '> p[( '. ld bplwpen two speakprs, " he sa id .
II " Ihi .. ,prt'dellng I)('twl'pn thE' two
'1"'.11-.,'1 ' Ihal wrll "Ildbl" (1)(' '> t.H ion to
Pll tpr tain its li steners with " fun stereo
,ound ' Huntsberger ( Iaim s he wi ll have
tr ,lIn , running t hr o ugh p e~ fll e ',> l iving
room,>, allcl tpnni .. matches Irom o; peak er
to ' ill'ak" r in thp ir dens.
I hl' modulator that al lowed the station
to go ,>\prpo was fund ed hy a grant from
th, ' Hilas I ounda t ion and a supp lementary
iuncl pro\ Ielpd hv nSC\ Auxil iary Sprvices
Nesbitt Receives Faculty Status
I ~ ",
"l
t
'i ' , " ," '
r,
I."
"" h,IrI! '.,",hli l . ,'v1dllilge'r 0 1 II'\(' Com·
Illll :l li dl ion, Ilurlci ing for Ill!' 1",1 lour
Vt'.II ....
t~.
ul :\
, ..
n( )',\
I hi I ve rgnl( 'l l
11,, · not deser t ing IiI, l um Burl, '
,1
nlembpl"
01
,wei 11." taug ht at I verL;rl" 'n bpforp
t'-" " h'ti <)111, Ih" rank s 01 a 'Illa ll group'
h l'l l4rt'I '11 ('lllplo\'E'PS who aI( ' both fMlI
d11c1 ,I,I 11 ',,"v. '11 ' Ielff nlPl11ht-'r, - fivp pr"
1""lon,1I Irl lI.rrlan <" john Aiki n of Compu tt'r SPI"VII f " and r--.:esbil t -t'njoy th"
ul1usual , Idlu , I hpse I)('op lp Me (0111nlit lH! tu If'ac hlng In at I.. a,t onp progral1
01 ( I(Jrrll natpcl study ev('rl thrpp ypars .
Il l,"
AN
A 1.1< ull y 1I11'IllI)(,f 110rnl,111 \' .1\\UIllI" Ih..
, 1.111 IUllc lioll while til<' ,1. 111 Ill<'mbt'r I'
tl 'd e 1 1In ~
1'111 ' .lrr.lllgPllwnl has ,,'v,'r. I1 b.'nd lh
tor I v,'r L!rt'('Il , cI' (ordillg I() Ae .Icit'mll
1).'.In II.Hb.lr.l <'Ill ith . 1.11 ull\' .lIld ,tali
l11('mh.'rs I('am to appr('c l.llC' ,'de h other' ,
rol" , S,t ucipnh eire' ablp to 1,;,ull from 1111'
' P'" 1,1 1 ('xp('rtl'p o f staft protp" londl,
rll<' ,t.llt nl('lllber, hav(' an opportunity I"
I",J( '1 lull -tim.' with ot her fa culty
Nol th'lt t(,drh ing is np\,\, to Npsbitt Hp
has work .. d with spvpral programs and
t,lughl works hop, ancl modules at Fvpr·
grp('n H{' hcl' bl't'n d Visiting Profpssor of
Thp.ll<'r at tllP Univpr,ity of Missouri ,
AMERICAN ORIGINAL
tclught olC tlng work, hops at Portland State
ancl oppratpd hi s own theater "hool In
Port land , Orpgon
U pon tlr,t IllP('tl nJ,: Npsb itt, It IS harcl to
b(,II(,v,' Ih l' ,mal l, Qui et man with thf'
, Iighl ,loop [(>ally does all tht' thing'>
UP(lit('d to him. HIS quick , .ontained
gp,turp, .lrf' thp first clups to thp e no r·
IllOU' pnt'rgy ancl organila tion his hi slory
het r,lVs' Np,bllt has worked w ith stage
proc!uctlClIl al Sa n Diego', O ld C lobe
Theatr.. , tlw Amprican Conse rvatory
The.l!!'r In Sa n I ranci s( 0, the Milwaukp.,
Repprtory Theater, the Hartman Theatpr
in St'lnforcl, Co nnectic ut, the Ameri can
Theatpr Company and thp Storefront
Theatpr in Portl and, and thp Missourr
Repertory Thf'ater in Kansas City . He has
workE'd li ve years in summer stock productions in Ca nada and the United States
N ew York's theater distriCt's designations
grant him the interesting credit of having
worked On-Broadway, Off· Broadway and
Off-Off Broaclway The last four years,
Nesbitt ha<; been really off Broadway at
Evergrpen .
As Communications Building Manager,
Nesbitt schedul es building use, provides
equipment arcess and handles budgets for
theatrical productions at Evergreen . He
also proc!uces the Performing Arts Series
and plans Evergreen Expression s. The big· .
gest stumbling block to hi s involvement
as a full-time teacher is finding someone
to take hi s place o n the staff .
Nesbitt has not restricted himse lf to
running th e daily affairs of the Com Building He sponsors individual contracts and
OC(,l"()Il,lllv rilrp( I, productions at thp
, " lll'g.'
Np,hitt rpariilv admit> 10 hi s credils as a
prolP\\ ional managpr and dirt'Llor. Asked
ahou t hi, dc t ing pxperi ences. he looks
dWdY , pau<,e~ and then hesitantly acknowl·
"dgp, thaI hI' ha.. made monpy that way
" I likf' to work With ac tors , but I don 't like
to act. 1'111 d gooc! acting coac h ."
I t','-iI1I1'15' di s(' u<;s ion of teach ing actors
that Nesbitt <;udclenly becomE'S effusive
" 1vprgrppn i, bptwixt and betwpen (as a
thpater .. chool) It'<; not a professional
training program, but we're not just trying
to tpac h pE'ople to be good appreciators
01 thpa tpr Evergreen has to deci d e a
dir('( li on "
HI' envisions a coordinated studies program in expres sive arts in "a real interdis·
ciplinary mode, including, for example, a
scienti st and an anthropologist There's a
lot of technology involved in thea ter now.
Theater i<; involved in the examination of
personality and cu lture'" He is adamant
that act ing techniques are not sufficient
training for students interested in theater
careers.
Nesbitt is also animated o n the subject
of theater management. He points out the
difference between arts management and
runnin g a business . "Arts management is
generall y non-profit Ahout 30% of t hE'
budget must be raised from outside
sources . Therefore gra nt writing and fundraising are important parts of th e job"
Without pLlbli city, the arts cannot reach
thpir audience, so arts man agement rpquirps adverti sing expertise .
Th e theater manager must have the
ski ll s of businessman , advertisin g director,
medi a techni cia ns, and artist. To these
qualifi ca tions, Ri chard Nesbitt adds hi s
proven abi lity to share hi s know ledge with
students .
All submissions for News and Notes
must be received no later than 5 o'clock
Friday the week before they are to appear.
Submissions must be TYPED DOUBLESPACED, and the first few words should
be capitalized. Submissions must be seven
lines or less. NO EXCEPTIONS!!!
APPLICATIONS ARE NOW BEING
ACCEPTED FOR THE MASTERS DEGREE
PROGRAM IN PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION.
App li cat io ns for both full- and part-time
study in the two-year program mu st be
submittecl by April 30. Forty students will
be accepted for the 1982-83. program
which begins September 27. Contact the
Admissions Office, 866-6170 or call Dr.
Lidman at 86&·6049 weekdays , for more
information .
A PREVIEW OF EVERGREEN'S SUMMER
FOREIGN STUDIES will be presented
April 13, at the Tuesdays at Eight Lecture
Seri es, at 8 p.m . in the Rec ita l Hall of the
Communi ca ti ons Builcling Summer stud ies
in Israe l, Creat Brita in, Creece and Italy
are on tap thi , jun e for up to 50 students
who w ill st ucl y ab road with three fa culty
members . For add iti onal in formation o n
the summer trips ca ll the Off ice of Admissions at X6170 .
FACULTY: DO YOU WANT TO TEACH
IN ABERDEEN AT NIGHT AND ON WEEKENDS DURING THE 1983-84 sc hool year?
I f not , se nd Mark Levensky your proposals
for Annual Progams that you want to do
instead. So fM he has rece ived only four,
and one of those was his own. Do it Quick
because the 198.1-84 curriculum will soon
be dpcicied, and facu lty assignments made.
PERSONAL LIFE MANAGEMENT SKILLS
will be the focus of a four-part series
sponsored by Keep Enhancing Yourself
(KEY) a nd Counseling Services . Each
'>ess ion will be held at noon, and students,
,tatl, and fac ul ty are encouraged to come,
.lIld bring a brown-bag lunch. All sess ions
wi ll meet in the Lib. 3500 lounge April
I I Time Mangement; April 27 Budget
'v\anagement ; May 11 : Depression Man,lgpmpnt ; May 25 Stress Mangement For
morp information , ca ll Jeff at X6464 or
Coun<;p ling Sprvi ce> at X6151
INTERESTED IN A WORKSTUDY POSITION OR AN INTERNSHIP AT THE
COUNSELING CENTER? Bring a brownbag lunc h when you attend an informa.
tlon se<;<; ion o n April 14 at noon in
CAH .106. Counse ling Servi ces, the Couns(' lor Training Program, and the appl icali on and hiring proce<;s will be discussed.
