The Cooper Point Journal Volume 15, Issue 27 (May 28, 1987)

Item

Identifier
cpj0421
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 15, Issue 27 (May 28, 1987)
Date
28 May 1987
extracted text
tL
ourna
May 28,1987

COO

_volume XV

Freshest of tile Lights

They're out there. :.. arid they're Silvers! It's a new
silver can, but inside you'll find the same satisfyUlg Mountain Fresh taste in a less-filling light beer.
Rainier Light. . . it's the perfect combination of less calories and great taste.
fur a full-sized color poster of the Rainier Silvers, send $2 to Rainier Beeraphemalia. 3100 Airport Way South. Seattle, WA 98134.

The Evergreen
Sta te College
Olympia. WA 98505

Nonprofit Org.
US Postage Paid
Olympia, WA
Permit No . 65

p e r poi n

_i88ueXXVC

CONTENTS

editor's note:
Ben: Okay, folks, I'm in control this
week. He he he
Jason: Suuure you are, Ben.
Ben: Yes, as a matter offact... No Polly
to keep you comfortable this week,
Jason!
Yolande: Do I have to participate in
this!
Jason: Yes you do. While Polly's away,
someone has to keep Ben in hand. He's
a madman.
Timothy: Keep what in hand?
Ben: Quiet, Timothy. How's the calendar coming? ..
Jason: I love the calendar.
Ben: Okay, how many lines have we
written in this silly little thing so far?
I can't figure it out. Call Polly. Help.
Jason: God you're a weenie.
Yolande: There should be a comma after
"yes." I'm hungry.
Ben: I'm tired. Sa)" Yolande ...
Timothy: (singing)l don't know why I
love you ...
Jason: I'd like a cigarette
Susan: Jason, you're GLAMOURIZING
cigarettes!
J88Ol\: Why does Susan have a line-she's
not even here.
Ben: Well, dear -readers, as you can see
I've had quite a time getting this thing
together, but with the help of all these
very silly people we have managed to
put out a hot product. Check out
especially Tim's story on the school
budget, a CPJscoop. We also managed
to score a few articles on the travel
theme, though Yolande has questions
about the bus story, but SHE thought
up the headline. Jason was basically his
arrogant self throughout production
night (and morning).
Jason: No, Ben, actually you did the
whole issue. You're a maniac. Have you
called Gary Diamond7
Ben: I'm sorry Gary. You were too
political. I warned you.
Yolande: You guys are dominating this
page.
Tim: Hey, Ben, you type pretty good,
first time we've seen yer hands outa yer
pants all night.
Jason: Yea, he's really had things in
hand.
Ben: Well, I think this would be a good
place to end this.
Yolande: You guys are all full of it.




t

e

r

s

I N M E M 0 R I ·U M
6... Evergreen loses Irwin Zuckerman
&

CAMPUS

COMMUNITY

NEWS

9... Legislators settle Evergreen budget ~ by Tinwthy
O'Brien
12... United Farm Workers of Washington take action ~ by
McCan & Waits



A N A L Y S IS



OPINION



t

L

11...Hunger: what is to be done?

~

by Peter W. Rickett

12 ... Thinking about the physically challenged
Duncan

~

by Cindy

TRAVEL

The coming of summer:
,
13... A quick trip to Brazil • by Felicia Clayburg
. 14... Radical summer fun ~ by Lillian Ford
15... Bus transfers are free ~ by Howard Earl


GREENERSPEAK

16... What is your most interesting hitchhiking story?


POETRY

18... Hog index·


CALENDAR

19

ST A FF
The COOPER POINT JOURNAL is published weekly for the students, staff, and faculty of The
Evergreen State College, and the surrounding community. Views expressed are not necessarily
those of the college or of the JOURNAL's staff. Advertising material contained herein does not imply endorsement by the JOURNAL. The oftice is located at the Evergreen State College, Campus
Activities Building, Room 006A. The phone number is ~, x6218. An calendar announcements
must be double·spaced, listed by category, and submitted no later than 5 p.rn. on Tuesday for that
week's publication. An stories and letters to the editor must be typed, double-spaced, signed, and
must include a daytime phone number where the author can be reached, and are noon, Monday,
and 5 p.m. on Monday, respectively. Display advertising must be received no later than 5 p.m. on
Monday for that week's publication.

Editor: Polly Trout 0 Currently in Power: Ben Tansey 0 Graphics: pure evil by design 0 Photo
Editor: Michael Polli 0 Domesticated: Paul Pope 0 Reporter and Production: Timothy "Ghachong"
O'Brien 0 Calendar Coordinator: Kathy Phillips 0 Late Night: Yolande Mai Lake OAdvisor: Susan
Finkel DBusiness Manager: Felicia Clayburg 0 DistrIbution: Crosseyed and painless 0 Typist: Ben
Wah 0 Advertising ~anager: Chris Carson 0 Advertising Assistant: Julie Williamson

~watch

out

Letter to the Evergreen Community:
Two and a half years ago I left the
U niv~rsity of California, Santa Cruz, an
expenmental alternative college like
Evergreen. Both schools started within
two years of each other during the
1960s. Both schools used the evaluation
system instead of grades. Both were
committed to a low student-faculty rntio
with an emphasis on sharing and
cooperation between the faculty and
students.
The dream of Santa Cruz is gone.
Through the actions of the Chancellor
(equivalent to the President), the student government, pressure from the
state of California, and by an active
recruitment policy, Santa Cruz was
buried and a Berkeley clone was born.
~ta Cruz over the past ~~ f~
has increased its enrollment from nearly
6,000 students to nearly 9,000. They
have adopted the grade system although
they are allowing for evaluations in some
programs. Seminars have given way to
lectures in halls filled with hundreds of
peopie.The student-faculty ratio haS-iD:creased. Many Humanities departments

(such as the Religious $tudies Dept.)
have been cut or dropped to fund new
departments in the sciences such as
Computer Engineering. The students of
Santa Cruz who at one time shunned
competitive sports and fraternal
organizations are, this year, fonning
their fIrst fraternity. All this and more
is happening in the wake of it receiving
national attention as one of the top ten
small liberal arts schools in the nations.
Sound familiar?
I suggest Evergreen awaits the same .
fate as Santa Cruz. The foretelling signs
that I remember at Santa Cruz are here.
Brian Hoffman

~

appreciation

To Patricia Hutchinson:
In your response in the May 14 CPJ
to G.W. Galbreath, you assume that you
can speak for the whole of the
Evergreen oommUnity, but not the "new
students, visitors, and vandals," in saying that appreciation of cultural diversity exists at Evergreen. I would agree
that there is a conscientious community of people at this school that work for
and believe in cultural diversity, but I
2

also know that there are many not new
students, faculty and staff at Evergreen
who are not as concerned with the issues
of cultural diversity. In defending your
own feelings, you have assumed that only the uninformed do not recognize the
importance of the Welcome Pole. I feel
you are overlooking the fact that
Galbreath's letters regularly address the
instances of subtle racism and lack of
respect for cultural beliefs that continually oreur on the Evergreen campus.
Until we, as the Evergreen community,
acknowledge that these problems exist,
we will not make any viable progress
towards cross-eultural understanding.
We cannot continue to sweep the dirt
under the rug as if we are not part of it.
A rece!lt example of !lJ)J>~rent
disrespect for Native American beliefs
is the use of the "Seven Generations To
Come" concept by the students who plan
to embark on a mission for peace across
the Bering Straits. I believe in sharing
ideas and beliefs between people who
understand each other, but sharing does
not include taking what is not nihtfulIy yours. Seeing a traditional Nl!live
American concept emblazoned on Tshirts and posters as a slogan disturbs
me. It is not anyone's rig1!t to ~~ective­
Iy choose certain beliefs of other cultUres

LetterS

LetterS
and spread those concepts as one reinterprets them, no matter how good
their intentions may be.
Secondly Patricia, I fmd your suggestion for an identification plaque for the
Welcome Pole ridiculous. There is no
such thing as "tangible proof' of appreciation for another culture, when the
lack of cross-cultural respect and
understanding undeniably exists. It's
not necessary that any culture spell out
their beliefs for you, me or anyone else,
but it is imperative that everyone takes
the individual responsibility to improve
their cross-culturalliteracy, in the effort
towards bridging cultural gaps. An infonnation plaque would only loosely veil
the problems that exist, an inadequate
attempt to placate the justifiable
anger demonstrated by the Evergreen
Native American community and others
genuinely concerned .
Finally, I do not take offense at G.W.
Galbreath's using the word "rape" to
describe the recuning vandalism to the
Welcome Pole. I am a woman who, like
yourself, is plagued by the fears
associated with the crime of rape.
Therefore, I too was jolted by
Galbreath's choice of words, but feel it
was an appropriate metaphor for the
repeated attacks on the Welcome Pole,
and further appropriate for all the past
and present attacks on Native American
culture. We should not try to qualify one
crime as worse than the other, as this
does not further any progress towards
resolution of the problem of crimes
against humanity as a whole.
I personally appreciate G.W.
Galbreath's letters, and others who have
pointed out the problems of Cl'OSScultural diversity at Evergreen. Until
the day occurs that these problems no
longer exist, it is necessary that
everybody take the responsibility for
recognizing and discussing these problems with open minds and respect.
Marilyn Homing

~

post it

To the Editor: .
On the morning of Wednesday, May
13, my office, the Office of Information
Services, received a report that a
woman who was a student at Evergreen
had been raped. This was the seventh
incident of sexual assault, attempted
rape, or rape that had occurred at

