The Cooper Point Journal Volume 16, Issue 7 (November 5, 1987)

Item

Identifier
cpj0429
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 16, Issue 7 (November 5, 1987)
Date
5 November 1987
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TABLE
OF
CONTENTS
b)' Philip Bransford
Po fle ~y by Jeanne Pepper

( :OL'I'T

LETTERS ................. 3-6
• I am not a spy
NEWS .. .................... 7
• 'Focus on Fighting'
• Campus Fire
OPiNION .. . ................ 8
• Hiring System Flawed
FEATURES .............. 9-15





Team Gel Booms On
HEC of a hubbub
Son of Curriculala
I nmates in Art Class

POETRy ...... . ........... 14

Editor's Note

the 19th century.

Note to the reader: this week, the editor's
note has been token hostage by a bond
of reckless and marauding terrorists.
They broke in at 6 p .m. as the paper was
going to press, dressed in the traditional
hippie fatigues of their ilk, brandishing
exados, demanding cigarettes, and
generally breaking the machinery and
causing a rucus. Then, the evil intruders,
all two of them, hijacked the typosetter
in order to spread their nasty and notpolitically-correct ideas. Thank the Good
Lord they weren't very clever or some
serious damage could have been done.
What follows is on interview amongst
these fiends published upon threats, torture, blackmail, and general silliness.
Hold on to your hots.

Trout: Come, come . You must have
learned something here. All that money
a nd time and all.

Trout: So what do you think about this
curriculum business anyway? It's on the
cover, so you'd better say something
complementary about Ben's long, long,
long story-of-the-week or this will be
axed.

Polly: Hey, I dig Ben's long, long, long,
long story. Love all them quotes . Curriculum? The best thing about the word
is to help formulate a handy and pat
answer in case parents or heckboarders
ask where their money is going. They
don't worry so much about the acid and
sex and stuff if you can spout off about
the Gilgamesh epic or Russian history in

Polly: Yeah, but not so much of it was
in closs. I learned how to learn things.
I learned that everything, and I mean
everything, is always moving/shifting/changing. The curriculum was just
exercises to practice learning that on . I
could have studied marine biology, or
Japanese, or economics . All immaterial.
Trout: Just out of curiousity, what did
you learn?

Polly: [musingly, scratching her nose,
storing at the ceiling, and pausing for a
heck of a long time} To see what I need
to do, and then do it, and not trust any
authority to tell me what that is. And
lasagna. I make all right lasagna now .

Ca le nd a r
Edit o r --Kri s tin
Fo nt a in e;
T ypesetter--Whitncy W a re; G raphic Servi ces-Shirley G ree n : La te Ni ght G raphic Ser,ices-Ben Tansey ; Poetry Editor--Da vid Thompson ; Advertising Production--Julie Willi a m son: Advertisin g Man age r- -C hri s Ca rso n;
Ph o tograph y Edit o r -- Philip Bran s ford ;
Advi sor--Susa n Finkel; Production Manager- Kathleen K ell y ; Bu siness Man age r- -Carol
Poole ; Managin g EdilOr -- Andrea Miller ;
EdilOr--Ben Tan sey .

prepares his lunch in the Greenery before last Fn'day 's forum . Behind him, President Olander talks with a stutimt as
Vice President for Student Affairs Gail Martin walks PMt in her devilish Halloween costume. (Her nametag reatiJ, "The Administration. ")

Letters
No Excuse
Dear Editor,

ENTERTAINMENT ..... 16-17
• Whimsical jazz tapestry
• The Flick File
LITERATURE ............. 19
• Epsie Onward
CALENDAR ............. 21-23

2

T Ilt' Coo per Point J o urnal is published on
the ca mpu s of th e Evergreen State CoU('ge,
Olvm pi a, Washin gto n 98 505 . (206)
Bfib-6000 ext e nsi o n 621 3 o r 6054 .
Copy ri ght by the Coo per Point Journal,
h'ngree n Sta te C ollege , Olympia, WA
YWiO'i . We d o no t necessarily endorse or
ad\"<'rt iwrs. but we a pprecia te the ir support \ \'c do n 't d o wind ows.

Evergreen Parent Resource Center, I feel
a special need to speak out in behalf of
all student-parents on campus.
The issue I attempted to discuss last
week is one of childcare -- an immediate
need for all parent-students, and is only
the first of many issues affecting our lives,
and the lives of people around us. I very
much feel that the Cooper Point journal
has a responsiblity to the parents here at
Evergreen, and therefore a responsibilty
to print what I am willing to write for
you.

Every week, I read the little excerpt in
the front part of the CPj that says,
"Looking for writers, etc." Last week,
I took some initiative, and offered to write ·
for you . The subject I wrote about is one
worthwhile, and understated on this campus. My concern is for the parents here
at Evergreen.
And yet, although you are supposedly
Thank you,
lacking in writers, you did not bother to
print what I gave you, or offer me an exMelissa London Platt, PRC.
cuse for not doing so . I don't want to hear
for
it now. And, although I'd very much ap[Ed note: please see page 8
Melissa's article.]
preciate it if you run my article next week
(though definitely not later), I also don't
want to hear that excuse.
The group of parent-students on cam pus is a large group that is treated like " ,
a small one . It is not that we do not have ' _' ~': Dear CPj,
a voice, but rather, that we are too busy
Last night (Halloween) I was informwith our many individual concerns to
ed that I was a spy for the on-campus invoice ourselves . As the Coordinator of the

No Spy

A nti-Apartheid protesters Sandra Funk, Nick Roberts, Ty BMS and Chris Wy ths --all Evergru n stlldellt r-discuJSjury selection at the Thurston Distn'et Court lost Monday. Two other defendants not pieturrd Laurir
Gressman , Larry WiltUs and Tom Naught. The tria l continues this wed.

formational organization called The
Network.
This was news to me.
First things first: I don't like The Network. I don't like what it does or why it's
here. ' I have been opposed to this g~oup
ever since I discovered its existence, and
I'd like to see it removed.
' Apparently a group of people opposed
to The Network have been doing spying
of their own, and have gathered "files"
on people who have had contact with this
organization. From these "files" they
have drawn conclusions and made decisions based on them .
Doesn't this sound a lot like what The
Network is being accused of?
I am NOT a spy for The Network. To
be so would be to go against everything
I stand for. I resent being accused of such
actions by people who have never tried
to talk to me (according to my information, I have been a spy since my first
year, before I knew anything whatsoever
about The Network.)
I have been in The Network files since
the beginning of my first year . I took IT)\'
continued on following page

Let.ters
continued from preveious page

then-girlfriend to the Counseling Center
while trying to keep her from suicide.
She's still alive.
1 have since been a client of the
Counseling Center myself, and have
referred friends there as well. I am glad
to have been a client, as Shari Smith and
Barbara Gibson are wonderful people,
and 1 trust them. I am proud to have
helped my friends get better.
Later, I attempted to contact The Network directly (I missed) while trying to
keep someone from being thrown out of
school--he's still here.
Apparently these events made their
way into the hands of these students. Seeing that I had done something positive,
they immediately determined that 1 was
a spy and therefore dangerous.
1 was advised to stop referring people
to the Counseling Center in order to protect myself from a bad reputation
Threats? Bulls hit. If someone I know IS
in need of help 1 can ' t provide, I'm going to find someone who can .
If this group of students is going to
clandestinely gather "files" and make
judgements without seeking the truth,
then they are no better than what they
claim to oppose. I don't like hypocrisy.
Not a spy,
Leif Wahlborg

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'Dine & Dash'
Dear Editor,
I am a waitress at a local Mexican restaurant and was waiting on two
members of the Evergreen faculty . You
can't imagine how surprised I was when
I discovered that they had left without
paying for their meal! 1 often wondered
why students had to fight biases in the
community. Now I know why! It seems
that some members of the faculty are giving us a bad image. I have a suggestion
for these two women : If you are planning
a "dine and dash " in the future, do
something worthy of your level of decency. Snitch grapes at Safeway .
Surprised ,
Loria E. Sumrill

Inappropriate
To the community:
The article that appeared In the last
issue (Oct. 29) about the Day of Absence
was found to be inappropriate by myself
and those who participated . My intentions were to communicate to those not
present at the retreat the frustrations and
the unity felt ·that day and to share the
issues with the community . I am afraid
that the article I wrote created new tensions and apprehensions by my breaching
the confidences given that day and taking "off the record" comments and printing them. With this behind me I will
continue to ·communicate issues and
events concerning minorities (majorities)
with a clearer understand and with the
same goal -- unity .
Kathleen Kelly
November 3, 1987

BASHING
Evergreen Community,
This letter, thank God, is not in regard
to the Master Plan. However, it is in
regard to a related component, a
phenomenon I will refer to as "Ben
Bashing". The "Ben" in .reference is
none other than our own illustrious Ben
Tansey, Editor of the CP] . The
"Bashing" refers to a certain mood,
perceived by the Author, of certain individuals and elitist circles on Campus.
I don't question the right or the appropriateness of individuals to question,
and address Ben's controversial views .
On the contrary, I feel this to be not only healthy, but stimulating as well. What
I do question, however, is the appropriateness and productivity of certain
comments and discussions made in
reference to the now-infamous October
22 article of opinion by Mr. Tansey (Ah,
controversy: does this ensure print , ·
Ben?) .
Those of you unaware of the popularity
of Ben Bashing these days might have

taken interest in the poignant display of
said fad at the Presidents Forum of October 30. After patiently waiting for his
turn to speak, Ben was "verbally mauled" and shouted down by the same individuals who have demonstrated similar
behavior when faced with the reality of
differing opinion in the past.
How disheartening it is to have my
bubble popped in regard to my assumpt ion of the courtsey, respect, and fairness
of Evergreen Activists. I too consider
myself to be an activist, though I question seriously the ability to establish a
working relationship with people who
demonstrate such selfish and childish
behavior. For in their earnestness to promote their "party line", an ugliness appears that often consumes their ability to
perceive objectively and creatively.
It should be noted that this malignancy has been observed in regard to dealing with the HEC Board and damned
near anyone else daring enough to have
ideas that are not "politicaly correct".
There is a positive note, however, for
out of this experience I feel I have gained insight into one of the hurdles of social
change. How naive of me to assume that
Evergreen faculty and students express
activism any more creatively than at any
other institution_
In conclusion, I acknowledge Ben
Tansey and anyone else masochistic
enough to disagree with the politicaly
popular stands on campus. Even though
your opinion does suck, Ben, I appreciate
sincerely your article stating it . There is
something to be said for the advocacy of
the Devil, and I feel that this is where
Ben's perspective often emanates. But
regardless of Ben Tansey's opinion, let's
face it, he's the editor of the CP] and the
'Editorial' is his forum. Those of you
concerned with exposure of opinions differing from the Editor's can relish in the
fact that no less than four letters and well
reasoned articles appeared in the October
29 issue of the CP] directly challanging
the Editor's expressed opinion of the
previous week. In spite of this, the next
day Bashing was practiced with fervor,
the timing of which adds a particular
ugliness to it all .
Eric M . Larsen