It vou are unable to attend, contact Coun,('ling Sprvlc es at XhlS1 .
THE MEDIEVAL SERIES IS LOOKING
FOR ENTERTAINERS: ARTISANS, AND
VENDORS, for the Medieva l Faire and
Tournament. It will be held the weekend
of May 8 and 9, in the fi eld behi nd the
Semi nar Huildillg The Faire wil l sta rt at
10 a.m . and end at 6 .p.m . For more infor. mation, ca ll 866-6220 or stop by CAH 305.
LEISURE EDUCATION REGISTRATION
CLOSES tomorrow, April 9, so hurry on
down and register for the works hops
whi ch include 15 sessions in sports, 17 in
movement, 10 in art, 15 in aquat ics, and
19 others. For more information, o~ a
comp lete li st ing of workshops stop by the
3rd floor of the Recreation Bu ildin g or
cal l 866-6530 weekday<;
HERE'S YOUR CHANCE!! The O lymp ia
TESe'S ORGANIC FARM HAS COMFood co-op is current ly preparing the
MUNITY GARDEN SPACE AVAILABLE.
ballot for its May board of direc tors elecThe Si l O renta l fee in cludes tool" irrlL;d'
tiolls . Anyone who has an interest in
tion water , and organic fertilizers lor
. and/ or experi ence wi th t he cooperative
STUDENT POETS: This year's Earth Fair
more informat ion ca ll 866-6 161
way of business is eligible. A twelve-hour
: elebration will include a poetry rea ding
trainin g sess ion will be offered after the
on Silturd ay, April 24 . If you are in terested
IF YOU HAVE RECEIVED A NATIONAL
elect
ions . For more inforRlati on, ca ll the
in read ing, please attend an orga ni zat ional
DEFENSE/DIRECT STUDENT LOAN whrlt-'
co-op
at
754-7666
or
visit
the
store
any
mpeting at the Environmental Re source
attending Evergrt-'en and you p lan tl', " radday from 10-7.
Cen ter, CAI:3 103, at noon on Tuesday,
uate, withdraw , or go on Ipa'. i" next
April 13. Please bring a sa mpl e of you r
" quarter, you are required to go thr fJl.lgh a
OF
ANGER
AND
CONFLICT
DYNAMICS
work that you fee l i, appropriate to ce leNDSL Exit I nterview before Ipav in g. IOlease
IN OUR SOCIAL STRUCTURE, .l1ll()llg
brating th e ea rth . For fu rth er information,
cOlltac
t thp St udent Accounts Ofii ce at
,,1111'1" I" IIP' . w rll Iw cll\( l"",<1 .\lHI d.'.1 11
ca ll Ri ch at 866-6784.
fl66-6441\ to make an appoi ntment
,.,.tll III .1 twO-d.1V w(lrb h"I' I>n \ \"111"11
" Ile! ·\m.!, ·,. April '17 ,lIld til 11"111 q " \"llIr
STUDENTS, STAFF AND FACULTY ARE
. 1.1\ .1 11(1 t2 · ' )(lllel.lI ·\dll ll"" ," I' !l,r-"cI
INVITED TO HAVE COFFEE AND IN" , .... /ldll1 L: .... t ,ilt , I I' 'i ll ~ ... () II ' ~r;(J ,I :; , . 1_
CARDIOPULMONARY RESUSCITATION
FORMAL CONVERSATION WITH THE
I ... 11" ,th,r! i i, , , ' \\1)111 1 ': "
I I I; 1 1 . " 1", I
LESSONS w ill be oifprpd Sprin g Quartc·r
BOARD OF TRUSTEES durin g their
,. 111 11 . . . ( \ \ ' ; . . I .... ( "I I ' t ' I
,I '
II, ':
Advanced regr> tral lon is reqUir ed for t l1(o
. ; : ( )- ',.,
monthly board m ee tin g o n Thur sday ,
'v\onday af te'rn ocJII or even ln," ( lasses I (J
April 15, from 2 to 2: 15 p .m . Thp meeting
I"('g i stp r or l or l110re i nt or ill at i o n ( al l
begins al 1:30, ancl will include for conHt'alth Sprvl' p, .1 ' flbu-u2()(t
TWO SUMMER JOBS ARE AVAILABLE
sideration a proposa l to avoid housi ng
rental rate in creasE's, policy di sc uss ions WITH THE CITY OF TUMWATER : one is
,1 rpcrea ti o n / tenni s instru c t o r a nd th e
regard i ng ri sk cove nant, suspended operao thpr , arts / crafts l ()ordina t o r Co ntact
tions, and corrective empl oy ment program
policies
Ca rppr Planning and Placement, X6193,
Library 1213, for more information and
application forms
WILDLANDS RESEARCH INSTITUTE
"WOMEN'S SEXUALITY: ISSUES AND
Join a Backpacking Research Team
ANSWERS" a workshop sponsored by the
in Ihe Mountain Well, Canada or Alaska
Women's Health Clinic will be held SatATTENTION TO All STUDENTS THAT
On-sit e resea rch to preserve
• Wildlife Species
urday, April 17, and Sunday, April 18,
HAVE A WASHINGTON STUDENT LOBBY
• Wilderness Hab ita ts
from 10 a.m . to 4 pm. For registration
PETITION: plPil'op rt'lurn your flPtition(s)
Su mmer 1982 - 3 unll s
dnd morC' information call 86b-b238.
Course derails "
,,, ,oon a<; po'>sihlp to eit hpr Sf'If-Help
W ILDLANDS RESEARCH IN STITUT E
,'g.l l Aid, Lib .ln4, or to th .. I V<'rgreen
407 Atlanllc A\le ", San ta C ru z. CA 9506 :':
( CJul1(il Off ill-', Lib . .1227 .
(408) 427·2 '06
THREE POSITIONS OF GARDENER are
open for th" '>ummer elt T~SC. Prl'krpncp
will h., glv('n to pnrollpd st ucienh dt ~vpr·
g[('l'n with prror ('xperipnn' in mdlntdining
~round, The' tlr,t 20 qUdlifipd applicants
",rli h,' Inlt'r VII'Wl'cI. l or morl' mformation
,,1 11 th .. P( 'N1Il1l<'I Officp dl Xh.lb1 0;
1«(, t.!() Applv hl'lor.. Apr il 1h
1
II .
f,
GIVE MOTHER A SMILE!
KAYAKERS START OUT YOUR PADDLING SEASON RIGHT! The first annual
Kyak Slalom Race will be held at TESC's
pool on Saturday, April 10. There will also
be a two-hour workshop before the race
to introduce skills to beginners All equipment will be provided. There will be
events for men and women of all ages
and abiliti es. The workshop starts -at 10,
warmup at 12, and the ra ce will be at
1:00. The $3 registration fee covers both
the workshop and the ra ce . Registrat ion
forms are avai lable in the Leisure Education Center office (3rd floor REC ce nter) ,
the pool office, and around campus. For
more information, ca ll Wilderness River
Sc hool at 866-8285 .
ENLARGEMENT SPECIAL
Receive 25% off a picture mat with
each enlargement 'o r reprint order!
"QUITE POSSIBLY ONE OF THE
BEST FILMS EVER MADE.
It is a masterful,
heartbreakingly
beautiful movie."
-Rob Baker.
The Soho Weekly News
"'Heart of Glass'
is a strange movie
of stunning
originality."
5 x 7
-No rma McLain Stoop ,
After Dark
Enlargements
8 x 10 Enlargements
A LUIS VALDEZ
film
z..... su....
Saturday, Apri 1 24
3:00, 7:00, & 9:00 P-~.
Lecture Hall I
Admission $1 . 00 Students
Sponsored by 'MEChA & KEY-Special Services
p.l~t' ~ The Cooper Point Journal
April 8,
COLOMBIA
BAKING CO.
