The Cooper Point Journal Volume 11, Issue 23 (May 26, 1983)

Item

Identifier
cpj0309
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 11, Issue 23 (May 26, 1983)
Date
26 May 1983
extracted text
Rising Tide Of Driftwood Dissatisfaction
by DA Heier

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Evergreen's Driftwood Day Care Ce nter
·exists in an almost unnoticed wrinkle of
Ithi s state's bureaucratic fabric. One state
agency can't license anoth er, so Driftwood
isn 't currently state certified . As a result it
doesn't have to live up to state-mandated
standards for child care facilities.
Recent informal assessments of Driftwood indi cate that the fac ility does not
conform with minimum state standards.
The parents whose children populate the
center are not happy. t<ecently 1/l ot those
parents sign ed a petition calling for improvements in "safety, cl eanliness, equipment , m anagement and staff training in
child development." Spec if ic defi ciencies
cited in c lude; lac k of adequately t rain ed
staff, lax supervision of children, lack of
first aid train ing for staff, and poor
respo nsiveness on the part of the center's
admin istrati o n. Some have even call ed for
Dri ftwood director, Virginia Brian's job.
Coll ege Dea n of Student Servi ces, Larry
~ te n be rg held a meeting w ith the parents,
Bri an, and Student Activiti es director
Ly nn Ga rn er. Garn er was t here because
good o le S&A foots the biggest chunk of
the Driftwood b ill. The purpose o f the
meeting was to air grievances and try to
reach a med iatio n o f differences. At the
end St enberg assured the parents that,
. (he) would be personall v accountable
for bringing Driftwood up to minimum
st ate standard s by next Fall."
O ne student parent who recentl y withdrew her child fro m Driftw ood, Kara Neff,
sa id that she was pleased that Stenberg

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A no ther student pa rent, Charlotte Todd,
researched the state day care standards.
She fo und th at Driftwood mi ssed t hose
sta nd ard s in several areas. She too was
encou raged by Stenberg'S commi tment,
" He now rea li zes what the parents have
been up aga inst He has a pl an of acti o n
and is w illing to let the parents help
evalu ate the (driftwood) director's
perform ance."
Direc to r Bri an responded to som e o f
the crit icism s; "I believe Driftwood meets
minimum standard s. What isn't compli ance to o ne parent, may be compli ance
La another. M any parents are support ive
but apathetic. Driftwood could be cleaner
but nurturing sometimes comes first w ith
a limited staff . When you have to m ake a
c ho ice between reading a story and was hing the fl oor, sometimes the sto ry is m o re
importa nt"
Greg Krall has two children at t he
ce nter and is support ive of Bri an; "Virgin ia
has do ne a wonderiu l jo b, with little or
no suppo rt from the co ll ege. Until thi s
latest controversy things were impro vin g.
I can't understa nd w hy recent meetings
have deterior ated into Virgini a defending
her jo b. Th at's not at all constructi ve."
Almost no o ne wo uld argue w ith the
im portance of d aycare for student parents,
but Driftwood poses some knotty problems.
It's hou sed in an old inadequate building,

photo by Albright

it sits in limbo regu lat io n-wise, its budget
(lik e others) is ti ght, Evergreen has no
curri culu m in chi ld develop ment , and
parents have w ide ly d ifferent expectati0ns.
Some pa rents think t he direct or shou ld
spend m ore t ime superv ising children and
intern s, o thers think she shou ld be better
prepared for t he S&A budget batt le. Thi s
bu il t-in schi zophreni a is a commo n problem w ith thi s type of organi zaati on
A lmos t all pri ori ty setting is accompli shed
in budget hea rings Thi s poses two big
pro bl ems. First , no t o nly do personn el for
these ty pe jo bs have to know and be

competent in t he spec if ic field, they also
have to be budge t experts and be ab le to
effect ive ly represent thei r organiza t ion in
budget hearings If suc h a person is ineffect ive in e ither area, the program
su ffers. Second, o nce such a mu lt i-ta lentpd
person is found, that person and their
supervisors have to dec ide how much of
eac h f unct io n is to be pursued . Again, if
the pri o riti es do n't fo ll ow a very thin line.
the program suffer>. If you don't have
money , you do n' t have a program, but i f
all your energy 'is going into the budget,
how can you have an effective program l

COOPER POINT

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was w illin g to take responsibili ty o n the
standard s iss ue but that bef ore she enro l ls
her child next 'fall she will " go in to Dri ft wood w ith the state I icense requirements
in my hand"

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Piaying Power In The Pacific Northwest
Surges in publi c opini o n and intluence
come and go in t he m aelstron of Ameri can politi cs. In the 1930's, an emphasis
was pl aced o n the electrifi cation of
Ameri ca and spec ificall y, who wo uld
benefit from this advance in technology publi c o r pri vate interests . The New Deal
poli cies of Franklin D . Roosevelt gave us
the Tennessee Valle y Authority and the
Bonneville Po wer Administration. A fter
tremendous battl es, these entities were
pl aced in the publi c's hand and put under
the ir contro l. With these battles fought
and won , the publi c, resting on its laurels,
relinquished more and more control. As

both publi c power agenc ies. O nly with a
knock in the head , thi s time an astronomical leap in electri c rates, has the publi c
again grown concern ed about their
interest s. The battl e is again being w aged.
A battl e with ha zy boundari es and uncl ear interest groups. The vi cto r will
determin e the future of publi c poli tical
power over electri c power.
Befo re looking at today's pro bl ems it is
useful to examine yesterd ay'S, beginning
w ith Muscle Shoals, a 37-mil e stretc h of
white water o n the Tennessee River that
was to set the stage for a power debate
that continues tod ay.

fed eral governm ent to pl ay its hand. They
needed mass ive amounts of electri c ity to
produce nitrates for muniti o ns. After t he
war, with no need for munitions, the
United States governm ent was deciding
how to use wh at m any called " the white
eleph ant." Bill s were introduced, but I-Vere
usually variations o f the sa me theme and
were often wri tten by pri vate enterpri se.
Their aim w as to deli ver Mu sc le Shoals to
pri vate hands. Henry Fo rd , the automobil e
entrepreneur , grac iously offered to take
thi s burden from the federal government,
so he could make fertili ze r (fro m the
nitrates ) for the f armers. However, product io n of fertili zer used o nly about o neeighth o f the total power o utput. Clearl y
M r. Ford wanted something else. Newto n
Baker, Secret ary o f W ar, m ay have provided t he answer w hen he suggested , " If I

contro l slipped from their gro up, private
power interest m ainta ined a steady assau lt
against publi c power and whil e not in
direct contro l, have effect ively co-opted

In th e ~a rl y 1900's , controversy ce ntered
o n ," ', ether pri vate enterpri se o r the
federal government w ould build a d an at
Muscl e Shoa ls. Worl d War I forced t he

Evergreen

The Politics





A thletics and rec reation programs at
TESC are the resul t of an innovat ive and
uni que concepti on of the role of spo rts in
higher ed ucation . Based o n a balanced
program of athl et ics, recreati on, and
leisure educatio n, the princ iples of
accessibili ty, equal opportu ni ty, and
(athl eti cs) in the perspec ti ve of hi gher
educat ion, at hl eti cs at Evergreen prov ide
a number of usefu l services to t he
communi ty .
An increas in gly visible and important
part of these serv ices is the intercoll egiate
athl etic program. W i thout doubt , the
development of in tf'rco ll egiate sports has
been ext rf'mely successful. Intercoll egiate
athl etics now fields eight team> in five
~por ts includ i'ng swimmi ng, soccer. tenni s.
and, rew I h" a n l1,,~ 1 budget" >ome
'hl'lO,(JUU, dnd Ihpn' MP approxil11dtf'ly
120 PMt ll 11',,"1 ,

Thi s development has been of benefit,
not o nl y to the athletes involved, but to
the publi c relat io ns and image of TESC in
regard to prospective studen ts in the
southwest Wash ington area. However,
rap id expans io n of the in terco ll egiate
sports program over the last fou r years
has generated d ispute ce ntered on a number of phil osophi ca l issues, and has been
the sub iect of a great dea l of controversy
The deve lopment of intercol legiate
athl eti cs has been c lose ly related to the
development of TESC itse lf. Conceived in
the 1960's, Evergreen was or igi nall y
designed to accommodate both an
expected imrt'ase of 17.000 highed ed
students ,lnel a pE'rceived liberal trend
in ffiw dt lOl1 Ily Ihe mld->eventi es , tdliurc'
of the,p prOl"llions to matprial ize ca used
>evere enrol lnlf'nt trouble> for the II1Slillltl"" A gt'nl'r,1 1 pl'rl ppt lon ,'merged thilt
till' ro l" ,lIId """ ,on o t tht, "ho,,1 , holi id

were greedy for power over rn y fell owman I would ra ther control M uscle Shoa ls
than to be continuously elected Pres ident
of th" United Sta tes."
Because energy is the key to the industri al revoluti o n, it is no coin cidence
that Exxon, Shell , and the rest of t he
energy mono po li es are am o ng t he worl d's
fin ancial brokers. If yo u control someone's meter, then you control a portion of
their life. You enter the rea lm of po liti ca l
power -power over peop le. The Fords
and the Rockefell ers have know n t hi s for
years A handful of visionari es have
battled aga in st it, and the general publi c
has intuit ively se n ~ed it.
By 1936, t he contro l of Columbia River
power was of major concern to taxpayers,
and power bro kers. In the electio n yea r,
cont inued on page eig ht

of Athletics

be redefined One of more visibl e re s u l t~
of t his was subst itute Senate bill 3109 .
Passed in 1977, the bi II direc ted the
Was hington Counci l for Postsecondary '
Educat io n to study TESC and determi ne
actions necessa ry to broaden t he institution 's cliente le base by introdUCing
traditional un dergradua te and graduate
course offerings and reduce the institution 's total operat ing costs per FTE stu den t
to t hat of the other state coll eges (now
reg iona l universiti es)
I n response to the d IreClive t.he CPt
produ ced a very unusua l and deta il ed
report 1 hp 45G-page ·study was o nly the
sE'cond known instance of a statewide
agpney conduct ing a comprehensive
review of a co ll ege The report adm itted
th at conduct ing whdt W,lS III many
rp'pt'ch ,111 inq it ut iona l f'v,lluatlon had
urn .... t .lrlC (>~ " 111

( reatl 'd ..,O llll-· " lJ IHI >,l l.-l 1

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recolllllll'ndation s on matters " U5l1d ll y
as the provin ce of t he institut ion "
Howeve r the counci l noted that ",flection
on >ueh ma tter; was essentia l for, om prehensive study
Recommendation 17 of tht' 1979 (Pl
report w hi ch concerned intercol legiate
athl et ics prov ides an insight to tht'
motivat io ns and goals behind thc· df'velopmen t of thi s program .
" The subj ect of intercollegiatf' at hl etics
at Evergree n is a se nsiti ve one;' the report
states . "Many of t he present st udents and
fa culty have expressed themsE' lves In
opposition to tht' idea . The,(' sentiments
can bE' appreciated At the same time. thf'
topic emerged in so many instJnct's as d
tactor that cou ld be emp loYf'd effect i ve ly
by the C:olleg(' to broaden its appea l to 11
IMgf'r rilngl' of high " hool qudl'nts and
('n han, c' it s , Ollll11unity relat ions hip, that
II slillp ly (ann,,! bf' Ignorf'cI
vif'W~

Ma y 26 1983 The Cooper POlnl Journal page 1

Evergreen Loses Respected S&A Administrator

News & .Notes
WASHPIRG STUDENT BOARD ELECTIONS HAVE BEEN CANCELLED. There
were only seven nominees for the sevenmember board . The nominees will comprise the board until next fall They are:
Annette Newman, Susan Morrison, Priscilla Holcomb, Jack Gillis, Lynn Brassfield. Michael Kelly, and Ceu Ratliffe.
Another elec tion is being planned for
next fall . Present board members can be
renom inated, and anyone who develops
an interest in WashPI RG ca n run.
The two weeks of nominations were a
success. Student interest was higher than
antic ipated The WashPIRG table will be
<;et up "' the CAB Thursday and Friday.
People \~III be on hand to answer questions about IndiVidua l co ntra cts and
Internships through WashPIRG next year.
SYMPOSIUM ON AGING IN AMERICA.
II ill be May 26 through lune 3 as foll ows
.\ta, 26 , Thursday, 10 a.m .. Death &
D,ing Re l igion. 130 pm .· Death !;
D\ in>;. R e l l~i on concluded
\\<1\
~7 . Friday ' 10 a m., Crime .'.
Vlolenu' I 30 pm .. Political Act ion .
PUBLIC PERFORMANCE (A ll presen l"
til '''' In L" ct urp Hall 115. unless otherw"e
nl):, y i)
,'v'..JY 11 Tup,d,lI 4 p.m. , Famil y Issll,"
dnd Till' (>nel,H lon Gap; 7 p .m . LectLH'
Hilll II 1. r dlll 'y,1'LII",.O OW, Tokyo Story
June 1 Wednesday . 4 p.m .. Eco nomics;
7 I' n1
Medic,,, Cue, Cross-Cu ltural
1)f->I '; PP( I I '.!'

' .In" _ fhur,clav · 4 p.m . Dea th 8.
D" nL R E' I' ~ ") 11 ; p.m , Deat h & Dyin!<
C' ,'l( lucle(!
Ilin
I . f flda,.
4 p.m., CTime &
V,(den( p. -; pm Polit ica l ALl ion
ror 111 or,' Intonnat ion . contdct Richard
AI,'xanclt>r . 11G"-6CO). e_t, 65% .

An al l-cam,Jus PRESENTATION OF THt
LONGHOUSE PROJECT wiJi be given next
\\ ednesday . lune 1. at noon in Lectur. ·
Hall 1 Hrinl; vour lunch .
A t <a d ltional Na tivp-Am e rican Lon ~
r 0use Jnd related educational facilrtie' I
prop'hf"ci to be bu dl on the ca mpus Thl
" the firSI rrespntat io n of this project t,
'h,· ca mpu s communit, We welcoill"
lour Darti, ipatlon

Go Geoducks
contlnueo from page 3

I h,,, I hi' lou n,, 1 proposed Recomnwnri,ll'(>11 17. " It IS rpcommended Ihat
" l·rg,. ... 'n ,t udy the d,., irabi lity and
I('a"b, l, t\ of f'ngaging in a limited range
of Int('r, oll egiat e at hlet iCS as one means
fit eX[J2.ncil ng its appeal to graduat!ng high
', hoo l se nior, and en hancing ItS relation s
\lIlh t he O lympia commu nit y
I he nsc administration had been ron"dering the development of intercollegiate athletics since 1977. Though the
or iginal DTF on the matter came out
,t rongly opposed to the development,
by 1978 the board of trustees had
,1PI'TOved a subsequent set of recomillpndations ca llin g for the development
0 1 21 teams over a period of eight years.
These recommendations (later scaled
dow n) have been the basis for deve loping
Intercollegiate athletics at TESe. From the
beginn ing, funding from both the in stitut Ion and services and activities (S&A) fees
h,lVe been considered essential to : he
npve lopmen t of this program.

Wh ile su pport from the institution was
rp,ldily forthcoming, the use of student
1"<,, lor Intercolleg iate athletics has been
,1 wrv ,ont<oversial iss ue
In May, 1979, Dean Claybaugh and
lit 1011 You t z reques ted $4.lXlO from the
.... 8.11 ['(1,lrd to begrn athletics in the 79-80
page 2 The Cooper Point Journal May 26. 1983

,,.

LSAS would like to remind you that the
October 1983 LAW SCHOOL ADMISSIONS
TEST will be held on October 1. The
regular registration postmark deadline for
the United States, Puerto Rico and Canada
is September 15t.

More than 25 households of the A.S.H.
APARTMENTS, Adult Student Housing for
Evergreen, will ho ld a GIGANTIC YARD
SALE on Saturday, May 28, from 10 a.m.
to S p .m . at ASH . Books. baby clothes,
sport equipmen t, and plants are just a few
of the sa lable Items offered by the ASH
tenants. The yard sa le will provide a
m e, hani sm for st ud ents to recyc lp
perso na l belongings and share in an
A.5.H . comm unity event before the end '
of tht> sc hool year .
Tablps will be set up on the mai n
quadrangle by thp manager's off ice at
3138 Ovprhulse Roan N .W . If it rain s, the
yard sale wi II move to Evergreen 's Pavi lion . ASH tenant s welcome the community to come browse through thi s sa le.
For more informat ion, contact coordinator
Evonne McMillan at 86&-6000, ext. 6907 .

