The Cooper Point Journal Volume 6, Issue 1 (October 6, 1977)

Item

Identifier
cpj0160
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 6, Issue 1 (October 6, 1977)
Date
6 October 1977
extracted text
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J

Arts and Events.
September 2 at 8 p m Folk
music perl0<mer PEGGY SEE·
GER General admission 14 00
Under 12 or over 65, S2 00

FILMS
r)N CAMPUS
~ ridav
Sept pm Der 2
MAD LOVE t 1935 83 min I D1•

tea by l\a!I

'l''

MUMMY!

Freund

(THE

this 1,1m ,s a remake

1 tne 1925 Gt>rrnan tilm

THEATER
ON CAMPUS
The Evergreen Summer Repertory Thealer does a shon Fall
'ieason with PLAY IT AGAIN,
SAM on September 29 and Octobe1 1 and WALTZ OF THE TOREADORS on Seplember 30 and
October 2 Second 11001 Library
Lobby. 8 pm
1N SEATTLE
THE CLUB A play wh,ch portrays the social and sexual all1tudes of a group of well-bred
New Yo,k gentlemen at the 1urn
ol the cen1u,y using songs.
Iokes. and anecdotes There Is
one catch
all the men are
playea Dy women Opens at ACT
Seµtembe1 1 Call 285-5110 !or
into
FOR Alr,ghl. alt you closet
Man From Uncle fans, Robert
Vaughn Is s1amng as Franklin
Delano Roosevell Monday. Seplember 12 through Saturday,
September 17 al 1he MooreEgypt,an Thealre in Seatlle For
ticket 1nlormat1on call 344-7271
LASERIUM So. Ive finally
broken down and included LA·
SERIUM In the Ans and Events
column H's a httle hke calling
Ewen Cowilrts Gel The Blues
hteralure Oh well. Pacific Science Genier Planetarium Shows
every day al 2. 4. 8 and 9 30
Late shows on Friday and S.1urday al 11 Three bucks, sucker

OR-

LACS HANOE ,1na oeals w,th d
nnt en 01,in,s1 wn,~ 1oses i,,s
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S<lCl.ll
ano
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i:::t•th
t>•Cep! thd! q
DI,• t' In outer space
r-, J r1• cf'! Polai.. ,1
,h
S1epan1"- RaOl'~.1n
·•. !Jana Medr1ck.a1Shown
S ,Jnoer The I Ile VOY.
fl.GE TO THE ENO OF THE UNIV' RSE l H One 8 O m
7~
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? .. esda)'
September lO
PEOPLE Will
TALK 11951
SA• Among the mos1 unusual
' .,,,s to come out ot the early
, ·•~s 11 ,s soph1s11ca1ed w11tdy
~ ·,,c1ec1
ano ,a,ses somP Impor:.1n1 auest,ons about psycho•
somatic rnedIcine and the psv•
cruamc PPa1men1 ot the s,ci.
accoro,ng t~ u,e Dictionary ol
1 000 Best Fltms. Cary Gran!
;)!a~s
a P•·lo•ess1ve doctor wt-o
1,ses riu"1a ·•1v and psychiatry Iri
,11;:i(J,1,t" 10 his medical sk1Ils tu
l'.u'P ,._,spatients and ,s accused
~~ ri s Cr"lleagues at u,ing mys
1ve•s D,1pr1ec:1by Joseph
'!;i"'"•f'....,ec:
,t also starc::
,· ,.,._C•a1" F,rilay Currie c1no
·, • S1e1a~ Also NIGHT tNl AUOERS a' ,m b\ TESC Siu
D1, , Worman L H One 7

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F, oc1, Ser 1t•mber 23
FRITZ THE CAT Ralph 8,1~
y •••'"'C Cd•'
0"
Need
I S,l.
AIc:, Bu~ter lo;e,a1tins THE
OLAYHOUSE Lt-- 0· r I 7 ,.in•

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HIDDEN

FORTRES-..

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THRONE or
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WHAT IF

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ONE ON ONE Is 1h,s movie
·, • , .,.., ,1,.,, ,...n, wrote 11
<. "
~f' ROCKY, ano he
•~"'''> ., ,\.l ,,. h,gh scnooI oas~P•r.,a
8our1cJto be heartwarm,
,. 0I,..m:,,c 357-3-422
HERBIE GOES TO MONTE
CARLO t1ey I \/P got a greal
,1p;,
LP! s gel a Vo!kswagon

DANCE
MERCE CUNNINGHAM ANO
DANCE COMPANY wilh JOHN
CAGE al various times, dales,
and places In Seatlle trom September 2 through September 10
Call the Cornish lns111ute lor inlormat1on. 323-1400

:JUg oaIn1 ,t tunny gwe 11 a
personal1tv ar,o mak.e lots ol
mov,es abo11' ,1 C.ar,110ITheater.
)57