Evergreen since last fall, and we
the two vice presidents) that we made
prepared the infonnation to release as
an error in judgement in how prominentwe usually do in such instan(!es-a short
ly to display the release.
account of the facts and who-to-contact
On Thursday, Pat Gilbert of the
for information was written; copies were
Women's Center and Tani Beckman of
printed and given to people in our office
the Lesbian-Gay Resource Center came
and the Infonnation Center to distnbute
to the office to ask me about this mat·
around campus.
ter. Based on our conversation, I am
Two factors changed our procedure,
writing to the CPJto explain how and
however. First, at the time we sent o~ why my office distributed information in
the release, the circumstances of the
this instance. Should similar cirreported rape were still unclear and incumstances arise in the future, I intend
complete. Second, it was the day of the
to use the experience of May 13 to
Academic Fair, and more than 600 high
distribute infoi'Ilultion in the best way
school and transfer students were here
possible with the first priority always
to register for Fall Quarter.
being public safety and the campus comMy first concern in the event of a rape
munity's need-to-know. My thanks to
report is to get the word out as quickly
Pat and Tani for coming in to discuss the
as possible. Although our routine varies
matter with me.
depending on the situation, distribution
usually consists of informing chief adMark Clemens,
ministrators (if they don't already
Director, Information Services
know), posting the infonnation in the
CAB and the Library, and sending it via
campus mail to the CPJ, KAOS, the
Housing Office, Counseling Center,
~
WomeR's Health Center, and to all faculty, staff and student offices. However, in
Dear Greeners:
light of the uncertainty as to whether
The next time you see Vonda Drogthe reported rape had occurred on cammund, who runs SAGA food services
pus and out of concern not to unduly
here on campus, give her one bia' triplealarin several hundred visitors to camdip springboard high-five!She has made
pus, I changed our routine.
the visionary decision to discontinue the
In addition to delivering the release to
use of styrofoam! She's put t~ comfaculty and staff offices in the campus
munity on the cutting edge of the interthat moming so it would be
national movement to save Earth's atdelivered by mid-day, we also sent 200
. mosphere. Let's celebrate!
extra copies to Housing for student
residents. We distributed the release in
Gratefully,
the CAB through the Iruonnation
Rhys Roth
<2enter, leaving copies on tables upstairs
and downstairs, but not posting them on
doors and windows. We hand delivered
~
copies to the CPJ and KAOS. We did
not post or otherwise hand deliver
To the Editor:
copies around the Library, relying inBen Linder's recent contra
stead on the mid-day campus mail to get
deatrunurder in Nicaragua has producthe word out.
ed two profound reactions for me in relaThis change in routine was my effort
tion to my worklife this quarter. The
to inform the campus community as well,
first reaction was an intennittent feelif not more so, than we usually do. While
ing of despair and grief throughout the
we did not post the release in some
days that followed. This not only interplaces, we actually passed out more inrupted my concentration on my studies
formation, as we printed and distrbuted
and school life, but pervaded my social
800 copies where we usually do only
life as well. My second reaction was a
400-500, and w~ took care to place copies
jolt, a push to move forth even stronger
directly in the hands of the CPJ and
in my work and to canoy on the work and
KAOS.
ideals of Ben Linder, and to help see

high-five

mail

a jolt

I feel that, at the time, I made the best
decision under the circumstances. So do
Vice Presidents Sue Washburn and Gail
Martin, who both approved the decision
beforehand. In retrospect, I feel (as do
3

them .through. Please join me in a rededication to this issue.
Sincerely,
Kaci Wilson

~

styrofoam

To the Evergreen community and
SAGA:
Often when we think of how we can
affect positive change on behalf of the
environment we forget that the change
begins at home, with ourselves and our
daily habits. The recent drive by
WashPIRG to educate our community
about the dangers of styrofoam is a good
example of learning about how we can
begin modifying our habits to be less
harmful to the world we all share. Unfortunately, those of us who wanted to
use paper cups instead of styrofoam
found that either there were no paper
products or that they were only in certain places, i.e. in the Greenery but not
the Deli, and considering the amoUnt of
people who signed the WashPIRG petition, there were a lot of styrofoam cups
being used anyway. Signing a petition
does not eliminate our responsibility. It
should re-affinn our commitments to our
responsibilities. I want the members of
our community and SAGA to continue
to advocate the use of paper products or
bringing cups and plates from home and
to eliminate the use of more harmful
.styrofoam products and to see that this
effort continues next year and the ·years
that follow.
Diana Gudaitis

. ~ egotistical
To the CPJ:
I really enjoyed all of the letters and
articles about the S&A process of allocation in last week's CPJ,especially the article with the comment:" 'I think they
(SIlA Board) are making a real mistake
by arbitrarily cutting budgets,' said
Kuhner, 'for the most part of the
Board's decisions about cuts hav~ been
politically safe." Who is Eric Kuhner?
I never saw him at the S&A Board
deliberations; I have never heard his
comments or CQJlcerns O.D ~he.p~ of
our deliberations!
That's right, I am a white male student studying MPI, and I serve on the
board. I am commonly referred to by
some as one of the "little, egotistical
power-hungry, Machiavellian princes."
I am being quite frank when I say that
I thought these letters were some of the

most humerous comments on the S&A
process I have ever read in the CPJ.
Why do some people choose to "piss and
moan" about subjects they know very
little about, and worse, aren't even willing to spend the time to get what little
they know correct?
I mean, really, these comments were
more of a joke than any realistic discussion or consideration of how the process
actually works. What sent me into fits
of laughter is the fact that 30 people
showed up to last Wednesday's deliberations and voiced their comments and
concerns. Due to class constraints I was
unable to attend the moming session (I
was finishing a research paper-are my
priorities screwed up?). Well, the furiny
part, for all of you who weren't there,
was that when I arrived in the afternoon, none of these "concerned" people
decided to "hang around" to view the
very process they were complaining
about!
Having served on the S&A Board for
the entire year I find it pathetic that the
board is so often criticized (I guess traditions are hard to break! when no one
outside of the board members show up
each week for the meetings. To deal with
decisions that have to be made is difficult, because we know that they won't
always be absolutely correct. I guess it's
fortunate that some people are willing
to take the risk.
So, are you wondering why I am not
justifying any of our decisions in this letter? The reason simply is that I see no
purpose nor feel any obligation to. If yo~
are someone who feels differently, I invite you to come to one of yo~ S&A
Board meetings, which, if you're not
aware (its more than likely you're not."
are finished for the year. So, come if you
are still as "concerned" at the beginning of next year. Why don't you apply
for the S&A Board. Then I will be looking forward to hearing your comments
.C?n the S&A Board process when you're
a board member!
In my opinion, this year's process of
allocations has been excellent. The entire campus owes S&A Board Coordinator Dave Campbell a sincere thanks
and round of applause forputtingup with
all the bullshit of managing a process
which some people would ratber"cry"
about than participate in. He is truly
concerned about the welfare of the entire student body and knows better than
anyone the frustration of dealing with
the administration on issues they would
rather not talk about.

"

In conclusion, all I ask is if you're one
of the "concerned" members of the stu·
dent body, why don't you fmd out why
our library can't afford a stapler for
students' use. Then do something about
it, and do us all some good!
Stephen Schramke
S&A Board member
A "concerned" student

~

17th century

Letter to the Editor:
I t is too painful to see the huge pileup of our forests, now merely "lumber,"
at Olympia Marina!
.
The recent transaction with China, on
• top of our other exports, has temporarily
boosted the state treasury, employment, etc., but the overall affect will be
disasterous and irreversable.
Washington State's policies in regard
to the precious and perilous environmental balance are antiquated 17th century
thinking. Overcutting of forests,
destruction of wildlife, and generalized
pollution go hand-in-hand to destroy
both earth and dweller. Historically,
these localized short-term profits produce for the ignorant only a momentary
delusion of well-being which in reality
becomes a deadly serious, monumental
and irrevocable error.
Sincerely,
Br. Beroy Bish OSF

~memory
Dear Polly,
When I opened last week's cpJ, I found
my name underneath an article that, between the time submitted and the time
printed, had changed The original first
paragraph, which was cut altogether
(though incorporated in part into the second paragraph), was a specific memory.
When edited into the more general form
in which it was printed, the memory lost
its relevance.
This memory was as follows:
"When I waLl five my family drove for
several months and several thousand
miles from Iowa City to the West Coast,
back through Iowa and on up to Vermont. Somewhere along the way I
awoke late in the night to find that we
were driving through the assaulting

e

L

t

t

e

r

s

====In memorrum =====

. Free Ads'

He was a person who inspired others
with his constant curiosity, his will·
ingness to change, and the fact that he
tried to bring new issues in. He was a
tremendous friend. He believed public
infonnation could lead to peace. He was
genuinely committed to helping us see
the world as it really is.
Matt Smith, Member of the Faculty

Prove ou're

Irwin Zuckerman joined Marilyn
Frasca's class, Meditation on Faith, lwlf
way through the program. He met with
them in small groups at his home until
this paBt week. The follnwi:ng exerpts an1
entries written in students' journals on
hearing of Irwin's death.

U~~SELECTIVE SE~V:'

We went to visit Irwin that first day;
one month ago. I felt so priviledged to
have a faculty member who would still
teach, even 80 close to his own death ... Irwin reminded me that we all share this
life, we can love and learn and have
dignity and faith and some sort of happiness, every moment of our life.
Mark Edward

W' . .

11 you're within a month of turning 18, register with
Selective Service. It '5 simple. Just go to the post
office and f1ll out a card. That '5 alltt takes.
And don't worry, registration is DOt a draft .
The country just needs your name in case
there's ever a national emergency.

night lights of a strange city. For my
five year old mind this sensation of
Night and a Foreign City aroused only
fear and I retreated immediately to my
place of safety, the space between my
family members and the front and back
seats of the car."
The main difference between this
specific memory and the more general
fonn into which it was edited is one of
context. The space between the front
and back seats of our car and the safety
it provided me seems important only in
the context of finding myself in a strange
and terrifying place. Such context is part
of my understanding of all safe and
sacred spaces and is why I included the
memory in my article. A safe place is
necessary only in the context of an "un·
safe" place. Sacred space is felt in its
contrast to profane space. The
sacredness Native Americans feel for
their land speaks to this: "For each tribe
of men U sen created, He also made a
home. In the land created for any par·
ticular tribe he placed whatever would
be best for the welfare of that tribe.
Thus it was in the beginning: The

Apaches and their homes each created
for the other by U sen himself. When
they are taken from 'these homes they
sicken and die."{Geronirno)
The attraction we feel to our
homeland, home, bedroom, playhouse, or
any safe place is strong and relevant in
the context of a less intimate, foreign,
anti ultimat.,lv "chaotic" wor 1rl
Such places are, in every sense of the
word, where we can be at home.
Also, I built with concentrated glee,
not glue.
I realize my intentions for including
the memory may not have come
through. But if this letter requires any
editing, please, let's do it together.
Thanks.
Stefan Killen

~

biases

To the Editor:
The S&A Board is making decisions
based on personal biases and politics.
The Board is not responding to the conS

stituencies. Yes they have a limited
amount of money to distribute, but their
list of priorities is confused. They claim
to be committed to cultural diversity yet
both Innerplace and Peace Center have
been backhanded. Both groups serve
peoples of all different cultural
backrounds. Innerplace has shown films
on Tibetan Buddhism, sponsors a Sufi
group on campus (Sufism is derived from
an ancient Moslem sect), has worked
closely with the SEVA Foundation, a
group that provides medical services
and supplies to indiginous peoples
around the world.
The S&A Board has equated cultural
diversity with color. They have funded
all groups associated with people of color at near or full funding. Simultaneously they have either eliminated or
significantly cut most other groups not
serving a particular color of person. I am
not objecting to funding these groups.
I do suggest that equating cultural
diversity with color is reverse racism.