Traditional Breads
and Pastries
111 'N. Columbia
352-2274
SruDENTS COVERED BY EITH[R OF
OUR HEALTH INSURANCE PLANS haw
the option to be covered by the sa III I'
plan during one Quarter while on leavp or
durin g summer vacation . If you want thl '
cove rage you must fi ll out an in sura;llt'
card and subm it it no later than tht' Sth
class day. For more informati on, " "I' Anna
Mae in Student Accou nts o fficp
Werner Herzog's
A New Yorker Films Release
each
From Your Flvorlt. Color Neg.llve
. (110,126 or 3Smm Size)
OFFER GOOD: APRil 12 - 21, 1982
at 3:00, 7:00, & 8:30
in Lt-f1
.20C
Reprints
HEART OF GLASS
Friday
$ .89
$1.99
TESC
THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE
BOOK STORE
April 8, 1982
The Cooper Point Journal
page 5
"
Analysis
Opinion
Purchasing Political Stability
U.S. -Multinationals Drain Domestic Ec~nomy
by Bob Davis
Ronald Reagan may be the best thing
to happen to this country's movements in
some time. His policies toward welfare,
food stamps and related programs make it
obvious that we cannot sit back and
assume the system is working. In times of
If'sser threats to the needy , the disenfran chised masses were much less vocal
than they are now becoming.
Poor people in this country always have
reilson to be defiant, although their
, hances to protest are fairly few. The U .S
pol i,y toward addressing their needs is
one of conciliation: rather than messing
with the private sector to produce a full employment economy, private sector
bu~iness is allowed to run its course
(whi ch tends toward fewer jobs and
greiHer profit margins ), and is then taxed
to provide a " handout" to the disenfranchi,.. d . We manage to buy politica l
'itilhilil\', first endorsing an exc lusive econollli c ~vs t e lll and then using some of its
proll" to convince people that the system
i, II ork IIlg.
Protest mu st coniorm to in stitutional
circlimstance'i . and on ly when certain
(Ot1(illlOm prevail i, dt'tl,1I1ce a viab ll'
,l lt erna l ivf' for oppreswd people Tht'Sf' (i rCUIll'iI,ll1c(', includf' politi ca l and econolllic in, r,lbility , and a change in con·
,c lou,np" oi the opprl'ssed .
Pollllc(\1 IIl'ldbility oii('rs Oil(' l hill1(I '
tur prote,t hl'( <luse. given a situation
wl,prp riet i,ln ct-' is dt'lllonstrated . pol it ic "I
Il'dd,'" h"vI' three option s' repn·'sion .
igl1(lr,1t1(" or concilidtion . In tim(', (It
p(lliti( ,11 ,t,lhi lity, rt'pn'-;s ion or il-:i1ordn ce
bt'(on1l' tlw ':'as ie,t choi(f'>s, bel ,lIN'
1I',leter, dll not ha\-!:' to f,'><l r lo"ni-! Import,lllt '«gllu'n l s ll; thplr politlla l ,upport
A common method of retaining political
stability is to start a war Short of thi s, the
Re,lgan administration is trying to eonvinn' us that the "commies" are going to
~et us if wt' dOIl' t shaPf> up . Rather than
crt-atl' a unifit'd nationalist spirit, we find
that thl's, ' dforts to get on the nationalist
hilndwagon ar< ' running into stiff rf's istt' protf'Sh against U .S. ar~s imrpasl's
and Involvf'mpnt in 1:1 Salvador are now
rn--i n),: <;('riou,ly ("omparP<i to V'C ,t nalll-' 'ra
dl'monstrations, whil(' ,1 year ilgo th!:'
sal11l' ( omp,lrison was IIsf:'d to disnll';s th ..
movement' s importancp
I conomi ( instability is an important
pr!:'curS0I1 to all forms of chang... This I.,
larl-:el\' hp, ,1 USp pconomi, IIl,tahilily uf}-
<111<
Analysis
By Tom Schaaf
Social norms favor individualism ana
self-denigration for personal inability to
cope with hardships. The American work
ethic is a good example of this : we are
taught that when we fail to get ahead, it
is our own fault for being lazy or stupid.
This attitude is transcended only in the
most dire conditions (which are fast
approachinp.l. The brei'ldown of social
norms such as this work ethic is a rare
event, as evidenced by the co~tinually
alarmed editorials and other signs of
public opinion at the slightest provocation
by an oppressed group.
The change in mass opinion among the
oppressed is the first conscious step
toward defiance: "the system" loses
legitimacy, the work ethic no longer convinces many people that they and their
neighbors are lazy or stupid. With this
rejection of the work ethic comes the
feeling among the oppressed that they
have "rights" under the system, if not to
work or land, at least to some ticket to
sets otherwise static relationships in the
survival. When these "rights" are asserted,
business sector, which in turn upsets
people begin to gain a new sense of
political relationships by destabilizing
efficacy, feeling that there is someth ing
politi ca l alignments Leaders must decide
they can do about their plight.
what business~ or other economic forces
The only real freedom we have in a
will remain dominant and what new'-"
capitalist economy is the freedom to
forn" will emerge, in order to decide
starve. Reagan's policies acknowledge
wherl' to place their alliances for the
this, but he has not yet dared to explain
strong!:'st base of support. While the busithis to his electorate. Most people would
'ness world set'ms [0 be struggling to
probably wish to change our society if
maintain ih status quo, the "consumer" is
this "freedom" is laid bare by the Reagan
be, oming an increasingly powerful voice .
administration , Many people already do
Thi s can he seen in :he PacifiC Northwest
wish to change our society, and their
with th,' " ratepayer revolt," and across thp
strength is growing rapidly . Most likely,
'1atlon 111 thp swelling ranks of unemthough, we will end up fighting for the
ploy(>d , Politicians must now choose besame socially debilitating "welfare state, "
tween business interests or the irate eleeand self-denigration will again become
tor ate as a new "economic" power.
the rule. Perhaps we need something
more than a handout or a job to create a
- better society. But we're not likely to get
it. Perhaps we can only hope to regain
~ last generation~ s "advances" toward an
or~ ega litarian society.
' d
a
va
What's All ThisThen About EI S I
BI
~rjn
l<E'nnv
to r"turn to thp previou s framework s of
our formpr governments, temporizing,
lorn hy polit ical vio lence and bloodcrf'atlng obstacles and finally impeding
shpti ~I Sa lvador is the smallest and most · dpvelopment of the objectivps set out in
d('nseil )lopulated country in Central
,.. ' the' Armed forces Proclamdtion , Thus, tht,
AmerIC a EI Sa lvador has the highest rate
falsp notioli of .hp nputrillity of thp milioi llrll'mploymen t on the continent at
tdry
is ht-'ing heard again . And that has
SII % <Inti illitpraey i .. ,1150 SO% According
gpnerated a ril-:htward tu-rn in the process
10 1')76 stati slic." EI Sa lvador had the
o t dpt11ocratil<lI ic)ll and social change," A
IO\I'I -; t pf' r (,lpltal ca loric intake of any
npw gov0rnnWI], i, formed with no civili an
( Oll ntrv in L,lt In America . Roughly 75%
partip .. pxcept thp Christian Democrats .
oi all S,llvacioran childrpn under age 5
1<)/lt) (Mdrch) - The outspoken defender
"ufi ... r i rom m~lnutrition Thi s reflec:ts the
of human ri ght s, Archbishop Oscar
till I that 1->0 <)." oi the land is owned by 2'Jo.
Romero, is murdprt'd . As early as 1977,
0 1 I h, · popu lallOn and more than 40% of
the Whitl' Warriors League, an ultra-ri!,ht
tl", pt-asan t, are landless. The main exgroup, had publicly threatened to kill all
pmh arE' ( ollep (compri sing 44% of all
I('suit prip,ts, charging tlw Ca tholi c
('\port- ) and cotton
Chur, h with the promot ion of comt:: Salvador has bpen under conlinuous munism Onep again there is c1 mas..
militMV ru le sinee '1932 , longer than any
resignation of cabinI'I m e mber ~, mostly
other rount ry in Latin America . At presen
Chri stian Democrats, who are repla,ed by
the country is ruled by il civilian-military
right wing and military person s.
lunta h ead~d by President Jose Napoleon
1980 [April) - The Democratic RevoluDuarte . Her<' ; . .' ':::rief chronology of
tionary Front (I'DR) a broad coalition of
(,,'ents Ipadlllg up to and immediatel,y
religiou s, professional, technical, labor,
following thp formation of the present
peasants and student groups and political
lunta :
,
parties is formed, Among the changes this
1977 - Deiense Minister Humberto
party seeks are: an end to the power and
Romero is elected president with military
the poli tical, economic and social dominsupport . These elections are generally
ation by large capitalists and landholders ;
considered f ixed .
compl ete liquidat ion of the economic,
1'J7!l - The "Law for the Defense" is
political and military dependence of their
pniKlpd abridging freedom of 'speech,
cou ntry with respect to U.s, imperialism;
prp.,." public assemblies, strik es and civil
ensuring democratic rights and freedoms
lihprtles.
for all people, particularly for the working
1979 (Oct) - General Romero is ousted
masses; turning over to the people the
In a bloodless coup d'etat by two colonel s
means of prodi}ction; rai sing the material
Gutt ierez (cons idered right wing) and
and cu ltural sf.Jndard of living of the
Majano (considered to be a moderate) . A
population; and, encouraging organiza) -ll1ember civilian junta (junta means
tions of all peoples at all levels to obtain
" together") and cabinet is f~ with
the t losest identification between the
centrist and some left partiCipation .
people and the government. This group is
Promises for reform include land redi stribnot a recognized .political party by the
ution and human rights investigations are
government of EI Salvador nor by the U .S.
madC',
government.
l':mU\JuneJ -Political organizations, in
1980 (Jan .) - Two of the civi lian junta
alignment with the FDR, form the United
members, including Guillermo Ungo (who
Revolutionary Directorate (DRU) -the
hds sin ce jC,;:lhj the opposition as presimilitary arm of the FDR. ,
dent of their pol iti ca l party - the Der:no1980 [Sept.) -Colonel Majano, one of
l r,lti( Rpvolutionary Front - resign along
\\lth 80% of the cabinet, claiming there is the leaders of th e coup d'etat in 1979,
leaves the junta and joins the opposition.
l'lt l!' cham e for reform given current
1980 [Oct.) - The FDR/DRU party
Illrl,t.1ry inilllPn.-e. In his letter of resignareaches a new level of unity with the
t,<'n . Un!;o ,1S'; ('rt s that " those minority
formation of the Farabundo Marti Front
II,t,'r,·,t, (of the right) have been strengthfor National Liperation (FMLN) .