OLYMPIA FElLOWSHIP OR RECON·
open for applicants but you must get your . CllllATlON May 28/29 are Peace
application resume in by Monday, May
Sabbath/ Sunday. Some local churches
30, 1983, by noon to Joel Barnes or Lynn
again will incorporate peace themes into
Garner in CA B 305, ext. 6220. Selection
their worship services. Everyone is invited
will occur on June 1.
to participate in a Vigil of Hope outside
the gates of the Trident nuclear submarine
base on Sunday, May 29. The vigil will be
an entirely legal witness for peace,
organized by members of St. John's
Episcopal Church. Carpool from St . John's
parking lot (19th & Capitol Way) at 12
noon. Return at 6:30 p.m. While at
Bangor we' ll hear a presentation from the
folks at the Ground Zero Center for
Nonviolent Action , next door to th e
Trident base.
Also on Sunday. May 29 will be vigils
on railroad tracks in Chehalis and Elma.
Missile motors and nuc lear warheads
travel by rail to the Trident base. These
death trains pass through our communities, just as death trains carried millions
of victims to the Nazi concentration
ca mps through communities of good
Germans. People of conscience must
protest the Holocaust that is being
planned . For deta ils call Kay Engel
(Centralia 736-(679) or Paul Jeffrey or
Lyda Pierce (Elma 482-3375).
CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT
WILL BE ClOSED ON JUNE 6, from 15 p.m _ for staff retreat:

THE OLYMPIA TIMBERLAND LIBRARY
WILL BE ClOSED SUNDAYS after May 22.
AUCTION! FACULTY! STAFF! Please
cons ider helping us in one of these three
ways :
1. Auction items-hurray for a clean
closet, attic, and garage; any and all
art icles would be appreciated.
2. Volunteer help at the auction : 2.
shifts (1 p.m.-3 p.m.) and (3 p .m.-sp.m.).
3. Come to the auction and buy!
Some of the possible items : (we will
pick up) :
1. Glassware
2. Kitchenware
3. Furniture
4. Antiques
5 Clothes
6.
Old bicycles (we will repair)
If you have received a NATIONAL
7.
Recreational equipment
DIRECT STUDENT LOAN while attending
8.
App
liances
Evergreen. ilnd plan to go On Leave or .
9.
All
mi
sce llaneous items
graduate. you need to schedule an Exit
A
tax
write
off might be easier than doing
Interview. PI!'<lse contact Student Accounts
that
garage
sale you've wanted to do for
at 136&-6(X)(), "xt 6448 to arrange for an
years$$
EXI t Intervipw.

acadpmic year . The request was tabled by
th .. bo,lrd. The administration then proceded to fund int ercollegiate ath letics on
its own The program had been in operati on il lmmt two ypa rs before S&A was
again approac hed for funds in t he spring
all ocations o f '1981 .

The '!>2(l,lXlO request rai sed a number of
concerns as to the need for intercoll egiatE
ath letics and the proper manner for its
funding . A spec ial S&A task force was set
up to consider the matter and came up
with ,everal proposa ls. The issue came to
be a matter of whether S&A shou ld
merely refuse funding at that time, due to
a lack of informat ion and a concern with
the development, or whether S&A shou ld
take the position not to fund interco llegiate ath letics then or in the future .
Reasons behind the proposal not to fund
intercollegiate athletics ever included :
a belief that competition was contrary to
the Evergreen philosophy, a perceived
finan cial drain on other essentia l services,
the poor reputation of intercollegiate
athletics at other schools , disagreement
with the emphasis on image building and
rec ruitment, indications that recreation
sports were more highly considered by
potential students than Intercollegiate
athletics, a recommendation from the
Washington Association of University
Students, the fact that the original DTF
was not in support of intercollegiate ath-

Before coming to TESC, Garner was a,
secretary at KPEC and registrar at Franklin
Pierce High School in Tacoma.

S&A COORDINATOR POSITION is still

letic development. and imbalance in
funding for sports clubs vs. intercollegiate
ath letics. and the potential for alternate
devp lopment of ath letic programs .
A second. more moderate proposal ,
th at S&A was not prepared to make a
fund ing decision on the intercoll egiate
athletics budget with the informatio n and
time ava il able, was based on a lack of
information concerning guidefines, growth
and direction , lack of mechanisms tor
ongoing student input. lack of initi al student and staff input into the original
evaluation and development of the program , and a need for more thorough
study . Thi s second proposal was accepted
by the board and funding refused, but the
.
matter continued. During the following
summer allocations, amid a general
atmosphere that the board of trustees
would reject any budget without funding
for intercollegiate athletiCS, the program
was allocated some $20,lXlO in student
fees . In last year's spring allocation, the
board chopped intercollegiate athletic's
budget request of $18.cXxJ to $12,lXlO
ca using some degree of friction between
the two groups . This year intercollegiate
ath letics requested $25,000 and has
received $19,lXlO.

It appears that intercollegiate athletics
has become firmly establi shed at TESe.
The issues of its goals, philosophy, funding structure and expansion shou ld be the
sub ject of controversy for years to come .

TO: The Evergreen Third World Community
From: The Third World Coalition
Subject: " Day of Absence"
On Friday, May 20, 1983, the Third
World Coalition hosted its first annual
"Day of Absence." The purpose of this
day was to discuss issues that concern
people of color on the campus. The day
was important as well as successful. This
letter is to thank all of you who participated in this day and who supported us
throughou . For those of you who were
unable to attend and have questions
about the events of the day, please call
Steve Bader, Coalition coordinator, at
866-6000 ext. 116034, or stop by the
coa:Jition office.

WOMEN IN COUNSELING. Any woman
who works in a professional or paraprofessional counseling capacity is welcome
to attend Women in Counseling. For more
information about the group, call Barbara
Monda , 866-1378 or Linda Scheffer,
352-8460.

STAFF
Co-editors : Eric Brinker, Duane Heier
Production Manager : David Gaff
Photo Edi tor : Gary O berbilli g
Writers : Claire Kuhns, Gail Pruitt,
Arthur West, Leslie Welliver
Photographers: Chri stine Albright,
Bing Bristol
Graphi cs : Wayne Doty
Business Manager: Margret Morgan
Advisor : Mary Ellen McKain
Typesetting and moral support :
Shirley Greene
Dead line Coordinator : Kid Lizard
The Cooper Point Journal is published
weekly for the students, staff and laculty
of The Evergreen State College. Views
expressed are not necessarily those 01 the
college or of the Journal's stall. AdvertiSing
material contained herein does not Imply
endorsement by the Journal . Ollices are
located on the third 1I00r of the Evans
Library (3232). Phone 866-6000, exl. 6213.
All announcements for News and Notes or
Arts and Events should be typed doublespaced, listed by category, and submitted
no later than noon on Monday, for that
weeks publication . All letters to the editor
must be TYPED DOUBLE-SPACED,
SIGNED and include a daytime phone
number where 1he author may be reached
for cons ultation on editing for libel and
obscenity . The editor reserves the right to
reject any material, and to edit any
contributions for length, content and style .
All unsolicited manuscripts or art mailed
to us must be accompanied by a selfaddressed , stamped envelope In order that
it be returned snfely. Display advertising
should be received no later than Monday
at 5 p.m. for that weeks publication .

Garner is responsible for over 45 individual budgets and says it's not an eighthour a day job. "I would estimate I attend
an average of 15 meetings per month
which are relevant in some way to the
position . The person who accepts this
position should be well-organized, very
open and even-handed. They shouldn't be
dictatorial, but act as a facilitator. They
should be in touch with what's going on,
but they shouldn't do the job for people,
and they should be able to help them
realize what is important and how to
achieve goals. A facilitator stays in the
background as an observer, then offers
suggestions. There is a continual turnover
in the student staff because of contracts
and internships "

,

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Director of S&A Lynn Gamer Is leaving Evergreen
to pursue her own business .

by Claire Kuhns
"It's a scary thing to think about leaving, Evergreen has been a large part of my
life. I will be going to a very different
kind of environment. " Outgoing Student
Activities Director Lynn Garner says that
the birth of her child caused a change in
her viewpoint. "I was torn between my
baby and my job. I began to think about
going into business on my own. It is a
long-time fantasy . One day I went into a
shop to buy fabric and decided that was

photo by Oberbillig

what I wanted to do, it was an easy
decision. Larry Stenberg, my boss, encouraged me to take a one-year leave-ofabsence to see if this was really the
answer."
Lynn Garner first came to Evergreen to
study psychology and philosophy. She did
part-time work for S&A, and later did an
internship 'and individual contract with
S&A. She studied student services and was
secretary to the director of S&A.

Bill Eiseman, an S&A Board member,
who has worked closely with Garner,
contributed the following: "KAOS is 80%
funded by S&A. The other 20% comes
from private donations. Lynn's position
has a high amount of pressure, espeCially
when it comes to legalities. Lynn's leaving
will be a real blow, the whole school will
have a hard time covering her position.
Lynn does more than just handle books.
She's a counselor, advisor, and a good
friend to many. Whoever takes that posi tion will be under a handicap Lynn has
been here for 10 years and is familiar with
S&A allocations and there wi II be a transition to a computer system coming up.
We'll all miss her ."

God & Ape, Slug It Out In The 80's
by David Gaff

The third, and eventually thl' most important group of Creat ionists WPI p those
who believed in " Price's theory " Thi s
theory was developed by George McCreedy Price, a man with no formal
sc ientific training. His beliet was that th,'
world was created in six literal days and
only 6,000 years ago. Though thi s theory
was only a minority belief in the 1920's, it
gained popularity due to o ther group,
claiming Pri ce as their leading <;cientist

What is Creationism, and what is its
history in the United States? These questions formed the foundation of Professor
Ronald Numbers' lecture on "Creationism
in America," the fourth and final lecture
in the Religion and Public Poli cy Lecture
Series. Professor Numbers is presently in
the History of Medicine and History of
Science departments at the University of
Wisconsin at Madison .
"Could Creation ism be alive in the
1980's?" Ronald Numbers hopes the issue
will be with us in the future. During his
lecture, Numbers gave an unbiased
explanation of the history of Creationism
in America. Evolution began appearing in
school textbooks shortly after 1851, when
Darwin published his Theory of Evolution .
From this time until World War I, there
was no major argument about the inclusion of the Theory of Evolution in school
texts. World War I brought about changes
in many peoples' thinking.
A large part of the population believed
that the world was getting better; with the
beginning of World War I, people became
deeply troubled about the fact that
c ivilized nations were fighting each other.
Some people began to blame Darwin's
Theory of Evolution for prompting the
Germans to go to war based on the idea
that might makes right. They thought the
love of Jesus Christ was losing to Darwin's
law of the jungle.
Parents started to complain about their
children's faith being undermined in
schools through what they were reading
in the textbooks. An " unprecedented
number of American youth were going to
high school and finding out what was in
these books." The number of students enrolled in public high schools doubled in
the 19)O's, according to Professor
Numbers .
'
Arguments quickly began to develop
opposing Darwin's theory. Only a handful of scientists existed in the 1920's who
opposed evolution, but public opinion

Prolessor Ronald Numbers

Photo by Albright

weighed much heavier. " Scientists were
not to assume according to the Fundamentalists ," said Numbers. Science was
supposed to be factual not theoretical.
William Bryan, later the lawyer at the
famous Scopes Trial, "thought it was
impossible that a small scientific soviet
would impose their beliefs on millions ."
This was " undemocratic" according to
Bryan .
"Bryan's advice was to go to the
people," said Numbers. He believed that
the process shou Id be dealt wi th democratically. The people should be able to
vote on whether evolution should be
taught in public sc hools.
In the 1920'5, there were three major
camps of Creationists (the term given to
the group of people opposing Darwin's
Theory of Evolution and preferring the
Bible's explanation of creation). Each
group had their own theory, and their
own following. The " day age theory" was
designed to allow the acceptance of
geology and the age of the earth . Days
represented ages of indefinite time in this
theory, but in the "gap theory," there
ex isted a great period of time between the
creation of the earth and the creation of
man .

After the Scopes Trial, pvolution began
to di sa ppea r from textbooks . By the
1950's, the name of Darwin beLame Imt
in those texts. Darwin i, ,,, made a strong
resurgence in the 1960's however. As the
60's and 70's progressed, Darwin became
more and more entrenched in the public
mind as technology increased and respect
for science soared. Just as Darwinism
gained newfound strength, so did Creationism. However, their tactics had
changed; in the 1920's the Bible and its
reality could be maintained, but by the
60's and 70's, science became essenti al
according to Numbers .
This change in societies' views on
science in the 60's and 70's forced
changes in how Creationists viewed their
" Theory of Evolution." Creationists began
to look for scientific evidence to explain
their views , and found what they were
looking for in flood geology, which is the
major part of Prices's theory. The flood
mentioned in the Bible accounted for the
existi ng geologic record according to
Price's theory.
The Bible however, could not be taught
in public schools, and so the Creationists
were forced to drop all references to the
Bible. The Creationists began strictly using
science to explain their ideas, " nevertheless the story remained the same," said
Numbers . Price's theory, which had been
a minority theory in the 20's now became
the dominant theory.
This theory has become the major tool
of Creationists in their court battles to get
their views taught. Creation ists, who previously had fought to b.an Darwinism,

Michael Huntsberger, KAOS Radio
General Manager and student advisor has
worked with Garner for three years . " She
taught me a lot about "my job. She has
been temendously helpful and the fact
that she is leaving wi II put more responSi bilityon me. She is such an excellent
administrator, it's been very nice to work
with her. The transition will be tough on
other student groups too. Because she has
been here for 10 years, the position has
grown up around her. I feel whoever fills
her position must be interested in whatever students put together. Her approach
is: You have plans, how can I fit into
those plans l

I only hope the bookkeeping and
budget processes can be covered out of
that office. Lynn has always been very
willing to allow people to learn to administrate. She's wonderful, very friendly and
outgoing, very willing to facilitate and
willing to let students make their own
mi stakes . I doubt they will ever find
anyone who is so totally familiar wi~h the
S&A position . She has taken on many
responsibiliti es over the years. It is a tremendously important pivotal position.
Hopefully her replacement will be someone who is very familiar with Evergreen
because it is an autonomous situation ."

loel Barnes, S&A Board Coordinator,

w," quick to point out the fact that,
''ihE'S not really leaving. She's taking a
.. oar's leave-of-abseme She is the insti tutional member of the S&A Board and very
good at getting along With the people she
rip"ls with, which is a very useful persondlit y trait. S&A has (ontrol of about
'!>4tJO.<XX) and there are many views on
how that money should bE' spent. That's
pilrt of Lynn's job . It's hard to comprel1f'nd finding il perso n who can do d
bettpr job She gel<; along 50 well With il
diversity of personali ties ."
continued on page 5

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continued on page 9'
May 26 , 1983 The Cooper Point Journal page 3
I

I

Opinion

Equal Worth May Arrest Female Poverty

Letters

by Sanna Sorensen

More Driftwood Drama

Over The Brink
by [ric Brinker '

In a move that was applauded by both sides for the gun' control issue, Covernor
lohn Spellman signed a npw law that will provide at least some restrictions on guns
II) Washington State.
The menti on of gun contro l can trigger an argument even between the best of
jrlpnds . It"s a touchy sub ject , no matter which side of the issue you take. This is why
til{' new law was a good politi cal move for Spellman, because on one hand it
promises to cut down gun related violence while on the other hand the restrictions
are not harsh enough to raise th e ire of the NRA and other like-minded organizations In sho rt it"s a law of compromise .