Brian Hoffman

Eyes full of love
Irwin Zuckerman, member of the
faculty since 1977, died last Sunday at
the age of 66, after a long sf:ruggle with
cancer.
Irwin was as open-minded and curious
an individual as I ever met at
Evergreen. He was eager to learn and
eager to help others learn. Though he
came to teaching relatively late in his
life, he quickly developed a profound
grasp of what education could become
at a college such as ours. He never tired,
even while seriously ill, of working
toward making his vision of education a
real one. He added zest, humor, and life
to this community. Irwin left his mark
on many colleagues, many more
students, and on the college as a whole.
We will miss him and we will never

forget him.
Don Finkel, Member of the Faculty
Irwin's life reflected his deeply held
belief that for our personal. lives, for our
country and for the college, there are
greater possibilities. And that we can
make them happen if we try together.
Those of us who loved Irwin found some
of our own greater possibilities in our
relationships with him. For us, he is
indispensable.
Allan Nasser, Member of the Faculty
He was a good friend, an admirable in·
tellectual force in the community, a true
gentleman of the old school who always
wore his years lightly, and an all·'round
class act. I already miss him, and I <!!m't
ever expect not. to.
. /"
Leo Daugherty, Mtmiller of the Faculty
6

I thought of Irwin all week. Held him
in my thoughts and now we can let go.
He suffered for a long time and was
lucid, holding to his ideas, ef\joying his
memoms, puzzling over them. He talk·
ed with me about a childhood memory
as if it were an archaeological discovery.
Finding a recoll~ion like going to
religious school as a boy or remember·
ing a Jewish song so long buried in his
past excited him and reminded me of my
own searches. Perhaps each person's
past is a version of the past of all of
humanity. We each have our own ver·
sion of the Lascaux caves, the pyramids,
the Rosetta Stone, the Dead Sea Scrolls
and a myriad or testaments and psalms.
Marilyn Frasca, Member of the Faculty.
How quietly we leaned our ears in the
direction of his passing, looked up into
his voice so full of breath and rattle between the lesson. The eyes. wbich were
full of love for US-Bome blank, honest
love.
Now I remember with my throat
crushed up a little too high how he said
over twice "Belief becomes a material

force."
I may not know that-belief becomes
a material force-for thirty years, Irwin.
All that I can see today is how 8Otneone's
smile just can't die.
Jennifer Seymore.

N

N

s

w

e

Seawulff prowls the sound
voyages of exploration on Puget Sound.
Five voyages were scheduled during
April and May. Five students joined
skipper Bob Sluss on Evergreen's

Spring quarter academic activities for
the core program Exploration,
Discovery and Empire, taught by Bob
Sluss and Byron Youtz, included

'''-.

Teach'n'coach
Three Evergreen students competed
in the intercollegiate district marathon
championship at Seaside, Oregon on
February 28th. Jim Shultz placed first
in the mens' division; Amy Youngt'lesh
and Noelle Nordstrom placed 4th and
6th in the womens' division. These
athletes deserve recognition for their
achievements, though that is not the sole
reason I am writing this.
For four months I worked with these
athletes (and others who didn't com·
pete). My role was to facilitate and coor·
dinate the training for the marathon. I
did this in the form of an academic con·
tract with faculty member Pete
Steilberg.

I encourage others to do coaching con·
tracts at Evergreen. With budget cuts
in effect, Cross Country and Track and
Field are operating on a miniscule
budget and could use the time, talent,
and energy of people who care about
these sports.
I strongly encourage Teacher Cer·
tiflcation students to take advantage of·
the opportunity to get experience in
coaching. Not only will it help secure a
teaching job, but coaching athletics is a
great way to develop a student's poten-.
tial and self-esteem beyond the
perimiters of those classroom walls. 0
--Sue Clynch, Teacher Cert. graduate
1987 (754-7102)

sailboat, Seawulff, while five others sailed on Don Fassett's Swirl II from
Boston Harbor each week.
Sluss and Youtz planned the voyages
to enhance the basic skills and
knowledge students acquired during fall
and winter quarters. As Sluss wrote in
his syllabus for the spring expeditions,
"The cruise is an opportunity for the
journals to demonstrate what has been
learned about sailing, piloting, navigation, birds, plants, and marine
organisms, as well as an indication of
how well this basic learning can be extended." Each student also was expected to keep a journal entry for each
three-hour watch stood on the Seawulff
or Swirl II_ Other activities included
trawl sampling, vegetation analyses,
drawing maps, and general natural
history.
These pictures record some of the
events of the final cruise, which sailed
from Olympia and Boston Harbor to
Protection Island in the Strait of Juan
de Fuca from May 11-15.
--Chris JrmUm

I·················




PADS
FOR
RENT
••
••
pretty awesome domicJe sp«eS
••
••
:
Family Size
:
••
Pizza
'.•


i
$7.99 !


Furnished or Unfurnished

Heritage Pa!,k Apartments
1818 Evergr. .n Park Drive

·4 Bedrooms, 1 and V2 Bath, Share Kitchen
From $160.00 Unfurnished.

All Utilities PAID

Includes hot tubs, saunas,
recreation room, weight room,
ndry room, free satellite T.V.,
Movie Channel.

- Choose one topping_ . •
Thick or thin crust only. •



Harrison & Division •

:

•........




357-7575

:

Expires May 30,1987
~
_
Void with other otters~
..
"
./_
limit one coupon per pizzo.

.

.

.'j:
---

UFW

e


In

Evergreen students can support the
United Farm Workers of Washington
State by refusing to purchase asparagus
and Ste. Michelle and Farron Ridge
brand wines.
Currently, the UFW-Washington is
engaged in three strikes and has
declared two product boycotts. UFW
struck Ste. Michelle wineries in late
April of 1987. Recently, Ste. Michelle
changed from wages of $6.00 per: hour
to piece rates which do not allow
workers to earn even minimum wage.
UFW is demanding a Union contract,
health benefits and wages of $6_00. per
hour.
UFW-Washington is currently boycotting asparagus, and struck SKD Farms
of Wapato last May 13. According to
George Finch, a UFW organizer, SKD
was forcing workers to work without
rest breaks at piece rates which allowed wages below minimum wage.
Workers were being fired for complaining about conditions and for joining the
Union. The UFW is demanding wages

s

w

labor
of $5.50 per hour and a Union contract.
UFW-Washington struck Pyramid apple orchards last February. In 1986,
Pyramid changed from piece rates which
allowed workers to earn $5.00 per hour
to rates which allow workers to earn only $3.40 per hour. The UFW is demanding $5.50 per hour and a Union
contract.
The United Farm Workers of
Washington State were organized in
September of 1986, with an initial
membership of 400. Current member-

ship stands at 700-primarily in the
Yakima Valley.
Thomas Villanueva, President of
UFW-Washington, will speak to theae
and other issues confronting fann
workers at a fundraiser sponsored by
MeCHA on Friday, May 29, at 7:30 p.m.
in Lecture Hall··1. Suggested donations
are $10.00 for working people and $2.50
for students. Any donation is welcome.
No one will be turned away because of
lack of money. 0
--John McCann and Barbara Waits

Supply swipe
Over the Memorial Day weekend a
large amount of art supplies were stolen
out of several art studios in Lab 1. These
included: paint (acrylic, oil, watercolor), ,
and brushes. In addition at least two
very valuable art books were stolen. The
students who lost these books will be
forced to reimburse the Evergreen
Library for them if they are not return-

ed. The art supplies are equally expensive to replace.
Any information will be gladly accepted by Security, Walter Neimick
(building manager), Jean Mandeberg, or
any student working in the studios.
Please return our supplies! 0

-Joe Szwarc

A place for you in Teacher's Ed.
The Teacher Education Program at
The Evergreen State College has extended its deadline for applications.
"It is po881ble," says POugiales, "that
many prospective students, hearing
about how difficult it was to enter the
program a year ago, may have been

discouraged about applying. We have
therefore extended admissions to Tuesday, June .15, for completed
applications. "
Entrance requirements include a
minimum of 90 quarter hours college
work, completion of an academic m~or

FARMHANDS WANTED
1WO TO THREE PEOPLE TO WORK
ON AN ORGANIC VEGETABLE FARM.
POSITIONS AVAILABLE ANYTIME
BE1WEEN MAY AND OCTOBER.
SHORT STAYS WELCOME. ROOM,
BOARD, $loo/MONTH. HARD,
SATISFYING WORK. LEARN TO FARM
IN A BEAUT.IFUL, P,E ACEFUL
ENVIRONMENT IN THE FOOTHILLS
OF THE CASCADES ALONGSIDE THE
~OUTH SANTIAM RIVER .
CALL OR WRlTh
JetT Falen
Persephone Fann
4-0861 McDowell CK DR
Lebanon, OR 97355
(503) 451-564-0
8

(secondary) or two academic minors
(elementary), ~ hours of writing and
eight hours in the natural sciences. Passing scores in a basic skills test and two
references are the other requirements_
For a full explanation of the two-year
teacher education curriculum and entrance requirements, contact the AdmiSsions Oftlce for a mini~og on the program, at 866-6000, ext. 6170. Teacher
Education Director John Parker at ext.
6341 or Marilyn Watson at ext. 6181 may
also be contacted for more
information. 0