5

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Dear Editor,
For reasons that must include
masochism, I make a habit of reading W.
R. Hearst's weekly column in the Sunday Seattle Times/P.1. I like to keep track
of what his faction is thinking. About two
weeks out of three, Mr. Hearst leads
cheers for various policies and actions of
his hero, Ronald Reagan. In his eyes,
Mr. Reagan has done and can do no
wrong. I finally figured out what Mr.
Hearst is doing with his hand up by his
mouth. He's going bee dee - beedee beedee with his lips. (This is a difficult
sound to describe onomatopoetically.) A
while ago he launched a real zinger of a
diatribe, entitiled, "Liberal Profs Are
Poisoning Young Minds." In it he
claims, among other things, that "the
more elite the university, the more liberal
is the faculty" and, that "liberal professors frequently exhibit guilt to
anything our country does or stands for. "
He points out that 90 percent of those
'un the humanitities and social science
f~culties at Stanford are democrats. My,
this is chilling. He also states that "the
liberal indoctrination which so many of
our children are getting in schools and
colleges leads them to belittle the importance of the strategic defense program
(SDI) to protect America against nuclear
attack. "
In short, this column is just this side
of ou trageous. I would like to just ignore
the guy, but he has such a huge podium
that it's difficult to be comfortable with
the nonsense he spouts. It is not hard to
imagine why Socrates was forced to drink
poison (real poison, Mr. Hearst) those
many years ago as punishment for the
charge of "corrupting youth."
Might there be a good explanation for
the apparent preponderance of liberals on
the faculties of many elite universities?
Could it be that intelligent people wh.o
chose careers in academia eventually acquire such a well rounded grasp of history
and ethics that they gravitate to a political
awareness that Mr. Hearst find.s

distasteful? Where are the talented conservatives who would make good faculty
members? Are they perhaps drawn to
private business and military service
more frequently than talented liberals?
Perhaps the pay of a university professor
is not good enough for those who believe
the business of America is business.
Would Mr. Hearst have us believe that
talented academic aspirants, with conservative viewpoints more in line with his,
are barred from moving up the ladder on
top university faculties? Of course, that's
it--it's a liberal plot to keep conservatives'
out of academic life, a conspiracy by
liberals to gain control of the minds of our
nation's youth, a conspiracy so
diabolically clever that it has not been
discovered until now! And just in time!
Why, before we'd have known it, those
liberals might have convinced our
children that we Americans are not endowed with a divine right to determine
the destiny of the world,
If liberal professors exhibit guilt about
the behavior of their own nation, perhaps
they have discovered aspects of its international behavior that are difficult to be
proud of. I would give them the right to
choose the mark he or she hopes to make
on the world. If Mr. Hearst feels that too
many liberals have achieved positions of
influence on the minds of our future
leaders, I would suggest that he examine
the underlying causes of this
'phenomenon before launching any witchhunts. Could it be that the liberals he so
casually vilifies are possessed of greater
vision than the conservatives he would see
in their places? Might the predominantly democratic faculty suggest to Mr .
Hearst that he attempt to understand
those human beings, who he insists on
labeling liberals, rather than blindly attacking that which he cannot fathom? I
certainly devote a lot of energy in trying
to understand him and his allies. This
quote attributed to Ben Franklin is appropriate: "The wise man learns more
from his enemies than the fool does from
his friends."

Sincerely ,
Carl McFarland , Jr.

Brush Up On Fighting Too Hot
,!
I

I

.I

Two free self-defense workshops will be
taught by FIST for women who have attended at least one of their workshops.
These brush-up workshops will focus on
physical fighting skills, unlike the basic
workshops.
"Focus on Fighting" will be held
Wednesday, November 18, from 6:30 to
8: 30 pm at Gloria Dei Lutheran
Church's Parish Hall (Harrison and
Perry Streets, on Olympia's Westside) .
Simple strikes and basic strategy will be
practised in a supportive environment.
This class, open to all women of all
physical" abiiities, aUns to let everyone

feel their personal power.
"Weapons In Our Homes" will be
held Wednesday, December 2, from 6:30
to 8:30 pm at Olympia Timberland
Library's East Room. It will be a playful
look at how ordinary objects in our homes
can be used to prevent, stall, or stop an
assault.
FIST is a women's volunteer organization that has been teaching self-defense
since 1979. Its programs are developed
through the experiences of women. They
emphasize every woman's right to choose
whatever action she finds appropriate for
her situation.

Bookbinder Preserves Tradition
John Crosby, a book restorer at The
Evergreen State College, likes to get his
nose into a good book--literally . "I love
the smell of leather and paper that you
get from an old book," he says.
Crosby is one of a dying breed whose
occupation dates back to the invention of
paper many thousands of years ago.

Sepser Wins
Video Awards
A video produced by Evergreen student Dominique Sepser has received one
of five first place awards in Northwest
Film and Video Festival's 15th annual
contest.
The 16 minute autobiographical piece,
"Deux par Deux," was produced as part
of an educational program with the
assistance of Faculty Member Sally
Cloniger. It will premier November 13
on the opening night of the Festival in
Portland, Oregon. Locally, it will be
shown at Olympia's Capitol Theatre at
3 :00 pm on November 14 during the
Olympia Film Festival.
The work will then go on a nation-wide
tour with the other first prize winners ,
with screenings at universities and art
shows.
Sepser served briefly as photo editor to
the Cooper Point Journal in Fall 1986.

Modern techniques of storing information, like microftlm and microfiche, can
preserve the words of a book, but
something is lost in the translation, he
says. "You lose the book as a document,
as an artifact, as art. It's very satisfying
to sit down with a book, open it up and
read it, as opposed to sitting in front of
a machine and punching a button ."
Crosby works to preserve not only the
books themselves, but the art of the
bookbinding process. He keeps his art
alive by speaking to local community
groups and schools, including presentations on the history of bookbinding at Jefferson Middle School in Olympia .
"While I'm talking to them, I tear the
cover off a book and rebind it. That
. usually gets their attention."
A native Californian, Crosby has been
a drill sergeant in the Army, an interrogator in the Air Force, half-owner of
a truck stop, a poet, and an avalanche
tontrol and rescue specialist for the
Olympic Commission, among other
things. Why add bookbinding to the list?
.' 'I kind of backe<lin.to_iL'.' .says.Jk_~_
'year-old Crosby. "I came to Evergreen
as a typist, and part of my job was just
slapping a little glue on some books and
sending them back out. I asked my supervisors for more time to learn how to do
'it right, and they agreed . So I taught
'myself. "

'H ot PIate

A small electrical fire occurred at about
midnight, Tuesday, November 3, on the
fourth floor of the Seminar Building. The
fire was caused by an overheated electrical cord from a hot plate that was inadvertently left on Monday evening . No
personal injury resulted from the blaze,
which charred a two-foot section of wall
before it burned itself out. Crews from
the McLane and Olympia fire depart ments were on the scene.
Campus Security urges members of the
Evergreen Community to double check
all coffee-makers, hair dryers, space
heaters, hot plates and other electrical appliances before leaving the premises.
Students, staff and faculty are also cautioned against overloading extension '
cords. Questions on electrical safety can
be directed to the McLane Fire Depart ment at 866-1000.

--Iriformation Services

Reveal Your
Writings
"Slightly West," the Evergreen
literary magazine, is soliciting material
for its Winter Quarter issue. Poems ,
short fiction, and artwork which
reproduces well will be considered for inclusion. Black and white photographs of
sharp definition and line drawings work
best.
All written material should be typed ,
and the author's name and phone
number or address should be attached on
a seperate sheet of paper. All submissions
will be considered anonymously.
The deadline for the Winter Issue is
Tuesday, December 1. Please leave all
submissions at the "Slightly West " office, Library 3229 . Students , faculty and
staff are encouraged to reveal their
writings .
--CPJ Staff

7

Hiring Process Flawed

Patrick Maley working at tIu Evergreen ChiiJcare Center

_0_
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Eput to the Boomtest

by Melissa London Platt
We, the parents, staff, and supporters
of the Evergreen Childcare Center are
sad to see Patrick Maley leave us. Patrick
began to work at the Center last year as
a temporary teacher in the toddler room.
He has done a great job by being
supportive and loving with each child.
The children, in turn, care for him a
great deal.
Patrick has not chosen to leave the
Center. Rather, he has been forced out
because of an unjust hiring system.
Last spring, the Center was fortunate
to improve their budget allocation with
the addition of a toddler room' 'Childcare
Specialist." Patrick was hired to fill an
immediate vacancy, which this fall has
become a new position. During the summer, the job was posted, and applications
accepted. It was at this point that the flaw
in the surface presented itself.
The job is well-paid, but has a low
minimum requirement, and therefore attracted many, many applicants. These
applicants filled out applications, which
then were graded on a point system. Only
the top seven applicants proceeded to the
next step.
There are two flaws in this statewide
system. One, that jobs like this one tend
to attract well-qua,lified applicants, leaving those who meet the required amount,
but do not far surpass it, out in the cold.
Two, it fails to acknowledge the fact that
an employee was already working in the
position, and performing his job in an
above average way.
The final chapter to this story is that
Patrick Maley, who excels in verbal
skills but not in written skills, was pointgraded out of the competition, denied a
chance to be interviewed, and replaced.
The woman that got the job is, of
course, extremely well-qualified and
deserving, but the issue here is one of
fairness. The fact is not necessarily that
Patrick deserves the job, but rather that
he deserves an interview. Another
overlooked fact was, that the children's
best interests in the short run wcre
}" overlooked. Toddlers at the ECC range
in age from 18 months to nearly 3 years
'I , old, and at that precious time in their
, lives many are leaving Mommy and Daddy for the first time. Adjusting to a new
daycare provider is difficult. Adjusting to
a new daycare provider four weeks into
the quarter is even more so.