71f,l

CASABLANCA ,s l,nallv at the
C ,•a·•n .,
... t un1,· August
31
u•;'
,t'rot,eo
rumor has 11
ROCKV ,._ rnmIng
neil
.1 ...~ Q,:J •.q1,1
THE RESCUERS a WoI1 Dis"'' nurrf,('I plus Don Knolls ,n
NO DEPOSIT NO RETURN at
•n, L,,. t!'\ D11ve-ln 491-3161
IN SfATTLF
AGUIRRE. THE WRATH OF
GOO ~nt Sul'll•~urs ol a party ol
.,•
,r-i c11riqu,stado1s that set
•1 " PPr,1 ,nto the Arna.ion
,, , t• ,t £ Dorado the clly
t ,;, ,1,1 ,11eth,· suoIec1s ot 1nIs
• :· . ,kcla1mp(l Werner Hertog
At the MQOff' Egypl1.tn
• .• 'f1":i2
ALLEGRO NON TROPPO in
,,.,q ... eel- d1 the Guild 451h
1t1uc,n5se1 tn cIass,caI music
T.r•nd•e• 1hal"I FANTASIA 633J'\<,J
BLACK
AND
WHITE
IN
COLOR The setting IS \he Ivory
,.oast 01 Atrica ,n 1915 where the
French and German colon,stc;
,.re hving a contenlecl and peace·
•ul ,I somewhal 1so1a1ed Ille
One day the mail amves at the
French OUIDOSI bringing the
news inar WWI had slanect s1,i:
monlhS earlier The French are
overcome wI1h patrI0!1c leryor
and ptan a surprise auack on
theu German neighbors A bIl-

1ng comedy. pho1ographed enl1tely on locatton HaNard E111t.
352-46-47
PROVIDENCE Alan Resnais's
1,rsl !,Im in Enghsh delves ,nto
the inlerplay ol memory, dream
ar1d reality In ,1, a dying novel•st dreams paranoIc visions of
his lam1ly enacting a novel in
his heaO when he wakes. their
rru,~ re1a11onsh1psare revealed
Ri>sna,s dtrected HIROSHIMA
MON AMOUR and LAST YEAR
IN MARIENBAO. PROVIDENCE
r,tars Su John Gielgud, Dirk Bo~c1rde.Ellen Burslyn, David wa,,er and Elaine Su111h Seven
3atJ1es 632-6820

MUSIC
JAZZ CRUISE - Aboa1d the
h1s1onc \lessel me Virginia V
will take place here Sunday
Septembef 4 Mus1c w,11 be provided by OBRAOOR, an Olympia based grouo whose music ls
Lat1n I Jan I Funk The cruise will
Ieave the port at Olympia and
will take place In lhe evening
horn e1ghl 10 m1dmghl, lravehng
around the Sound Tickets are
$5 00 and are available tram
Budget Tapes and Records in
downtown Olympia.
Al !he Other Side OI The Tracks
- 106 W Main. Auburn
August 29 AIRBRUSH
Augusl JO OPEN MIKE
August 31 OPEN MIKE
Sep!ember 1 ~ARIE MILLER,

Bulletin Board
Open 1n1ervlewa w1ll"I app!1
,, ,., J,., 1ne oosI1Ion ot CarNr
Counselo, dre being held in 1he
t , 1m.,nr SeN1ces lounge area
, ' , 200 AnyonP who Is In1e,.
'"'"<I
,n 1,1~,ngpart 1n the hmng
, ' I( '"iS ,._ 1-'ncouraged to anend
r,., anr1,(lates names and open
,,.,,
P,J; 1-mes are as follows
•..-1onr1avAug 29th 1O a m
,.,,,., [),:,nohue
' ,f'<.Oa\< Aug 30th 10 am
Ant11•

A'yrP<;

1.•JPC1ne-.r1av
Aug 31sl 9 am
~-1<.f'Woo
Wi'>dn1>sr1a'-I
Aug 31S! 2 pm
l

1,1111•

Bilt.,

•11'i(1cl, Sepl lSI
'·'·••·tlt'· 1\,1,ri
1.,,
SrM
2nd
11

•I

Interested In studymg the behavior ol the Roosev.ell Elk? A
small group ct students wtll be
htkmg 10 !hf! Bogach,el Basin 1n
the Olympic Mountains on Auqusl 30 to mee\ with a graduale
cl Evergreen and follow
lhe
movements and obser-.e the rut
1Ing behavior 01 tht elk herds In
1ne high country II you're 1n1eres1ed in gelling involved call
666· 1587 or leave a note on the
Woll Study door (lab 3250) Fall
Quar1e1oroIec1s are ava11ab!e

! , .. , • ~

I""