N

e

w

S

NewS

Back on the Battleground

Joe's smiling
Persuasion and personality bring bucks to Evergreen

Evergreen tops the list of all other
state universities, with a 13 percent
overall budget increase. The legislature
appropriated a record $40.26 million to
the college for the bienium, 1987-89.
Other state institutions received about
a 10 percent increase, with the University of Washington posting a 12 percent
gain.
"We scored bigger than we have
scored for a long time ... particularly considering that it (the state budget) is a notax increase budget," said Stan Marshburn, assistant to the President_ Marshburn, along with President Joe
Olander, coordinated Evergreen's ef·
forts to secure additional funding from
the State Legislature.
Representative Jennifer Belcher, one
of several legislators who were strong
advocates for the college, agrees that
Evergreen made out well. "In general
they got better treatment than the other
regional colleges," Belcher said.
The college's capital budget was $13.1
million, nearly three times the size of
any budget since the school was founded. The two largest items on the col·
lege's capital budget are $6.7 million for
a new gymnasium and $1.1 million for
a Lab Annex Remodelling project.
Evergreen was the only institution
allowed to in~ ~ir Julllline enrollceiling. Governor Gardner's
original budget asked that the college's .
growth be increased from the existing
2600 to 2700 and 2800 for the bienium.
''That was a real favor for Evergreen on
the part of the Governor," observed
Marshburn. The legislature went one
step further, approving fulltime enrollment of 2800 in 1988 and 2900 in 1989
all of which adds up to an extra $1.4
million for the college.
In a letter to the faculty and staff
outlining the college's budget, President

ment .-

Olander leaves the question open as to
whether or not the college will increase
enrollment to 2900 students. Of the $1.4
million, $860,000 will be used to support
enrollment growth of 2700 FTE and
2800 FTE during the next two years.
"The remaining $573,000 will remain untargeted until decisions are made about
whether we ought to grow to 2900
FTE," writes Olander, "'and if we do,
what kind of students will constitute the
growth." Olander cites as an alternative
the possibility that the money might be
used to support existing academic programs or add new ones.
Another bright spot in the budget for
academics was $315,000 in instructional
support, an item not included in early
drafts of the budget. "I think that in
terms of instructional support and the
additional FTE, we'll see the college
have an ability to do some new things,"
said Marshburn. "Once the provost and
the deans sit down with the faculty and
say, 'OK, now we are increasing our
enrollment and we have a little bit of extra money for this and that.,' how are we
going to continue to improve ourselves?"
The college also received over $1.5
million in enhancements, including
$400,000 to fund the Washington Center
for the Improvement of Undergraduate
Education, $300,000 to support the National Faculty Program, $200,000 to
establish a Center for Labor Studies and
Research; $150,000 for equipment;
$145,000 for maintenance and operations
and $75,000 to further recruitment and
retainment of minority students.
Olander, in his letter to the faculty and
staff, advocates a conservative stance
and reports that the Trustees will continue to work on a "current level"
budget and "policy changes inherent" to
such a budget. The Trustees will then
meet in July to approve a two-year plan

of expenditures concerning the
enhancements.
Faculty salaries will rise 15.2 percent
over the next two years. This includes
a recently approved 4.5 percent increase
plus a 3.1 percent raise in March 1988
and a 7.6 percent scheduled for January
1989. Exempt employees who did not
receive a recent 4.5 percent raise will get
one in March of 1988. All exempt staff
will receive an additional 3 percent raise
in January 1989. Classified std, whO did
not fair as well, are slated for a 5.6 in·
crease over the biennium.
Marshburn explains that one of the
reasons the college did so well this ses·
sion, compared with earlier budgets,
was the strorig base of support among
several legislators_ "We had some pe0ple who fought very hard for us," said
Marshburn. "In 1983 when we had
some problems in the Senate, it didn't
come in the hearings so much as it came
when people were in caucus (closed sessions) arid they said: we're doing too
much for Evergreen, and there was no
one there to say, "Hey, wait a minute."
"There is a 8Qlid group of legislators
who take an interest in what's going on
at ~vergreen," added Marshburn.
Among those he mentioned were:
Senators Kreidler (district 22, D) Halsan
(district 20, D) Grimm (district 25, D)
McDonald (district 48, R) Lee (district
33, R) and Representatives Unsoeld
(district 22, D) and Belcher (district 22,
D).
A more familiar name crops up when
Marshburn and legislators try to explain
Evergreen's success this year: Joe
Olander.
"He's bold enough and eft'~e
enough to sell the college in ways the C0llege should be proud," said Marshburn.
"He may sell the same product but he
sells it like it has never been sold
continued on next page

9

Americans gathered at Concord to
resist the tyranny of Great Britain in
1775. Americans will gather again at
Concord to resist the tyranny of a secret
government. The government that funds
a gen?Cide in Central America against
the will of Americans. This time it is the
Concord Naval Weapons Station Port
Chicago (near San Francisco) CanfOmia
on June 12 and 13.
We are going to block the gates and
the rails that bear a nation's shame, that
fatal trade of white phosphorous bombs
for lives in EI Salvador. Our bodies may
go to jail, but theirs will burn.
"Arena is a fascist party modeled after
the ~am and certain revolutionary commurust groups," former Ambassador to
EI Salvador Robert White told the
House Subcommittee on Western
Hemif!J~here Affairs in February 1984.
Arena IS the party of the rich and the
military in EI Salvador, that has used
our tax dollars to kill 60,000 of their own
and that has openly stated they are

prepared to kill 300,000. And this in a
country the size of Massachusetts. A
leader of Arena once told three European reporters, "You Germans were
very intelligent. You realized that the
Jews we.re responsible for the spread of
commurusm and you began to kill them."
In the book Weakness and Deceit
Raymond Bonner states that one death
squad member, when asked about the
types of torture used (in EI Salvador)
r~p~ed, ."Ah, well, the same thing yo~
dId m VIetnam. We learned from you ...
We learned from you the means like
blowtorches in the armpits, shots i~ the
But for "the toughest ones"- that
IS those who resist the other tortures ..
" we have to pop their eyes out with a
spoon. You have to fIlm it to believe it
but boy, they sure sing."
'
"Action from principle, the perception
an.d the performance of right. changes
thmgs and relations; it is essentially
rev~tionary, and does not eonsist whol.
ly WIth anything which was . It not only

?aDs."

divi?~s states and churches, it divides
familIes; ay, it divides the individual
~p~, ~he diabolical in him from th~
d~vme, Bald Henry David Thoreau in
hIS essay on civil disobedience.
. "The reality of greater U.S. intervention worries us a great deal What I
would like to see for EI Salvador is that
there be no more bombardments that
the soldiers stop coming in and' that
there be no more massacres here. I hope
the people of the U.S. begin to understand our situation. What we want concretely is peace," a young woman from
Las Vueltas, EI Salvador told Eugene
Newpost, Mayor of Berkeley California.
C~me to Concord to protest. If you
can t come then talk about it. Call the
White House, call Congress and write
the newspa~rs. :rJ:tis is a national protest. Make It a natIonal issue. Call the
Pea~e Center 866-6000 x6098 for
details. 0

·-Hector Dougla&

contmued from prelllous page

before."
Legislators acknowledged OI~nder's
efforts to promote the college. "He has
helped to establish the good feelings pe0ple have about Evergreen," said Rep.
Unsoeld. Rep. Belcher went as far as to
grade Olander's efforts. "He has gotten
an A plus."
While he may .not be as visible as
Olander, Stan Marshburn is uniquely
q~ed to represent the college in the
~gI.Slature, having worked five years
~th the House Ways and Means Committee ~d three years in the Governor's
BUdget Office. Marsburn is the man in
the trenches, the person who babysat
t~e bu~et through the Legislature.
~Iven this marathon (a five month ses81On), and the numerous versions of
b~dgets, Marshburn had his share of
highs and lows. Evergreen's budget., like
the state budget, went through at least
13 c~es. One version of the budget
contained $3 million less than the college
ev~ntually was appropriated. "At one
pomt we had Joe pay personal visits to
over ~ legislators, talking to them about
key Items ... working on them one-by-

one. That seems to have paid off"
While the budget for Evergr~n is
cause for celebration, there are those
who ~oub~ the state budg"'t wiU survive
the blenmum. The con~itutionality of
the,state's business and occupation tax
system is being questioned in the
Supreme Court. Should it be declared illegal, the state budget would have to be
changed, resUlting in either a tax increase or cuts.
When asked if the whole state budget
passed by the Legislature was
reasonable, Rep. Unsoeld remarked "I
think. it is crummy. Unless we hav~ a
boonnng economy that fills our state coffers, we are going to have a biJI " Re
Belcher agreed, saying the bu~et w~
"fiscally unsound." Sen. Kreidler
thought the budget was reasonable and
responsible. "For the best guesses we
have, it is sound," said Kreidler.
. Marshburn has heard both sides and
~ remaining finnly in the middle.
'I.'hen: ~ere those floor speeches that
Bald this IS not going to work, this is a
~: .. ~ people have a right to that
decISIOn Just as the majority had the
10

r~ht to say we're going to do this
WIthout raising taxes," she said. "The
budget that was put through was a no~ budget That was a big political deci:~on. Th.ey. did that by making assum~
Ions... It. IS our position that if th08e
ass~ptJons don't pan out, it is then appropnate to go back to taxes." Marshburn added, "It's all going to depend
on the economy during the biennium "
In his letter to the staff and facult~
Olander addressed the nn ....ibilit
f'
ts "Ihave 1"eOOnunended~
Y 0
cu.
to the Board
of Trustees a strategy similar to the one
we ~dopted two years ago, which wiD
proVIde us with a "cushion" suclJ that.,
In the event of the worst case scenari
we shall not be in a position of havin~
~o. ~ke back monies already allocated
\\-lthm the College," wrote Olander.
However, most agree that cuts would
not be as likely as a tax increase. But
Marshburn says he. will plan for the
~orst and hope for the best. In conclu.
slOn ~e noted, "You have to bet on the
low SIde and be prepared." 0
-Timothy O'Brien