_

back down into the bull's eye with intention . They got the most points.
The third event was Australian
Round, which combines distance, accuracy and catch . This event was conquered by Team Poultry, but it was
Te~m Geldog, with Michael Girvin,
Bell'in Drake, Max the Italian Sexgod
and Pete Moss who poetically painted the
skies and scored the second place victory .
Position was next. A teamm~te throws
from the center and catches. The next
teammate throws from the point where
the previous catch was made. Closest to
the
bull's
eye
wins.
Team
SuperGelafraGelisticexpialatrocious,
comprised of Steve Kavanaugh, Paul
J olde,rsma, Bruce Siq!leland, and Brian
Kennemer, dominated the gods of consistant accuracy. They scored the closest
with three meters.
And then ... the internationally-famous
event, invented right here at Evergreen
by Team Gel--Style Outback!
There are no rules in this event. Only
context. The teams are assigned points
for how well they define radness, display
style, anti-style, or demonstrate the artfullness of unparalleled beauty.
Team Hell's Kitchen ruled this event
with a choreographed scene from. the Old
West. They started with their backs
together and paced off 10 steps, and then
turned and threw. They ran and caught.
The crowd chanted "30 points." Perfect
score. Team j oe-hose-a-fat, made up of
Kurt Williams, Georgia, Marty 'Charcoal' Friedman and Derek Miller, chucked their booms and ran full-speed into the
nearby forest . Their booms landed, unattended, and they did not come back. For
a while.

"\i
~

~
~

......
~ '\
by Michael Girvin

r

"*"~

'*-I

October 25 was a good day. It was the
day Team Gel proved that fun is easy.
Twenty-five Evergreen students and
five dudes from a band called "Hell's
Kitchen" converged on the Evergreen
recreation fields for Team Gel's first
boomerang contest of the year.
There were only team events at this
Boomtest. The less experienced boomers
threw on teams with the more experienced boomers. That was what made this
Boomtest so successful: people were stQked to learn and teach.
The first event was' consecutive trick
catch: catching one-handed, behind the
back, between the legs and with the feet.
The 30 boomers lined up next to eachother, and on the count of three, 30
boomerangs were thrown and gra~ed the
,air together. People ran in different directions , and each followed their booms for
, the catch.
Team Poultry , featuring Mike
Ullman, Brian 'Rainville, Paul Cryan and
Adam Craven, caught the most collectively and scored the highest.
Accuracy, where you try to make your
boom land in the bull's eye , was next.
Each team stepped into the bull's eye and
threw together. In this event, Team Phuquette , consisting of Michael Krausser ,
Ed Love, Steve Brown andJay Dotson ,
tossed their booms through the sky and

.

Photos by Dennis Held
, -- -.:; - - . .. :-

.'

-

WORK

to
j

The last ev.ent was Roung Rang Relay.
The teams lme up 20 meters from the
bull's eye . On the count of three, one
member of each team runs to the bull's
eye, throws, catchs, tags the center and
runs back, tagging their teammate, who
then repeats . Whew. If you drop, you
have to throw again .
The awards ceremony was held in the
Mod Social Space. Hell's Khchen
played back-up music ceremony, with' appropriate drum rolls and guitar riffs for
each award. After the awards, they
played a ripping set for the booming
crowd . People danced and smiled.
Everyone was stoked.
The Team Gel Boomtest ended, and
the boomers left knowing that no one had
to speak of radness , because they knew,
they just knew.

BAN

.

-

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-

ALL WAYS TRAVEL SERVICE, INC.

,

STYROFOAM
FROM
,
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THIS~ PLANET
Contact WashPIRG for informati on
Winter Quarter internships. LIB 3228, 866- ... 0 ext. 6058
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Harrison and Division
9

HEC Board Comes Down
by Aaron Yanick
reported by Timothy O'Brien, Ben
Tansey and Aaron Yanick

Three members of the Higher Education Coordinating (HEC) Board -Charles Collins (Board Chairman), Mary
James, and Andy Hess -- came down to
Evergreen last Friday afternoon to discuss
the HEC Board's Master Plan for higher
education. The Plan contains some controversial policy proposals.

The meeting was riddled with disagreement before it even .. began.
Members of the People for Open Edu~a­
tion (POE), an Evergreen g'r oup, oppos'ed to the Plan, were upset by the fact 'that
they were not consulted about the
meeting. They also felt that the original
format of the meeting, which ,involved a
separate meeting between the boar~
members and faculty members followeq
by a general forum in Lecture Ha1I3, W(l8
exclusionary .
At a POE meeting the night ~fore
there was talk of boycotting or
demonstrating at th'e meeting: Instead
they decided to circumvent the planned
forum and "invite" Collins to an extemporaneolls meeting in the CAB . Gail
Martin , Vic.e- President for Student Affairs , informed Collins of the students'
10

plans and he readily agreed .
By 12:30, a crowd of about 150 people had gathered on the main floor of the
CAB in a fat semi-circle around the three
board members who sat together at a
table. Some of the crowd made introductions, in some cases describing themselves
as under-achievers in high school, dropouts, economically disadvantaged, etc.
Thel'e was no systematic moderation
of the meeting. The CAB was full with
the lunch-time crowd, which added to the
general hubbub. President Olander said,

" If you can't hear, corne closer. If you
can't corne closer, complain to whoever
sc:ems to be in charge." Later, a
microph0!1e was set up and it made its
way randomly about the room . It
sometimes proved to be the greatest factor in determining who was speaking.
When the Chairman asked if the group
wanted to name a moderator' 'to define
the order" of their questions, Sandra
Davis shot back, "We have no order."
Collins introduced the board members
,and began with a story about a friend of
his who had fled from Austria prior to the
Holocaust, leaving her family behind. He
quoted her as saying, "The uncommitted life is not worth living, " Years later,
at her request , Collins had gone to visit
Dachau , a former concentration camp ,
He had been amazed at the fact that a

death camp could exist in the suburbs of
Munich. His explanation for the
catastrophe was that the German people
had been "morally and intellectually
lazy, " and that, in such an enviro~ent,
"democracy is not possible." He had
corne today, he said, as a believer in
democracy and an enemy to moral and
intellectual laziness.
Speakers from the audience said that
his story worked against his position and
't hat the leaders of our country and those ,
in favor of the Master Plan displayed the
same attitudes that led to the rise of the
Third Reich in Germany. So began the
exchange .. .
Collins said early on that he intended
"that we seek out and act upon the
truth. " The truth was that the final draft
of the Plan would be voted upon and
handed over to the legislature corne
December 1. For students to "seek out
and act on the truth" was for them to try
and understand the Plan more clearly,
and most of his talk involved restating the
means and ends of the Plan in his own
words. Every so often he would either
fmish a statement or get cut off by various
comments: "Did you corne here to talk
or listen?" The crowd felt that they
understood Collins' truth. They rejected
it and offered to him their own turth.
A reflection of the fundamentally different values held by the two opposing
groups was the language they used. Collins used words like, define, order, assess,
system, profit, buy and sell. He defined
thinking as "analyzing, generalizing,
communication and computing." The
students used words like, open, free,
egalitarian, disadvantaged, privileged, rights,
and needs.
Collins stated that one of their goals in
writing the Plan was trying to reconcile
two opposing theories about education:
one that education was an investment
upon which a return was expected, and
'the other that education is an end in itself.
One student replied that it should be based on neither theory. When Colilins said
that admissions standards should not be
used as a "regulatory valve," Larry
Hildes, speaking for POE, said in a statement of their vision for education taken
from Ira Shor's Culture Wars that admissions standards ought to be abolished

to Hear What's Up

HEC Board mlTTlbers Mary James and Chuele Collins

altogether.
Fed up with what he was hearing,
HEC Board member Andy Hess stood
up and said, "I feel like I'm listening to
a group of blind people describing an
elephant they haven't touched,"
The biggest dispute was regarding the
Plan's method and use for assessing the
quality of institu tions of higher education.
Part of the Plan requires that schools obtain evaluations from their graduates.
The audi~nce voiced no opposition to this
idea ; it was the use of standardized tests
to which they were opposed. Concerns
were raised that teachers would begin to
teach for the test and that tests would
serve to legitimize already existing inequalities among people. The Chairman
said that the greatest obstacle to equality
in higher education is the present
geographical location of schools.
Collins said that ,the nature and purpose of the tests was not yet decided and
that their usefulness would be evaluatep
after two years, whereupon it might b~
decided that the tests should not be used
at all. But, he pointed out, legislators h~d
to have some tangible proof that the
money they gave for education was Pt;ing put to good use. The legislators we~e
also the ones whom the HEC Board wa,s
trying to please when their language in
the first draft of the Plan was made to

stress the economic value of education.
This language, he said, would be changed in the final draft.
At 2:00 pm, Collins left. Mary James
and Andy Hess remained for a while
longer to continue the exchange . Leaving the CAB, Collins said that' the
meeting had been a "missed
opportunity. "
President Joseph Olander, who sat in
for much of the discussion, said that the
students had been "rhetorically
abusive." Later he added, "I regret that
more faculty did not have the opportunity
to talk ." Susan Finkel thought that the
meeting was a disappointment for the
same reason. It would have been good,
she said, to have the Board members
know that the faculty are concerned too
- "they needed to he"a r that." Still
others felt that the faculty had let the
students down for not appearing at the
meeting in greater numbers and taking
the initiative to make themselves heard.
Vice President for Student Affairs Gail
Martin ,gave the meeting .. mixed
reviews." It would have been better, she
said, if more people had had the opportunity to speak, rather than a few people
speaking repeatedly. Several members of
the POE, when asked what hopes they
had for the meeting, said that they were
not sure ,