10 am
10 am

There w111be a presen1a11onon
Trtdenl on Thursday Sep1emt>er
8 In Friendship
Hall in the
YWCA downtown
on U1t1on
S1ree1

The Thuralon County Farmen
Martie! happens 1n Olympia every
Fnday and Saturday from 10 am
In 2 pm at lhe loot ol 71h Avenue
near Cap11aILake Fresh produce ts
sold by local growers For more inlormat,on on buying or selhng al
lhe Market call 9-43-6875

Am a lechn1cal translator/ ln
terp,eter (French, Spanish, Ger
man) and research chem1s1 and
would enjoy COTTMpondlnv wllh
some aludenls al your colleoe
Perhaps you would be kind
enough to oost 1tus on your no•
t1ce board Thank you
Sidney Simon
27 Loftu1 Roed
London W 12

a jau singer. with Al TURAY
September 23 FRANKIE ARMSTRONG
Al the G-Nole Tavern. Seattle
Augusl 30. and every Tuesday
n1ghl, square dancing with lhe
GYPSY GYPO STRING BAND
Al the Rainbow Tavern, Seattle
August 31 SKY BOYS
At lhe Bombay Bicycle Shop
Seattle
Augusl 31 and September 1 UPEPPO
At the Collseum, Seatlle
August 31 TEO NUGENT and
REO SPEEOWAGON. mediocre
and loud roci..
September 18 YES
October 2 ROD STEWART
At lhe Paramounl NorthweSI
Seattle
September 7 BEE BOP DE·
LUXE and TOM PETTY AND THE
HEARTBREAKERS (an English
band horn M,am1)
At the Museum ol History anCI
Industry, 2161 Hamlin. Seattle

• ART
AUSTRALIAN
ABORIGINAL
ART. more than 200 plecas ot 11,
a1 uw·s Burke Museum It's hee
and wltl be open Tuesdays
lhrough Sundays ln September.
COSTUMES ANO SETS tor the
Merce Cunningham Company by
JASPER JOHNS, ANDY WARHOL. ROBERT RAUSHENBERG.
and FRANK STELLA at the Fosler I Wh11e gallery on Pioneer
Souare
OTHER STUFF
BUMBERSHOOT 1s a lree arts
fesl1val that 1s usually well worlh
going to It lealures visual arts
music. m,me dancing
cralls
poetry, and l1c11on September
2 5 at Sea!lle Cenler
RINGLING BROTHERS CIR•
CUS September 20 2'5 al !hf'
Coliseum 1n Sea11Ie
And speak,ng ol circuses 11's
ORIENTATION WEEK at Evergreen September 19 26 Sef'
-.cneciule elsewhere ,n lh1s paDf'r
for complele dcta1Is

JOURNAL JOBS
There are currently two paid
positions open at the JOURNAL :
1) Features Editor: This job
requires strong writing skills, a
willingness to work long hours,
and some background in newspaper work. We will be taking
applications until October 1. Applicants should submit a statement of interest, a resume, and a
sample of their writing. Pay is
$2.80 an hour for 15 hours a
week.
2) Secretary: General office
skills and typing are needed for
this job. Applicants should be
work-study
qualified.
Pay is
$2.80 an hour for a 15 hour
week.
Apply at the COOPER POINT
JOURNAL office, CAB 306, or
call 866-6213.

Vol.6 No.I

The Evergreen State College

October 6, 1977



Student Design of CAB II

Underway

IS

t·,p.in.:.1nn
,., dt·tl·rmined
nt-u·.,
',df\
th(• ',llUth WJll v,,.J!!bt· ,J
p,1rt\' \•.,:)II 1,1 "-l,1 h ,in t''-r,in..,H•n
2 '-,u1t,1hl1 ml1·rI(\r
rt•nwllt·lin ►(
Jnd
\'l'rll(
Jl l'',rJn,111n
\\ di l---1·
pt rrlllllt·d
rr11\
11lt·d it ,., lktt"r
tnJ11t·d l1·.1.,1hlt' ,lfld u1,r dkc tl\ t
3 I ,1<,tm,,: utilt111·, ..,t,•.im 1,,,tn