A

n

1

y
s
The ongoing solvable problem gets results
What would the world sound like after
an event like this was announced in
every paper in the world? What would
the world sound like if this headline appeared every day for a week? A year?
Wouldn't the world cry out in a loud and
persistant ''Why?'' Voices would be raised in inquiry and rage. "How could this
happen?" "Why didn't anyone stop it?"
If 40,000 people died every day, 20,000
of whom were children, wouldn't you
want to know about it? Wouldn't you
want to do something to stop it? Well,
you have that chance.
The fact is that the equivalent of 100
747' s do crash every day, killing mostly
women and children. That's 18 children
every minute 24 hours a day. Only no
one hears about it. It is a crisis of silence,
relentless silence. They die, not from
pilot error, but from hunger and neglect.
Hunger, which you and I could prevent
if only ...
Did you feel yourself want to stop
reading? "Oh, hunger, not that again.
People will always be hungry and there
isn't anything that I can do about it.
Besides, there isn't enough food in the
world now!" As long as we entertain
these notions, we will continue to do
nothing. We see the problem as overwhehning, as this immense glass wall,
smooth and shear, seemingly without
handhold. The fact is, it just ain't so.
Let me start a new conversation. We
can end hunger and you and I make the
difference every day.
There is no doubt that hunger is a
challenge, but if you listen to those who
work with the challenge daily, the one
idea that cannot be denied is that we can
end hunger. If the Will can be found,
hunger will end.
The world has the resources. If the
world commitment to ending hunger
were only 30 billion dollars per year for
ten years, we would end hungerforever. That is the equivalent of one
quarter of one percent of the world GNP
and just 3 and one half days of U.S:
GNP. To the non-hungry world this
would repuire a meager $12 per person
per year. In terms of what the world
spends for war, to end hunger on the
planet would cost 16 days worth of world
military spending. Our own military
spends $42 billion per year on cost overruns for its submarine, frigate and
destroyer fleet. Projected "Star Wars"
costs range frOm $400 to $800 billion.
Put into this perspective, the costs are

a

meager. Noone can be certain what
hunger costs us, but it has been
estimated that ending hunger would increase world per capita income tenfold.
Those dying or crippled, made unproductive by their circumstances, would now
become full members of the world community. They would become active partners, no longer draining off resources,
but adding to them with their knowledge
and abilities. Each person would be able
to fulfill the potential that the human
race has. Ending hunger is an investment in our shared future. The returns
on that investment are staggering to
consider. The real cost of ending hunger
has never been lower.
We have the knowledge and techniques. UNICEF has developed 4 low cost
health measures that will cut childhood
mortality in half in one generation. 1.5
million children have been saved from
certain death in the past 12 months by
these simple and effective measures, the
G.O.B.!. measures. These are: Growth
monitoring, Oral Rehydration Therapy
(called the medical advance of the century by the British medical journal

... to end hunger on the planet
would cost 16 days worth of
world military spending

Lancet),
Breast feeding
and
Immunization.
Food is not the problem. The world
can currently produce enough food to
feed 7-8 bilion people. In fact, 40 billion
metric tons of food are lost each year to
spoilage. Also, it has been shown that
when death rates decline, there is a
subsequ~nt and substantial drop in birth
rates.
If resources aren't the problem and
know-how isn't the problem, what then
is missing? What comes back again and
again as to what is missing, is simply the
will to end hunger. The President's
Commission on Hunger states, " ... the
. persistence of hunger reflects a lack of
sufficient political will to eliminate its
causes.~' - The National Academy of
Sciences' World Food and Nutrition
II

.
1

s

Study says, "If there is the political will
in this country and abroad .. .it should be
possible to overcome the worst aspects
of hunger and malnutrition within one
generation." It is our own silence and
denial that allows hunger to terrorize
the world daily.
Listen. You can end hunger. Our
democracy provides you with an extraordinary opportunity. Sure, government is slow to move, but once it does,
its force is iri-esistable. That is how we
ended slavery and small pox and put a
man on the moon. We have the ability;
all we need is the desire and will. None
of the great social achievements of our
time came about until people made
demands on their government and made
it good politics for government to respond. If you want to make a difference,
then take your intellect and energy and
act! "We're not passengers on spaceship
earth, we're the Crew."
So what can we do? In 1980 a group
called R.E.S. U. L. T.S. was formed with
the expressed purpose 1) to create the
political will to end hunger and 2) to let
each of us know that we do make a difference. R.E.S.U.L.T.S. has established a network of 70 national groups in 34
states and 3 groups internationally in
Canada, The U.K. and Australia, with
groups planned for France and Japan.
In 1986 R.E.S.U.L.T.S. volunteers
played a key role in doubling the Child
Survival Fund, which promotes ORT
and immunization, in a year when
foreign aid was cut by $1 billion. During the campaign, R.E.S.U.L.T.S. intitiated 90 editorials and features nationwide, convened news conferences in 22
cities and met with 30 Senators and
scores of Representatives. The model of
citizen participation works very w~ll. If
you care deeply, and I know you do, then
stop talking about the issues and learn
to speak them. If you want to end human
suffering, stop running away fr9m the
horror and meet it head on, take responsibility, and help end it. There is no one
else who can do it.
. Let's not have it said about us that we
saw what needed to be done, but failed
to act. For more information on
R.E.S.U.L.T.S. call 352-9'155.0
--Peter W. Rickett is an Elementary Sclwol Teacher in Olympia, a graduate
of Evergreen and a partner in Olympia
R .E.S. U.L. T.S., a TU>(/'-profif, citizens
lobby for the end of hunger. .

o

.

p

1

Challenging

the

Do you ever feel uncomfortable or
awkward around people who are
physically challenged? It is very common for people who are able bodied to
be confused about how to act and what
to say when they are around persons of
disability, and this, of course, inlubits
their ability to communicate effectively.
There may be a variety of re~s for
feeling this way, but for the1frost part
• they all end up having to do with our
own personal experience. Personal experience may be: direct interaction with
a physically challenged person, stories
you have heard, myths that you believe,
the
way · that you ~ social~d.
When dealing with a person of disability you need to remember
that first and foremost you are dealing
with a person, a person who has many
strengths and abilities. Often it is easiest
to focus on the commanalities that you
son of disability, you need to remember
a task that must be done, or interests
that you both have. By having this starting point, people can learn about each
other's qualities, and get to know each

n

.

N

o

1

physically

fit
can work out a solutIOn. For instance,
if you want to communicate with a person who is deaf, but you cannot sign,
write notes back and forth; or if you
have trouble understanding someone
with a speech impediment, ask if he can
write his message down, or ask him to
repeat it. Do not pretend to understand
what has been said.

other as people instead of as a label.
Finally, I have a list of things that may
help able bodied people to better communicate with persons of disability. Be
open and honest with the person. Tell
the person you are uncomfortable and
are not sure how to behave. Let him
know that your behavior is not because
of something he has done wrong, but is
because you are dealing with your "personal baggage."
Be considerate of the person's feelings. Do not treat him as an object.
Think of how you might like to be
treated if the situation were reversed.
Examples are: if you are signing or
writing with a deaf person and the
telephone rings, let him know what you
are doing before running out of the
room; if you are speaking with a blind
person and someone else walks into the
room, introduce them or in some other
way let the person who is blind know
that someone else is there.
If you are having trouble communicating, try to fJgUre out what the
barrier is and then see if the two of you

""-----,.

Most persons of disability do not"mind
being offered assistance, but always
remember to offer before doing. If your
offer is refused, do not assume that all
physically challenged people will react
in the same way.
Remember that people of disability
are people first, and that they are all different. We cannot expect all physicall
challenged people to behave in the same
way any more than we expect it from
able bodied people.
When interacting with persons of
disability, avoid the attitude of doing for
or to, adopt the idea of doing with. 0
--Cindy Duncan, Disabled Student
Group Coordinator

r---------,

I

I FREE
I Single serving
I SALAD

CLASSIC TRAVEL
754-6060
In the historic
Mottman Building,
101 No. Capitol Way
Downtown Olympia (98501)

k~o'"
~'D".f:11
S

coupon

1

Iittle,RJebard's,
SancJu,iGh Shop

from our

' ·salad ba.r with
the purchase of
any sandwich

~

General Store
117 East Fifth

1015 E. 4th
352-9266

Olympia

Ladies Resale Apparel

Orden to go

Sizes 3-28!1l

357-6808
We Deliver .
$10.00 Minimum Order

-Qllality Fashions at Discount Prices
-Hand Crafted & Gift Items
-Formals - Vintage

HOURS:
9am-4pm Mon.-1<·ri.
llam-4pm Saturday
Closed Sunday

\
12

II

Expires
1
j{); 1987
_._ June
•• _.•_____
,-._.JI

.1

C

T

r

I

t
all
started
out
so
s imply.
The
summmer
of
1977
I
traveled
to
Brazil
with
American Field Services to live as an exchange student. In January of 1981, I
was preparing to board an airplane for
another journey there. As I settled into
a window seat my mind recalled the
past. It had been 3 years between trips
and I was more than ready as this vacation would be spent in Sao Paulo and
Tupa during the world famous partytime event of Carnival.
Landing in Los Angeles, I went to the
ticket desk to confirm my next step. A
man in a reassuring dark blue uniform

B
f

u

m
r

a

v

e

Then I heard some one say "Excuse me
miss, but could you please come with
me?" As my stomache began to turn, my
thoughts were spinning. What was going on? The trusty travel agent back
home and that smiling man in the blue
uniform both had wished me a good trip.
What went wrong? I was left sitting
with my luggage and a pin-stripe suited
man from Taiwan. Soon the man was
escorted from the waiting room, leaving
me alone in my confusion. Finally a man
came in and asked me to follow him. As
I attempted to get my bags together, a
woman walked past and asked the man
(in Portuguese) if he was going to help
me with my luggage. "No, she can carry
them," he replied, also in Portuguese.

p

e
o

d
m

BRAZIL

with lots of fake gold buttons, looked
over my passport and visa. Smiling, he
said, "Everything looks great. Have a
good trip." Content, I boarded the next
plane and almost 15 hours later arrived
in Sao Paulo. I disembarked from the
plane exhausted y~ thrilled to be there.