",Hod d,lIl\', pl'lilning, as they have been,
I'.I).!" h
rill' Cooper Point Journal
April 8, 1982
1980 (Nov.) -Six leaders olthe FDR art'
dragged from a meeting and murdered by
government security forces .
19H1 (Jan .) - The junta imposes martial
law . rMLN announces a general offensive.
19H1 (March) - Military appoints Christian IJf:'mouat Jose Napoleon Duarte as
prf'si cient and Colonel Guttierez as vice
president. Duarte was mayor of San Sa lvador in the late 1960's and was considered
to b(-' quite progressive, He won the presiden ti al elE'rt ions in 1972, but after a ballot
rpcount by the military " proved" that
DUMtf' had actually lost , he was exi led.
Hi~ appointment to the presidency wa'
no doubt an attempt to portray the image
Ihilt the government was still centrist,
dp.. pit .. all contrary reports . Duarte (omIT1pnt('d to the N. Y. Times that "t he only
r!:'ason I am in this position is because I
have the support of the army ."
1981 - The Reagan administration's
policy begins to take shape. Before his
iniluguration , there were ongoing contact'
between the right and the ultra-right in
. EI Salvador and members of the Reagan
team .
One leader of dn ultra-rightist death
squad , General D'Aubuisson , declared in
a press conference that "all we have to do
is wait for Reagan's election to get the
ki nd of support we expect from th e U.s.
Government. "
In late November, 1980, members of
thf' rightist Productive Alliance, representing EI Salvador's principal business
, associations, met with Reagan's transition
team. This group called on the U.s. to lift
restrictions imposed on military aid on
grounds of human rights violations by
Salvadoran security forces and armed
right-wing groups. Secretary of State
Alexander Haig,assured them that human
rights in that country would become a
secondary issue under Reagan and greater
concern would be placed on international '
terrorism (by Communists) .
U.N. Ambassador Jeanne Kirkpatrick
said to the N. Y_ Times, "I think it's a
terrible injustice to the government and
the military in EI Salvador when you suggest that they were somehow responsible
for terrorism and assasination ." In an
interview with News-.veek, Kirkpatrick
insisted that violence in EI Salvador was
not caused by social injustice, "'1 situation
GuATEMALA
Since the late 19th century, the industrial nations of the world have had to
import raw materials, and export manufactured goods and finance capital.in
order to keep their economies function. ing smoothly and profitably, This fact has
always been the main driving force behind
colonialism i;lnd imperialism in modern
times.
In the past, imperial expan~ion .was
organized and administered by national
governments, and marked by a profoundly
arrogant nationalism. The overall national
interest generally superceded the specific
interest of a given investment if the two
were in conflict.
In the past four decades, however, this
system has been transformed. The world
economy is far more integrated and interdependent than ever before. The old
system of colonial imperialism has been
rerlaced by the economic imperialism of
the multinational corporations.
The global economy of the modern
world is dominated by the large multinational corporations. These corporations,
based in specific home nations, have
transcended the political and regulatory
boundaries of the modern nation state
through overseas investments, and the
creation of foreign-based subsidiary companies controlled by the parent corporation . This sytem is highly profitable for
the multinationals, and disadvantageous
to the bulk of the world's population,
both in the industrial nations and in the
underdeveloped Third World.
To show substantial profits, the largest
U .S. firms ana banks have become more
dependent than ever before on their overseas activities. According to the Institute
for Policy Studies, foreign-generated
Between 1966 and 1970, statisti cs from
the Institute for Policy Studies show a
63% rise in U.s.-produced exports was
outstripped by a 92% rise in laborintensive exports produced by foreign
subsidiaries of U.S,-based corporations.
Most of these exports are sold on the U.s
market. U.S .-based multinationals registered a 5.3% annual employment growth
rae of 2.7%. By the end of 1970, more
than a quarter of their employees were
based in territory outside the U.S, At the
same time, the employment capacity of
U .S. manufacturing as a whole was declining at a rate six times what it was in
the 1950's, As the trend towards utilizing
cheap overseas labor continues, domestic
employment can only suffer.
Rising unemployment is only part of
the negative domestic effects of foreign
investment. The declining productivity of
outdated
indu stry is aggravated by
the flight of investment capital from the
domestic economy. U.S, firms and banks
are reluctant to invest in the domesti c
industruak base, They prefer to invest
(ilpital in areas with cheap labor and low
tdxe-;.
Pro fits produ ced by US . firms ca n be
mao!:' to ,lp:)('ar in tax havens such as
Pandrl1<l . r!:'ducing the tax reveriues avail ,1hl, ' to Iht' ff'deral government. These
f,Klor' .1r(' a major contribution to the
con tinu," \VC'akening of thl' dollar, thus
they drt ' ' Ignifl cant causps of ri si'ng
infl.llHIIl .
"~ tdgflation ," the vicious spira l of
simu ltaneously rising inflation and unemployment ,can be directly ,onnec ted to
'ht· In'lld towards foreign investment by
L' .., Illultinational s.
... lort'over, these S<lme activit ie, severly
rt ,,: fI( t th!:' elforts of the feder'il governtn"nt to cope with "stagfidtion ." When
ovt'P;P,jo; activities of U.s. corporations
,11 (ount for a qUdrter of their employees,
.md , lose to half of their investments and
" 11 omt', the federal government fa ces
'\In'IllI' difficulty in formulating and'
"l i on inl-: employmenl. taxation and fiscal
p"li( it" th,ll might alleviate the economic
""Y'S of the nati on.
u.s:
income, in 1966, was 24% of domestic
income. By 1970, this figure had jumped
to 44%. The same period shows an increase in overseas investments from 25%
to 41% of domestic investments for the
top 125 U.S global firms .
Foreign acti , ities of U.S firms have an
increasingly Il <'~dtive effect on the
domestic economy, and represent a major
drain of capita l, income, and tax revenues .
Moreover, these overseas investments
have a direct effect on the average wageearner and consumer.
Before 1966, exports produced in the
U,S. contained a relatively higher labor
Forum
Resisting Taxes
Encourages Peace
component than did U.s. imports. Hence,
a rise in exports would increase domestic
employment, while a rise in imports
would have a minimal negative eifeL! on
employment. In the late 1%o's and early
197(Ys, U ,S, industry faced rapidly increasing domestic competition from Japanese
and Gprman imports .
A favored method of cutting production
costs for U.S, firms was to transf('r manufacturing operations to undprdewloped
areas such as Taiwan , Singapore, or the
U.S.-Mexican border art'a . These regions
dre markf'd by plentiful labor and the
lowest wages in the world , Cheaply prorluced goods from th!'-;,' "~'xport plat forms" can be sold in thp U.s ,1t compt'titive prices. With ewry transfer of
manufdcturing operations to ,111 "t'xport
IJlatform" there is a corn'-;ponriing decrease in employment opportunities at
home.
By Kris Nelson
t.-
t,•
that ex isted for decades, " but by "the
introduction of arms from the outside. "
As a matter of fact, by late October
1980, 10,000 people had already been
kill ed. DUring this period, the U.S , had
been the chief supplier of arms and military training-and so, following from
Kirkpatrick's statement, chiefly responsible
for the violence.
I n early 1981, Reagan asserted that
'human rights conditions had improved in
EI Salvador in order to resume military
aid . In fa ct, by September of 1981 , according to Amnesty International, there
had been 10,000 noncombatants killed,
more than during all of 1980. On May 6,
1981. Amnesty International, in.a letter to
Secretary of State Haig, reported that
"analysis of all avai lable data suggests
that the maJority of the reported viola'tions, including torture, 'disappearances'
and deliberate, cold-blooded killings , have
been carried out by the security forces
and have been directed against people
not involved in guerilla activities. "
1981 (April) - FDR sets these conditions
for a negotiated settlement: (1) With,drawal of U.S. advisers; (2) Cessation of
repression; (3) Termination of state of
siege, and (4) Access to media.