,w"

The
law extends the waiting period for a concealed pistol permit or purchase
oj a pistol to bO days , though this only applies to people who have lived in the state
less than 90 days The extension on the waiting period gives police more time to
conducI Investigations into the background of pistol license applicants . The new law
al;o authorizes the courts to order the temporary surrenc'"r of firearms in divorce or
dome.;tlc violence cases Ii mortal threats occur.
The,e two i a,ets of the law . granted that they are small measures, are certainly a
movement toward stricter gun control For that, proponents of gun control see the
new law as a small step in the right direction .
rhe new law also eliminates the waiting period for those people who have concpa led pi slol li censes and want to purchase another handgun . This facet of the law
is sllpported bv gu n control opponents . The NRA has howled for years about how
th i< kind of burea ucracy was unfillr.
A lthough the n<>w law tack If's on ly a miniscule part of the problem, it is good to
see ,()mPl hlng f in,)llv happenmg with gun control. There may be hope yet.

i h",ml an Int8"',llng piece 0 1 Information thi s past week . Did you know that the
tond " ' 1\ I, f' (on tra, t I' '(1Il1ing "p. as It always does, in the summer. I wonder why
,: " do" ... th<lt W,1\"' II q'pms In m., Ih ... ~vprgrppn communi ty should have somp say
." I h(' l(lOd SHV I<,' ~ hal " prov.d"d for thf'm Milybe a co-op
Nah l

Letters
I () \rthur \V, -t

\nhu r. I ( en,'l nl , ',li d ,1 lot of Ihin gs in
Ollr lI ' II'rvi,'w didn 't II In ,lilY case, I
Iwl .('\!, th,ll you mi squotl'd me on three
,,,"pa rat e o,cas lo n,Ilrst. yOU quote me as saying, "
h,we b" en very act lv,," probably more
ac ti ve Ihan most of the board is COI11fortable w ith and probahlv more active
tha n tne board members have been ." I
believe the conclu sion to that sen tence
was . " th a r , past coord inators have been ."
Second , you quote me as sayi ng, " So I
throw proposals out to try and get
thi ngs
" Correct as far as you went,
however what I said was, " So I throw out
proposa ls to try and get things moving ."
What is important to me is not so much
the item I'm proposin g, the product, but
thp act of getting people to react to the
proposal, the process . An important
dIS tin ction
Third, you quote me, " The board is
composed of one faculty, one sta ff
mpmber, six studen ts, myself and Lynn
Carner."
This is not true . The board consists
<olely of one faculty, this yea r Mike Beug,
OIW staff , th is yea r Sandy Butler, and six
qudents, this yea r Bill Eiseman, Margaret
,'v\organ , FranCISco Chaleaubriand , Stuart
Smith , Cary Burris and Twilly Cannon .
Lvnn Garner and I are not on the board .
hu t are listed as advisors.
In any case, thanks for the article, I felt
,\ (ertam degree of shock at reading my",If in print We are looking for a new
SI\ A Coord.nator and if anybody is inter"q"d .n th is position thev should apply to
Ih.. 'i&A Coord,n ator , me, by May 30,
1qlll "

1",, 1 I R.lfn !"
page 4 The Cooper Pomt Journa! May 26 , 1983

Revenge of the Jocks

It ', timp to UO morp than read the
sports Pdge. I he S&A board is doin g their
imi tat ion of the <tate legislature with
n sc bv not fu nding intercollegiate
athl"ti( <

Intprcollegiate ath letes need S&A support to not on ly maintain bu t to improve
the quality of the intercollegi ate sports
program here at Evergreen .
If you happened to either read or hear
about Duane Heier's<>article in the last
Coopf'r Point journal, lie asks for a convincing argument "that explains how
intercollegiate competition is superior to
recreat ion and intramural sports ." As any
athlete knows, athletics is like learning a
popular foreign language. Intercollegiate
sports is analgous to being in a classroom
composed of seriou s, dedicated students
that are being instructed by a bi-lingual
native. Whereas , intramurals are better
compared to learning that language from
a book.
.

The problem here is o ne of educational
quality for the athlete. Faced with the
choice of different colleges offering the
same foreign language, would you attend
that institution with the great professor
or that which invites you to learn on your
own, from a workbookl
In short, we're here for the all-around
superior education that Evergreen provides. As siudent athletes, we don't want
this quality diminished in the area of
athl eti cs and in academics as well. The
answer to the present funding predicament is clear to us .
Benjamin Chot zen
Rocke Klockner
R9n Hagen
Robert Enr iquez
Rex Fletcher
Ceoff Cu Ibert
Austi n St. lo hn
Mi neko Nakamura AI ice L. Parson s
T sa Easa Sekazak i
Lilian Cu rti s
rom Mueller
I:ric )eemann

Driftwood Drama
Editors:
When I first brought my daughter,
Amelia, to Driftwood House, I hoped that
her 'experience there would be enlightening for both of us. My unspoi led expectation of a campus chi Id care center at a
four-year college was full of wonderful
images. I suppose I imagined an intellectually stimulating place with lots of
college students leading well planned
activities . Upon seeing Driftwood the first
time, I was struck by the clutter and
chaos I saw, The children seemed as loose
and unanchored to their surroundings as
the discarded clothing, abandoned toys
and outdated messages left hanging on
the walls.

Amelia's milk bottle was missing when
came to get her after her first day at
Driftwood. Virginia looked tired when I
asked her for it. Someone, too busy to
stop and introduce themselves, suggested
I ask one of the other mothers. Not
having met the woman, I tried and failed
to find the bottle among the disarray of
cupboards. On the day following, I sent a
new jar; and, after it, too, disappeared, I
decided to stop sending milk to school.
Recently, I tried again; this time the
bottle failed to survive until lunch time.
The kids were to walk up to campus on
foot , that day. The one adult I saw was
carrying so much in his arms that no
more cou ld be accommodated . Therefore,
Amelia was told to carry her jacket, lunch
sack and milk bottle herself. Not surprisingly , the jar was dropped into the
road and shattered .

Driftwood ch ildren fr equent ly walk
down roads-and across them as well. I
went to get my daughter not long ago,
perhaps I should mention that she is four
years o ld, and was told that she had gone
with thp othf'rs down to the beach to
pl ay Perch ing myself on a miniature
chair th at had been left in the front yard .
I waited for their return. Before long, I
noti ced Ameli a and a little fri end bounding up thp path and across the street to
Driftwood . Sens ing that I was concerned
about something, she assumed that I had
noticed her shoes were mi ss ing and a pair
of muddy socks were her only foot covering She conf idently reassured me that her
" teacher" was carrying her shoes up from
the beach and would be there soon.
Which indeed she was, a few minutes
later.
Recently Virginia responded to an
observation I made about the unpredictabl e atmosphere at Driftwood by exclaiming defensively that the children are
happy there. I am sure that she is right
about that. Children, unless abused or
mistreated generally do look happy. They
are not old enough to be safety experts;
they do not know what it means for them
that their "cognitive development" money
was used to pay for a co llege dance. I,
however, am o ld enough to know what
these things mean . I am not happy.

It was only lately that I learned other
parents have doubts about the qual ity of
Driftwood . Recently, I attended a meeting
where it was clear that all but one parent
present was disappointed with the ad ministration of care. I sensed that neither
Lynn Carner nor Virginia re sponded
adequately to the comp laints and suggestions made. My impression of Virginia
is of a person overwhe lmed by the
requirements of her job. I have little confidence in her. It is my strong suggestion
that she be replaced by a ce rtified teacher
whose ability has been demonstrated by
experien ce; a teacher who will be at
Driftwood every day engaged in effective
management of interns, staff and children.
jenn.fer Neighbors

Editor :
I would like to correct the possible
impression that there is only disapproval
of Driftwood Daycare and its director,
Virginia Brian. Such is not the case. I am
eminently satisfied with the daycare and
with the care my children receive there.
My children are happy with the center, as
are my wife and myself. This is not to say
there may not be problems with Driftwood, but my· approach is to work within
the organization and help to correct any
problems, not to lash out in all directions
in frustration and pique.
In the time that Virginia Brian has been
director of Driftwood she has accomplished several things to benefit the
facility. One of the most ' important is
the establishment of a staff teaching position . In the past year, despite problems
with keeping that position filled, the
effectiveness and consistency of staffing
at Driftwood has grown . This has occurred
because of the staff training program
developed by an intern, and the reorganization of the parent staffing arrangement.
I n the time that Virginia has been director
of the center, field trips have become a
regular occurrence. Such was not the case
in years previous.
It is alleged that Driftwood is constantly
dirty. I have not observed this. I have
been in the center as much or more than
any of the parents and I have found that
the daycare is not a mess. Messes occur,
as they wi II in any envi ronment where
there are children, but they are dealt
with. The biggest problem with cleaning
is that the teaching staff have to clean
the center. This has occurred because
Driftwood has no regular custodial support. The director has attempted to hire a
student as custodian but few are interested, especially at the low wage the
cen ter has to pay. The college custodial
sta ff provid es only minimal support ,
cleaning the ce nter once per quarter. But ,
despite these prob lems the center is not
an unrelieved mess, as some would have
you believe. It is in fact quite clean , that
cleanlin ess obtained at the high cost of
using teaching and child care sta ff for
cl eaning .
The one time I agree wi th is that we
need a full-time teacher at Driftwood .
The direc tor is the only full time staff
position currently funded for the daycare
We do have a half-time staff teacher D
position which I feel should be expanded
to full -time. A full -time teacher would
insure conti nuity through the day and
from day to day.
I have heard it said that there is
nothing to learn at Driftwood, that an
intern there cannot learn how to teach.
First, there is so much to learn there that
a year , or even four years, would not
suffice. The range of ages of the children ,
from 18 months to five years, make the
opportunities for observing the development of children almost limitless. At anyD
time one can observe children in almost
any of th e stages of development described by theorists , Piaget wrote volume
after volume on what he learned from just
watching and doing simple experiments
with children. As for teaching, one does
not learn to teach from another, one
learns to teach by teaching. Most experi enced teachers will affirm this.
In the long list of comp laints about the
center and its director, just about every
aspect of the daycare has been found
fault with. In fact, one person stated just
that, that EVERYTH INC was wrong with
the Driftwood. If so much is wrong with
Driftwood then why are there happy
children there? I n my opinion, the most
important measure of a daycare and its
program is the satisfaction the children
have' with it. My two chi ldren are very
happy w ith Driftwood . If they could
attend seven days a week they would .
And at the end of the day they wou Id
rather stay and continue their happy play.
Sincerely,
-..,
.
Gregory Krall

Washington State was the birthplace of
what has been called the women's issue
of the 1980's, comparable worth. The
concept of comparable worth is radically
different from earlier strategies employed
to gain economic equality for women
in that it goes beyond attempts to move
women into occupations traditionally held
by men: It calls for comparable pay for
services of comparable worth. Job
positions are considered to be of comparable worth when they require or
impose upon the worker similar job
knowledge and skills, mental demands,
accountability, and working conditions,
Every session of the Washington State
Legislature since 1975 has been forced to
deal with the decision of whether to
implement a comparable worth salary
setting policy in state employment. Last
Sunday, House Speaker Wayne Ehlers
signed Senate Bill 3248, requiring implementation of a program to achieve com
parable worth in the State of Washington
by 1993.
Dan Evans requested comparable worth
studies in 1974 and 1976, as governor of
the state. The studies were directed jointly
by the directors of the two state personnel
boards, the Dept. of Personnel (OOP) and
the Higher Education Personnel Board
(HEPB) . Commissioned to identify salary
differences pertaining to job classifications predominantly filled by men compared to those predomi nantly fi lied by
women in public employment. The study
found, overall, a disparity of about 20
percent less pay for women performing
services of comparable worth. Evans then
requested Phase II of the study, to
develop comparable worth salary rates
based upon measured job worth that
could be used for all public employment
classifications. To correct salary differ-

Letters
Editors,
I read your May 19, 1983 Opinion,
Heier Principles, They Shuffled Their
Feet with considerable dismay . You presented an inaccurate, one-sided description of the S&A Board dialogue with Dick
Schwartz, Jan Lambertz and various
student athletes. You may be interested to
know that we were not discussing the
athetics department but why the President's Cabinet felt that intercollegiate
athletics should be expanded. This is a
very hot and controversial issue and
deserves fai r and scrupulously accurate
reporti ng. Sadly you have done neither.
I t is obvious that you have not read the
intercollegiate athletics budget proposal
which is available in CAB 305 nor were
you at the budget presentation of intercollegiate athletics on March 30, 1983.
Had you been there you would have been
able to report on some following
information :
1. Intercollegiate Athletics under jan
Lambertz has no intention of ever
starti ng a football team given the
way football is currently practiced .
(Thus dies the football myth.)
2. I ntercollegiate Athletics is being run
Evergreen style. It is not trying to
recruit dumb jocks for Evergreen . jan
Lambertz is fiercely dedicated to
recruiting scholar athletes who are
interested in Evergreen's educational
system first and wish to participate in
athletics at a high skill level in 'a
non-traditional style.
You didn't do your homework, nor did
you report what you did hear accurately;
at best you presented a part of the argument. For instance what does this
sentence mean? "When I asked what
research Evergreen had initiated amongst
other small colleges regarding trends and
budgets in athletics Lambertz mentioned
some magazine articles that she had read

ences not justifiable on the basis of 'job
worth, the study established a system of
classification evaluation which could
measure the worth of all job classifications. Salaries cou Id then be set accordingly, ending the discrimination against
women by the state that occurs when it
bases salaries on prevailing rates in the
private sector, where few women are paid
their comparable worth.
Following these studies, Evans inserted
a $7.1 million 'appropriation into his
proposed 1977-79 budget to begin implementation of a state comparable worth
salary scale. However, this appropriation
was removed by Dixy Lee Ray when she
took office in 1977. The state Legislature
continually refused to appropriate funds
for comparable worth, despite the state's
own studies documenting its inequitable
pay practices, In 1977, the Legislature did
amend the State Civil Service Law to
require updated salary studies based on
comparable worth rates and prevailing
pay rates; and in 1982 a bill allowing for
comparable worth pay adjustments over a
1().year period passed the Senate and two
House committees before it died in the
House of Representatives. From the time
Evans requested the studies until a bill
requiring implementation of comparable
worth passed the Legislature, nine years
had passed.
Senate Bill 3248 (Prime sponsor, Eleanor
Lee, R-33) as initially introduced to the
Senate required "the salaries of persons in
public employment to be adjusted to
achieve comparable worth. . that salary
changes .. are to be implemented 'during
the 1983-85 b,iennium . . (and) that comparable worth is to be achieved by
January 30, 1983." The bill passed the
Senate on April 15, amended to stipulate
that salaries be " increased," not " adjusted," to reflect comparable worth . In

but Schwartz and the S&A Board just sat
and shuffled their feet. " The board did
not sit and shuffle its feet. The board
spent an hour asking many diverse
questions . One of the trends that we are
told about and I believe you were in the
room to hear, was that most college's this
size are currently spending about $200,000
on intercollegiate athletics, Evergreen is
proposi ng to spend about :Ii 114,CXX> on
Intercollegiate Athletics. If you are going
to imply we should be like everyone else
you would be recommending we increase
our spending by $90,CXX>. You ought to
mention this kind of figure if you are
going to argue we should be like everyone else.
You also state that, " Evergreen has
embarked on this athletic jourrtey
because the board of trustees has some
vague idea that the lack of athletics discourages some prospective students from
coming to Evergreen ." That is not correct,
you were in the room when Dick Schwartz
told US that the program started as a
recommendation #17 in the 1979 Council
on Post-secondary Education report on
TESe Research has been done which
shows that athletics is part of the culture
of high school students and that those
coming out of high school may decide
not to attend a college because it doesn' t
have a sport that they like to participate
in or watch; though once the student
arrives at college that criteria fades in
importance. Dick Schwartz did tell you
that one of Evergreen's failures- of market
penetration is high school seniors going
directly to college so athletics doesn't
seem so irrational. I could pick your
Opinion apart like this, however, I am
getting tired of writing half of every other
issue. I will close with a list of some of
the reasons that Dick Schwartz gave for
the support of intercollegiate athletics :
1. It is part of the working relationship
. between S&A and the administration
in areas of shared cost such as the
bus system .