Now my portuguese waSn't the best but
I knew enough to understand what was
said. After a long walk through the airport, over a walkway and down a couple of blocks, the man turned to me and·
asked in English if he could help carry
my bags. "No, thank you," I replied
13

T

L

again in Portuguese, while smiling
sweetly.
Entering the Airport Motel, I was
~eted by an excited staff who were
ready to practice their limited English
on me. After going up to my room, the
manager called to say that we would go
to dinner in an hour. Dinner. What an
experience. The manager spoke little
English, I spoke little Portuguese, and
reappearing on the scene was the man
from Taiwan who spoke no Portuguese
and little English. It was quite the comedy routine with everyone in the cafe enjoying the show.
. Returning to my room, I received
another call. This time it was to inform
me that the "police were coming to get
me." This was all that was said. My mind
raced with questions of what was happening. Sitting on the edge of the bed
I wondered how I was going to explain
this to my parents. My dad would probably forbid me from ever leaving the
state of Washington. A knock on the
door signaled that the "police" had arrived. I gathered my bags and went
downstairs to be escorted back to the
airport (this time, at least, in a car with
a gentleman who spoke English and
helped me with my bags).
Arriving at the airport the agents informed me that my papers were not in
order and that I was being deported.
They began to issue me a ticket to
Miami. "No way," I said. "I bought a
ticket to Portland and that's where I
want to go." I got the nerve up to call
my parents when I got into Miami to ten
them that I would be home in a couple
of hours. Quite a surprise to them since
I was supposed to be gone for 3 months.
The trip from Miami to Portland was
pretty uneventful except for
discovering that somewhere during this
short jaunt my camera had disappeared. (But don't tell my dad; he' still
doesn't know).
'.
Oh, and about Carnival. My grandma,
the fiesty lady with the custom painted
Firebird, went to the travel agency and
discussed (yes, everyone on the block
heard) my deportation. They gave me a
round-trip ticket back to Brazil so I only lost 1 week of vacation. And as for
Carnival, everyone should go and erijoy!
Four days and nights of fun was worth
a short side trip. 0
--Felicia Clayburg

r

v

G

oing nowhere? Caught in a
downward spiral of school
and
work,
work and school? The following
Vanguard's Guide to Summer Fun can
show you the way out of this town and
into the limelight of Revolution! Don't
head home in despair I Forget that decadent bourgeios sunbathing spree!
Students of the world unite in blazing
a mighty trail of revolutionary struggle
across the stinking industrial fascist
cesspool of Amerika! Or, at least, come
to a demo or two. Below are listed a few
highlights of summer protest.
.stop arms shipments to Central
America June 12-13 at Concord Naval
Weapons Station near San Francisco.
The Bay Area Pledge of Resistance is
organizing a massive demonstration/direct action to counter the base's
war preparations. CNWS shipped 80%
of US bombs and ammunition to Vietnam; now it sends white phosphorous
and other weapons to EI Salvador. It
also serves as a nuclear weapons depot.
Expect a big turnout at CNWS--San
Franciscans love demos, and the event
has been nationally publicized.
"Roam the streets of Minneapolis exposing corporate crimes; discuss
freedom, peace and the substruction of
the planetary work machine in dingey
church basements. The Anarchist Convention begins Thursday June 18 with
a welcome coffeehouse, and encjs with a
War Chest Tour of downtown Minneapolis corporations on Monday, June
22. Activities during the four fun-filled
days include a banquet Friday evening,
a concert Saturday night, an afternoon
festival in the park on Sunday, and piles
of workshops. Aft"mity group workshops
allQw participants to talk with fellow
anarchists, pagans, lesbians, gay men,
anti-technology activists and other
revolutionaries. Skills workshops teach
the latest techniques of squatting (living
rent-free in usually abandoned
buildings), surviving without working,
redistrib~ting land, fighting fascism and
racism, monkeywrenching, and more.
Forums will be held on a variety of
topics including: technology in a throwaway society, problems in the anarchist
movement, and violence vs. nonviolence.

I

A
U

A
u

s

t

o

A
C

m

Task group workshops will begin
organizing for a continental anarchist
publication, the 1988 Democratic Convention in Atlanta, and the next Anarchist Convention. All these workshops
depend on conference participants to
organjze them-please bring any relevant
information, or, prepare another
workshop on a related subject. Bring
your sleeping bag-space is still being arranged, but noone will go unhoused.
Childcare will be provided, but please
notify the -organizers of your need as
soon as possible. Contact them at Back
Room Books, 2 East 27th St., Minneapolis, MN 55408, phone (612)

879-0312.
..While you're in the midwest, stop by
the Starkweather Missile Silo Peace
School, to be held June 19-28 in a cornfield surrounding a minuteman ICBM
silo near Starkweather, North Dakota.
Activities at the camp include movies,
slideshoWB, workshops and presentations on Central America, feminism,
nonviolent action and more. There'll also
be time for song, dance, partying,
feasting, and other fun-making. Bring
food, camping gear and $10 to contribute
to water, power, portapotties, and to the
farmer leasing out the field..
_
.staying close to home? Here's an
event begging for protest: The Young
Republican's National Convention,
featuring George Bush, Alexander Haig,
Pat Robertson, Jack Kemp, and Bob
Dole, in Seattle, July 8-12. Organizing
has just gotten underway-have any
ideas?
..rlon't forget the fourth annual Hanford Peace Camp, held in Richland,

u

m

D

R

tot

I

0

F

14

u

G

N

Ide

R

L

e

v

a

5

a

y

A

L

e

r

N

Washington during HiroshimalNagasaki
week, August 2-9. Sing at rallies, leaflet
Hanford workers, meet and debate
Richland residents, block the road to the
PUREX plutonium processing plant and
visit the inner confmes of the Benton
County jail! Experience life downstream
from Hanford at the riverside Columbia
Park campsite. It's usually warm
enough to sleep outside, but tents are
nice when the wind starts kicking up
radioactive roadside dust. Buckwheat,
seaweed, and lots of bottled water can
reduce or counter radioactive contamination. It's best not to bring small
children. Remember, this is more an invitation than a warning: visiting Hanford country can be most interesting and
erijoyable, despite the post-apocalyptic
precautions.
"Ready for another "anarchist extravaganza"? Come disrupt the
bicentennia1 constitution celebration:
''We The People-National Constitution
Day" in Philadelphia September 17. If
you've heard Ken Dohlbeare speak on
the Constitution's origins/purpose, or if
you just want to meet some fellow anti
authoritarians, this event is for you.
Another opportunity to challenge.misinformation and be told to "get a job" or
"go back to Russia."
Carpool and other information about
these events is available at the Peace
and Conflict Resolution Center, LIB
3233,866-6000 wxt. 6098 through June
10.
So, if you're restle88 in Sleepytown,
remeibber, the resistance never
sleeps! 0
-Lillian Furd

T

r

a

Bliss and vomit
We were four people imprisoned on
a Mexican bus filled beyond capacitytrapped like so many cell mates in a
tubular cell itself smaller than any even
semi-humane government would consider employing to punish even an incorrigible serial infant killer. A chain of Tshaped humanoids--arms stretched,
hands clasping the luggage racks, trying to ~e weight off their spent legsoccupied every square foot of the aisle.
They stood squashed together, a solid
stream, as if a chronic stutterer had
stood near the driver, facing the rear,
and attempted to say tangerine, succeeding only after emitting a string of
T's. The air was still and dirtied with
several unpleasant, unrecognizagJe
odors.
I was ill. For some moronic, unknown
reason, my three companions and I had
mgested a repugnant intestinal scrape
powder designed to become ballast in
your stomach and then swoop through
your intestines cleaning and purifying
along the way. Instead, the powerful
combination of this devilish concoction
and the swift, tuniing motions of the bus
promptly placed me in a pre-vomit condition. I dedicated every morsel of
energy I had left to the task of keeping
the Mexican nape before me clean of my
internal cookies. As we rounded the
umptillionth curve, I inhaled rapidly so
as not to lubricate the aisle with nasty
bile suitable to occupy a sewer pipe but
no other spot on earth. Eventually my
nausea passed, rendering the duration
of my sentence on the bus survivable.
As it was, however, I still had to bat-

v

tle fatigue, brandishing the last of my
objective truths as a paltry defense
against lunacy. My name, address, and
social security number. Thank God for
bureaucracy. I thought, "No matter
what crazy things I begin to believe, I
still know my name is Howard Earl, address: 2372 Loussac Dr., social security
number: 574-66-5007. My identity. I am
not the diseased slime encased Tasmanian Devil that I have come to resemble, I am a human being. Slime encased
Tasmanian Devils don't have social
security numbers." In this manner I
managed to remember to what species
I belonged. My past dissipated; my
future too horrific to contemplate. I
became an unthinking creature with only a dull, hazy sense of doom to call my
own.
Hours passed during my unthinking
stupor and eventually I found myself
seated on the floor back to back with my
(profoundly hip, pseudo-avant garde,
over-reactionary,
pressed-cotton
traveller) friend, Tom McRoberts. So
here I am, probably in my most pitiful
state, s'umped in the cellar of a Mexican
bus, weary and crumbling, toying with
the brink of insanity, trying feverishly
to compete with Tom's class act. My only
weapons were a plain pair of white cotton p~ama pants and a purple cotton
shirt. Tom was out-cooling me in a big
way and it was getting embarrassing.
While that portion of my brain that deals
with fashion dilemmas was buzzing
away, I felt a soft, sensual brush against
my leg. I glanced up, expecting a
Spanish lass with a twinkle in her eye.

HOURS:
• THURSDAYS
• FRIDAYS
• SATURDAYS
• SUNDAYS
10 am to 3 pm

e

L

Instead, I saw a dark-skinned boy wearing a white belt slung low on his hips,
with a seductive smile that was pointed
in my direction. I realized that I was experiencing the hopeful explorations of a
new-age Mexican adolescent homosexual, complete with Calvin Klein jeans
and a green and orange flourescent ,
Swatch.
So with no other options I stood and
walked toward the front of the bus. My
brain was in even worse condition at this
point, but somehow, through the fog
which lay between myself and any
coherent thought, I reached a memory;
we were to arrive approximately at
dawn. It was still pitch black outside but
I began to pray for morning with all the
residue of my will which had been
eroding geometrically over the past
hours. Did I imagine it or was the sky
outside becoming lighter? I waited,
stooping from my standing position
every so often to peer outaide, each time
hoping for a shade brighter. It seemed
a long while before I actually perceived
a noticeable difference, but when I did
it sparked a wonderful, musical celebration in my head. The euphoria of progress helped me through the remaining
hour. Arrival came and as my story ended, the unequivocal bliss that surround, ed my soul was ·indescribable.

Downtown,
in the Market
District

ODS
( Ir..
I
I
I
I
I

547-3977

Peter Robinson: I was in England a~d
had just finished a 68-hour marathon trIp
back to England from Portugal, nonstop.
A friend and I got picked up at 2 a.m.
by a very drunk Englishman. As ~e
drove down these old country roads m
a beat-up Volvo at 110 mph, he ~egan
to tell us how much he hated Americans.
At one point we were thinking about
pulling the key out, hitting the brakes
and jumping out of the car. He rm~lly
came to a screeching halt and ran mto
another car. We left him with the other
driver and went

Pete Murney: "There is nobody who
won't give you a ride. A couple friends
and I got a ride from a 70 year old couple who had a plastic Jesus on their
dashboard. There were three of us and
we looked really wierd. It was a Sunday
morning, they ended up taking us to
their house and offering us showers and
a place to spend the night."

Centra I America
Peace Campaign
. has

N. Thurston &

e

r

What is your
most
interesting hitchhiking
'story?