1981 (Aug.) -France and Mexico issuf'
a joint communique to the UN Security
Council recognizing the FDR/FMLN as a
representative political force.
In conclusion, the U.s. policy toward EI
Salvador, in fact t.oward all of Latin
America, can be summed up by these
words to the N . Y. Times from the U ,S.
Ambassador to EI Salvador, Dean Hinton:
"There would be a revolution here (in EI
Salvador) even if there were no involvement by Cuba, Nicaragua and other countries but the national interest of the U.s.
justifies military assistance to the Junta."
ters, guns and ammunitton 10 the armybacked government in EI Salvador. Clearly,
even the most persistent cri es for redu ced
of the Future Program
m!lit <.!;y spending are not enough ,
Our country's unprecedented military
The time has come to make our wishes
spending and nuclear weapons production for disarmament heard in a language
comes at a time of increasing tension
simple and effective: war tax resistance.
between the U.S , and Central America.
Even the Archbishop of Seattl e, Rev.
Given thi s holocaust portending climate,
Raymond Hunthausen, stated that he w ill
friends, religious and labor leaders, even
refuse to pay ha1f of hi s income taxes " in
a few politicians are speaking out against
resistan ce to nu clear murder and suicide."
us. military aid to EI Salvador, the MX
He, like many, has seen that our house is
Missile, and the multi-billion aollar Tri burning down while we throw gasoline
dent submarines, These are essential parts
on it.
of our overkill " defense," all being piled
This method of making a clear stateonto unjust cuts in social programs, cripment is by no means new or unpatrioti c.
pling our true national security.
Tax res istance played a pivotal role in the
Almost daily we hear or read of ca lls
American Revolution . The colon ial rebelfor nuclear disarmament. But how many
lion against British rule gained its strength
of us actually have seriously examined
through people refusing to pay for unjust
policies and treatment. Indeed, if tax
who's allowing the military insanity to
refusal helped form a democrati c society,
continue? Who is ultimately behind the
it is essential now to preserve life from a
production of a nuclear warhead every
eight hours? Is it President Reagan?
nuclear nightmare.
A direct way to stop paying for nuclear
General Haig? Boeing? Congress? No.
war preparation is to withhold telephone
We're responsible for it, US. taxpayers .
Many taxpayers are doing part of their
war taxes. This federal excise tax was
duty by asserting to legislators and
enacted in 1941 to bolster the military
Congressmen and women that the arms
budget. In 1966, it was extended to help
race, as well as continued U .S. financial
finance the Vietnam war. Include a messupport of the murderous military junta in sage with your phone bill explaining your
EI Salvador, is wrong. Such dissenting
refusal to pay the one percent federal
war tax. The phone company will inform
voices are important. In order for elected
officials to halt military madness, we must the IRS of tax refusal. However, according
.
to the national Fellowship of Reconciliainform them of our feelings.
Most of us, however, are calling for
tion, "the IRS rarely bothers to carry out
peace and paying for war. Currently, 56
the full range of collection procedures
percent of our federal tax dollar supports
and has never applied criminal penalties
war-related programs and 75 percent of
for phone tax refusaL"
the national debt that resulted from past
Considering the alternate uses of mil.iwars . We will bear the $60 million in
tary taxes naturally presumes some risk.
supplemental military aid that Reagan
But one option is being used more and
requested to buy and transport helicopmore. Military tax refusers can deposit
A Member of the Exploratiom
Advp.rtise in the
Ihpir withh eld taxes in the World Peace
lax Fund (WPTF) . This escrow account is
administered by the Conscience and Mililary Tax Campaign as a means to devote
;h~ military portion of federal taxes to
peacefu l purposes. The IRS has not yet
,Ittempted to seize money depos ited in
Ihe Fund.
The Conscience and Military Tax Campaign seeks to gain passage of the World
Peace Tax Fund Bill . It would al low conscientious tax objectors a legal alternative
to paying mto the $270 billion military
budgeted for 1982. If you are not willing
to continue finanCing the arms race, you
din send the percentage of your taxes
used by the military (56 percent) in check
or money order to the World Peace Tax
Fund Escrow Account, 44 Bellhaven Rd "
Bellport, NY 11713.
In order to document your diverting of
taxes, one of two methods can be followed if you are conscientiously opposed
to military uses of tax liability. You can
can claim a deduction by filing torm 1040
and completing Schedule A-Itemized
line
the
•••
•
C PJ
WHY?
Because we11llike,you,
•
percentage amount of the war tax deduction . Or, a War Tax Credit may be claimed
on the 1040. In Part IV Credits, cross out
one of the items li sted and write in "war
tax credit," and write the portion refused •
in the blank . Be sure to include a letter of
explanation, stating your deposit into the
WPTF, if it is used.
War tax resisters may have already paid
federal income taxes, usually due to withholding from wages. In such cases, request a refund "for taxes illegally, erroneously, or excessively collected" on the
1040-X Form for each of the three preceding years. You must accompany your
request with reasons for wanting a refund .
These ways of making your voice
against nuclear annihilation heard are
influential acts of conscience to preserve
life. Other methods of war tax resistance
can be followed; some are legal, some
illegal. Details on the Conscience and
Military Tax Resolution, alternative funds,
and military tax resistance cases can be
obtained from the Fellowship of Reconciliation, 5015 15th SE, Lacey, WA 98503,
491-9093.
and you'll like us ,
Think ahout our
-lOOO ( irn il.ltion :
April 8, 1982
The fyprgreen campus ,
state office building.."
and the OlvmpiJ MPd .
The Cooper Point Journal
rage 7
Oly Goes Blue with John Lee Hooker
Movie Review
Missing Flirts with Greatness
By David Goldsmith
Missing, directed by Costa-Gavras
Thi s isn't just another documentary /
drama -with Costa-Gavras at the helm
Missing flirt s wit h greatness. In thi s, hi ;
first Hollywood film , Costa-Gavras has
aga in shown himself to be a master of the
overtl y poi iti cal movie. By interspersin g
hi s hard-dri vin g, st raight· ahead app roach
with flashbacks, tasteful voice-overs and
bo ld visua l imagery, Costa·Gavras m anages to keep our attention riveted to the
scree n for much of the film .
It is un fortun ate, however, that
Miss ing' s p lot-line, unlike that of Costa·
Gavras' best known film, Z, makes for a
po litical thril ler w ith a notable lack of
thri li s. I n too many respects, Missing is a
Z· clo ne wh ich fails to reach the power
and perfec tion of its model. WherE'as Z
starts out slow ly only to move in exorab ly
fa ster , like a coin spinn in g to a freneti c
halt, Missing maintains a constant almost
sta t ic tempo u nti l, finall y, it limps' off into
the sun set Unable to susta in any tension
thi s way Missing should have ei ther been
(l It ill length or else made to deviate suir
stdnti all y from the actua l events it wa s
deSi gned to portray.
. Miss ing is purported to be the true story
0 1 the disappearance of Charl es Horman .
It , ,,pm s tha t Horman (John Shea) and his
\<\It(' ( .~Issy Spacek) , young Ameri cans
bo[ h, i ,ad been drawn to Sa lvadore
A llfmde's Socia li st experiments and had
taken up residency in Santiago, Chil e
There Charl E's. J most naive po li tical nt'Gphyte, hecame active in lefti st publica·
t io ns. It was all very idea listi c, stimula ·
t in g, innocent, until o ne bloody night in
1971 whE'n a right-w ing junta toppled thE'
A ll ende regimE', thus turning Charl f's
Horman into an enemy o f the state . I f1
short o ruE'r Chilrl es Horman is mi ss ing.
. Thf' story revolvE'S around hi s wifp\ and
hi s iathE'r's (Jack Lemmon) efforts to
lo catp youn g Horman in the weeks after
thp coup agalilst A ll ende. Predi c tably ,
SpacE'k is tht' archetype of Southern
couragt'; LE'mmon represents reli gious
convi ct ion and ultimate be li ef in the
Am.'ri( an Way Roth have been getting a
lo t 01 milf'c1gl' latl'ly play ing t hese rol es
and trUt' to past performances they p lay
th.'1ll ,lgdin <ll"i l(' we ll hpw The very best
p,lrh of thp mmit' though are not cenh'rl'd ilrollnd th.· interact ion of the two.