other words, salaries for :under-paid positions (under-paid relative to the position's
compi!rable worth) would be increased,
but salaries for positions higher than the
position's worth (mostly positions traditionally held by men) would not be
decreased.
On April 16, the bill was introduced in
the House. On May 10, the bill passed as
amended by Representative Pat Fiske
(R-40). The Fiske amendment would have
changed the wording in the bill to allow
for salary "adjustments," meaning salary
decreases as well as increases.
The Senate refused to concur, however,
and asked the House to recede from its
amendment. The Special Session ending
Tuesday, May 24, it appeared on May 21
that the bill had a good chance of dying.
On the evening of the 22nd, the House
did concede, however. and that evening the
bill was signed by House Speaker Wayne
Ehlers .
If the bill had passed with the amendment, it most likely would have been
challenged by many <;upporters of comparable worth legislation. The amendment
would have allowed for a less costly program, since some salaries could have
been lowered. But opponents of the
terminology allowing for "adjustment"
have a strong argument in favor of their
position.
Carroll Boone, a proponent of comparable worth who has been working
actively with Washington Women United,
an Olympia-based women's lobbving
organization, and the Washington Federation of State Employees, which is bringing
suit against the State for comparable
worth, has determined that while full
implementation of a program would come
to a high dollar amount, the cost would
nevertheless amount to less than 2% of
the state budget. Furthermore, she i1rgues

2. The college is under a mandate to
grow and the college bel ieves that
Intercollegiate Athletics of a moderate size and at a moderate cost will
allow Evergreen to attract a wider
variety of students.
3. The cost is moderate, $114,000 compared to Western Washington
University's $336,CXX> and Central
Washington University's $314,CXX>.
Central's S&A pays $113,CXX>, Western
S&A pays $219,CXX>, TESC's S&A
$30,CXX> . The per capita cost is $674
versus Western's $25 .81 and Cen tral's
$19 .12.
4. When there is an upturn in the
economy, TESC must grow and the
co llege is gearing up for that; whi ch
is why they want the full intercol legiate athletics program in place
5. Evergreen needs to add non-academic
academics whi ch help in se lling the
school.
6 . Intercollegiate athletics will help
with the social atmosphere for 18
year old students coming to the
college
7. The more attractive we make our
~xist in g structure the less pressure
there is to change the core of Evergreen's education : it's academics .
8. Part of the Creek ideal of education
involves a sound mind in a sound
body. Evergreen has been relatively
weak in offering athletics for a schoc
of its size .
I n addition to Schwartz, the board
heard from student athletes on why intercollegiate athletics was important to
them. My notes show they said that they
like playing for the school and they like
the higher skill level involved in intercollegiate athletics.
As you can see thi s is a very complex
issue and should not be reduced to one
side's argument on the issue. You have a
duty as the press to try and show both
sides of controverial issues affecting the
college.

that paying women their comparable
worth should have a positive effect on the
state economy, increasing consumer
demand and taxable income while decreasing government transfer payments . .
Boone also recognizes that it is unfair to
demand that the lowest-paid workers
assume responsi bi Iity for the state's
economic problems.
The State of Washington has defended
its salary setting policy on the basis that
private employers also pay women less
than their comparable worth. Some state
legislators have supported compdrable
worth practices replacing rresent policy,
but are in favor of "adjusting" salaries,
something Boone opposes because the
strategy lowers some salaries as a means
of correcting discrimination. She asserts
that this strategy has been rejected by the
courts, and Winn Newman, special
counsel for the American f-ederation of
State, County, and Municipal Employee s
(involved in comparable worth litigation
in several states). has also stated that
such a policy is prohibIted by federal law.
The Washington Federation of State
Employees (WFSEJ, the local AFSCME
affiliate, received in 1982 the necessa ry
au thorization from the Equal Emploympn t
Opportunities ComnllSsion to take Its
"omplaint of sexual discrimination by the
',I.lte into federal court The union ( Ia.ms
that the state's present ,alary setting
practi ces violate federal and state laws
dgdlllSt diSCrImination and the Stdte Equal
Rights Amendment. .
The Washington Statp l omparable
worth legislation is schedu led to beg. n
n( 'xl August in u .S. DIItr. c t Court in
"" "" ,, ,II,rl wtll be the fir st com parable
worth L ,l " " ~o to tri, I It is expected to
set the precedent for d" ,,: lng ".th the
issue nationally.

Garner

continued from page 3

Evergreen Vice Pre,ident Slenberg
ri('sc ribed Carner as a very dedi cated ,
well qualified employee. "Of course I am
verv sorry to see her go, but at the same
tlll1P excited for her and applaud her tor
taking that kmd of ri sk . Lynn has nearly
"II the history of the S& A Board and wil l
act as a consu ltant. "
To fill th. s position we wtll haVE' to fmd
'omeone who has observed and been
Interested in the S&A proces, and ho\\ it
I'rn ction s. Someone who has COmmilnlf'n!
~ nd rea liz,", ib importance, its educa·
' ional valu e and opportunity for stu de'll t
," break away trom ri gorous arti" it,.
,>,I(,A offers a veh icle tor people to beconlf'
politi ca l as well as SOCIal Th ey ,hou ld
know of the coll ege Jnd how it funct,olb .
he good at planning and well -organi zed
They shou ld be a good deta il person and
have some sort of balan ced skill along
with the qualities of being creative and a
good planner It wi II be someo ne fron
inside because Lynn is officia lly taking a
leave-of-absence for a period of one vear
and thilt means she isn't reall y quitting
There's a possibility she might come back
after that year's up. Right now shf' is
anxious ly looki ng forwa rd to the opening
of her fabric shop.
Her favorite phase of the fabri c
business is custom sewing, combining
patterns for an original look , planning
wardrobes for the woman executive, but
she will be doing everything from
hemming pants, replacing broken zippers,
to altering coats .
Although Carner will be leaving around
lune 30, she will work with the new S&A
person for approximately two weeks, and
she will assist in any way possible from
her business in Olympia. Carner said , " It
has been a good experience overall. I
don't leave with any hard feelings, and
cou ld easi ly come back , but I am eager 10
try a new venture."
May 26 , 1983 The Cooper POInt J ou rnal page 5

Would Gorton Bill Protect Northwest Wilderness?
by John Kersting

Wdderl1es ~

II)

t he balance .

photo by Oberbillig

TwoWheeled
PoliticalAction
by l ndd : llma l

vl"lor I· Evergreen IS sure 10
null( E' IIII' [4rea l nUlllher of bicv cle, used
h\ . ·ud. ":, here. Even on ,1 wet winter
di\\ 50 I I 75 <tueknls arriVl' by bi cyc le.
011.1 111(" sprin g OilY Ihis ,an iump to
,t'\l·ral hundred .
'\11.

t\ (Pcent survey of bicyclists IIldl Ca ll' rt
that Ihe TESC-West Olympia-Downtown
Olympia ( orndol hJS Ihe heav iest biryr I,
tratl l in 1hurslon County with Divisl<JI1
SI .h Ih,· si ngle bUSI(,q road
)lIlre bicycle c()mmutmg bent'lits
('\'p"'!Joch 1(1 our (ommuni ty through I", .
P()lIlItIOI' l·nergy (On,umplion ano ro.ld
"P." VOl. might expect that somp 'Pt'(
(ol1"derdl lon ior blcyr lisls mighl oc< II '
dlull ~ th i, ro,lt e. In fact , til<' route hil'
SP\I ,/.11 serious prob lems for bicyc lISt,
Con,ICI<"1
The L)i\ " ion St. bikepdt l , " below q.llp
anell1dilona l standards III dps ign , sur l '" •.
co nd ili on dn d \o\lelth . ThIS qretch
IISt" d t hird on the su rve\,' as a difficilit
or ,idnl4erou, bott leneck to bicy clin f\
Cooper POlil t Rd is in good shape for
( y( lin f\ ,'Xl .'pt for the shorl st reIch betwef'n 28th and t he Evergreen Parkwa y
,,·hll:' I) pdrl 1,1 the Cllvmp iac.ormlor
Thp up-bound lane of Harrison Blvd . on
thp \'\'f'stsicie hil i " too n.lrrow tor
hi, \ ( I." 10 ,hdre the lane and the ~ iel, '
\\ ,il k " too narrOl\ . cracked ilnd Ii Iler(""
With leaves and gla,s . This st retc h WdS
li "c'd flrsl bv b,cyLiists a, a difficul l
dnd dangprou s bott leneck .
;\ new gro up called the Wl'st Olympia
SI' ycle Act ion Co mmitt ee wants to draw
dtipnt lon to thiS situation and bu il d support In the community for deal ing with
the'(' probl ems. Several of our elected
ofiluals hav(' e~p ressed a general interest
in bll Yl ling as a form of transport at ion .
However they couldn't be expected to
su pport improvements unless bicyclists
t-wrome an Informed and organized con"Ituency. ThiS is especial ly important
bp( Ju se very few of the peopl e in
po"tions of management depend on a
bi cycle as a form of transportation . The
West O IY'llPla Bicycle Action Committee
will represent people who bicycle in all
(onditions. If bicyclists are to be safe in
the rain, after dark and o n busy roads,
some improvements to streets like
DiviSIOn , and Cooper Pt. Rd. are
important.

,,,!

w,,'

nsc

Thl' Iwo improvements that the West
Olympia Bicycle Action Committee is
r('com mendlng are to pave the shoulders
0 1 Cooper Pt. between 28th and the Ever!-\f.-en Parkway . and laYlllg a shoulder on
th,' "",t li1l1e of Division St. and removal
nl til(' cemen t curbs that form the present
hlkq).1th
page 6 The Coo per POint Journal May 26. 1983

'1he' first recommendtion is noncontroversial. Thurston County, whose
iurisdi( I ion this road is under, has done
SOIllE' good bikeland co nstruct ion on 28th
up to Coorer Point Rd. The short dangerous strei ch was Simply an oversight on
the part of the people who arranged the
work and won'l be very expensive to
repair .
Th(' improvement of Division St. is
likely to be much more difficult. I-or one
thlllg, it w ill cos t quite a bit of money.
Also, the city of O lympi a has invested in
oulelal eel bike path designs and it will be
difficult for Ihem to admit that t hey made
d miq"ke Their approach is to use
cellleni r ltrb<; 10 "separate" the bikepath
from the road. Thi s philosophy ignores
thai 111m I bicycle acc idents occur at inters('c tions . and thi s type of path makes
inl.'rsP( I ions more complicated . Almost
all bi cycle fa cility planners with any
unciers t,1Ild in g of bicycle safety abhor this
design but there are sti ll plenty of
enginee" , pilrenl s and even some bi,yc li slS who hawn'l Ipilrnt'd t he basics of
bi cyc ling theory .
I f you wou Id I ik .. to su pport these
dforts to mdke tht' roads safer and more
comfortab le for bicyclists herp is what
YOlt can do:
Contact the O lympia City Council to
express your support of the proposal 10
improve Divi sion Street for b icyc li sts
by bringing the bikepath up to
standard Write . O lympia City Counci l,
r .O 1967, O lvmpla, Washington 98507 .
Or call 753-832S
Contact Thurston County Commi ssioners to ask that they fund improvements to the short stretch of Cooper
Poi nt Road between 28th and the Evergreen Parkway and that Mud Bay
Highway be improved for the sake of
bicyclists . Write: Thurston County
Commissioners, Bldg. 1, 2000 Lakeridge
Drive, Olympia , Washington 98502.
O r ca ll 753-8031
Contact the Intercity Transit Board to
request that they install bicycle racks
on the TESC #41 bus. Poi nt o ut ways
that this might help you, the low cost
of the program and the potential of
this program to pay for itself. Write :
PTBA Board c/o Jim Siakey , 1401 S.
Eastside, O lympia, Washingtvn 98501 .
Or cal l : 753-8107
West Olympia Bicycle Action Committee is part of the Thurston County Bicycle
Action Comm ittee, an organization dedicated to address in g a wide range of problems that bicyclists face. If you are
interested in either organization wr ite to:
PO 1624, Olympia, WA 98507.

Washington's most important wilderness
lands design ation bill is now being drafted
for submission tei the U.S. Senate and
liouse of Representatives As it stands
now, Senate bill 837 sponsored by Slade
Gorton, cou ld add up to 2.5 million acres
or as little as 365,000 acres to Washington's National parks system . The flexibility
o f thi s bill cou ld ;;lliow the omission of
'many spectacular and ecologically sens itive areas, <;evera l of wh ich are directly
adiacent to existin g Nat ional Parks. The
bill also contains a dangerous and , very
poss ibl y, illegal transfer of an existing
Pacific Crest Trail wilderness area over to
a privately owned sk iing resort. On June 3,
from 9 a.m . to 5 p .m ., both Senators and
seve ral Washington representatives will be
hold lll g a field hearing in Seattle on the
4th fl oor of the Federal Building. Thi s
hearing is essential to the designation of
wildern ess areas in Washington State. Our
represe ntatives are very dependent on
publi c input to determine what areas in
Washington are popular or need protection and therefore should be designated
as protected, publi c wilderness. The areas
that do not receive any public support
will very likely not be included in the bill
allowi ng the sa le, development, o r
multiple use (or abuse) of these lands.
Senate Bill #837 is presently structured
on a bare bones study ca lled RARE II
(Roadless Area Review and Evaluation1977) Thi s nationally conducted study
proposes that only 365,000 acres of Washington 3.6 million acres of road less lands
be designated as wilderness areas. This
study was heavily influenced by the
timber industry and has been legally
stru ck down in two courts as being
inadequate In January of 1983, Californi a's 9th Circuit Court ruled in Block vs
Ca li f . that the RARE propo<;als were
wholl y inadequate, especially concern ing
specific impacts of development. As a
result, Ca liforni a, Washington, and many
other western states will have to totally
revamp their roadl ess area wilderness
designations . Our senators and congressmen are extremely dependent on publi c
response to determine what areas besides
the sparse RARE II proposals should be
added to Senate Bill 837.
The bill is now divided into two parts,
Title I will rubberstamp the Carter Administration's RARE II 365,000 ac res desi gnated for wilderness protection . It also
has language allowing a legal challenge to
the studies' acreage limit. It also provides
for some very interest in g " boundary adiu stments" in the Goat Rocks wilderness
area. Title II is now a general li st of 12
areas that are worth public consideration .
The study states that these areas "are of
concern to many citizens" and " should be
considered during congressional hearings."
There are no spec ific maps , acreages, or
sit es that can now be examined.
The li st of Washington roadless areas is
long and includes o nly areas that are undeveloped, and for the most part useless
to any private interests. However,
development and exploitation can take
many forms, so certain areas are in
desperate need of w i Iderness designation
to survive the chainsaw and trailer parks.
-Couga r Lakes area. A favorite of Justice
William O . Douglas, it is an incredi hly
beautifu l area in the rainshadow of Mt.
Rainier.
- The O lymp ic Range va ll ey areas of the
Duckabush, Dosewollips, and Greywolf
rivers all need protection to provide
spawni ng beds for steel head and salmon.

-Glacier Peak has only a tiny area
presently proposed as wilderness, it's a
long-time favorite of climbers nationwide.
-Mt. Adams' lower elevations need protection from the watchful eyes of timber
interests.
- The Lake Chelan-Sawtooth area is a
spectac ular and very popular area to a
great variety of outdoor enthusiasts .
- The Kettle Range is recogni zed as a
valuable scientifi c study area as well as
providing an invaluable watershed resource to the semi-arid region .
- The Patos Islands deserve special attention si nce it is the only proposed area
known to be a natural habitat for eag les
and may be the only San Juan Islands that
become permanently protected from
development
Other areas worthy of consideration
include: Mt. Baker, Higgins Mountain,
Boulder River, Eagle Rock, Tatoos h,
Glacier View, Dark Divide, Indian Heaven,
Trapper Valley, Tiffany, Beaver Meadows,
Nason Ridge, Devils Gulch, Goat Rocks,
The O kanogan Highlands, Salmo-Priest,
Chopaka Mt., and The Juniper Forest area.
Many other areas deserve specia l attent ion and people are being asked to provide support at the hearing as well as by
letters written to our representatives. The
Sierra Club and other conservation groups
from across the state have drawn up a
"Conservationi sts Wilderness Proposal " to
be presented at the hearing. It is a diverse
and comprehensive package containing
2.5 million ac res in two dozen areas .
There are 3.6 million acres of road less
area in the state under consideration. This
proposal would still leave 85% of the
commercially feasible forestlands intact
for development or timber harvesting.
This proposal needs broad-based support
to become viable to our representatives.
Even a short card describing a certain
area that has been especially enioyable to
you or your friends could make a difference in this critical period. There is time
before this bill is finalized but the sooner
response is made, the better.