I J HOlIJaTd EarL

Capitol Way
"A FUN, FRIENDLY PLACE
TO SHOP, EAT & VISIT"·

T

L

Gary Diamond: "I got a ride from this
guy who was kind of a simpleton. He
could hardly smoke a cigarette and drive
at the same time. He had an unlit
cigarette and flicked imaginary ashes
out the window for 20 minutes. The guy
played Beethoven and all sorts of
classical music, it was really beautiful to
see him so turned on by the music."

'Celese Thomson: "My mother and I
were picked up when I was about six
years old by this doctor, who told my
mother he wanted to cut us up into a
million little pieces. My mother demanded that he stop and let us out. After she
argued with him for a while he stopped
and let us out. I don't think mY_!!lothe.r and
I
hitchhiked after that

• C;@W--"";'P"UIS*i'P"+
$1.00 OFF A 5E1(2) OF

II

SEAnLE

16

Cruisers'
MUltiple Choice_ - A) Choose 1 Cruise:

o
o
o
o
o
o

MEET ALL OF YOUR HOUSING NEEDS
-COMPLETE 1, 2 and 3 Bedroom Apartments
(not Dorms\
-LOCATION: Adjacent to college cam;;'\Js

B) Receive:

JC HAWAII

-RATES: Month-to-Month Leases. Call for rates.
-Russ and Ellen Schofield • Managers

FREE!

We hav~ immediate openings for
1 and 2 Bedroom Apartments.

Call Now For Details
Offered exclusively by

SPECIAL
10 visits for $25.95

q/dJal£rfJ!r#-;~'-:I!:-'-:~:"-:~::-:=-E

-or

-:-L-C=-=O-=M-:-:-P-"-N-Y-

$3.00 for 30 minutes

Capital World Wide Divuion
121 North Wuhington Street
Olympia, Washington 98501
(206) 943-1100

aver-hul • • rd .• n.w.

Capital South Sound Divi.ion
325 South Sound Center
Lacey, Washington 98503
(206) 491-2640

Too busy studying
to cook?

THE
SEVEN
GABLES

Stop by for mouth-weterlng. wholesome treets
the Co-op ~U.
Sandwiches. Wed8 end morel

~m

Cocktails • Dinner
Sunday Champagne Brunch

--.. .

Alaska
South America
China
Trans-Canal
Orient
New England/Canada

.-

Sunday, June 7th

. ...

And ... no dishes to
wash!

~

Graduation Brunch
9:00am -1:00pm
Graduation Dinner
4:00pm· 8:00pm

POEM FOR FATHER
This stuff will burn your eyes out
so make sure the dogs don't come around
and keep it off your hands.
It'll eat up the O-rings
so take them off and
hand them to me.

Working on my bike last Sunday you said look,
the carburetor's full of green stuff;
it sat for six months,
grew into the jets,
so tiny
and clogged them.
That's why it wouldn't run. That's all.

When you come toward me
the head goes down the trick is to cover
the head and the ribs
at once.

When I came through the door that year Mom had to jump
to keep your wedding band from cracking
into my teeth.
I guess you didn't care I made it in eleven rides .
and turned down three.
She said you gave my picture to the cops..

Now maybe we can blow it out with
com pressed air.
Scrub it with an old toothbrush,
but be careful around the springs
and the float
and we'll see how she does.

You can't clean the jets out with a wire
because you'll mar the walls,
and the flow won't be exact,
it's got to be just so.
So tiny,
we've got to soak it out.

Cracked hammered and raw on the bedroom floor
I woke up stiff and covered with snot.
Nly eyes in the mirror
told me the sink had cracked in two.

You've got the crooked teeth of a mill-town hero
but when you bare them with that black stare:
hammer
of steel on my collarbone.
In '74 I was riding my bike like
a horse when that stare hit you said
"Go put your shirt on. JJ
Ten years gone I'm in the doorway tracking
Neah Bay mud on the throw rug from Sears you said:
"Take off your boots. "

Now the lights are out
they were working a minute ago.
Clean as a whistle and the
lights won't go
and Mom says it's time for dinner.
Don't you worry-one of these days.

Happy fJirthday Deli!
You are 1 year old June 1st .

1205 West Bay Drive - Olympia

Olympia Food Co-op

Phone 352·2349 for Reservations

N..Roger. open ... dell, Ol,mpltl 754-7_
17

- Magnolia . Ravenal
18

Thursday, May 28
Slide and Musk Meltdown, an onglnal presentation
by TESC students will be shown at 8 p .m . In the ReCital
Hall . Com . Bldg. It IS absolutely FREEl

Thunday Nl,ht Films presents: Los Olvldodos. 8
p .m .. Lee. Hall I . Cost : $1 .50. Childcare IS prov ided.

Friday, May 29
United Farm Workers of Washington Fundralser IS being held at 7:30 p. m . In Lee. Hall I .
Featured speaker IS Tomas Villanu eva . Donations of
$10 for working people and $2.50 for students are sug'
gested . For mor e Info. contact John at x641 6.

Epk and X-Factor Productions presents: a fun ·
dralsing event with Hehotroupe. Black Cat Bone. and
Danger Mouse. There will be a bake sale and door
prizes. Also . Bill Schnieder on stage . Lib 4300 at 9 p.m.

Storyteller-Will Perry will perform In Com I 10 at
8 p.m . $4 general and $2 .50 for students.

The Rainbow presents: the Tom Russell Tno. lau
on woodWinds. reeds. gUitar and bass. Cover $2.

Internal Wu Shu Arts: Health, Meditation and
Self-Defense will be taught by Andrew Dale. head

Tuesday, June 2

of the North West Tal Chi Chuan Assoc . Workshop
will Include Chi Kung exerc ises. 2 person or Tui 5hou
Steps and a demonstration . It takes place fr.om 9:30
a.m. to 2 p .m . Cost is $15 . Info. and advance reglstra ·
tlon. call 357·9476.

Money, management, morality and more: see

Thea tre. 10 a.m . to 4p .m . In Com 110.$15/$10/$5.
For more Info . call 754-0940.

Theatre of the Absurd: lonesco's The Bald Soprano
and Bec kett ' s Act Without Words . See above for
show tlme and etcs.

Saturday, May 30

Interested In takIng Landscape. and
Blo,eography and Hawaiian Natural History

Governance houn have been changed to: Mondays.

munication Center .

3-5 p .m ., Wednesdays . 3-5 p .m. and Fridays, 12:30-2
p .m ..

Native American Studies DTF meets Wednesdays

Radkal women meetln,. The essay. Woman as
Leader: Double Jeopardy on Account
Sex. written by
Clara Fraser . will be reviewed at 7:30 p.m. at the New
Freeway Hall. 5018 Rainier Ave. 5.. Seattle. Dinner
is at 6:30 p.m . For rides or childcare. call in advance
722 -6057 . Wheelchair accessible.

12-3 p.m. In Lib . 1600.

or

Energy Outreach Clink: Solar/Wood Water Heating
Plan IS scheduled from 7-9 p.m. at the Energy OutreaCh
Cen ter. 503 W . 4th . Call 943 -4595 for more details.
Time Lan,uqe,a surrealistIC multi -media perfor-

Money, management, morality and more:

mance wi ll be presented at 7 p.m . in Lee. Hall 3.

Money, manapment, morality and more: see

The Rainbow presents: Tommy Sar>ds . one of the

students from the MPI program will present a lecture
se nes. fr om 8:45 a.m . to 3 p .m .. Call x6425 for loca-

most powerful songwriters from Ireland . $5 cover

ti on and m n "- p InfC)

above for details.

'treat yourself to the finestl
• ..,tv• • Hot tub Rooms
• Ther_peut'c M . . . . .

L 1407 from 12 to I p.m. call x6193 for more info .

Applications accepted until June 15 . Contact American
Heritage Association, PO Box 425. Lake Oswego. OR
97034, or call 635-3702 (Portland, OR), 1-800-642-2445
(Portland). or 1-800-654-2051 (outside Oregon)

Enrollment Coordinating Committee meets on
alternate Mondays . 3-5 p .m. In Lib . 3 I 12. Call x631 O.

The Ca.... r Development office II announcing
It II movln, from May 29 through June 4. Beginning

S.A Board meets every Wednesd ay at 10:30 a.m.

June 5th the office will re-Qpen in in its temporary location in Library 1610, 1611. 1613 & 1607. By the end
of August another, permanent move will be made to
the new Student Advising Center Area .

In Lib. 4004 .

Faculty Evaluation DTF meets W ed'nesdays at 1·3
p.m . in Lib . 2219. Call x6870 .

Deadline for the Carleton Morris Cooley
Scholanhp has been extended to June I st. Those
with an accumulation of 48 quarter hours of
writing/English classes may win a $ 1000. Applications
available in the Dean of Enrollment Services Office.

N_O.W. is sponsoring an essay contest for students
that asks the question: do we need an ERA amend·
ment. Winners will receive a $1000 scholarship,
deadline is Sept. 30, 1987. Write : NOW Foundation
Essay Contest. 1401 New York Ave .,N .W .,Suite 800.
Washington D.C. 20005 or call 202-347-2279

Continuing
Paramount Archival fthotograph Exhibition by
special arrangement with The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences at Frederick and Nelson. 8th
fioor exhibition hall. Seattle. through June 7th.

Tunnel Art is a two-part exhibition about the art
of the Downtown Seattle Transit Program 's 1.3 mile
underground tunnel and will run May 30 through July
19, with a special opening celebration May 29 from
5-7 p.m. It is located on the Fountain Level of the Seatt le Center House . Wed-Sun.
11 -6 p .m .
Contact Linda Knudsen 625-4223 for more info.

The Senior Thesis Exhibition will open in gallery

Academic Advising Board meets Wednesdays at

·Summer Job Ilsdn.. are posted in Career Develop-

1·3 p .m . in Lib . 2220.

ment. Stop by Lib . 1213,8 a.m. to 5 p.m. or call x6193.

4 from May 6 through May 28. Devon Damonte and
Agnes McLin 's work will be featured. In pIIery 2,
Ford Gilbreath's photographs will be featured .

r----co·uPON----l

What you don't know
CAN
.... - hurt you.