Master Plan
Update

,

The final draft of Building a System: the
Washington State Master Plan jor Higher
Education, the controversial policy proposals put forward by the His-her Education Coordinating (HEC) Board, has
been readied. It will be approved for submission to the State Legislature at today's
HEC Board meeting:, which is taking~
place at the Seattle Airport Hilton in the
Horizon Room, 17620 Pacific Highway
South, Seattle. The meeting began at
8:30 am.
The "Master Plan" will be sent to the
Legislature December 1. Previous
legislation requires that it be acted on
during the 1988' session.
In addition to several other agenda
items, the HEC Board will be hearing a
progress report from the Statewide
Minority Taskforce.
There are four copies of the Master
Plan on the reserve shelf at Evergreen's
Library.

--CPj Staff

ChaimuI1I Collins
The REC Bo;:~d is meeting today t ~
finalize the Master Plan , It will be sub ·
mitted to the legislature December 1.

11

.:

A Tour Through the Curriculum

j,I S famil y III a hi gh sc hoo l stud e nt 's erenion d llr-

ea rli es t known s h ort stories and which is

in\.{ cla ss. tn a park sta tu e's reflections un it s
S \I rnJutl( lings .

c urre ntly being read in fa c ult y m e mb e r

ing u se d

C h a rl es McC a nn 's Co r e pro g r am, Great

Sy s t e m s, Since it s one of my favorite s,

Boo k s, A m o r e re ce nt c ritiqu e fro m thi s

we'll end th e tour with it , In th e fo ll ow-

b oo k:

in g o utt a k e, Defen se Attornev Drum -

Y u u m ay think the c ur a t ors o f th e
Evergree n C urri c ulum Muse um we a r e
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rt'l;)tI\'e ly aufOnO Tnus int (' ll igcnlT'i thai h (t\' (' spc'( ifll
.i lld Identifiable COlT u perat i o n s .

riw

111 1

.tll d, \\1fh hi'"

I ' h:II:t1 Icr .

W e Kn ow, by M a rtin Go ld s t e in, we r ea d:

based arou lld Howard Gard nt'r " book
A Thto"ol ,l1ultlplf Intfl/'gmaJ Th,'
pru"ra ll) IS expluri nf( the Idea that In stead of one

ll ......

()Ilt' t:.\..JIIl~!I· I ' ,III d " Il,!ItIlU'1I1 i.! J\.('1l

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Kri s tin F on t a in e c urrently find s h e r self

Frain"

h I( h (/rc '

111 \\

t a l eve nt. Stephan ie Coo ntz is t eac hin g
Science and Society thi s yea r. From H ow

,\

PI( I

111,\1 IIH 11111,"

p . ,l l d

B a byl o nians were in o n thi s fund a m e n -

by work in th e pro gra m wh ic h

FlaltIC ~ o j Mind : t\ :"J('W ApJJrp(lch 10 Kn o ..... i llg I ~

Rwh

1 Illl'h.I'IIt'" (11 1I " I'I!'11 1

II,tll .l1,d

lIll \' 1IH'lI liH'/"i . I ( I . 1'

l'lllllt' pr(l~r.lIll

Currentlv the stude llt s and fauiltv in the progranl
.I re " tUd y llH~ the phys ical st ructure 0 1 th e br,lIn
Ihr()lI~ h II T IUIT " bv fa ru ll\· rn t: ITlher I.ind a Kahan
I!lt ldr tllf Rrarn . . .ll1ci alutal dIssect lOll of shee p brains
11.1\'" ;tlded Ihi s , Of all tht' aui\'it it" in the prnf(ralll
.... (1 far . I havC"
enjoyed Iht' dis~t' r li(}n the mn .;;t I
found Ihat It gave Hl f il mUl h bettel gras p of th e
d IftenJnt structure" of Ih e brain and the ir lorat loll !'.
~I he l1exl text ..... e will bc' stu dying in Fra m es of
:0. 1>nd (\ (;l!uld', ,lf lSm,ru ln( o/- Han (;ou ld deals wll h
IIlI' \\;1\ ' In \'\'h ILh SO( i.:tJ pn'l udicc,\ a fft'Cl the Ka tJwr ·
Ill~ and ILlnslatlO n of sl l t'Tl tili r info rnl ? lion , H e then
l;lle~ on 10 exam In e how Ih{-'se distortion s htl\"I' led
(0
"'i( il'nlifir co nclUSIOns" that ba<.k up popular
'i ttll.d

prrludill's

( )II(, (If ttl(' drawbal k, ( 0 Ih e FralTu's of rvtll1d pro '
l{rilll i 1,\ Ihal al II TIl e" II f('cls lik e Ihert' is no fl)(U,,",
ill rtH' program ilnd th tll w(' arc running In (If( I(' ~
( lltl s ln'2: our lilds 11 I S Illy hop(' tha i a s \\1(' learn Illon '
.,boul Ihe ",atC'nal a nd we' ,~aill a more so lId noti()n
p i o ur rndl\' ld ual npll1iUrls, we wil l be rtbk to Tnak,'
(tHl n ,'( 11(111'" Ihat w e did lI"t "tT prc\'io u sly. du(' III
pur II4TlOr<l l 1t ( . ()n dll' . . uh\I '("( " I (;,trdllt'r's (h('(lr\"
, l ilt! Ihe w(lrklng" I II [ht' hI ;1111

LIlIc'I ' ...

th e pe rce ption of a problem a nd th e beli ef in the
poss ibilit y o f a n a nswe r , Astronomy did 1101 bt'f~ in
with the ga ther in g of da ta on the mOliun of the sun,
moon and sta rs; it bega n wllh the belief Ih al
knowledge of such motion s was wo nh hav in g , \Vh "
the Haby lo nians of 5000 yt'a!"s ago wa nted such in formati o n ca n b e o nl y a rn a ttt' r o f co njec ture. b u t
II

must have involved reli gious beliefs, astrolog ical

hypotiH"ses about thc influ ence of stars on the courst'

o f hi""ry o r the li\'l's of me n , or Ih e id ea Ih al
knowleuf(e ul the III °Iion of Ih e heavenly bodies had
sO "I("

practi <al predictive \'alut' here on earth .

Mass

Comm uni ca ti o n

a nd

Soc ia l R ea lit y is u s in g Woody G uthri e's

ROl/nd (or C/o,)" In tht' following exce rpt ,
GlI th r ie is in a tavern co mposi n g a so n g
at a memorable p o illt in U ,S, hi s t o r y:
I

woke up

th is

boi l
bod
boil
boil

myse lf
myse lf
my se lf
myself

..... rlldl ,," ,It"" ., II
I

Ii'

till'

I

II, I,ll' I I I 111 1 '11
I"I!I' l.j til'

11 111111 " I " I

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I

I;

II '111I1l"rl,dl'\

"1
I

.\I11t II III "I 11lt'1
1

I II

!

I I, II I l '

~\

~ II 'III

no coflCe
no lea
nn LolTn'
no I('a

made a run for th at relrullllI'

~rll.dl,lllld It"'I, Ill[

ritiqul' must hav(' been o f the next item .

Lpll of (;ilgallf(:sh, w h ich is olle of th e

Drummond was defendin g a witn ess wh o
h a d beell c h a rged with teac hing evolution
in th e sc h oo ls during th e

Deep in Amer ican heritage can a lso be
found

the

i nfamou~

1920s, The

defense los t th e case, but th e foll ow in g
sce n e c h a n ge d c irri c ulum s from th a t d ay
forward, [t is o nl y in r ece nt yea r s that
n ar r ow mind e d

fund a m e nt a li s m

h as

again r e -a ppea r e d ,
Drullllllond ( D ): Dr , Page tells Ill e that thi s rock
is at leasl len million yea rs old , Louk Mr , Brady
Th("sl' arc fu ss il remain s of a prc· hi s to ri c m a rine
c r l'a tu rc, whic h was fo und in this vcry ro unty-

and ,,'hich li \'ed here milliu ns of yea rs ago , when
Ihe se mlluntain ra n ges were subm e rged in watcr .