These Photos are in apprec iation of the sometimes
malign ed and generally
unheralded folks from
Fac iliti es, who keep thi., place
trimmed up , watered down
and bolted t oge th er . Their
effort s have helped keep
Evergreen one of the clean est,
best ordered campuses
anywhere

Now, here's the political catch you've
all been waiting for. A maiority of the
l ands contained in the Conservationist's
Proposal may be held hostage for a tradeoff written into Title I by Rep. Sid
Morrison. His .district contains over 50%
of the land s contained in the Conservationists' proposal and he has made it clear
that he wi II no t support the proposal
unless he gets the trade-off included in
the bi II. Rep. Morrison wants to delete an
exi sting section of the Goat Rocks Wilderness area in exchange for a larger, separate sectio n o f roadless area. The deleted
area would be given to the White Pass Ski
Resort to be developed into a World Class
sk iing slope. While on the su rface this
would seem to be a worthy trade, especially for Rep . Morrison's support, there are
several disti nct technical and legal
problems.
First and foremost, the Wilderness Act
of 1964 clearly states that Wilderness
areas are "for the use and enioyment of
the A merican people in such a manner as
will leave them unimpaired for future use
and en ioyment as wilderness and so as to
provide protection . and preservation of
their wi lderness character . ." This wording obviously shows that wilderness areas
are for the unspoiled, undeveloped enioyment of the American public-forever.
The only deletions permitted are those
deemed by Congress to be " in the
national interest" and has on ly been done
cont inued on page 8

Bm'. Capitol Sea"a

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May 26, 1983Jhe Cooper Poi nt Journal page 7

NW Power Playing
continued from pagel 1
and aluminum plants, and squeezing ten
years of Columbia River development into
five.

one-half of the eventual 29 public utility
districts (PUD's) were established and
private utility candidates were defeated
in their bids to be PUD commissioners .
Later, a 1941 'report by the Federal
Power Commission fueled the public vs.
private controversy by disclosing that five
private utilites had spent more than one
million dollar~ in campaigns against
public utilites especially PUD's. They
funneled the money through front organizations (such as the Washington State
Taxpayers organizations) to sponsor
efforts like Initiative 139, which would
obstruct the PUD's ability to obtain
financing for distribution systems. These
efforts were a direct attack on publ ic
power and, more importantly, were
attempts to destroy the prospect of
inexpensive energy.
The controversy was set aside during
World War II. Electricity was needed for
the war effort and there was no time to
quibble over smaller issues. The federal
government ran the show; building dams

Prior to the end of the war, private
utilities had begun an aggressive campaign to secure inexpensive hydro power
from the BPA, so they could sell it to
their customers at a handsome profit.
After the war the battle began where it
had left off, only now the stakes were
much higher. With $325,000,000 dollars
invested, Grand Coulee Dam and Bonneville Dam were generating electriCity and
distributing it over miles of transmission
lines. The Northwest was an attractive
plum. The major questio became: Who
will control the power of the Columbia
River for whoever controls this power can
dictate the economic and industrial future
of the Pacific Northwest.

The BPA remained in control, but they .
could only sell power. It has no authority
to develop new generating sources. As a
marketing agency it was conceived with
specific guidelines . A major bone of

twice, under very different conditions.
The spirit and the letter of the law would
seem to be directly violated by this tradeoff. This deletion would set a precedent
that would allow anyone to waltz into
Congress with a proposal to bargain
public lands for private interests .

@ Pacific Northwest Bell
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Vancouver, WA 98660
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Secondly, this deletion would result in
the loss of an important jumping off point
of the Pacific Crest Trail 15 miles S.E of
Mt. Rai nier National Park.
Third, to officially become a World
Class Skiing slope White Pass would need
at It'ast a 3,000 ft. vertical drop. The proposed area has a maximum drop of only
2,000 ft. There is very little room for
needed expansion of facilities, with the
nearest small town 25 miles away.
Even though the development will very
likely never happen , this legal precedent
would seriously undermine the integrity
and stru ct ure of the Wilderness Act itself.

Last Day Service Wanted

Address of Working Service

While these events were eroding the
public's control over existing facilities, the
national attention turned towards the new
Utopian energY-atomic power. After
debate over who would control atomic
energy, the Republican controlled Congress passed the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) to issue licenses to private
enterprise. The Democrats felt this would
be a give-away to private enterprise and
would replace government 'monopolies
with private monopolies. A Wall Street
investment banker, lewis Strauss, was
appointed as the first chairman in 1952.
The public lost control of the AEC and
especially the license hearings, which
were designed to prevent them from

continued from page 6

• 1st, fill out the attached form and mail it to :

I
I
I

Public agencies were forced to borrow
money from Wall Street instead of securing government money while at the same
time; private utilities were given huge
subsidies. They could amortize 65% of
project costs (for dams) against corporate
income taxes.

interfering. The AEC and utility applicant
would usually meet behind closed doors
and then present a unified front to the
opposition.
Perhaps the most devastating series of
blows to public power occurred in 1966.
A joint power planning council was
formed comprised of the CPA, private
utilites, direct service industries (aluminum companies), and of course the public
utilites.
A guiding philosophy of the BPA, which
chaired the planning council, had been
formulated by BPA general manager
Bernard Goldhammer, who built an
argument praising the aluminum industry
for their contribution in keeping electric
rates low for the preference customers.
The BPA even went so far as to sign
long term contracts with an aluminum
plant that did not exist (and still does
not).
Also, during this time, inaccurate
energy forecasts were poi nti ng to an
insatiable demand for electricity-a
demand that would soon outrun the BPA's
ability to deliver power
With a strong commitment to industrial
contracts, with the BPA apparently ignoring the preference clause, with a regional
council stacked against public utilities,
and with inflated energy forecasts, the
Continued on page 9

Wilderness Bill

ATTENTION STUDENTS!!
00 You Need Your
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Telephone Number

contention is the preference clause, which
gives publicly operated utilities priority to
the electric power.
Under the Eisenhower administration,
the policy was to keep the federal government out of the dam building business.

I

Amount

This field hearing in Seattle is a very
important opportunity for community and
individual support for wilderness areas. If
you want to attend, remember to write
down that it's being held in the Federal
Bldg., 4th floor , South Auditorium, 9 to
'i p.m . You can come for any part of the
hearing to provide input. If you want
more information , you can ca ll The Sierra
Club in Seattle 'at 621-1696 or the Wildernes s Cen ter at The Evergreen State College
at 866-6000. You can write a card or letter
to your congress man or Senator at the
address below. Remember, your input is
important for the protection of those
areas for futu re generations as well as our
own . The Sierra Club's May-june issue of
Cascade Crest has an excellent outline of

the areas under consideration and they
would be more happy to provide you with
whatever information you would want.
Their address: 1516 Melrose, Seattle,
WA 98122.
If you want to write to our President,
Secretary of the I nterior james 1M, our
two Senators, or any of our Representatives , on any issue, here are their addresses. It is a good idea to write letters
to Representatives of other districts as
' well as your own. This can provide them
with other information and opinions other
than of thei r own constituency .
President Ronald Reagan
1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
Washington, D .C 20500
Senator Slade Gorton
and Senator Henry jackson
Senate Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C 20510
Rep . Morris Udall
Chairman , House Interior
Committee
Washington, D .C. 20515
Interior Sec. james Watt
Dept. of the Interior
Washington, D.C. 20240
Representatives of Washington State;
The Hons. Joe l Pritchard (R- 1st Dis!), AI
Swift (0-2nd Dist.), Don Bonker (0-3rd
Dist.) O lympia phone 753-9528, Sid
Morrison (R-4th Dis!.), Thomas Foley (05th Dist.), Norm Dicks (D-6th Dist.), Mike
Lowery (0-7th Dist. ), Ron Chandler (R8th Dist.), House Office Building,
Washington, D.C. 20515. Capital Hill
Switchboard: 202-224-3121

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page 8 The Cooper Point Journal May 26, 1983

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Here's What To Do:
• First cali Pacific Northwest Bell busjness office between
9 a,m. and 5 p,m. to order your telephone service.
• For your convenience your telephone sets may be
delivered to you by United Parcel Service or picked up at
one of the nearby Service Centers. The Service
Representative taking your order can provide you with
further detajls.

BPA

continued from page

INTERNSHIPS

1

joint power planning council adopted the
Hydro-Thermal Power Plan (HTPP) The
HTPP was the beginning of the end for
th e Washington
Publ ic
Power
Supply System (WPPSS) . After building
one small hydro-electric dam and a
nuclear plant at Hanford (50% of the
electricity went to private utilitesl. WPPSS
was called on to bui Id five more nuclear
plants under the HTPP. The plan was
approved in November of 1969 and within
three months, the estimated costs for new
thermo, hydro, and transmission faci lities'
jumped from 15 billion to almost 18
billion dollars. The pattern has changed
little since. The new thermal plants would
be integrated into the BPA grid with the
higher cost of thermal electricity averaged in with the lower cost of hydropower. The public utilites were in effect
paying more for their hydro power so that
private utilites and private industry could
pay less for thei r thermal power.
With Phase 1\ or HTPP came more
future problems . The BPA could no longer
use net billing as a means to finance
further generation facilites. Not only did
the IRS strike it down, but it had ceased
to be practical. The costs of WNP 1, 2,
and 3 had already exceeded net billing's
capabilities.

Equal Worth
cont inued from page 5
A growing number of women in the
U.S. are experiencing downward economic
mobil ity, a trend referred to as "the
fem ini zation of poverty." Women who are
single parents are especially vu lnerable.
Compared with the.11 % of all American
families living in poverty, about 35% of
families headed by women live below the
national poverty leve l.
Women's economi c status in Washington State f ares perhaps worse than
women's economic status nationall y.
Approx imately 95 percent of all indi v iduals in Washington State receiving public
assistance are women and the ir ch i Idren.
Th is stat istic is not descriptive of Washington women but is indi cative of t he
lack of opportunities provided to women
in employment outside the home.
Several states, including Oregon, Idaho,
and Alaska have already passed compdrable worth legislation . It remains to be
seen, however, what effects comparable
worth programs w ill have on private
employment pay practices. If the discrimination comparable worth focuses on is
considered unacceptable in public employment, are they justifi abl ~ in the
private sector? Our economy depends
upon a class of low-pa id servi ce workers
who can be drawn into the labor force
. during periods of growth, and expelled
during periods of stagnation.
Historically, this class has been comprised largely of women (whose rol e in
the work force is justified by a sex role
ideology) and ethni c minorities. Comparable worth legi slation will not directly
challenge the existence of this class of
workers, and so would be rejected by
radical social and economi c theori sts. It
does not directly challenge patriarchy in
the economy, and so would be rejected
by radical feminists . However, comparable
worth strategies may eventua lly prove
more successfu l to liberal feminists than
earli er measures for greater equality within the prevailing econom ic order.

God Vs. Ape
continued from page 3
totally now f ight to get the ir views given
equa l time in sc hool. Two states, Arkansas
and Louisiana, eventually passed laws
giving equal school time to the teachings
of "Creation science and evolution
sc ience." the Arkansas law was eventuall y
ruled unconstitutional , because it advo. cated rel igion not sc ien ce. It also necess itated the supernatural, as well as being
untes tabl e. The Louisiana law is still gOing
through the courts and is likely to .g o to
the Su preme Court.

ADMINISTRATIVE INTERN" Seattle
Deadline: 5-20-83
Responsible for implementation of fish and shellfish harvesting surveys. Will work independently
surveying fishermen and shellfish collectors in
various days and times . Prepare survey data for

computer entry and evaluate using statistical
com puter programs. Prepare report on survey
findings. Prefer student with junior standing and
academic background in Qiology, chemistry, and
an interest in ecological andror environmental

quality research . 1-3 quarters, 20-30 hours/week.
paid positions (work-study and others)
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANT
Locations in: Wenatchee, Moses Lake, Spokane,
Bingen, Cheney, and Pullman
Work in comm un ity-solving capacity in coopera-

tion with other PRI members. Some background
research and conference and workshop design

will likely be included . Student shou ld be familiar
w ith literature on social change and community

development and be wil ling to work in the area of
group development and problem solving. 1 quarter, 40 hours/week, paid (travel/per diem when
on ollicial business)
SCIENCE INTERPRETER/SCHOOL FOR SCIENCE
AIDEITEACHER'S AIDEI PLANETARIUM AIDE/
MARINE EDUCATION AIDEIELEMENTARY EDUC.
AIDE/NW COAST IN[\IAN STUDIES, Seattle
Working with this Seattle organization to assisl
teaching staff in developing/maintaining education programs In the area of math, science and
computers as well as astronomy, marine educa-

tion, and Indian education. Depending on position
student will be involved with schools, or the
general public. Background reqUirements will vary
with position but most require science and
education. 1 Quarter, 20+ hours/week, pay
negotiable
fNVESTIGATOR INTERN, Seattle
Assist criminal defense attorneys by contacting
and ifJterfviewing witnesses, police officers,
victims, and anyone else having information
about a case. Reports wi II be written from each
Interview for the attorney working on the case.

Take photos, make diagrams of crime scenes.
In terest In criminal justice system;

ability

to

handle stressful situations well; relate well to
cultura lly diverse individuals; musl have good
analytical and interviewing sk ill S. 1-2 quarters,

20

hours/week, paid position (work-sludy only)

BOARD COORDINATOR" TESC
Planning, organization . moderation of Board ,
so li citation and se lection of board members , publici zing and informing of meetings and events,
exploring records on computer , and use computer
in allocallons . Maintain office functions. Prefer
stud ent who is familiar with computer , and who
l as good communication skill s. General r)ffice
,kills are a definile asset. 4 quarters (10 ho urs I
summer qtr) 20 + thereafter. paid pos ition

INTERN . Olympia_.
Student will be involved in a co mpari son 01
environmen tally sensit ive areas of the Thurst on
Region with others in Puget Sound . Duties will
Include assessing streng t hs and weaknesses o f
eac h in general terms , and mak ing recommendalion s for code modif ications or ad dit ions for
Thurston County or one regional s tandard and
writing up / presenting the results of the s tudy .
Prefer s tudent wi th senior standing and work
experience and/or st rong academic background in
the planning field . 1-2 quarters. hou rs negotiab le ,
volunteer (poss ible travel compensation )

PUBLIC EDUCATION COORDINATOR , Olympia
Write , distribute and follow public se rvice
announ cements on radi::> , televisio n and in articles
in magazines and newspapers. Also, distribute
hotline information to agencies . Preter student
wilh desire to develop sk ills in public relations
work WIth TV , radio stations, newspapers, and
magazines. 1-3 Quarters, hours negotiable , paid

(work-st udy on ly)

COMMUNICATIONS INTERN,
Richland , Wa.
Assist in the production of a weekly employee butletin and a monthly newspaper ;

INTERN , Olympia
Conduct mapping of wetland areas of Thurston
County, to include analyzing and determining
proper boundaries in areas of non-overlapPing

writing,

data and making suggestions for methodology ,

photographic coordination, headline
writing, page layout. Student shou ld have

plete description available in Co-op. Ed .). Prefer

will

involve news and

feature

had news and feature writing classes,

understanding of basic editing (AP style),
andprior experience in writing and/or edit-

ing for student newspaper is desired. 1-2
quarters, 20-40 hoursl week, vol un leer

PUBLIC AFFAIRS TECHNICIAN , McChord
McChord AFB , Wa.
Assist with conducting tours, doing photography,

w riting

stories

and

news

releases. (Weekly paper "The Northwest
Airlifter") Prefer student with background
in journalism , English , photography, and
ability to type. 1 quarter, hours negotiable,
volunteer

DEFENSE INVESTIGATOR INTERN , Seattle
Assigned case load of 4-6. Intern will contact and interview witnesses, pol ice
officers, victims, and anyone else having
information about a case . Reports from

these interviews will be prepared for the
staff attorney. Confer with staff attorney
throughout investigation and exchange
information. Other duties as assigned .
Prefer student with undergraduate course
in law; experience in photography or
drawing; interviewing and writing classes.