Co, t,I·C ,lVr,l< ,Irong suit rema ins hi s
dbilil y 10 Of( h("tr,lt.' ex plosive and convin. ing" lr"l' t ",'IH" . At its most gripping
Iw, t (tw lV O il ,md III thp fl as hbilcks)
Missing shows a soc iety in di sintegrat ion
from the vantage point of jeeps and
heli copt ers, from behind uniforms, rifl es
and Wil li s. In the most powerfu l sequence ,
Sp.l ('('k ra ces home after curfew through
strl't'ts ridden with corpses, holing up in a
courtyard for the night. Terrified and
t'xhauo;tt'd she fall s into a fitful sleep, a
sl"pp punctuated by the cackle of guns
and the dront' of heli copters . Sometimes
bdort, d,lwn , nf'a rby shots awaken her
,111<1 ,IS ,h" lift s her hf'ad she sees the
im.lg.' 0 1 .I white sta lliun being chased
down tht, street by a gang of thugs in
unltorm . 11fI1ll: at it from their jeep.
.
,
Spacek , no doubt wondering if she is still
dream ing, lays her head back down. In a
simple, eloq uent image we have seen
liberty being driven out of the I;md . This
is the stuff 01 great movies.
In m any respects Missing is a timely
production. As with the China Syndrome/
Three Mi le Island connection, Missing
benefits from the current concern over
U S involvem ent in EI Sa lvador. Whi le
leav ing a lot of questions unanswered
Missing does suggest that this govern~ent
is' gu il ty of som e heinous actions in at
least one Latin Ameri ca n country . And
o ne t ime Missing voices the bottom line
of Ameri can democracy quite exp li citly to
the effect that What's Good for General
Motors Had Damn Well Better Be Good
for the American People.
Whi ch brings us to the bottom line of
this review. Though , as I've sa id it fal ls
Ishort of Z, Missing is st ill a_n altoget her
worthwhile m ovie experience. At the very
least, its t ightly woven plot wil l demand
that you pay som e close attention. It is
even more likely that you will leave the
theater with mu ch to talk about Is not
what Solidar ity was trying to do in Po land
similar to w hat A ll ende was trying to do
in Chi le? Then, for its intervention is not
:he U .S ' on the same low-level as the
Soviet Union? But, perhaps not quite,
after all Man of Iron cannot be seen in
Moscow while Missing is most certainly
showing in D.C. A thought provoker,
Missing is, and a must for mom and dad
to see.
It's a long way from Chi le to the US ,
to be su re. The beauty of Missing is that
it closes the distance by drawing tight
that common thread of humanity which
suffers whenever and wherever ideals and
rea lpoli tic, innocence and brutal reality,
hopes and corrupted dreams come into
confli ct. Costa-Gavras again presents to us
these u niversal themes whi ch, in addition
to any contemporary signif icance, are of
tim(!less importance.
By I W. Nielsen
Sund ay night, O lympia was treated to
a specia l appearance of o ne of the world 's
great blues mu sicians. John Lee Hooker
rattled the rafters for two shows at Astair's
o n 5t h Ave. O ly mpia was the last s~op for
Hooker and hi s'Coast to Coast Blues Band
after a long tour. Hooker sa id he was
ready to party and party he did .
Hooker cou ld have written the book o n
the blues . Hi s dynamite guitar leads got
even the mell owest in the crowd on their
feet to boogie. His so ngs were about love
and the blues , jea lousy and the blu es, and
blues and the blu es .
After tett in g hi s band plav three songs
by themselves , he took hi s place front
and cent er and " got down ." He sat
bouncing hi s leg to the beat of t he music
as unbelievable notes jumped out of his '
guitar, he wou ld look to the left and then
to the right as he acknow ledged th e many
signs of approva l from the audi ence.
His openin g song for the second show
wa s Stormy Monday w hi ch soon became
a medley w ith Little Red Rooster. After
that It was one hal jam af ter another.
rowa rd s t he end of hi s show, Hooker put
down hiS gUitar and got to his feet to
boogie alo ng w ith the music of hi s band .
He dan ced arou nd the stage observing hi s
band members as a teacher wou ld observe
hi S students . As he encouraged hi s band
to " tell it like it is" Ihey wou ld respond
ba ck to him and the audience w ith
Incred ible solos .
'
On his .over 100 LPs , Hook has been
backed by such greats as Van Morrison
Charl ie Musselw hite, and Elvin Bishop. '
DUring the ea rl y 60'5, groups suc h as The
Rolllllg Stones and Eric Burton and t he
A ni mals opened hi s shows as wa rm·up
bands.
O lympia's own Harmo ni c Tremors (not
to be conf used w ith Mt. St . Helens'
.--iarmoni c Tremors ), opened for Hooker
,lIld s~t the mood w i.th its iaa/ blues sty lE'.
t\,talr s has a good-S ized dance floor and
' hl' T relllors gut the crowd up and o n
heir feet. By the time Hooker'S Coas l to
oas t Blues Band took the stage, everyone
\as read y to get down ilnd boogie.
. Hooker was brough t to O ly m p ia by The
)outh Sound Concert COlllpa ny w hosp
root s and inspirat ion s·tem frolll the Evergreen s tudent G IG Com mission two years
"go . 1 hp company is Illilde up pn tire ly of
pres~ nt and past ~vprg rppn stud pnt s. Tht'y
will at' proou clIlg b lu,,'s gU ltilri st virtu oso
lu hn Hammo nd al Evprgrt't'n on April 22
and Chari If' Mus ~(>lwhit e I,lter on thi s
'ummE'r.
I spoke to Lon Schif'dE'r, Iwad of South
')ollnd C:oncprt COl1l pany ilnd hp told IllP
th,lI IlP on ly had one rDmp lilin t during
thp two shows . That complaint WelS thdl
too m anv ppopl f' were dancing and sompo n!' cou ldn 't sep Hook er. Sc hi eder lold
Ill P that the owner of Asta ir' o; had (0111 '
ll1entpd to hilll that he was , urpris(,d at
how we ll-behaved t hp crowd WilS .
Harmoni c Tremor s
yea, lime span' You ' Spanish s ludres will be enhanc ed bV
o,' po rlunl 'Ies nOl available In a U S c lassroom Standard
leSIS s how our sluden l S' language sk ills su perior to
s luden lS complellng two ",ear programs In US .
BEGINNER OR ADVAN C t-O Cosl IS about the same as a
In a U S ,;n Uqp' $2,989 P~,c e Includ es le i rou nd
tllP 10 Se Ville ' rom N p ..... YO 'I. l oom , boafd . and lUll ron
~:: ~~~~~e GO \le,nmem 'l I d O !:. rind loans avaIlable 101 eligible
.,cod
l lvf" Wi th, a SPdni sh tam .l v. Jtt end classe!> tour hours a day
lutH d.J", !i it w e rok 101 11 m on l h s Earn 16 IllS 01 crefht leqlJl
volle r!1 10 4 S""II!~ tl~I " l aught In U S c:olleyc~ over a tw o
F=Al l SEMESTE R
seme s te r
Hurry. It takes a tot 01 time to make all a rr.ngaments
SEPT lO -Dec 22 SPRING-SEME-STER
Feb 1 June 1 eac h yea r
SEMESTERLLY
iNTEOs'PAin'NOII2442 E. Collier S.E. Grand Rapids, Michigan 495011
(A Program of Trinity Christian College,
CALL TOLL FREE
for full information 1·800·253·9008
(In Mlch .,.or II loll Ireellne i noperative call 1-611;>·942·2903 or 942·2541 collect)
Miller times =If~
Leisure Ed Offers
Seventy-Six New Courses
Ute
Hanggliding, vegetarian cook in g, the
fox trot, m assage, karate, jewelry cas ting,
w hC'th('r it' s exci ting, productive o r ju st
plain fun, Leisu re Educat ion ca n show YOl
how to do it. There are 76 workshops
·ofiert'd Sp rin g Quarter, at varying costs ot
$') to $ 125
"ML(st be
a .p('(2slrrnan:'
/
Lt'i sure ~ducdt i on Coordinator Kri sti ~og
S.lV, ~ar tl c lp(lIlt s can sign up through
Al)nl ) Without paying a late fee. Workshops thilt ilrf' not fi lled w ill accept regi s-
FlFIHSF
COLOR PROCESSING ON PREMISES
YOUR FILM NEVER LEAVES
TOWN ...
tration s until Apri l 16 with a $5 late
charge. The fol lowing changes have been
m ade in Leisure Education classes :
The Silkscreening workshop wi ll be held
April 17 and 18 instead of the 10th and
11th.
Intens ive Life Draw ing has been
changed from April 10 alld 11 to Apri I 24
and 25 .
Al l Aerob ic Dan ce c las ses except Rec
tread w ill begin the week of Apr i I 12.
Creat ive Self-Care has been moved to
Librarv 2204 .
Another Kayaking works hop will be
oitered on Wednesdays from 6 :30 to
8 30 pm
A W eav in g Workshop from 'l a.m . to
noon on Wednesday has bee n added .
TIlt' Sa turday Pre-School Swim Clas s i,
full , but therE' are sti ll openings in the
W ednesday class .