Brady (H): I know , The bib le gives a fine accou nt
of Ihl' Flood , Hut your professor is a littl e mixed up
on hi s dates, Thai roc k is not mort' than six th ouS, \ nd years old ,
D ' H ()w do you kn ow'
B, A fin e biblical scholar , Bishop ti sher , has deler 1I111wd for us Ihe exac t dat e and hour of th e Crea ·
tiun , It nnu rred in th e Year 4004, I:\ ,C,
D : Tha i 's Bishop Us her's opini o n ,
B: It is not an opini on , II is lit eral fact, wll< ch
the ~ood Bishop arrived at throu gh careful computa ·
tion s o f the ages of the pro phets as se t do wn in the
O ld Testament. In fact, he delerm ined that th e Lord
be~an Ih e C rea tio n o n th e 23rd o f Oc tober in the
Year 400'~ B,C, at-uh , 9 am'
O :Thal Eas tern Standard lim e' (laughter) Or
Rocky Mounlain lim e' (more la ughler ) It wasn'l
dilylif(hl "l\'ing time, was it ' Bceau Sf' the Lord didn't
mak e the Sun until Ih e founh day!
B: Thai is torreet.
D ' T he first day , W as i, a 2+-h our day'
B: Tht' Bible says it was a day ,
0 : Thne wasn 't a ny Sun , How do you kn ow how
long it was~
B , Th e Hible says it was a day
I) : i\ normal day, a literal clay, a 24 ·ho ur da\"

B: I d0l11 know ,
D : Whal do vo u think '
13 : 1 d o /l ot think " bou ( thlll gs lik e thaI. I do
not think a lx,ut~ (T here is so me laughler , But il is
d a mpened b\' Ihe knowled!«r and awa reness
throuf(hoUI tht, courtroom, that the tra p is abou t to
111' sprunK) Isn't 11 pOSS Ible th ,1I th e first da y was
I

wt'n (\'fil"( hour; lo n K? Thert' was no way to nlcaSllfl'

no ",a\, 10 lell! Could it have been twenty ·fiv e

rs?
B II is .. I'""ible .. , (Drummond's got him , And
he know it ' T hi s is th e turninf( poinl. From here
lin. t il t t ("n~ lon mount s .)
I) : Oh , '1'011 inl erpret Ihat the fi"t day recorded
,n Iht' Book of Gt'nesis tll ul el b,' of inde lermlnate
!engl h ,
B: I mean 10 stale thai Ihe day referred to is not

"

Offil('

( : ritique is obv io usl y a li ve and we ll at
Evergreen, [ s uppose the first lit e r ary

mond ha s ca ll e d th e Pro sec u t o r Brad y t o

IH-cessanlv il 24-hollr d ay
I) , II ,,,,tid haw been 3D hours' Or a monlh' Or

l-n el(· Sam. m a ke rOOln fllr rr1t'~

l

in Torn Grissom's Phy s ica l

h Ull

mornin

Set'n whal the papers said
y ('S. b(Jv~, I woke up th is lTluT'nin'
Them Japant'Sl' had bo mbed Pcarl 11 "bor
:\ "d war had bet'n dedart'd
d id n't
didn'l
(lidn'l
did,, ' t

Inherit Ihe Wind w hich is be-

th e s t a nd as a n ex p e rt o n the Bibl e,

II,

1 11 \·H'lIlll/l t ·lI(

11"\\('1' \\1111 \1'1\

II,

Babylonian ,

Scie Tl cc does n o t begin with ract s: it bt"Kin s w ith

I.II~(,

1,.Hl l l tll.llh

.1

1,\ \ 1. ilh.

( c'"" (" \\ 11I1n ~ IiI.. (1 1111 ' I hc ' 1111 II..! I ,1 111 !. '1
.I l.t n.::t' ~ I ' ' II P l I Itl(jlJ(' 11/ "' Iud, 111 \\ I Ir 1-...

c' 'p.tt I '

\.11

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kill

1111d Ihl II

1111\\

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()I

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,·.It h ·ot lin ·,

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!I\IIIIIJ.Il!I'

II ...

IH'I ICllt C'

~tu flt Ill ' h,I\I'.I11 npP't!llll1ll\ II' 11·,III. I IHll c·\ 1/ '\\

I [1 [(' III SI 1It! " , I> I "I'" I ,

<Ill (' .... (Trpl

til tI,/'

fnml \1 "I( R,wll', ()f/l!/!/\

1"

,,('IWllle

II'

I "'I" Sllt'iLI I'IJiIc-II dC'1 I'd,!" t il<' ililPJ)('I I'
\\ 'l'

1'1[1'

l l " lhlln.~ at

IIHI

Illd 'C/IIl,! l d

a

e 11 ro ll ed :

\ldIlti"lI l.Jl II" "" port =<:

t ;ltltlJl ( :'llllr al I L!.Ut.:'"

111l1'11l

I' \

hl·11

til

l ' ItI '

t.: 11 .\\ 111l!"

was

m av b e best ex-

e mplifi ed

till' E . . pl'ril ' IH ( " F J('li()ll, Sill -

\1.lrtll\' ,lllti

II! .tl lllllH'I'" \\,11111"

, -\, tJ

J..1l()\\'Il.l ~

cielll :\lItirn

",IIHI"' -I IIII'"\ I)I'I[I'IHI
11 11111,1111-.111 I ...

a t things, This fact

1t',III\'I' \\ ritiIl~

,I',

,IIHI I,, ;[k, ' !ll<' Ir ,1I1 " ili"" 1<1 !lit' I'\'I't;ral"

III Ikil Y E,tt's' prtlt:;ra lll

tJ'I ' d

T l't itll"I" t:;\, ,lIlt l 1I1II llail R easo n :

t (llllrOlllt,d

,\/odan SCII'lI(I, I" RI' hilltl \\ '", tlall :
["\()hlll~III

it!

l)iI\

-1 0111

I hi' ( :I/IlIlrlicl ilin II/

p i" '.Ie;(' In'"1

il.

Ru ss ia ll so

111\

1"1 's 11\( 1\'(' ,111 til ;1 Pd SS <lgl' i'rtlill

1111 1'1I1t.:1·1

",ilh

lip 1111

1It11

Yes, th ere are a lot of way s of looking

11"i1 \'\ 'li lli, hIli ti",, '! Ill' 1111 illJiti ,Jll'ti ,

(1\(', I (C' ,\ [ II! [11\C-)

, ll l t l l l ill

11.1\'IIr \\ill 1)('

s lu c!cnts ",I lt> I () 1l11 ih'lll,d
The tirq ' 1"1' "

I .\\I{I I)I'\

G il ga m es h

co u rse , so it mak es se n se to r ead n ow
a b o ut how sc ie n ce b eg in s, b eca u se th e

(1\

gll lll t:; t(l th, '

"Th e Gilgamesh Epic, the lon gest a nd ma SI
beautifu l Ba b y lo nian p oe m ye t discov e red in
th e mounds of th e Tigri s-Euphra l es reg io n ,
ra nks among th e g rea t lit e r a r y m as terpieces
o f mankind , [t is one o f Ih e princ ip le h ero ic
ta les of antiqu it y and may as we ll b e ca ll ed
t h e Odyssey of th e Babylonia n s, Though ri c h
in mythological material o f g re at s ignifi c .. n cc
fo r th e st udy of comara ti ve religion. it a bo und s
with episodes of deepes t human int e r es t, in
di stin c t co ntrast to the Babyloni a n c rca ti o n
versions; and, although co mpose d tho u sa nd s
o f yea rs before our time , the Gilga m es h Epi c
w ill , ow in g to the universal appea l of th e problems with which it is co n ce rned and the m a n n e r th ese are trea ted , continue to move the
h ellrt s of men for age s to come, To Bible
stud e nts in particular il will b e of sp ec ial in terest because of it s eschato log ical material a nd
because it con ta ins th e b es t preserved a nd
m ost ex tens ive Babylo ni a n accounl of Ih e
d e lu ge, ,.

pl ay called

Monkey

Trial s,

tran s l ripts uf which were made ilJtu a

~'('ar'

Or a hundred \'r"rs' (HI' brand ishcg the rock

un dcTnl'.t lh Bralh·· ... nost' ) Or Il'n milli o n veal's'
B ' Yuu ,m ' trvln~ IU destruv ('\'erybodv', bc li tf
;n Cod'
I> Yuu kllfl'" thal"s nol {rue I 'm I rvin~ 10 stup
\ '(l li hll!ot . . (In<l i~n()r : ""l1 "> ('~ IroTll (() ntro lllTl~ the
('dlll ,11[(111 I t! till' l ' nltcd S r,lIl, . . 1 And y()u kllO\\ II ~

13

Scott Interns Apprehensively at Prison
by Felicity Scott
The sign, posted on a tree to the right
of the road, read; "Jesus Christ Died for
the Ungodly." It insinuated a connection
to the prison I was en route to visit.
Perhaps a plea for a measure of
understanding. The idea of purposely

) §[Requiescat) §[

I found our littl~ dog
Floating quietly in a
Pool on the creek.
She was blind in one eye
& slightly dotty & when younger
Loved to run circles.
I suppose & hope
She didn't suffer.
The next day riding
My bike to work I
Pass the broken carcass
Of a doe tossed casually
In the ditch & swerve
To avoid broken glass
& the confused wanderings of
Her fawn, littering the roadway.
Further down the road

A pheasant is startled
By my morning ride.
I no longer hunt for sport
But to point to the
Beauty of nature for
My children.
Occasionally, though,
I catch myself aiming
My finger ...
rotten canvass
rusting rifle
moldering leather
broken tooth
bleaching bone
once home to
hopes & fears & joys
now with buddhist
third eye seeing
sand drift through emptyness
as cleanly a bullet
drifted through the forepast

John Crosby
14

satisfy a long standing curiousity. I interviewed for the position of Arts Coordinator and began work onJune 8, 1987.
My job primarily involves coordinating
the 1987-88 Artist in Residence (AIR)
Program in prisons . The program is
funded jointly by the Washington State
Arts Commission and the Department of
Corre<;.tions. A portion of these fu.nds are

S.T. Crapo

6th Street viaduct, 85 degrees
at twenty past nine in the morning.
The road is going up,
swinging up slowly on giant hinges
to let the Huron Cement ship go under.
The kid in the heavy metal
T-shirt swings his elbow-long
hair and bums
a light from a car in line,
then goes back to jamming
his air
guitar, head bobbing hard .
He hangs his skull
and cross bones flag
on the candy-striped gate
that holds the cars back .
A light
blue gull flies
over the car in front of me.
The ship's big black smokestack has
a twenty foot H
outlined by rivets .
It's the S.T. Crapo .
The whole road shakes
as the bridge goes down .
The kid walks up the road
as it comes down,
waving his flag like mad .