1-2 quarters , 20+ hourslweek. volunteer

DAYCARE DIRECTOR TRAINEE, Olympia
Responsible for childcare, program plan-

scale and size for printing document (more comstudent of senior standing With academiC background ;n planning or geography. Mu st show

ability and knowledge of graphic techniques
1-2 quarters. hours negotiable, volunteer (poss.
travel compensation)

SENIOR FIELD COUNSELOR (Appllcallon deadline 5/20183 ) Denver, CO
Work as senior counselor with co-counselor for
two sessions; plan and implement activitiez complete home visits , attend training and meetings
as required and assist in logistics prep andlor
adm inistrative projects . Must complete institution
requirements and provide eva luative report. Prefer
student with comprehensive background in counseling , psychology, special education, experiential education, or outdoor recreation . Should be

experienced in backpacking and campcraft skills,
and have experience in working with children.

t quarter, full-time, stipend.

HISTORIC PRESERVATION INTERN . Olympia
Conduct an inventory of Thurston County historic

resources. Systematically drive/ walk/ bike streets
and roads nollng old building s. structures, and
characteristics of neighborhood s; research
construction dates and historical associations of

buildings/sites; note condition of buildings ; take
photographs. Preler student with background in
land use/environmental planning, hi story, archi-

tec ,ure , or photography . 1-3 quarters, 10-25
hours/week, volunteer 'oossiblp
trav(:l comp.fp hoto mater 'Ci ls

work-study)-

ning, administrative duties including pub-

licity, parent education, bookkeeping, and
working in a co ll ective situation. Prefer
student experience with working with
school-age children in groups. and who

has had psychology and child develop-

S.E. ASIAN COUNSELORITUTOR , Olympia
Visit in homes of refugees . Set up recrea-

tional program for children alter school. Teach
English as a Second Language. Prefer student
with strong English background, and back-

qualified)

ground in helping relationships. Should have
gaud understanding 0 1 Third World co untri es.
1 or more Quarters . 10 hours/week ..... o lL.nt eer

EDUCATION SPECIALIST ASSISTANT,

CLASSROOM ASSISTANT. Oakville. Wa .

ment courses. 1 quarter or more, hours
fl exible, volunt ee r (unless work-study

Tacoma
Assist with nature center program development; publi ci ty for programs ; presentation
of planned or stalf- presented programs;
and other support activilies as determined
by superv isor lead tours for schoo l and
communIty organization qroups . Preler
s tud ent with academ iC bac kground in
environmental education . natural sciences.
and education . 1-3 Quarters. 10+ hours I
week. volunteer (travel compensa ti on)

Assist c lassroom teache rs with Head Slart
pre-sc hool program for 3-5 year o ld childrt;:, ..
Provide learning experiences to promo t e
social , intellectual. phYSical and emotiona l
development . Prefer student with background
In early childhood uevelopment/educalion or
.. previous expe r ience with early Childhood
programs . 1- 3 quarters. 5-24 h ours/week,
vo lunt eer (provide meal )

ASSISTANT DAY CAMP LEADER . Tacoma
CRISIS INTERVENTION WORKER" Tacoma
Receive train in g on c r iSIS l in es . Gain
awarenes s of dynam i CS o f domest ic
vio len ce H andle one- la-o ne counse ling
With wo men at the l ac ilit y Co- facilitat e
group o n dome sti c violence . Charting and
mtake procedure s l o r res idence will also
be handled . Prefer student with some
counseling experience . who has worked
with women. and has had classes In group
dynami cs. 1-3 quarters . 4+ hou rs/week.
vol unt eer

AS Sist with f in a l prepa ration for nature day
ca mp - Includmg se l up and actual program for
four ses SIOns of day camp (kindergarren through
4th g rade). Prepare writlen eva lu ation of each
<>e5">I0I1 Ass ist with o ther support activities as
delerm ln ed by super visor. Prefer uDper leve l st LJ ~
dent wllh co ur sework in elementary ed u catIOn 01
envIronm en ta l ed ucat Ion and wh o has previous
cam p experience: or with work ing c hildren a ge~
5· 10 1 quart er (sum mer) . 32 ho urs/week. Delict
( sti pe nd o r work ~s tud y)

SOCIAL WORK INTERN . Bremerton
PROBATION AND PAROLE OFFICER
INTERN , Bremerton. Puyallup. Tacoma.
Wa., and lakewood . and Po rt Orchard
Assist staff with pre- sen tenc e, pre-paro le.
elc . investigati o ns: monitor offender compli ance with cond itions of supervision .
conduc t interviews , maintain rec ords and
w rite report s. Prefer s tudent wi t h senior

standing. Must speak, read and write the
English language well. 3 Quarters, 10+
hours/week,
::.ensation)

volunteer

(t ra ve l

com-

The st udent wi ll be aS Si gned a small case load of
families where suspected abu se or neglect had
occ urred . Student w ill init!ally observe and then
gradually become responsib le for in vest igatin g
t he allegations , developing an appropriate case
plan . implementing the plan and assessing it s
effect iveness . This includ es co unseli ng . cou rt
work , and lo ster placement. Prefer st udent With
background In social work , psychology. SOCI ·
ology . Interest in this field , energy and persever·
ance are highly recommended Qua l ities . ' -2
quaners, up to 19 hourslweek, volLonteer (travel
co mpensation)

Reg. 6.99
Now. 5.49
12" COMBO PIZZA

1.50 OFF
Offer good through May 31, 1983

TRY OUR FRESH

PIZZA

YOU BAKE OR WE BAKE
866-3999

Located 150 yds N. of Intersection of Cooper Pt. and French Rds.
May 26, 1983 The Cooper Poinl Journal page 9

Hanging Out With Coya At TESC Callery Four
secured a commission from the local
cathedral. Later he moved to Madrid and
married a sister of the famous court
painter, Francisco Bayeu . It was through
Bayeu's influence that Goya became a
protege of Ralph Antoin Mengs, and was
introduced to the Spanish court by this
teacher. Mengs, a German painter was the
director of the Vatican school of painting
and an influential proponent of NeoClassici sm iO Europe. Under his guidance
Goya was given a job in the Royal
Tapestry Factory .

by Claire Kuhns

" Los Di sparates," a suite of 18 etchings
by the Spanish artist Francisco Goya, is
presently on exhibit at Evergreen's Gallery
4. These etchings, produced by Goya in
the eight years preceding his death in
1828, depict the disturbing behavior of
people in Goya's native Spain .
" Los lJi sparates" has been recognized
as one of the most perplexing of great
etching styles. Much of the obscurity that
clings to this suite of prints can be
attributed to their nightmari sh quality.
" Los Di sparates" was done between 18211828, during the time Goya also worked
on hi s fam ed " bl ack paintings," of the
Qu inta Del Sordo. A similarity in story,

In 1792, a serious illness left Coya completely deaf. For a man like Goya, wno .
walked the tight rope of a rising career,
among the fashionable and intrigue
infested court, it was a devastating effect.
But Goya was to become one of the most
sought-after portrait painters in Madrid,
and in 1799, he was accorded the highest
honor possible for an artist in Spain ; Goya
became First Painter to the King.

mood, and composition links the two sets
of works . A spaceless ness, where existing
figures move about in a desolate world ,
defined by few props, natural or manmade, contributes to the eerie effect prevading both "Los Disparates" and the
black painting.
Born in 1746, Goya grew up near
Saragossa as the son of a guilder. He
showed a precocious bent toward drawing
and was apprenticed to a pai nter at the
loca l academy when he was about 13-14.
His attempts to compete for acceptance
to the Royal Academy of San Fernando in
Madrid were unsuccessful. Consequently,
he was forced to travel to Italy in the late
1760's at his own expense. On hi s return
to Saragossa in 1771 at the age of 25, he

From the time of his illness, Coya
began to produce a new kind of painting.
He became fascinated with abnormal
states of mind. The su ite of prints on
exhibit, demonstrate this strange fascination and we are tempted to read into
them the working of the Enlightenment
idea -an intellectual revival which appeared in Europe in the 18th centurywhich sh uns and satirizes the madness
and superstition abundant during this
period in Spain .
Was Coya a cartoonist of sati ri cal
genre? O n a conscious level, perhaps he

Shadow Box Handles Subject Matter Well
by Gail Pruitt

was, and his works invite such interpretation . But he is not simply an observer,
considering the increasing persistence and
intensity in dealing with these subjects.
One might conclude that his deafness and
increasing isolation from society led him
to the same madness and fantasy found
in these images.

Coing to a play on death was not my
idea of a fun Friday night. My premonitions
were right, it was not a fun eveni ng. twas
uncomfortable. I giggled; I sniffed . I
walked out moved and engrossed in
thought.
The "Shadow Box," performed last
weekend, was a play about three
term i nally ill people. Set in cabins w here
the terminally ill go when the hospital
can do no more for them, the play centered around stories of the different
peop le interacting with thei r loved ones.

. Goya was fascinated with hi s own
creat ive imagination, or appears at I.east
to be struggling to understand the nature
of the imagination. Goya is known as one
of the giants of the Romantic Age. From
the bright Roccoco style of his early years
in the court of Charles IV, Coya moved to
a dark and powerful expressionism that
reflected the tortured Spain of the 1800's.
Goya drew the world he saw, a world full
of war, menace and desolation, producing
some of the finest art works the world has
seen.

Characters included a senil e woman ,
attended to by her meek daughter, an
intellectual man w ith hi s male lover who
gets a visit from hi s "floozy" former wife;
and a New jersey work ing man visited by
hi s w ife and son.
I nterwoven throughout the pi ay were
the five stages of t he grievi ng process

Goya's etchings will be open to the
public from 12 noon to 6 p.m, on weekdays, and from 1-5 p.m. on weekends.
This exhibit comes to Evergreen from the
Museum of Art at the Washington State
University through a grant from the Evergreen Foundation. For more information
on the Goya exhibit, and opportunities for
internships, contact the Evergreen Galleries
at 866-{,()00, ext. 6075.

Victor Borge bring s his unique blend of co medy

the om"-man show . Comedy in Music , which

artists of the week Mav 21-28 watercolorist John
Cash and oil painler Claudia Marsh. The gallery
hours are 10-5 MOnday tnrough Saturday .

Albalross productions presents Joan Armatrading al Ihe Paramounl T~ ~at re on Friday.
June 17 at 8 p.m . Ticket s are $12.50 and $11
reserved and are o n sale at all Ticket Master
o ut let s ,

debuled In Sealil e. and ran in Broadway's Golden
Thea tre for a record- shatlering 849 perf orman ces.
a feat w hiCh has si nce been uneq ualed . Since
then . tll S ever-changin g c o nce rt and sl age presen -

latl on has been enl oyer1 by peop le of all ages

10

every co rn er of the wo rld Vic tor Borg e has been
ca lled " a leg end in hi s own l ime" and " an Int er nat lunal treas ure " And . as one c n t ic sa id : "We' re
fo rtunat e, ln 1eed , that Vi c tor Borge does ex i st.
for w hQ co u id have Inven ted him? Appearing wittl
S Ollle IS Int erna ti onal ly acc laimed opera sop rano ,
Mary ', ') MUl vey . Tlc}<c ts lor Victor Borge's
Comer1y W ill; MU SIC, pre sent ed by Cornish
Ins t itute, are available al a ll Ticke till as ter out lets .

Poone ortlers can be placed by calli ng 628-0888.
Phoeni x Oesign , a c ooperative of three individ ual s dedi c ated to the deSign and execution of

frnely etched glass panels will feature their work
in a specia l exhibit ion s ponso red by the Mandann

Glass Gallery. 882t Brldgeporl Way , S.W . in
Tacoma . April 17-May 31. A reception honoring
Ihe arl ists will be hel d Sunday. April 17 from
1·4 p m. Gallery hours are from 10-5:30 Monday
throug h Salurday.
,---- -

- --

The Artist's Co-op Gallery al 524 Soulh Washington in dow ntown Olympia wi ll fealure as their
arti sts of the week May 28-June 4 oil painters Rita
Norquisl and Norm Gardener. The gallery hours
are from 10-5 Mond ay Ihrough Saturday.
The Artist's Co-op Gaffery al 524 South Washin gton in dow nt own Olymp ia will featu re as their

The Olympia Film Society at 911 E. 4th in
aowntown Olympia presenls "Jonah Who Will Be
25 in Ihe Year 2000" (Switzerland . 1976. 110 min ..
color. subtitled). directed by Alain Tanner Sunday .
June 5 at B p.m. The film stars Jean-Luc Bideau .
Miou-Miou and Jacques Denis and won the 1976
National Society of Film Critics Award for Best
Screenplay. Tickets are $1.25 for members and
$2.75 for non-members .

by Ben Fu chs

Last Saturday a Performers' Open Mike
was held in an artists' studio at 215 N.
Capitol Way. The event was a part of the
Celebration of Olympia Artists se ri es and
organ ized by Our O riginal Performing
Soc iety (O.O.PS) .

Special thanks to Hiro Kawasaki, Evergreen professor of Art History who
graciously allowed this writer to share his
notes on Francisco Goya.

The Artist's Co-op Gallery at 524 South Washington in downtown Olympia will be featuring as
their artists of the week June 11-18 watercolorists
Lynn Paveza and Judy Mitchell . The gallery hours
are 10-5 Monday throug h Saturday.
The Olympia Film Society at 91 1 E. 4th in
downtown Olympia presents "Loulou" (France,
1980, 110 min" co lor, subtitled), directed by
Maurice Pialat Sunday. June 19 at 8 p.m. The film
slars Isabelle Juppert , Gerard Depardieu and Guy
Marchand . Tickets are $1 .25 for members and
$2 .75 for non-members.

Study this summer in Idaho
at NO EXTRA CHARGE /*
u

N

v

E R 'S

T Y

o

F

DAHO

-_ ........

I
II
I
\

I

I

There is still time to plan to attend Summer Session at the University of
Idaho, Moscow Campus or Coeur d'Alene Center,

The Bellingham Hardware Gallery at 215 W.
Holly in Bellingham will present walercolors and
pastels by TESC student Pablo Schugul'8nsky
May 3-26. There will be an opening reception on
May 6, from7-10 p.m. The gallery hours are 11-6
Tuesday through Salurday, or by appOintment.
Clay Vessels. an exhibition of cerami c pieces
by graduating Evergreen studenls John Hendrickson and Lilli Crites will go on display in tt,e
Rotunda of the Lecture Hall at The Evergreen
Stale College on Sunday, May 29. at 3 p.m. The
pieces will remain on display for three days on ly.
For more information. call 886-6000. ext. 6247 .
Portrait pholos, taken by Evergreen faculty
member Lynn Patterson. will go on display at the
Northwest Center lor Vfsual Anthropology during
the month of May. Th e studio gallery is located
al 21 10'/2 West 4th in Olympia. The Northwest
Center for Visual Anthropology is coordinated by
Pallerson and Evergreen faculty member Sally
Cloninger.
The ElJergreen Ga ll eri es will present a Chicano

Poster Exhibit Including work by artists both
Within and beyond Ihe Pacific Northwest In
Gall ery 4 of Ihe lESC Library from May 5-J une 6
page 10 The Cooper Poinl Journal May 26, 1983

Be an Idaho
resident
student
this summer

o

and $55.50 per credjt for graduate
students and graduate courses. Djscontinuance of the non-resident fee
and the change in the graduate fee
were among changes made by the
Regents of the University at the May,
1983 meeting.
For a copy of the Summer Bulletin containing
co mplete information including an application . cal l or write immediately .

Universityofldaho
Paul Kaus, Director
Summer Sessions
Moscow, Idaho 83843
Telephone: (208) 885-6237
AA /EO

The "Open Mike" was sparsely attended
but those who were there had tremendous enthusias m and energy. The performances included a staged reading of a
new play, vaudeville routines, a Shakespearean monologue, story telling with
musical accompaniment, jugglin g, and
stand up comedy . The f inal performance
was the character of a bag lady. The
actress who wrote the monologue devel oped a touching portrayal of a street-wise
social outcast w ho had not lost her
warmth and humanity. She invited the
audience to come see what she had in
t he several large shopping bags she
carried laborious ly on stage. One by one,
people got up and sta rted to unpack her
things . The bags contained costume
pieces, toys , props, f lowers, hats, and
many other imaginative t hi ngs. What
followed was that as people picked out

BPA
continued from page 8

June 13 - August 5, 1983

"Non-resident fees will not be applicable for Summer 1983 at either the
Moscow Campus or the Coeur d'Alene
Center. Thus fees for all students,
whether residents of Idaho or not will
be $43.00 per credit for undergraduate
students jn undergraduate courses

what he thought of them because he
wanted to make su re the wrong people
did not show up for his funeral.