. I~ or il compl ete li stin g of work shops
otfE'rE'd , seE' the Lt' isure Edu ca ti o n new sletter. The Leisure Edu c ation Offi ce is in
the Campu s RE'creation Ce nter. Room 302 .
Thei r phone is 866-6530
CROSS COUNTRY SKI SALE
We're selling our rental equipment
ALL WA13 TIIAtI£L 8E11t1IC£,
See our full selection of bikes
backpacking equipment, sport~ apparel
W£5TSIDE SHO .... , NG CENTER
OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON
,
D-
Highest Quality
Reasonable Prices
OLYMPIC OUTFITTERS
117 N. WASHINGTON
e43 · 8701
843.8700
Opa JIV UOO1IIIt todaJ IIId Id 1II1IIl, JIll lib
UII ...... m of banM.,.
NEVER GETS LOST
Prints & Slides
Color or Black & White
IIIC~
$25 to $35
Cross Country Skis
$49.50
Alpine skis
$4.00
Cross Country Poles
$10
Some Cross Country Shoes
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
We've got several wa,ys to get free checldng 1114 earn interest.
24 hour ba.nk1ng with The Exchange Card (over 48 locations 1n
WBBh1ngton and soon nationwide).
Protect your valuables with a Safe Deposit box for only $12 a year
Loan Appl1cations
.
Gaahlers checks, money orders. traveler checks.
Free Pay·By·Phone
and, of course, friendly service
LoaaW Ia DIO-CIO 101, Opn 11 rOO • 1,10 p.1II. lIolIdaJ \bn
Bee' Brewed by Miller BrewtngCo . Milwaukee 'r'YIS
WE
,PROCESS
ALL BRANDS OF FILM
tile r-r-OlJaJll UN.
Travel comfortably and in good
company aboard customized sleeper
coaches. Stop at Wilbur Hot Springs for
a soat( and cook-out breakfast.
Special prices to points along the way .
SeaHle 324-7433 or (BOO) 227-4766
....
·w . . . . . -..,. ....•
.'
April 8, 1982 the Cooper Point Joumal
page 8 The Cooper Point Journal
April 8, 1982
7M-1IM1I
Icratlllloud.dIouJ auk Ma 11ft o\ber looa1lou"; .... )911111
24-HOUR SERVICE
DEVELOPING - PRINTlNGSERVICE
~ 1981
rrida"
pase9
Life In IVIodern Times
Ah Springtime, the season when love
awakens the hormones of even the most
diligent and stud iou s of Greeners . Turning
my investigative reporting ski lls towards
the subject, I found that a five-stage pattern arose during the love affairs of
99 44/ 100% of all couples.
Curiously enough, my best gal pal,
Sally, and her boyfriend, Frank, typify the
average couple. Stage one began for Sally
and Frank in Sally's kitchen . I distinctly
remember standi ng in Sally's kitchen with
the empty beer bottles, the overdue bills,
the letters from home, the pots half-filled
with grease, the moldy ca nteloupe, the
dirty socks, yes, standing there, looking at
the tacky postcards glued to the refrigerator door, with my back turned on the
dying plants, and Sally who was running
through the li ving room in a frenzied
pani c.
" Frank's due here in two hours . This
place is a mess, I'll never be able to fit all
the laundry into the closet , and I haven 't
even started the lasagna. I have no idea
how to cook it, you know I always eat at
SAGA. " she whined . "And worst of all "
she sai d in a gravely serious voice. "I '
have absolutely no idea how to get the
mushrooms off the shower walls ."
" We ll , look." I co mforted her, "do
something about thi s pl ace and I'll make
thE' lasagna for you ."
Thert' I was forging lasagna for Sally.
w hil e she was doing her hl', t to fit everything IIlto thE' hall closet , try ing to hide
the rea l "Sa ll y" before Frank got there .
Thp mess was di sgust in g enou gh whpn
lying around her apartment , but when ,h(>
threw thl' ca ntplou pe on top of dirty
di shes in tilt' hall closet , I bE'gan to spri ously quest ion her san ity
The next mo rning I heard a "ynop,,,
from Sally over collep at SI\GA. " lie's '0
wonded ul, we played rE'cords and dann'cI
until two In the morning. I WilS hav in g
su ch a greil t time, but then the record
ended, and WE' were just standing th('rt 1
the li ving rOOI11, things got rea lly wf·': rd Ir
a minute there, and he sa id to me, 'Well ,
you can either take me home, or let me
sleep on the sofa if you're too tired to
drive me home: Hey, I would've felt
really strange with someone I hardly know
sleeping on my sofa, but I was soooo
tired, and I t hought maybe I'd feel even
stranger with him sleeping in my bed,"
she explained .
"So what happened?" I asked impatiently.
" I lent him some jammies and he spent
the night," she said wickedly, "But nothing happened, I swear," she added with a
raise of her eyebrows.
After that night, Frank was never to
return home. His roomies thought he had
dropped out and gone back to Ver-mont.
The condition of Sally's apartment went
slow ly downhill. The beer bottles began
to pile up in the kitchen again, but the
canteloupe never emerged from the
closet. Sally didn't care though, she was
in love (Iuv )
Stage two had emerged by this point,
about two-and-a-half week s into the relatiomhip Frank began to find out who
Sally was and vice versa. He must have
really fallen for her, because she never
figured out how to get the mushrooms off
the shower wall. She hadn't thought of
sa ndblasting, I guess .
I knew for sure they had reached the
stage threp when I saw Sally looking a
little grepn around the gi ll s exactly three
weeks and four days into the ir affa ir . She
came into t hp off ice. sta red at me like a
Imt puppy, ,md sa id , "Take me to SAGA ,
I np(-'d " (UP o j ("offt'e"
Sp('nh d' though the phonp had rung
around "i ght thp night beforp, and Sa ll y
h,ld mdd,' thp mi , tak(' of answering Iwr
own phorlf' It WilS a wOl11an (ail ing for
h'lIlk At firq h,' hild ( I,limpd it was hi s
, i,tf'r In On",hd hut S"lI y was too smart
for him . , hI' km'W hr ~ sistpr livprl in Ver mont. Sad hut tnlP . h ank had a girlfriE'nd
at hom,-·
" ll'''S(, Sill , why'd ya <I nswpr thp phon,·,,,
I askni hpr
" I Wd' "fraid rt was John ," shE' sa id ,
pl,'adrng With Iwr eyes for rlll:' to undE'rst,lI1d.
.Real Food·
Lunch and Dinner Special Too!
• Fresh Ingredients • Reasonable Prices
Garden omelltte .
.3.50
HUlvos Rancheros .
green peppers, onions
. . 2.95
with home Irles
mushrooms, cream Chilli
Piranhas' Omelettll ...... . ... .. . . 3.75
.3.25
Fish 80 Chip• .
sausage, feta Chilli,
. . . . 3.25
Fettuccine AI Pesto .
black ollv..
garlic br.ad
Reuben .
.3.25
Lasagne (meatills) . . ... ........ . 3.25
Fresh SplnlCh Salad . .
. .3,50
garlic bread
.
Chellse Burger ueluxe wllrlas .. .. 3.15
Sauteed Vegetables .
.3.25
Blua Cheell Burger wllrle.
.3.75
glrllc breld, browl) rice
Bacon 80 Chl..1 Gur!l8' w/frles .. 3.75
Filet of Fresh ReI! Snlpper . .. . . .. 3.75
grlllecl. '·~ncl:. fries
" He's the one in Chi cago, right?"
" Naw, he lives in Boulder," she replied
dejectedly, " John's from home, from L.A."
You can't feel sorry for a gal with so
many stringers, and well she didn't feel
sorry for herself for too long either. Now
Sally and Frank were really beginning to
know the score.
Things went smoothly for the next three
weeks, and I was sitting in the office wondering .when the big stage, stage four, ~s
gon na hit, when' Sally ran in, and sk idded
to a stop in front of my desk , Breathlessly
she panted her news to me.
"Frank and I were house-hunting all
day, we found the greatest cab in, it's half
a mile from campus, has a woodstove,
Frank can get free wood, and the most
wonderful v iew of the bay," she cried out,
and stopped for a breath.
" When did you decide this?" I asked,
406 E. 4th Ave. 786-9769
Dear Norma:
The CPJ just did it to me again. I am
one of those Greener men who needs a
positive role model.
I don't want to be a sex ist pig. I respect
women for their minds . I attend every
feminist gathering they wi ll allow me in.
I avoid making any comments about
women', bodies, especiall y compliments .
Whpn I talk with a woman I always talk
abou t what she's in terested in. I subscribe
to Ms . ,md buy the Matri x in the Bookstort-' I do E'Vf'rything I ca n to be a caring,
support ivl' man.
-I h,' women here wi ll ta lk to me. They
PVf'rl wrl l go out with me sometimes, but
they ' Iwnd most of the time ta lking with
w hatE'ver other woman rs around . That's
okay. I guess .