Drnnis Held

Felicity Scott stands at the rntrance of the state prison in -Shelton

surrounding myself with the" Ungodly"
made me apprehensive, more so because
it was a prison for men. Men that in all
probability hadn't seen many women
through the course of their incarceration.
I had spent the morning in a quandry
over what to wear. Instinct told me I
should attempt to blend into the
background. I had guessed that simply
being of the female gender was enough
incentive for "cat calls" without wearing
attractive clothing. I wanted to do the
observing, not be the observed. Deciding
on plain, ordinary Levis, I left with a
mixture of fear and anticipation.
This was my fIrst visit to a prison that
didn't exist in the illusionary world of
television. I would be seeing through my
eyes, able to come to my own conclusions, rather than sitting in an overstuffed easy chair at the mercy of somebody
elses' dramatized or oversimplifIed
version.
When a friend suggested I apply for an
internship with the Department of Corrections, I jumped at the opportunity to

generated by inmates themselves.
The Artist in Residence Program offers inmates a full range of artistic
. disciplines including music, dance,
drama, fIlm, writing, painting, drawing
and sculpture. Inmates are provided with
a creative form of respite from a routine
existence, which is something we can all
appreciate. Constructive expression promotes confidence and self-esteem, where
oftentimes
none
had
existed.
I've read countless program evaluations from inmates and artists alike that
strongly indicate the AIR Program is a
huge success for both. The inmates have
written that the art program makes them
feel more worthwhile and productive,
while eliminating built:- ~p tensions.
Many inmates have had little exposure
to the arts and lack even a good basic
education. According to a study conducted by the University of Washington
in January 1987, over 50 percent of new
admissions are high school dropouts, and
71 percent test below a tenth grade level.
The artists are often surprised to

receive such overwhelming enthusiasm
for the disciplines they teach. For them
there is the satisfaction of teaching
students that are eager to learn, as well
as the rewards of knowing they have
helped an inmate achieve a more positive
perception of him or herself, and their
capabilities.
Michael Tapp, a painter and one of
our 1987-88 Artists in Residence, was
himself incarcerated for 12 years for
murder. It was his art that set him free.
During one of my site visits, I had the opportunity to speak with Michael. He's a
short, wirey guy who exudes an inexhaustible souce of energy. It was evident
that his high energy level had probably
contributed to his problems with t.he law
when he was younger. As Jack Uglick,
an activities director at the Washington
Corrections Center put it, ., If you give
a guy nothing to do, he's going to invent
something to do, and most of the time it
will be destructive."
But Michael has been out of the
California prison system for 11 years and
is now a successful commerical artist and
art instructor at Peninsula College. He
works within the prison system hoping to
give back some of what he took from
others a long time ago. Not only does
Michael teach the inmates a skill, but he
inspires them to re-channel their energies
in a more positive direction.
As one inmate commented,
"Michael's living proof that ex-cons can
go straight and succeed. He's proof that
persistence pays ofl'--the power of positive
thinking. "
And what do I gain from my experience as an intern? In addition to being a paid internship (a nice benefit for
a broke college student), I'm learning a
multitude of skills that are applicable for
a variety of jobs , meeting people that may
prove invaluable in helping me attain
future career goals, and learning a great
deal about our correctional system in
general .
If you're interested in relinquishing
some old stereotypes, inquire at the
Cooperative Education Office for more
information about the intership. It opens
at the end offall quarter. Consider taki~g advantage of an extraordinary learnmg experience.

1~

Recent Flicks Under Review
by Clive Collins
PRINCE OF DARKNESS
101 minutes
Dir: J. Carpenter
Donald Pleasence.
Lacey Cinemas
The devil is about to check out the
Twentieth Century in person ... unless a
few students put in some overtime
credits. Some flunk out in a big way. The
suspense is cleverly built up with the help
of competent direction and an extraordinary sound track (thanks to that old
horror, Alice Cooper). However, by the
last 15 minutes, we are watching your
basic Zombie movies with 1987 special effects thrown in (or should that be up). It's
O. K. if you're into horror and can't get
enough of it from TV news.

PRINCESSES BRIDE
108 minutes.
Dir: R.Reiner
Cary Ellwes, Mandy Patinkin
lacey Cinemas
A fairy tale with some moments of
humor and pace. But not enough of
them. You might also think that if you
are going to make a different sort of story
about chivalry and adventure, that the
princess would do more than wring her
hands or scream. Do not think this.

until a baby interupts plans. The ladder
and her wimp lover are not strong
enough to support the strain and "let her
go." Poor old Diane has to rough it a bit
in rural Vermont before striking it very
rich on the emotional and cash fronts
(Sam Shepard and baby food, respectively.) On one level it's great that she makes
ly). On one level it's great that she makes
it. On another, the mm doesn't question
or tackle problems that millions of single
parents face who need food stamps to buy
their baby food.

FATAL ATTRACTION
122 minutes
Dir: A. Lyne
Glenn Close, Michael Douglas
Lacey Cinemas
A loving family-man's peaceful
suburban life is shattered by a weekend
affair. Things get out hand when his nowpregnant and psychotic jilted mistress
gets increasingly upset at his refusals to
face up to his responsibilities . A Trojan
Horse of a film carrying a deel?ly conservative message: two parent family stabili~
ty is best; it's OK to kill intruders. -It is
one of the most successful films, in commerical terms, this year ... draw your own
conclusions.

BABY BOOM
Diane Keaton, Sam Shepard
Capital Mall
Diane Keaton plays the successful
wOman vaulting up the corporate ladder

SUSPECT
122 minutes
Dir: P. Yates
Cher, Dennis Quaid
Lacey Cinemas
Courtroom melodrama set in
Washington D.C. Murder and corruption abound. Cher as the crusading
defense lawyer delivers a brillant performance. This is a well acted (Dennis
Quaid is also good as a juror) and
directed movie. The only fault I could
find was my inability to follow every twist
of the plot. Recommended.

FATAL BEAUTY
103 minutes
Dir: T. Holland
Whoopi Goldberg, Sam Elliot
Lacey
Predictable police vehicle for Whoopi
Goldberg, who is investigating the lethal
Los Angeles drug scene. For all of
Goldberg's streetwise rap, she behaves
like any other white detective. Designer
violence as its worst. A waste of time,
money, and Goldberg's considerable
talents.

Black and Women Composers Spotlighted
seems somewhat dated, tame and safe.
H~wever, the piece had a certain sentimental appeal reminiscent of ragtime
days.
In sharp contrast to "Classical Jazz"
was Leroy Jenkin's "Themes and Improvisations to the Blues ." Here each
member of the quartet performed with
voices. The composer explored the versatility of the instruments and called upon
the dexterity of the musicians. The piece
was the most dynamic of all those performed by the quartet. The superb ability of first violinist Henan Constantino
was particularly apparent throughout the
piece'. Canstantino's intensity fueled the
quartet as a whole. Jenkins was the founding memb~r of the Associa~on for the
Advancement of Creative Musicians,
formed by and for the advancement of
black musicians.
Diane Thome, considered by many to
t ~ the Northwest's most accomplished
composer, wrote "To Search the
Spacious World," a piece for solo viola
taped accompaniment, performed by
violist Judith Bokor. This work In-

by Lindsey W. Bolger
The Evergreen Expressions series, The
Intimo.cy of Music: The Composer, was
presented by Virtuosi Della Rosa to the
Evergreen community last Friday. This
string quartet, working out of Portland,
is primarily dedicated to pedorming
works by composers who are not often included in the programs of most of
America's orchestras and ensembles. For
this particular performance. at Evergreen,
Virtuosi Della Rosa spotlighted pieces by
black and women composers.
The"quartet opened its ' performance
with a piece written by Dorothy Rudd
Moore, the founder of the Society of
Black American Composers. Her work,
"Modes for String Quartet" was a short
yet subtly complex tribute to American
musical folk traditions of the twentieth
century.
The second piece, "Classical Jazz" by
Terry Snowden, was a whimsical weaving of jazz with more traditional music
of the first half of the century. Although
composed in 1986, Snowden's work

~==========================~

Lewis & Clark
NOR~STERNSCHOOLOFLAW

PORTIAND, OREGON

Date: November 11,1987
Time: 1-4 p.m.
Place: Evergreen Law School Fair
Library Building, Second Floor Lobby
"

.

... ~. r j

Are You Ready for the:(:hallenge?

10% OFF NOVEMBER'S
BIRTHSTONE TOPAZ

8~fE~~T ~?giC

Gary Meyers of Lewis & Oark Law,Sj!hool in Portland,
Oregon, will be on campus to talk tcft;tUdents about
careers in law and about Lewis & ~Mr. Meyers,
Assistant Dean for Special Progran\S;~ be glad to
answer your questions about:
..'

t.; ..

• Career opportunities available ~
'school graduates
• .Academic programs at Lewis '" a1ait'c':
o Environmental law and natural ~
o BusinESS, corporate, and tax law ;!' . i,

'..

o International business transac~t~
o Externships
:'~l!l

• Scholarships: The Dean's F "

.:~.

-"
.,,11'

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for Excellence

I

tegrated a somewhat weighty and
abstract electronic tract with rich and
penetrating emotion .
" Yonin To Hitori No Kai" ("Three
Pieces for the One ' ') , composed by Eva
Saito Noda, reflected the artist'sJapanese
heritage through its delicate and airy
voices . Here the quartet was joined by
clari~estist Yoshinori Nakao, who added a reedy and soulful dimension to the
work.
Virtuosi's final scheduled piece was
that of William Grant Still. His "Danzas De Panama" was a collection of traditional dance pieces ranging from the
graceful and gentle to the sensu?us and
provocative .
Th'e concert was brought to a close by
a short encore performance of a piece by
Leroy Jenkins similar to "Themes and
Improvisations to the Blues:" Special
thanks are due to Virtuosi Della Rosa
and to Evergreen Expressions for theit
fine presentation of these works by some
very talented composers who have been
far too often overlooked.