For instance, the working man , joe
(Bradley Aiken) had come to terms with
dying but his wife Maggie (Heidi McClure)
denied hi s impending death by refusing to
enter the cabin where he would die and
by neglec ting to tell their son (Austin St.
john) of j oe's terminal illness . She kept
insisting that he did not " look sick."
McClure and Aiken built up the tension
well and created a powerful scene near
the end with Maggie finally reaching the
stage of acceptance and asking joe to
te ll her he was dying.

Though humorous and ce lebratory of
life, the " Shadow Box" injected into the
aud ience an element of realism regarding
dea th . The play suggested the ideas that
w hen you di e, you die alone, you lose
everything materi al in life that you have
worked for, and your death comes more
qui ckly than you are prepared for . These
thoughts make wel l-reasoned ph il osophi es
about death less important than the emot ions people ex peri ence when faC ing
death .

The play was gut-wrenching yet not
overwhelming or depress ing. Su rprisingly,
there was quite a bit of humor mi xed in .
The intellectual philosopher Brian (Bill
Droege) told hi s former wife Beverly
(Dana Dunnell s) that he wrote letters to
everyone he knew and told them exactly

Perh aps the most di sturbing scenari o
was the cantankerous, seni le woman.
~el i c ity (luli e Stewart) and her d aughter
Agnes (Marla Stefflre) .
I t was evident Agnes loved her mother
but it also became c lea r as the play progressed that her mother was in so mu ch
pa in and made ~o many demand s t hat her

death would have been a relief to Agnes,
an agonizing situation many people find
themselves in,
Evergreen students performed the play
and Terry Swenson, also a student,
direc ted it The quality of ac ting by all
the performers was excellent, and it is
imposs ible to single out one performan ce
above t he rest The cas t interpreted the ir
roles well. The trio of Brian , Beverl y and
Mark (Gary Frey) interac ted naturall y and
almos t effortl ess ly with each other.
One sli ght flaw was that t he play
stMted out strong but hit a lull during
part of the seco nd act, seemingly du e to
laggin g deve lopment of some characters
But instead of fi u lin g. the performers
came on , trong in the end . whi ch is a
cred it to their skill.
" Shadow Box" conta in ed difficult
suh jC'ct matt er th at was sen sltlw ly portrdypd by Its r ast. It was a grdtlfYlng wa y
to ,pend a I riddY l'ven ing

O.O.P.s. Offers Rituals For The Future

More Arts And Events
and mU IC 10 Ihe Seallle Opera House. Thursday,
June 9 for one perlormance on ly at 8 p.m . In
1953, Borge made thealrical hi slory by developing

which people experience when they face
death -denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance.

--

Short ly t hereafter. in 1976, the BPA
delivered their infamous " Power of Insufficiency" notice, informing preference
customers that there wou ld be " inadequate resource avai lable to meet theri
estimated needs." The warning was
clear - bui Id WNP 4 and 5 or face power
shortages. Th is time, however, without net
billing, WPPSS wou ld carry the full
burden of financing construction.
The poli cies of the BPA, the interna l
structure of WPPSS, and the HydroThermal Power Plan, " coi ncidentall y"
combined in the early seventi es with
devastating effect With no seriou s challenge to load forecasts and with an
attitude of nuclear nirvana, WPPSS
entered into the full sca le development
of nuclear power. WPPSS wou ld ass ume
financial responsibil ity for construction,
the BPA would in corporate the hi gher
cost of therma l power into its grid, and
indu stry would receive a free ride - pay. in g a reduced cost for non-preference
power production . The public went along
; < with t he experts.
And w hat about today . The WPPSS
debacle is more than just a black eye for
, public power. Public power is a brui sed
and crippl ed body and will demand plenty
of attention to fully recover. Judging by
past actions, the Washington State Legislature w ill be of little help. They have
. already formed the Execut ive Counci l (the
~ inner san ctum of WPPSS) which moved

assorted things to play with, spontaneous
improv isat ions deve loped.
At one point, almost everybody in the
studio was parti cipating in thi s coll age of
creative play. The energy in the room was
vibrant. People were absorbed in roleplaying, playing with costumes, and
acting out improvi sations
This activity went on for over an
hour until people slowly dri fted off the
stage . As we left, peopl e were bu zz in g
with energy. I wa lked out feel ing a se nse
of excitement, release and joy. The events
that had taken place were a wonderful
ce lebrati on of O lympia artists.

O .O.P.S. was formed in September of
1982 by six peopl e from Evergreen and
the surrounding community under the
direction of th e late Richard Nesbitt. The
group worked closely for several months
developin g material through improv isa-.
tion. They documented the work caref ull y
and gave the material to Constance
Monaghan , a playwright and Evergreen
alum. The final produ ct o f this coll aboration was A Lover, The Moon, A Bus, An
Empty Street w hi ch performed last winter
in the downtown studio. More recentl y,
the group pertormed a staged reading of

the public further from the decision
making process m, they have taken W~ ps
to prevent WPPSS' abi lity to fi le under
Chapter 9 Bankruptcy. and they never
rea ll y objected to the govern or's closed
door meetings (which were designed to
f ind alternatives to the potential WPPSS
defau lt, but further alien ated the pub lic).
W all Street is certainly not going to help;
they w il l more li ke ly hinder, threatening
to foreclose on loans , and refusing to
iss ue new ones .
The advocates are coming out of the
woodwork. Ex-Representative Di ck Bond
from Spokane, " Thi s kind of mi sman agement is not acceptabl e and couldn' t have
happened with an investor owned utility,
What we have, therefore, is a colossa l
failure on t he part of government owned
utilities." Another political sage, former
Governor Dan Evans sees it differently. He
said t he first step towards rebuilding
publi c confidence in the Northwest has
already happened, the " people's attention
has been captured at the grass roots
level." To the three ousted PUD comm issioners in Mason County this is an understatement (Of 24 other PUD commi ssioners up for ree lection , only six incumbents were returned to office in 1982.)
The tide has turned and t he publi c's ire
is aroused, but there are no easy solut ions. The knives have been sharpened
and are ready to sli ce up the publi c
power pie. Lawsuits and counter lawsuits
are flooding the courtrooms, but in the
words of one observer, " t hi s is not a legal
question but rather a political question .
This is too big to be a legal question."

Help ~'Vanted by Martin Kimlo' idorf , a local
playwright. The play, whi ch dea ls w ith thp
psycho logical impact of unempl oy mpnt in
a mill l own during the recess ion of 198.1.

was performed at the I.W.A . union hall in
Shel ton as a benefit for t he cou nty food
bank.
I got together with an old fr ipnd , lpff
Noyes. a member of OO.P.S., to t.l lk
about the Open Mik e over d couplp beers.
We talked about the excitement o f doing
new and or igina l materi al ami about thf'
ritual of theatre . I told him about my
cat harti c experi ence at the Opf'n Mikf? HIo'
seemed pleased that my response was
poSitive and sa id, " 1 think we need to
develop new ritu als for the future ." As the
evening progressed and the beers dimin-

ished, our di scussion turned toward
d( ting. IWhi ch otten happen> when drinking w ith .lCtorS.) I '!sh 'o Jeff about hi s
Iro«'ss ,tS il ppriorlllin~ art!>!. He thought
"houl It ,! mon1Pllt . ('1l 1Iltied his beer dnd

"ud . "Acl illg is holi,t l< . Acting IS all
Ill' lu slvP An actor pub life on 'ta~p a
st.'p above the ('veryday life. Yuu try to
oh,,'rve ('vpryt hin g you know "bout
hUlllani ty and you try to put thelt on stage
in both .1 humorous and Io'mpalhi , \I .lV . "
()ur O ri gi nal Performing SociPI\ "
,urrent ly til I he plan ning pro([ 'ss fur thell
nl'xt event "hllh w ill blo' announc ed at a
fu tu re dal,· Unt t! then. all I can do "
w.l it wl lh anlillpat ion for the nex t adventu"o' and ritu al w ith ()lvmpi,l's experi mental thea tre group. l) O Y S.

WELCOMES

RNETT

JUNE 4
Shows at 9:00 p.m. and 11:00 p.m.
T-BONE BURNETT has worked extensively with BOB DYLAN,
THE WHO, and LEO KOTIKE; PETE TOWNSEND, Ry COODER,
MICK RONSON (of DAVID BOWIE fame)
Admission $5.00 in advance

$6.00 at the door

May 26, 1983 The Cooper Point Journal page 11

1983

MAY

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12-14
Spring is here -time for outdoor fun,
promises to be a chance for you to pick
gardening, baseball, cut-offs, and of up all kinds of goodies.
course, the KAOS Auction. Our tradiFor those of you who have never
tional spring festival of values on the air . participated in a KAOS auction, it works
will kick off with Jeff Clark on the morn- like this: During each hour, we'll open
ing of Thursday, May 12, and continue bids on 20 or 30 different items, ranging
until Saturday, May 14. And for those
three days, KAOS and community-spirited
local business people will be giving you a
chance to pick up all kinds of goods and
services for incredible prices. And of
course, all proceeds go to benefit
KAOS-FM non-commercial community
radio.
Last year, we auctioned off haircuts,
meals, Governor John Spellman's pipe, a
political football (signed by the Washington Legislature) , dance lessons, and many
other items. This promises to be even
more exciting and enjoyable. The response
from local businesses has been tremendous. We already have hang-gliding
lessons, stained glass windows, handmade dolls , record albums, books, and
goldfish (with a bowl. even I). More items
are coming in all the time, so this

1n retail value from $10 to $100. Opening
bids are $5, unless we tell you otherwise.
Then you listeners take over-call us up
and make your bid. At the end of the
hour, the highest bidder will take that
item or service for their bid. Once you

KAOS On-The-Air Auction

Thursday May 12 7:30 to 11:00 a.m.

Friday May 13

5: 00 to 6: 00 p.m.
7:30 to 10:00 p.m.

Saturday May 14

9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.

m



Remember the "Alive In Olympia" series?
Well, even though the series is over, it still
lives with the "Alive In Olympia" record . This
album features the best songs from the
series by bands such as Heliotroup, Early
Music Consort, Travelog, Factory Girls,
Angry Young Poets and more! This is a
limited edition release so order today!

KAOS STAFF
Th e ](AOS Program Guide is published monthly by 89.3 FM"
listener-spo nso red community radi o . The views in the Program Guide
do not necessa ril y represent tho se of KAOS o r The Evergreen State
College. Please address edit orial or advertising correspo ndence to:
T he KAOS Program Guide, 89 .3 KAOS Radio , The Evergreen State
College, Olymp ia, WA 98505 .

KAOS T-SHIRTS AVAILABLE AGAIN
NEW! IMPROVED! BETTER TASTING!

As a bonus, any person who makes a
bid over $15 will automatically become a
KAOS subscriber, receiving the program
guide, a subscriber card, and discounts on
all KAOS events, and our T-shirts too .
So, if you held out fo r so mething better
during our marathon , or if you just want
to pick up on some great deals , be sure to
listen to the ](AOS auction . W e' ll be
a uctioning on the air on Thursd ay.
May 12, and Friday, May 13, from 7: 30
10 11 a. m ., 5 to 6 p .m., and 7:30 to
10 p.m . Then on Saturday . May 14, we'll
'C on from 9 a.m. to 9 p .m .. with rea ll y
, pecial items , and during th e la st two
;,o urs, th e Bargain Basemen t Close-Out.
vhere we' ll a uction off pa ckages of it ems
"r any bid over $5.
Help rai se money for KAOS , get some
rea t deals , become a subscriber, and join
;le fun , du ring the KAOS O n-The-Air
Auction . No better deal in town !

LBUM
a

n



pay that bid, we'll give you a certificate
and inform the business involved that
YOU are the lucky person.

Send $6.50 plus $1.50 P & h to :
KAOS Album
TESC CAB 305
Olympia WA 98505
,Name

--------------------------------------Address
-----------------------------------

Allow 6;-8 weeks for delivery

O perati ons
Techni cal
Mus ic
News
;lrod uction

i'SA's
,- ommunity Ca len dar
General Mana~er
Program G uide
T y pese tt ing

Kat~

D re'l'n
Norm 5,·hl
Geotf Kir k
Cary O live, John Hill , Mary Schac ter, Jo hn Kirstin
Bill Ei ,eman
Duain e Heier
Eric Brinker
Michael Hu nt sberger
Kevin Olson
Sh irley Gn.' ene

Order now and receive, absolutely free, salutations from admirers, the envy and admiration of
your friends, and the thanks of the entire KAOS
staff.

The NEW 1983 KAOS T-shirts have arrived!
Jet black with the 89 113 logo, our call letters,
location and "Listener Sponsored Community
Radio" emblazoned across the chest In bright . r--------~--------------,
.
ORDER FORM
I
yellow, this T-shirt will make a welcome
Please send me
..
Enclosed is a check for
I
addition to your spring war9r"obe. Give them
1983 KAOS T-Shirts ' • (Sales taX included in I
away as presents! Buy 7--one for each day of
0$6.50 regular rate
,rrice--please include ',
the week! Fights headache pain--fast! Available
o $6.00 subscribers
:$1.00 for postage and ,
in small, medium, large and extra-large. The
Please indicate size(s)
handling on mail-orders) I
price--a measley $6.50, or $6.00 for KAOS
I
subscribers (Tax already inCluded). On sale now
SEND
MY
T
-SI-llRTS
TO:
I
from 9 am to 3 pm at KAOS, CAB 304, The
I
Evergreen State College; or outside the TESC
Name: ____________________________________ '
bookstor~ on Tuesdays and Fridays, 11 a.m. to
1 p.m. Or use this handy mail-order form below
Address
and send it to us at:
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6-8
weeks
delivery.
OLYMPIA, WA 98505



I

• •



7:00-10:00 a.m.
CLASSIC HICK SHOW
Bill Wake
F,>r those who are up and can appreciate fine classical music, my show will begin
the week for KAOS. Baroque. romantic, contemporary. with some jazz or comedy,
and the classical request hour from 9 :00-10: 00 . Enjoy

10:00-10:30 a.m.

OLD TIME RADIO
Gordon Newby
April 3. The Shadow
casts in radio history.
April 10. The Six Million Dollar Man.
April 24. The Lone Ranger.
Two shows!
Tune in at 10:00 every Sunday with
April 17. The Years to remember; NewsGordon Newby.

Hear 40's, 50's. 6e's; each week there
will be a spotlight album. Listen and win
sixty minutes of the oldies. Tell a friend

about Golden Oldies in stereo on 89 1/3
PM with Gordon Newby. Call 866-6822
request line.

10:00-12:00

1: 00-3 : 30
THE CELTIC SAMPLER
Annie Broome
Last month we traced the Bret;'"s to Louisiana by way of their Canadian settlement Acadia. So now the sampler features "Musique Aca diennes" and some hot
Zydeco each week.
The bulk of the program is still the jigs, reels and traditional airs of Ireland,
Scotland and Wales. We have new albums from the Bothy Band, Battlefield, The
Tannahill Weavers and Donal Lunny.
This month there will be readings of Dylan Thomas' poetry and "Adventures in
the Skin Trade," his unfinished novel, plus some recollections of Brendan Behan.
Listen. You'll like it.
UP THE REBELS I
(Note change from Friday to Tuesday)
3:30-6:30 p.m.

is considered by .many to be one of his
best.
April 17: This week it's "Black Magic"
from Magic Sam. A brilliant guitarist and
blues legend, this LP was released just
weeks prior to his premature death at
age 32 in 1970.
April 24: Fenton Robinson's 1974 debut
LP "Somebody Loan Me a Dime." Although not a big seller, this album in a
fine , innovative masterpiece by a progreso
sive and sensitive guitarist.

April 3: "Hoodoo Man Blues" from Junior
We lls. Released in 1965, this is one of the
first full Ip's from an electric Chicago
blw>, band.
April 10: "Evil " from Hnwlin' Wolf.
Although many of the cuts are availabl,
on various compilations, the o riginal disk
3:30·5.00 r.llI .
::':00·-

~,(

CLASSICAL SWING BIC HAND
Dave Beck
(a lt ernat in g week ly with Sharon Berman)

.. p.m.