Thf're's thi s guy in my program who
always makes sexist comments and tells
dirty jokE'S and refers to women all the
timp <1 5 "c hi cks ." Hp never asks anything
about what they are interested in. He
dominates conversat ions . Every other
week, he's (om ing on st rong to some new
woman , maybe two or three, He does hi s
little Billy Joe rou tine and the next thi ng
you know he's down at Popeye's boogy-
+
,
ITS'
r\"~f>EN\~6:-,
"
1
i lMM'1
TM GCJN,~A
L
flY
continuE'd from page 1
"My lI11prp,s ion of them was that I
didn 't rlI"tter. They tolrl me that their
hU'''l'''' was banking." HE' cont inu ed.
'.:Kids must lean on their parents. I'm 3.c,
YfW' old hut I sti ll told my parents dbout
S",,-I if't. 1 hl'Y have sincE' closed their
$r,O.tH) "(lount. They should have
I istl'rwci to me. "
-----------------------------
1 MCAT
~I
LSAT •. MeAT. AI( .
SI( PSYCH • II( '10:
SMAT • DAT • OCAT • PeAT
YAT • IIAT. • SAT
ECFIIG • FLEX • VQI
NOli • NPIII • NLE
aA(I"fl . . -. .'.,I
Prepllllion
$otcl.II.I.
IDUCATlONAL CIMnll
Stnce 1938
'0' ""O,,,,.IIM, ,.,.... C.II:
l
ing He's getting plenty, I know because
some of the women I've talked with have
gone with him and they are full of bitter
ta lk about it. If he doesn't get what he
wants he just walks out and tries elsewhere.
So I'm confused.
Dear Abby would tell me to try
churchE's, but su rely you can come up
with something more useful than that.
Shou ld I buy a leather jacket?
RALPH .
Dear Ra lph :
Let' s face it . you don't want clever
conversation . You don't want to work so
hard . Maybe your probl em stems from the
ian that you are working too hardtowards the same sex ist goal, but by a less
honest. politically correct, approac h. Your
money would appear to be' better spent
on rntimate dinners and tr inkets than
femini st magazines . If sex is what you
want. go in and win. By refraining from
your subtle, longin g overtures, you would
soon seek your level (dnd save yourseli
va luable time to boot).
I'orget the leather jacket, a leather
gloW' would be cheaper and more to thp
point
A h. ·.ttpd argulllent developed between
1-IY4 (dmpaigner Howat and a WPPSS
C1Ud lit V ,lssurance insppctor . The inspector
arguf'd that 1-.194 was " anti -nuke" and that
it would bring down Washington 's economy. Howat argued that it would help
con trol the economy . Neither was able to
("onvinn' the othpr .
Som(' pl:'oplp en routp to the bank sa id
thpy had alrpady withdrawn their accounts
,1Ild that thpy wl:'rp on state business .
Withdrawal s in the Olympia area numbpf(·d I('s<; than those in some other areas
in the steltp . Howat said that this stemmed
hom the fact that thPfE' was no Irate Ratep,lYf'r s organiLMion in Olympia, and that
(on'l 'rtupntly thp area was less mobilized .
II., sai d tha t thl:' Don't Bankrupt Washington Committee is planning a rall y at
thl' st.ltl' capitol in mid-Apr il which is
"'P"( tt'd to draw at Ipast 5000 union
ml'lllbef' to protest against thp banks
in\()l wd in th(' anti -.lY4 suit.
----~
L••IC OIJT!
:::~o~~;.'
!.
j
,1
,
f
L
I
,I
SOMETHING NEW
LUNCH SPECIAL EVERYDAY CONSISTING OF ~ SANDWICH AND CUP
OF SOUP $2.25. Plus reg. menu
.
There is something going on everyday
at POPEYE'S, so come on in and join
the FUN!
~~D~\75; \A?~/;--r~To,J~PTA:f~y\e\7 C7'\n\Y$°V t~<:~<Ji ~Am-fZ-\~?i
i-- ~A~oM Wjf7~GVM.
~7c.. <1t1f~
6f
"lff:=- WHAL= ~'iLt§-p
,"£or
5°
April 8, 1982
4
"NED80P"
ROCK N ROLL
f\\Llc i\"
~Y~!,\\(\-\ fioY-r
oK o~ ~u ,I t
Y
Again, thanks from all o f us at
POPEYE'S
Our 25¢ schooners are still going on
every Wednesday and Thursday nights
9;00 to 10:30.
ROCK -N-ROLL
IDCI~.·IDLL
$1 cover I $1 cover
$2 cover
14
15
DAYS
,.
18
ROCK-N-ROLL
19
scrg~!t~LI!!~ND
9:qfo,.t:e,.
$4 cover
$1 cover
$4 cover
THE
'HE'"
$1 cover
20
ROCK
21
50 's and 60's
ROCK-!'l-ROLL
ROCK-N-ROLL
$3 cover
$1 cover
$1 cover
~~
~
1
22
i'
$6 . 50 ADVANCE
J23
::R,.A..::.:::»XC>
$7.50 AT DOOR
124
FL~::EJ~
(YOU ' LL ROCK TO THESE GUYS . )
ALSO
Plu s openi nq ac t
$2 cover
27
26
28
~ltll1m Blue Plate Blue Plate
Special
mil.'1@?, Special
ROCK-N - ROLL
$5 ADVANCE
$6 AT DOOR
$2 cover
29
STU BORN
$2 cover I
III1
$2 cover
PUPPET
$3 cover
30
STII
~oe.~ 1\ ~()ll
I $2 cover I $3 cover
$3 cover
MAY 1st
DARK STAR
ROCK-N- ROL L
$3 cover
__ I
April 8, 1982
'i
.1;.."",
$3 cover
10
116
Ip
THE LEGENDARY BLUES BAND
ROCK-N-ROLL
$1cover
$3 cover
9
"TEARS MUSIC OUT OF THIN AIR" ROCK-N-ROLL
$2 cover
$2 cover I $3 cover 1 $3 cover
,,~ " 'o H ,12~~.
~
FOUR
$2 cover
ROCK-!'l-ROLL
ROCK
11
Forever
~gs
nOCK-N-ROLL
GRABBER GRABBER
'10 IIIITS or DP.I lIe.
J AZZ-FUSION
~egs
'lAZEESE"
8
7
SAT
'3
2
$2 cover
:6
5
FRI
1
2410 W. HARRISON, OLYMPIA, WASH.
ROCK N ROLL
ROCK N ROLL
You could also try your ski ll at our
weekly competition on our Video and
Ask the barkeeper
Pinball machine s.
about the current scores.
Please come in, bring your friends
and enjoy our Spiri ts, Music and
Good Company.
I
page 10 The Cooper Point Journal
~1\\
CALL (206)786-9290
a game of darts
FRI.
SAT.
SUN.
~ fR,.~'fJJ@ fi:J'....oIl!Iiii;iiQl.lliw..MlIiII_""'iWiW..,.~I*i*liIII~~
7°~ 5/<JN-J Ql' \~/
-5QtJj\
MON. 2 for 1 burger nite
nite-75¢ 160z.
TUE. Pounder
beers with free pool
WED. pool meat shoot nite
THUR. Meet your friends over
. THURS
WED
'S
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FOR LUNCH!
OPEN 11 A.H_
TUE
MONDAY
SUNDAY
LIVE MUSIC 7 NIGHTS A WEEK!
TUESDAY IS POUNDER NITE TILL
lOP.M. l60z. cans of beer for
75¢ with free pool
:::k:;;'/6; '" m" ""'~
l
Ip
s.ttIe
<t\l4-J ;Vf\~/; t~N~; t~c\~!; -rAV;:j~-\i ~CDtl5 i
l:
~
"'-"-!'-"-"-"-"-"-"-"-"-"-'
Withdraw Day
NATL 1110 BDS
(across from the train station)
M-Th 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Fri 10 to 10
Sat 10 to 6
Closed Sundays
l
Dear Norma ,_.. _,._.,-,,_.,- ,_.._.,_.,-,._,._ ,.
,
p~
hurt that she hadn't asked my advice
before deciding to move in.
"And it's only two-fifty a month," she
said, pushing herself nearer to cardiac
arrest, "Well, we discussed it and we
couldn't see the point in paying rent on
two places, and I can always stay at your
house if things get weird, right?"
"Sur~ ," I laughed. Well stage four had
blossomed .right on time.
, .
And. what about stage five, you ask? I'd
imagine that about right now, Sally is
taking the moldy can teloupe out of her
closet, to pack away for the new house.
Frank will probably lean across to her and
say, "Oh, pumpkin, you're so cute, let's
have it bronzed."
Either that or he's taken one look at the
ca nteloupe and Sally is look ing for a
roommate. Doubtful though, Frank 's a
slob, too.
The Cooper Point Journal
page 11