----------------------------'
Associated Students UPS Lectures
PRESENTS
One of the Leading International
Voices to Abolish Apartheid

Helen
Suzman
on opposition member of
South African Parliment

"As a woman in a patriarchal society, and
a liberal in a racist environment,
Helen Suzman is a phenomenon in the
politica(life of South Africa ."

NOV. 17

8:00 PM

~ The University of

iii Puget Sound
TACOMA FIELD HOUSE
TICKETS $6.00
AVAILABLE AT TICKETMASTER
RAI NY DAY 357-4735
THE BON 943-7200
FOR RIDE POOL INFO. FROM TESC,
CONTACT CHRIS • CPJ 866-6000 X6054
17

Call your mummy.
Too Hot and Dry In Epsie
We have now come to chapter five in the our
serialization of Esther Barnhart's We Went
Westward ... Ho, Ho, Ho . This week's
chapter, "Too Hot and Dry, "captures the extraordinarily simple, yet complex life style Esther
and her family endured during their early days
of homesteading in Epsie, Montana. Join us
now as it becomes evident that the drought will
continue and that the sheep and cattle will have
to be sold oJ!. Be sure to read next week's edition when Esther goes back to visit her native
Missouri.

You remember. She was
always there when you were
frightened. And if you got hurt,
she was standing by with bandages. Wouldn't it feel good
to talk to your mother again
right now?
Calling over AT&T Long
Distance Service probably
costs less than you think, too.
And if you have any questions
about AT&T rates or service,
a customer service representative is always standing
by to talk to you.Just call
1 800222-0300.

Sure, your schoolwork and
your friends keep you busy.
But call home and find out
what she's wrapped up in.

ATs.T

The right choice.

When it became evident that there
would not be any grass, and cattle and
sheep would starve, the government
started it's drought purchase program.
Three hundred and fifty thousand Montana cattle and 492,000 sheep were sold
under this plan. One man wrote an article about it to the town paper and likened it to an army retreat . Many a rancher's eyes were wet as his cattle were
driven away. Twenty dollars a head was
paid for a cow in good shape that could
be shipped to Southeastern United States
for grazing cattle. Thin ones sold for less
and went to packing plants .
Barney and his cousin John, took a
herd from this community to Miles City. Each had a saddle horse, and they had
a third one to carry provisions. However ,
this one decided that she didn't want to
be a packhorse and ran back home, scattering food and pans, so they let her go.
There were many herds going in that day
and each had to stay a certain distance
from the others. Some young women and
girls did their part in this . The pay was
ten cents a head. About halfway they got
to the graveled highway and the cattle
could be seen for many miles, with the
riders between, to keep them apart. Th~l
were told before hand where to stop ror
feed and water and where to bed down
for the night. The trip took ten days and
Barney said they lost one cow.

He bought a Ford Coupe that was just
like the one we came out in, except this
one had been out in the weather a long
time and wasn't as new looking. We
celebrated by driving to Epsie with a
dozen eggs. Carrie told us, "Eggs are
worth a nickel in trade but not for postage
stamps." We decided on a can of Campbell's Vegetable Soup and it was real
good for a change. Later we traded with
a neighbor a dressed turkey for a dressed sheep . If we could manage food and
kerosene, things were going pretty good .
A neighbor lady whose first name was
Eula, used to ride over to buy a frying
chicken from us about every two weeks,
for awhile . She shocked us the first time
by asking us to chop the head off, then
took her pocket knife and skinned it. She
had a piece of waxed paper to wrap it in
before putting it in the saddle bag. We
offered to scald and pick it for her but she
said, "No this is the way we like it."
Barney used to chop the head off then
leave. "I can't stand to see what she does
to that chicken," he said.
Eula had come from Missouri too, was
a teacher and had taken a claim . "We
don't live now," she used to say, "we only exist. " I told her that it was trees that
I missed more than anything. The next
time she brought her field glasses along.
She sa id she went outside every day and
looked at the distant hills through it.
" Look at the pine trees, don't they look
good?" she said . I looked but couldn't get
as enthused about it as she did . Sitting
in the shade of an oak tree is one thing;
looking at pine trees miles away is quite
another. One day she came with an ex tra saddle horse and asked me to go
riding with her. Barney said, " Go ahead ,
I'll take care of the kids." That was a
most enjoyable afternoon for me. W e just
rode to the hills, sat under the pines for
awhile and returned home, but it was

great. Later I heard Barney tell her that
I got up on the wrong side of the horse,
but if it was alright with the horse it was
alright with me.
We had about decided to pack up and
leave when a government man came by.
He said that he had been looking for a
place to stack baled hay that would be
issued to the ranchers. "You have a
good, tight yard here," he said. "We will
pay you to take charge of this." It was
a small wage but it was money, so we did
it. Soon men with hay racks came to get
it. They had gone to Broadus to get a
ticket and it had the amount each should
have. After a short time it was phased
out. Rather than pay someone to haul it
away, they sold what was left to us at ten
cents a bale . We kept some and sold the
rest.
The jackrabbit was a new animal to me
and always made me laugh. It seemed
that when we came upon one, it's hoppity jump looked like it was trying to
amuse a person, rather than running to
escape. It still seems like a miracle that
as winter approaches, their fur turns
white, all except the tips of their ears, that
stay black . Easterners ate rabbits, we
thought they were real good eating but
here it was a no-no. Eating a rabbit could
be a fate worse than starving to death, if
it makes you sick, you had it, we were
told. So to this day we see the bunny rabbits all around but we don't eat them.
One day that fall, a fellow who had
been hunting in the western part of the
state, came back with an elk. He gave a
piece to Uncle John and he brought us
a chunk with the hide still on it. When
we sat down to eat elk steak, Marla leaned back in her chair , crossed her arms
and said , "I'm not going to eat dog." It
took us minute or two before we could
figure out what she mea nt. UncleJohn's
dog was th e same color as the elk hide'

19

Greener Speak

Calendar
DIVERSITY

What Qualities Should an
Educated Person Have?

Lesbian Rap Group: Tuesdays, 7 :00 to
9:00 pm at the Lesbian/Gay Resource
Center, Library 3223 .

Ken Basset
Jennifer
Caples
I think an edll(ated pason
should be able to think/or
themselves, to solvc pro blems on their own, and to
know about what 's going
01/ in the world.

Monte
Thompson
They need to mix their
knowledge with love.

That's a tough question. It
would seem to me that one
quality of a person is to
become educated, andyet an
educated
person . ..
uM . .. umm. . . Gosh,' I
don't know how to answer
that!

Day change: Gay Men's Rap Group will
now be meeting on Wednesday nights
at 7:00 to 9:00 pm at the LlGRC in
Library 3223 .
EDUCATION

Due to popular demand, the Career
Development office wii conduct another
GRE practice test to be given Friday,
November 6, from 8:00 am til noon in
Lecture Hall I . Please register in the
Career Developmet Office, LI401 , or call
X6193 for more information.
Becoming an Environmental Professional is the theme of the Fourth Annual
Environmental Careers Conference on
November 6 and 7 at the University of
Washington in Seattle. The CEIPsponsored conference will focus on successful strategies for those wishing to
build a career in an environmental
organization. For more information and
registration, call the Environmental Intern Program at 625-1750.

Fouad Morshed
A n educated penon should
be able to produce i'lStead of
receiving in/onTllltion. They
should be able to examine
and 11Ulke a rational judegement.

FOR FUN

When you have a Roll of
Color Print Film
Developed and Printed

Cheryl West
I think an educated person
should have IlIImili!}" to
know when they need to
look further for answers. I
aha think that 0/1 educated
person needs to he toleran t
of other views in order to
learn more about them. and
to take them into consideration when they 're rompiling
some sort of dOCllmfl1tation
or a paper of IVliat fl'er.

Sizes 110, 126, 135 and Disc

developing.

The
~ Evergreen
State
College

the ~:trlce.

Bookstore

Replacement
Roll for avery
one left for

'~

NOT VALID WITH OTHER OfFERS

OHer good: Nov. 9 - 14, 1987
I nl,'!"vicws

20

Dare to Pl ev ian--Go Bowling-November 15, 8:00 pm til 10:00. We pay
for the ride, you pay for the game(s)
($1.40 per game) and splurge $.75 for
shoe rental. For more infor, call or stot>
by the Recreation Center, (X6530 at
866-600 .)

nv Ellen

Tepper

Ph utog ra ph s IJ )' C oll een Paull

INTERNSHIPS

Approximately 50 newspapers are signed up to hire students through the Dow .
Jones Newspaper Fund's 1988
Newspaper Editing Intern Program for ,
College Juniors and the Minority: ,
Editing Intern Program for College
Seniors. The deadline for both programs '
is November 15. For applications dF>~;"
more information, contact the CPJ, o't~~:··
write to: Dow Jones Newspaper Fund·: '{.
PO Box 300 , Princeton, NJ, 08543-0300;;':>.

phone 609-452-2820.
The Cooperative Education Office has
information on a varity of Interships
ranging from Health Services to Political
Science. For a complete list and more information contact the Office in the Student Advising Center, L1400, X6391.
PUBLIC SERVICE

Domestic Violence victims need your
help! You can help victims all over the
state from your own home. We will be
starting a training for advocates for the
Statewise Domestic Violence Hotline
on November 7. If you are interested in
joining us, please call us at 753-4621 or
1-800-562-6025 weekdays from 9 am to
5 pm for an appointment.
Every Wednesday at 5:00 pm the TESC
to The University of EI Salvador Sister
University Group meets in the Student
~ounge 3rd floor of the Library. All are
welcome . For more information contact
Innerplace Ex 6145.
On Friday, November 6, 1987, University of Idaho College of Law will have a
representative on campus to talk to
students about their law program from
9 :00 am to noon in the Hillaire Student
Advising Center L1401. For more information, contact Maureen Eddy in Career
Development X6193.
On November 12, the Peace Corps will
be conducting interviews from 9:00 am
to 5:00 pm. Interested students must pick
up packets and sign up in the Career
Development office located in the new
Hillaire Student Advising Center Library
1401. Call X6193 for more information.
On Wednesday, November 11, Eckerd
Family Youth Alternatives, Inc . will be
on
campus
to
recruit
for
counselor/teacher positions. Paid vacations, medical benefits, educational intership programming . Sign up for personal
interview at the Career Development Office, L1401--or call X6193.
On Monday, November 16, Godfather's , a subsidiary of the Pillsbury