VIET~AMESE

7:00 -~0:00

SHOW

Vern Nguyen
Major Tom

GAY SPIRIT

Rock mUSIc.
THE AGE OF RE-RUN
Rich lensen
10:00·12:00
When I heard it. I didn't even know , it was a radio show, thought some crazy
people had snuck into my house and we re arguing in the other room. When I found
out it was just the radio . I turned it right off. A friend of mine heard it , too, and
said th at a bunch of that stuff was done by people in Olympia. I didn't know there
were weirdos like that aro und here. Now I'm afraid to go anywhere, who knows
w ha t somebody like that is liabl e to do behind the wheel of a car or in a restaurant
with a sharp knife.
ROCK, VARIETY

Midnight-whenever

Whoever



6:00-10:00 a.m.
FIRST IMPRESSIONS
John Heater
A variety o f music, mostl y classical. folk . and jazz; with news, weather and
announcem ents of local event s to encourage you on Monday morning.
10:00-]2:00

BLUES

12:00-1:00 p.m .
Music, poetry , and other stuff.

1:00-3:30 p.m.
World Folk music.
3:30-6:30 p .m

6:30-7:00

Kennan Kelly

MOUTH PIECES

DOUG DENHERDER

Doug Denher!Ier

Parik Malley
(alternating weekly with Bill Martin)

word (poetry , comedy, philosophy, etc.) ;
and perhaps even some live poetry by
local poets.

KAOS AL TERNA TIVE NEWS

7:00-10:00 p.m.

JAZZ

7:00-10:00 p.m.

KAOS AL TERNATIVE NEWS
AIN'T MISBEHA VIN'

LhiSa Rheish (first two weeks
of the month)
Liste n ~\' ith your amiable cnm m~ntator Lhisa Rheish to jazz of all sorts-from the
bloozy " t the 20's and 30's to the' free-blowing leaves of a more recent era and a
so l'id casl 01 stdndard" inbetween.
Li s l(>~ in li"cn good and f~el tree to phone in your requests.
alternates with
YOUR JAZZ SHOW
Francisco Ariel Chateaubriand
This program is devoted to all listener requests as well as the best in traditional
and modern jazz. Artists will include such notables as Ella Fitzgerald, Dexter
Gordon, Stan Getz, Art Tatum, Mose Allison, Deodato, Billie Holiday and countless others. If it's good jazz you want to hear then listen to Your Jazz Show . .. And
for those of you who might be wondering-yes, this is my real name.
10:00-12:00

Philip Micheaux
(alternating weekly with Penny Ray)

10:00 p.m.-2:00 a.m. (at least)
HIGHLIGHTS OF A LOWLIFE
Nan
(12 midnight-2:00 a .m. on first Monday of month)
Wild rockin ' party music for hep folks to rock out. Ten to midnight, an artist or
theme is featured. '
Rhoda Fleishman is on at 10: 00-12: 00 the first Monday of each month; Mark
Christopherson takes over at 12 :00 on the second, third and fourth weeks.

••••••

Calvin Johnson
(alternating with Larry Champine)
I start every show with an instrumental because there's a lot of good ones out
there. Then I'll play something like XXOO, Atilla the Stockbroker, Faith, John's
Children or Sister Nancy. This is followed by your typical Bad .Religion/Tracey
Thorn/Void/Saccharine Trust/Neats/Factrix type of stuff, ru.d then for a change of
pace, I'll throw in some Gladiators, Chris Moffa, Crass, Descendants and Dangerous
Birds. Then to top it all off, I use the basic Fall, Big Boys, Red Cross and Diamanda
Galas grand finale. No new music, but sometimes new people are doing it.

9:30-10:30 p.m.
VOICE AND EXPRESSION OF LATIN AMERICA
Lisa Levy
Voice and Expression of Latin America features the best music of Central and
South America. A complete blend of traditional folklore with neo-folklore (new
music using traditional instruments and rhythms) and social and protest music.
This is a bilingual program.


10:30-12:00 midnight
ROBBIE'S. WORLD OF MUSIC
Robbie Johnson
Jazz, fusion, etc. This is the time to curl up next to your radio and tune in with
your mind open to some go-o-od musicll Guaranteed you'll like it. Just ask any of
your friends. We'll talk about it, criticize it, and maybe even hear some live music.
Have fun, enjoy and listen, as I'll share the best of our library with you.

Kevin Olson
Midnight-whenever
LATENIGHT LOBOTOMY
Hey, all you Rock 'n' Rollers, this is your showl Stay up late and scramble your
brain to both the latest and the greatest in the area of pure rock 'n' roll . For laughs,
I'll even throw in some comedy. Other surprises await you Wednesdays at midnight.
Your frontal lobe may never be the same.

••••••••
THE AMERICAN GUITAR
Jeff aark
PHILOSOPHY SI-'OW
America has a rich tradition of guitar
can Guitar Philosophy espoused in glowmusic, especially blues and country. Tune
ing musical terms. Requests and listener
in Thursday mornings to hear The Amerifeedback are encouraged. 866-6822
6:00-10:00 a.m.

BOY MEETS GIRL

Midnight -whenever
Can you j"I1,,,,,. the groove wherever
Whal aboul ,h()wt unes from the twenties
yo u Ihlnk you 've go l what it takes, tune
Wimp .

MIXER
Geoff Kirk
it may go? From funk to Frank Sinat.-a?
followed by hardcore from the eighties? If
in . Otherwise go watch TV or something.

6:00-]0:00
HALF AND HALF
Petrina Walker
If you have the coffee, Petrina L. Walker. ex Go-For-Baroquer, has the half & half
Wednesday 's 6-10 a.m. Do not miss the "Daily Living Ditties" -absurd statements
to help you Ihrough the morning. She w ill take you around the world with weather
highs and low s; and complete your day with politically disclaimed favorites. Listen
fo r yo ur favorite horoscope. Think, laugh, forget. Music ranges from classical-folkjazz. And spec ial requests are encouraged. Half & Half the musical beverage
all ernative .

]0:00-12:00
RANGER'S RADIO RODEO
Music to drink beer by in th e morn ing.

The Ranger

12: 00-1 : 00
WEDNESDAY FOCUS
Carol Harding
Wednesday Focus is a cultural Public Affairs Show. Each week I will be interviewing famous, nonfamous and infamous personalities. I will investigate and
explore political and social issues that affect not only students but also commumty
people. I will also feature interviews with artists an,d entertai.ners that are cuIturally
stimulating. So tune in and be turned on to what s happenmg locally, nationally,
a nd internationally.

1 : 00-3 : 30
EARLY MUSIC
Norm Sohl
Music of the Renaissance and Middle Ages. Composers from Machaut and
Dunstable to Michael Praetorius will be featured, including performances by the
Studio der Furen Musik, London Pro Lantione Antiqua, and local musicians I The
style of each show is varied, from islamic-influenced music to Medieval Spain and
Provence, the Litergical Music of the Netherlands, and examples of European Folk
Music, which still presents the instruments and styles of the Middle Ages. Hear what
European music was before European music became "classical."

3:30-6:30 p.m.
SUMMA MUSICA
Mark Christopherson
Say goodbye to soapsuds and hello to music-with SUMMA MUSICAl This
show has "tradtionally" focused on composers running the historical gamut from
Monteverdi to Hindemith, with special features on Stravinsky, Mendelssohn,
Brahms, Vivaldi, Handel, Mozart, Gershwin, Bartok, Cage, tenor Enrico Caruso and
harpsichordist Trevor Pinnock; this quarter will display more of a leaning toward
20th ~entury and American music (not always simultaneously). However, the classic
range will always be represented, so TUNE INI

KAOS AL TERNATIVE NEWS

10:00-12:00 a .m. THE ORIGINAL OGO POGO RADIO SHOW Ondy Dollard
A diverse blend of good morning music that will prove once and for all that with
hope we can all find Ogo Pogo. What is it? Listen and find out.

12:00-1:00 p.m.
WHAT'S FOR LUNCH?
Riede Wyatt
Native legends, poet,y and music from all around the world. Could be just abou t
anYlhing; there's only one way to find out - Tune in. Requests requested.





• •

6:00-10 :00
BREAKFAST SPECIAL
Bill Eiseman
Join host Bill Eiseman for a tasty variety of music, discussion, and information.
Check out the Best of the Week's entertainment, interviewed each week. From bluegrass to jazz and animals to zoos, it's a great way to start your day.
t

10: 00-12 noon'
Folk and bluegrass .

WINGS OF THE FOREST

Jeffree Stewart

12:00-1:00 p.m.
MET APHYSICAL REVIEW
Geoff & Tom
Is it a 'serious co"}edy show or a humorous serious show? Don't ask me, I'm only
half of the announcers. This month we plan on talking about aging, the nuclear
peril and more plus book reviews and weirdos who call in . Whether you're brownbagging or having a breakfast steak in bed the Metaphysical Review is the perfect
accompaniment .
1:00-3:30 p.m .
3:30-6:30

6:30-7:00
7:00-10:00
10:00-12:00

WORLD FOLK

Stephen Dimitroff

. Toni likes traditional Hawaiian music
best of all, better than the more modern
styles. listen and enjoy the sounds of
Hawaii. As a special treat, Toni will read
some romantic Hawaiian poems (her
favorite poet is Don Blauding). She also
gives you important Hawaiian vocabulary
additions for you to "computerize" as she
says. Here are some useful samples:

Toni Collie

Pe hea oe: How are you?
Aloha wau la oe: I love you.
Aloha ahiani: Good evening .
Ola mau ho: Same as usual.
Mabea Kou hale: Where is your house?
He papaleau: I have a hat.
As ever, Toni is looking for local
musicians and singers that sing and play
Hawaiian music.

CLASSICAL FEATURE
Ion Scheuer
3:30-6:30 p.m .
I've been doing this for sometime now. I know where to go for the good st uff. You
better believe all the bases.are covered -renaissance , baroque, classical. romantic,
20th century; new music - the whole spectrum of classical. The Big Names, the Old
Warhorses get crowded out by the great unknowns. Classical Feature takes up" where
Music Appreciation left off and goes way, way into the music.
6:30-7:00 p.m.

AL TERNA T1VE NFWG

12 : OO-whenever
Rock, variety.

Dave Rauh
HAPPY HOUSE
alternates with
Tucker Petertil
ADV ANCED ROCK'N'ROLL
Tucker plays all kinds of music, from beautiful. easily discemable, user-friendly
neo-standards, suitable for framing to interchangeable, disposable, burnout trauma
substitutes guaranteed to make your mohawk stand on end. He also features at least
one cassette from the international network of artworkers. So pull up an uneasy
chair and become advanced.

10:00-12:00 midnight

Midnight~l

THE TWILIGHT ZONE

Submitted for your approval: Picture
this, if you will, Spring. It is the beginning of a new week, a new dimension in
time, a new season. It is Sunday at mid~ight -atime to turn your radio on '

KAOS ALTERNATIVE NEWS
JAZZ

Ellie Fitzgerald

THE VINYL FRONTIER
Suzanne Shephard
(alternating weekly with Terri Sullivan)

MATT LOVE

Matt Love

••••••••
6:00-9:00 a.m.
JIM NEILL, THE MUSIC AND YOU
Jim Neill
Hi. I'm ]im Neill; catch me for 89-lnformation news. Soap Dope Stump the Stud
Trivia, Breaking Station Format. your favorites in Country. KAOS and YOU! Find
out with ME, Jim Neill, K A 0 S 89.3 fm .

AL TERNA TE ROUTE

Women's music, women's news, Women's views. April attractions: My birthday; Gayle Marie (Live) April 9; Mary

Janet B. & Co.
Watkins (If all goes we ll) ; Chi ldren's
(non-sexist) stories.

12:00-2:00
CINEMA THEATRE
Ford A. Thaxton
May 7th. "Mus ic from Animated Films"
Today we' ll hear the comp lete score by Angela Morley for "Watership Down"; lohn
Morgan 's score for the short film "The Magic T reasure" ; David Raksin 's mu sic for
the UrA Classic "The Unicorn in th e Garden " ; and selected b its from "Super·
chicken"; 'Tom Sli ck" : "Dudl ey Do-right" a nd many olhers .
May ]4th. "KAOS Auction"
I'm gone this weekend for the Annual KAOS Auct ion with lots of greal Ilem s to bid .
tune in and help support KAOS FM
May 2]st. "Composer Spot light: Ken Thorne"
Today we highlight the career of this very fine composer w ith his s«'res from such
films as "Help."
"Superman 2 & #3"; "Hannie Cau lder" ; and many o:ners.
May 28th. "New Releases"
If we're lucky, today we'lI hear John Williams score for "Return of the Jedi"; if th at
isn't available we'll hear "Dragonslayer" by Alex North; and "The Last Embrace" by
Miklos Rozsa.

2:00-5:00

7:00-10:00 p.m.
THE AUTOMATIC MEDIUM
Jeffrey Bartone
The Automatic Medium is back on the KAOS airwaves! A survey of contemporary New Music investigating the extraordinary variety in process, style, concept,
performance, and aesthetics. There tends to be a bias for the "Cage and beyond"
school but I try to approach as many forms ("established" or otherwise) as are available. LOQk for:
April 28: New Music for Organ, Percussion and corporeal settings.
May 5: Large Ensembles, Choral Work and Psychic Youth Rallies.
May 12: Solo/duet/trio; music for ears and tiny little rooms.

Cathee Gottfryd

CLASSICAL

'80s rock in the new wave and punk genre-hardcore tans stick around for your
stuff mostly after eleven . Independent weirdness prevails on Friday night. You can
call us up, 866-5267.

9:00-Noon
1:00-3:30 p.m.
HAWAIIAN PARADISE
Hawaiian music, words, and each week letters from fans will be read.

• ••••••••

6 : 30-7:00 p.m .

7:00-9:00
SLUGS
Paul R. Harding
"Jazz." Once upon a time at a club on East 3rd Street between Ave. A&: B, Lower
East Side, NYc. . . Where all the Cllts used to play. Monk, Lee Morgan, McCoy
Tyner, Sun-Ra, etc. Here we go back to that time of new blood of new freedom in
America's Original Classical Music-Jazz.

Andy de Bruyh

Lorraine Tong

MUSIC FOR THE CULTURALL Y ANEMIC

Classical music's greatest hits as well as
its most unpopular works . Features inelude: 20th century composers; Spoken

CLASSICAL

Dave Corbett

BLUES

This month is album feature month.
Jo in Dave Corbett as he features a classic
blues album from the past each week
during April The feature airs at 2 :00.

Peter Schofield'

12: 00 1: 00
JAPANESE HOUR
Micky Nakamura
lisa turns over' the controls to Willy the last two weeks of the month.

6:30-7:00 p.m.
1:00-3:00 p.m.

FOLK MUSIC

El MENSAJF. DEL AIRE

Rafael Villegas and Jose Valdez

5:00-7:30
CARIBBEAN CON"'lECTION
Caribbean folk music, Calypso, etc.

Keith Richard

7:30-10:00 p.m.
ONE LOVE
Ion and Rosie
Roots music to soothe the spirit and vibrate the body. Music from Africa and
Jamaica, exploring our connection to Rasta and the form that I takes in I-self,
I-ternally. Praises and thanks.
10:00-12:00
Rock, variety.

THE STEVE CLANCY SHOW

Steve Clancy

Alternating weekly with
DISCO DOCTOR'S LA BEAT-O
(i.e. Para.talic Action)
Two spiritual guys, Deejay and Mo,
jammin' the frequencies, jerkin' the views,
toastin' the bread, eliminatin' on you. So

JON & GEOF

don't make an airway 'enemy out of your
anima enema + Rx-Give us a call if
there's any change.

Chris Meu

89.3 FM. The first hour will be devoted to
Reggae and Soul. As the evening evolves,
you will hear more Rock ~ Roll and
Blues. Of course, this can only happen if
you join me ... in The Twilight Zone.

12:00-4:00
OLDIES REVIVAL
The Dr.
Your searchin' days are over; I have ex",ctly what you 've been looking for :
Oldies, 1950-1968. You'll hear such Greats as: J. Brown, W . Pic,kett. .G . Vincent.
Beatles, B. Holly, Stones, Ronettes and many many more.
Tune that dial to Saturday nights and bop to rock and see the heights .
Media
cpj0309.pdf