GIFT
, CERTIFICATES

!
II

I

from '7.00
am-IJ pm Sun-Thurs

Jam-" am Fri-Sat

WASHINGTON
FAIR SHARE

SEATTLE

Many Sexually Transmitted Oiseases (STOs), such as
Chlamydia, often have no symptoms. Left untreated, STOs
can have serious consequences. They are one of the leading
causes of infertility among American women, and they're
often not discovered until a couple decides to have a child
and can't conceive. Most STOs are now easily detectable.
Planned Parenthood of Seattle-King County provides STO
screening and treatment for all women . If you want to make
sure everything's okay; or if you believe you may:-have been
exposed to an STO, call us. We're here to help.

272-1172

Planned Parenthood

HAS

SUMMER/CAREER
OPPORTUNITIES

329-4130

TACOMA
19

Cover $3.00

Olympia 754-5522

Shelton 426-2933
20



I e\'b.Ol"lb
••

• Wolff Syst_ 1'IInn'n.

HOORS: IJ

.

Study the differing approach.. to public poky
Issues In Great Britain and the UnltiM Staws
In London, England this summer. August 16 to 28 .

Travel Film about Alaska In the Washington Center

at th e Capit ol Theatre . 206 E 5th . at 6:30 & 9 p .m.
AdmiSSion IS $4 for OFS members and $5 for nonmembers .

tact x6 170 for entrance requirements.

Aaademlc Computing Forum meets each first and

Introduction to Performing Arts ..,.,.,..m
is presenting: An Evening arOne-Acts . See above rar infc)

orthe Star held

Ev........ nIW. . .m Teacher Education Program extends applications deadline to June 15. Con -

or

third Wednesday of each month at I p.m. In Lib . 2610.
Call x6232 .

Scholarships

lI22I .

Job Search Seminar Series, May 27-29. held in

Thursday, June 4

Monday, June 1

Careers

Academk Computing Usen Group meets second
Wednesday of each month at I p.m. In Lib. 2610.

Insh Pub . Martin Way from I to 5 p.m . featUring 5
performers: Manlyn Turnbow . Joann Thorn. Jim Man·
nlng. George Bamer and H ,Y,eld . $10 for performance
plus full m eal of roasted pig . etc. Call Charles at .
786 -5525 fo r more Info .
).

Wa shington Ce nter at 7 p.m . Call 753 -8586.

11:3 0 - I p.m. Everyone is welcome. Located in CAB
306A , x6213.

The Introduction to Performln, Arts Propam

Spedal OIympks Fundralser. held at O'Blarney's

Olympia Film Society presents Hour

The Cooper "oint Journal meets every Friday,

Final reports of the governance DTF and
grievance DTF are available at the Student Com-

IS presenti ng: An Evening One-Acts . at 8 p.m . in the
Com . Bldg. Recital Hall. Included will be Commedia
del ·Arte. modem comedy and serious modem drama.

Sunday, May 31

POSSCA scholanhlp reCIpient reCital In the

Gall Martin . V.P . for student affairS. hosts open
meetings on Mondays at noon. Lib . 3236. D,scuss pro·
posed governance structure. Call x 6296.

to II :30 a.m. in CAB 108.

fl oor conference rooms at 5t . Peter Hospital. Cost is
$3 per famil y. Pre ·reglster by calling 456-7247.

formance and d iSCUSSion: P,nter's The HomecOming and
Brecht's The Jewish Wife . Students/alumni $3 and
genera; $4 . Showt lme 8 p.m. In the Experi mental
Theatre . Not' SUitable for children und er 12. Call
866-6833 for reservations and mor e Info.

Plannln, Council meets Wednesdays at 1-3 p .m.
in Lib.3 121. Call x6400.

Nisqually Orienteen IS setting up a beginner's
course at Priest Point Park. East Bay Dr .. Olympia.
from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. There wi ll be a $1 map fee.

prop-amIl Then come to an info. meeting from 10:30

My Body-My Own: Sexual Abuse Prevention
for Children, meets from 9:30 to I I :30 a.m .. 2nd

at 2 p.m. Tic kets $6 Call 786-1690

Washington Center. 512 S. Wash ington. 7:30 p.m .. $3
regular. $2 ASB/sr .

Wednesday, June 3

Workshop with Will Perry: Storytelling & Ritual Myth

Theatre of the Absurd presents an evening of per ·

Capital High School Pop Concert at The

above for details .

Governance

Jiaktrp

3014 Harrison West
Olympia, WA
352-3682
4136 Market Square
Lacey, WA
456-8412

10% Off
All Graduation
Cakes
PI.a .. ord.r ahead
One special per
coupon
Expires June 8, 198/

L____________

,.•
~



LI,ht Ceremon", for World Peace Thursdays at

Super Saturday I. let for Jun. 6 from II a.m . to
7 p.m . It is Free and open to the public.

Ev. .reen Chndcare Center I, holdln, bake

SafepIIIa needs committed volunteers. Exten -

..... May 22. & 29. call x6036 for more info.

sive training provided beginning june 22. Call 786-8754
for applications .

June 5 is the deadline to finalize your intemship plans

Force. june 5 at the Westwater Inn . from 6-8 p .m.
Admission is free. Call 357-4904 for more info.

~tely seekln, P...tiedWooclpeck..... Call
943 -7836 if you have seen the bird or Its nests. they
have red · heads.

Community Artist Television ai;~on campus chan -

What AII.th Theel. a multi-media question asked

Mulk I 26-SlrYey of Electronic Music. Edmonds

nel8. Wednesdays at I : 15 p.m. and 10: 15 p.m .. followIng NarrowFocus . CAT is also shown
Wednesdays. Fridays and Sundays at 8 p.m. on TCTV
channel 31 .

by the TESC Group Contract: Power. Progress and
the Role of Dissent. Friday. june 5~h from 10 a.m. to
5 p .m . in Com . 209. This mindlbody experience wi ll
take approximately 20 minutes.

Community College is offering a special 8-week course
designed for students and teachers. 9:30-10:50 a.m .•
Mon-Thurs . Instructor is Jim Guard . For more info. call
771-1650.

Free lectures, concemlng the sCIentific method and
it's limitations in regards to thought and reality each
Tuesday in Lecture Hall 5 from 3-5 p.m . Call x6 156.

Announcements

1m Democradc Student Summit. june I 1-13 in
Washington . D .C. Share your views with lawmakers .
Call julie Anbender. 202-863-8020 or Brian Lott.
202-225-5271.

7:30 p .m. behind Geoduck House at the beach. If it
rains: the Organic Farmhouse . Call 75 4-0940

Art for Ald. is a benefit for the. Olympia Aids Task

ChHdhood'. Gall.ry w ill feature the wo rk of Keith
Lazelle and Haruko Moniz May 8 through june 16. Call
943-372"
'

Upcoming

Friend. of Ev....,...n Library are accepting donations of books for sale at Super Saturday. Leave used
hardbacks and paperbacks at LIB 2306A. Call x6418
(o r info .

Shlr..y Chlshohn will add,... ,raciuate. June
1 at the graduation ceremonies at I p.m . at TESC.

Intenllv. Joum .... Llf. Context workshop will be

Ceremonies are free and open to the publ ic.

Dr. Ruth, sex educator, will deliver a public lec·
ture june 27 at 8 p .m . in the Seattle Opera House.
Tickets are SIS and $ 10 and are available at the Seat·
tie Opera House. 225 Mercer St .. 443 -471 I and at all
Ticketmaster outlets. 628-0888 .

conducted by Marilyn Frusca. july 18-19 at Seattle
University. Call joseph Monda at 626-6626 for
registration.

Crim. prevendon whlsd•• are available for free
at the equipment check out desk . Ask Cath johnson.
CRC 30) ><6530.

for the summer sessions . September 15 is the

deadline for the fall . Contact the Co-op Ed oITice.
x6391 . The oftlce IS located in Lab I . room 1000.

Deli,n & Plannln, Group wishes to form . If In terested . please call Eric at 754-1877 or leave message
at x6098.

R.nt a space at. the Olympia Center. located at
222 N . Columbia In Olympia. Rent ;s $7.38 per square
foot . per year prorated monthly for a non·profit
organization staffed by no more than the equivalent
of one full time employee. Call Judy at 753 -8380.

ClASSIFIED ADS

ACTIVIST

Contestants needed for Super Saturday Teen
Scene, June 6; lib-synch and skateboarders should call
x6245 by Friday. May 29.

Undl furth.r node. Intercity transit routes 64 & 66
are now detouring around construction on Pacific
AvenUe travelling the freeway from South Sound
Center to the Boone Ford exit. call 786-8585 for further info .

LET US
CHAUFFEUR
THE KIDS THIS
SUMMER!

Start a career in social
change. Work at the
grassroots to fight unfair
health care costs. Washington
Fair Share is winning
legislative campaigns and
developing a staff for the '88
elections. We train in
grassroots fund raising,
organizing, and leadership.
$195-250 per week plus
benefits, excellent training and
national travel opportunities.
Part-time also available.
.
Call 329-9764 Seattle
272-1127 Tacoma

ASSISTANT CURATOR
Assistant curator for Exhibit
Touring Services of Wa. State,
located on TESC campus. Must
know how to mat and frame
artwork, and possess other
related exhibit design and production skills. Must be able to
meet dealines and coordinate
multiple tasks efficiently.

19 hr •. per week,
$6.60 per hr. Phone
866-6000 x6286 for job

ALL WAYS TRAVeL

description and applicaiton.

Deadline June 10th.

seRVIce, INC.

And then he asked
to see my p~rtfolio
Academics aside. It's your portfolio of
work that gets you the job.
We offer Night and Day classes in
Copywrtting Art Direction Design.
Illustration Drawtngand Painting Led by
respected professionals in the very fields
that you want to enter.
Classes begin June 15. Call now, and
plan for a hot summer.

SEE US FOR
ALL OF YOUR
TRAVEL NEEDS
Harrison & Division
Olympia, Washington 98502
943-8700

SCHOOL
OF

VISUAL CONCEPTS
21

500 Aurora Avenue N
Seattle WA 98109
(206) 623-1560

MOUNTAIN BIKE

Intercity T ran

"Stumpjumper Specialised ."
-Mint condition- $375.00.
Mike Winsor 754-2187 early
mornings/evenings.
SIt

rllllllllllll
Youth Pass 17 years ·and under $8.00 per month(a small price for peace of mind)
For pass outlet nearest you, call 786-1881
Free painter's hat with purchase of pass
while supply lasts

Shop-Rite
Fresh Bakery Items

7 AM - 10 PM Daily
8 AM : 9 PM Sundays

WESTSIDE CENTER
Media
cpj0421.pdf