Company, will be on campus to recruit
for full time Management positions. Interested students can sign up now in the
Career Development Office, L1401, or
call X6193.
November 6--There will be a Resume
Writing Workshop in the Career
Development Office, L1401 from noon to
1 :00 pm. On November 9 thru 11,
Career Development will conduct their
Job Search Seminar series from noon to
1 :00 pm. Monday, November 9 is Applications & Portfolios; Tudesday,
November 10 is Job Search Strategies;
and Wednesday, November 11 is I,nterview Techniques . For more info, call
X6193.
The Career Development Office will be
conducting Evergreen's Second Law
School Fair on Wednesday, November
11, from 1 :00 to 4:00 pm in the Second
Floor Library Lob~y .. For more inform
ation, call the Career Development Of
lice at X6193.
Sundays Around the Corner, a series of
writers reading writings, will premier on
Sunday, November 8 at 7:30 pm at the
Corner in A-Dorm. The series will
feature an open mike format, with
readers signing up on a first-come, firstserve basis. Free .
There will be an Earth First! Slideshow
on Thursday, November 5 at 7:00 pm
in LH 1. For more info, call the ERC at
X6784.
\
Come join George Barner & the Original
Trendsetters, and auctioneer Sandy
Smith for a "Gala " evening November
7, at the Westwater Inn, to benefit Sudden Infant Death Syndrome Research
and Education. Preview and happy hour
begin at 6:00 pm, with dinner being served at 6:30 pm, followed by the auction
and dancing. Tickets are 525.00 a couple and are available by calling 943-5688 .
Advance reservations are appreciated.
Sponsored by the Thurston County SIDS
Families.
Fall Color Bike Trip in South Thurston
County, sponsored by the Wilderness
Resource Center, on Saturday,

Calenda'r

Calendar
November 7. Cost is $3.50. For further
information, call X6530.

MUSIC
First Thursday art enthusiasts who promenade along the Gallery Walk
November 5, 1987, are cordially invited
to conclude their peramulations with
"Dessert, Wine and Stars," an elegant
and romantic interlude atop the Smith
Tower in· the scenic Chinese Room, for
the benefit of Danceworks Northwest.
From 7:00 pm to 10:00 pm, at $7 .50 a
person, guests may partake freely of spectacular desserts from the Sheraton Hotel,
fine Staton Hills wines and Starbucks'
rich expressos while listening to the
soothing strains of live music.
On November 8 at 2:30 pm, the
Cleveland Quartet will be performing at
the Washington Center. Tickets range
from $12 to $18. Call 753-8586 for more
information.

Approximately 60 Doctoral Fellowships
will be awarded in an international competition sponsored by the Howard
Hughes Medical Instituted and administred by the National Research
Council . HHMT welcomes applications
from all qualified individuals and strongly
encourages members of minority groups
and women to compete fully in this program. The application deadline date is
November 13, 1987. For information
and application materials, write: Hughes
Doctoral Fellowships, the Fellowship Office, National Research Council, 2101
Constitution Ave., Washington D .C.
20418 or call 202-334-2872 .
'Major changes in the world economic

pm at 529 S.W. 4th Avenue, Olympia
WA. For more information, call Andrea
Damitio at 943-5633, or the Thurston
County Health Department at 786-5581
or 1-800-624-1234.

dividuals who demonstrate ability and
special aptitude for advanced training in
science or engineering. Applicants will be
expected to take the GRE. The examinations will be given December 12, 1987.
The deadline for entering is November
13, 1987.For more information/application, write: Fellowships Office, National
Research Council, 2101 Constitution
Avenue, Washington D .C., 20418 .

situtation have influenced America's
role in international commerce. What
effect do you think these changes will
have on inernational education?' is the
theme of the International Student
Scholarship Competition. The competition is open to all International Students
studying in the U.S. Students interested
must submit an essay of no more than
1,500 words on the topic. For more information, write to: Essay Competition
Coordinator; DSD Communications
Ltd . , 10805 Parkridge Boulevard, Suite
240, Reston, VA 20091.

THEATRE
The Olympia High School Drama
Department presents The Curious
Savage by John Patrick on November
12-14 at 7:30 pm and a matinee on the
14th at 1:30 at the Olympia High School
Little Theatre.

SUPPORT
An ACOA Weekend Workshop is set for
November 7 & 8 at St. Placid's Priory,
320 College St., NE, in Lacey . "ACOA"
stands for "Adult Children of
Alcoholics." The workshop is for those
adults who were raised in "damaged
families. " The problems may have been
alcoholism, chemicai dependency,
depression, eating disorders or mental illness. For more information, and to
register for the workshops, call 438-1771 .

The National Science Foundation plans
I

to award
Graduate Fellowshlps
and
Minority Graduate Fellowships to in-

_0-

Oregon Shakespearean (and more)
Festival 1988 ticket sales begin
November 9 for members, January 28
for general sales. For tickets, membership
and full-color brochure call (503)
482-4331 or write: Shakespeare, PO Box
158, Ashland OR, 97520.

THE WASHINGTON CENTER

Starting the first Wednesday in
November, Ben Moore's Restaurant,
112 W. 4th , Uptown Olympia, is pleased to announce live Jazz performances in
their dining room. The performances will
start at 9:00 pm and there will be no
cover charge. On Wednesday,
November 11, the Joe Baque Trio will
be performing in the Ben Moore Dining
Room. The performance will begin at
9:00 pm.

VISUAL ARTS

FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS

I
1

I
I

The SIDS Support Group for bereaved
parents, families, and friends will meet
Wednesday, November 11, at the
Thurston County Health Department.
The meeting time will be 7 :00 pm to 9:00

CLASSIFIED

Treat yourself to the finestl
• Private Hot Tub Room.

HOURS: '1 am .. 1t pm Sun-Thurs
11 am-' am Fri-Sat

WORKSHOPS
Cold Season Herbal Care Workshop on
Thursday, November 5, from 7:00 to
9:00 pm. COlt i. $12. Contact
Shoshana at Radiance, 357-9470, for
more information. '

r------~~-------,

Hundntds weekly of homel
Write: P.O. Box 17

Clarle, N.J. 07066.
,

-MASTER CARDIVISAI

'/ I



I

(
j

(

.

~




Regardless of nit history. Also, new crtdIt
card. No OM llfusedl
For Infonnatlon call ...
1-315-733-6062 EXT. M1845 •

~

.. ( . f , '

. ~:.. ...
,I '

f

invites you to try

"THE PARKNOSE"
6ur most popular
WHITE SAUCE PIZZA

.........................IIIIII!!!~: " . Ib:s:a::l:l~a::a~a::a~...
. ::.::>.~:' ,._.-"'!!'-•.. . .,;.; ;.---------.
;.
...

SCHOLARSHIPS .

"' .
"

The Ford Foundation Doctoral
Fellowships for Minorities Program
will ofTer approximately 40 predoctoral
fellowships and 10 one-year fellowships.
The deadline will be November 13,
1987. For more information, contact the
CPJ, or write to: Ford Foundation Doctoral Fellowships, the Fellowship Office,
National Research Council, 2101 Constitution Avenue, Washington D .C.,
2220418.

Representation is the second part of the
two-part exhibition, Aspects of Drawing, curated by Vancouver artist, David
MacWilliam. Part II continues MacWilliam's focus on drawing as an essential aspect of all forms of artmaking in the
visual arts. The exhibition will open Friday, November 13, from 5:00 to 7:00
pm and will run through December 31.
The Public Art Space is located on the
Fountain Level of the Seattle Center
House . Gallery hours are Wednesday
through Sunday 11:00 am to 6:00 pm.
Interpretive gallery talks are available by
appointment.

TYPIST

• The,apeutk Massage
• Wolff System Tanning

THEGREAT
ESCAPE!

Friday night at 8:00 pm in the A-dorm
Corner there will be a rock festival featuring Mecca Normal (a folk rock duo from
Vancouver), Rich Jensen, the GOTeam, and Spook and the Zombies will
be performing. Be there. It's free.

The Olympia Film Society is proud to
present its fourth annual Film Festiyal
duction. Scheduled for November 6-15,
35 fIlms will be shown during the ten days

of the festival at the Capitol Theatre. For
more information, contact the Olympia
Film Society, 754-667 .

SUNDAY -

N9~~MBER

- ILLU£ION£

8, 1987

2:30 p.m.
Washington Center for the Performing Arts
512 South Wa,shington Street
TICKETS: $18.00/$15.00/$12.00 Adults
TICKETS: $15.00/$12.00/$4.00 StudentslSeniors
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE TICKET OFFICE, YENNEY'S, RAINY DAY,
THE BOOKMARK, THE GREAT MUSIC CO. (Chehalis), OR CALL 753-8S86
PRESENTED BY THE WASHINGTON CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS
Special accommodations are avaihfblt 10 pe:rsons of di,1:abilit y. Please contact the Center to make arrangements.

~ ... ~-

a new

*

boob store

e:x:tends a warm welcome
to vi8it U8 at our new loca.t~
:'

,

OPEN HOUSE WEEK
NOVEMBER 16-20
call or come in for list of events
- - - -

113 W. Legion Way
94.1-8404

.. . ..s.2.00 OFF

ANY SIZE WITH COUPON
EXPIRES NOV. 30, 1987
120u.J)(~C.w.l

ot..vrnpiu.CHCJ

L _____ £~5..:..9849 ____

'L', 23
Media
cpj0429.pdf