Un ">l'pll'tnlwr
20,
l·vt.•rgrl'l'n,;;
lh1..ird 111 I ru,ll't'"
appr11vt'l.l le-.n
i.. ,1!\a·1 J-. ·ht· An h1tect Cun,ult.int ,,. tht ,tu<ll•nt
de<;ign teJm
lnr tht· ( ,1rnru.., ALt1v1ttl'S Budd1n).;
Ph.i...l' II g1vmg the lt1rmal
>,:t• .1ht•,1d tn the teJm
C(1lher
,u1d h,.., nInt• Intt-rn<, now h.we
thrt·t· mJin ,1hw< t1vt"', tor the next
rnnt' nwnth.,
I T11 develop
the
pn1>,.;r,11n .ind Jc<;1>!,n tur an e,,:p.in ....
111n (ll
the r;,,.1.,tmg l~c1ht1e.,
111 mn•t
tht· net•d<, nl the user<; of
the budding,
2. To analyze building ll'chnologies
and energy con"-t'rv,1tInn
nwthnd,
1n termc; of
lill' , vC"ll' co-,t<;, anti 3 To analyze
tht• u1,t t•.,t1matt' ol the proposed
l"'-pan.,I11n 1n relation
to the pro~
p<i<;t•J bud~t>I estJblishtnK
pr1oritIc<. ,1.., requ1fl•d
The extens11m
w11uld be nn CAB l'c; South side
.rnd the ,1,c t1I this add1t1on 1s
Iu.,1 one ,11 the questions
which
the Jes1gn team will be working
(1n whdr
Jt•velnpmg
rrelimmary
draw mg.,

Th(' student
interns
are Rob
~rllnw,,
Bri.tn J Milbrath,
Joanne
Ma,t.1n
I ,.,a Pieffer
Patnck
Sht•,1han
Nancy
Smith.
Bill
Wetll•r
Dan
McDonald.
and
Mich,wl
Mehaffy
Only
five of
thl•m
hdVt' had <;nml' prev1nu,:;
tr,tinin>,.: Pf hacJ...~rnunJ tn arch1t 1'dLlrt
( 111llt'r who
,._ fn,m
.i
t1rr~1 1n (.),1J...l.. ··d
(.,'1fnrn1,1
I \'BNA
Int ) will teJch the '-tu
drnt., dt·,i~n let hn1qur~
assist in
.,!Ulknt
rr.,eaffh
and J...eep tht'
pn11t·1 I muvm~
It ..., al.,n l olla·r.,
n•,pnn.-,ihihty
tc1 makt.• sure the
pr11~r.11n 1., lnmpleted
on time

'USER INPUT'
One nf tht.> rea,;ons for u<;m~ a
-,tuJent design team rather
than
J cc1mmcrc1dl
firm 1s lo promote
what the group c.1lls "uwr input ••
Thi'
mean-, that those whn will
tit• u ..1n~ the building
can be mVt.1lvl'd in des1gnm~
11 C11llier
,ay<; that ,tudent,
and the re<;! nf
the Evergre('n
community
arr
t.-..bv1ously crunal'"
for the success of the pro1ecl.
The de<-ign
team will
be approaching
staff
members.
people from the book,;,1t,rr people
from
KAOS
and
dll of the regular CAB
uSt.>r-. to
~et recommendations
on th(' de" 1>,;n nf the expansinn.
They will
dt, this
thwugh
meetings.
by

wv.,·r
thilleJ
\•.,1t1·1
t·lt1111c,il
,h.1!1 bt u,t·d hut l n•·r>!\ -.,1\'lnr
-.\"'-lt'rn"
....h11uld f---,,1 nn.,1dl·r1·d
whl'rt' II •., lt'J<.1hlt· -' rh(' 1''(1',I
in,,:
IJt"!t,1 2000 (t·ntr,11
lnntr,,I
,ind \.-111n1tnr ..,\•..,ll'm .,h.i!l ht· u..,,.,;
t11 rl'tle, t furthl'r
f'nt
r~\ ,.n·tn).;"
:i The <l<'.,1gn -.h,ill pt-rm1t
1ht
t11n\t·nient
u"t' "' thl· t\.\11 l'"\(1..,t
In~ t•levatnr,
c, lhe dl''>!,,:n mu..,l
be- (11mpJt1hll·
with
the 1--0.,tin~
..trmtun·
.rnd mu<:.t be nt rein
f11ned
, ,,nt rt•t(• Pr ":>lructur.il
',h_'l'I
rh1• ,,:rPur hJ, alreJdy
begun
t,1 wnrJ... Their
l1rst weeJ... v.a..,
,,wnl
dt',1gnat1ng
'-fl<'cd1c are.::1,
11! n·.,t'.nlh
1e1 l"ach intern
h1,ld

Arthitt"cl
<;endmK out questionnaires,
and
bv selling up a suAAest1on box.
The grnup
will work together
for ont• school year, they will rerl'fl
prn~r('s<; to their clients
at
lhe end 11f each quarter
The clienl., art• the Office
of Fanlities.
tht• Snv1ce,
and Act1v1tie,
ReVll'W
Board.
.ind thf' Board
nl
Trt.1'-lt't'"
During
the mf'l'lm~
IJ'-l
Wl'l:'k.
the l\11ard
of
fru'-ll't·.-,
adopted
a dausf'
which
KLVe<;
tht.·m lhl' leg,1] optwn
nnl tn follnw tht' ~n1up <; recommf'ndat1ons
JI tht• rnd 111tht• year But Cc,lher
,., lnnhdent
and he s.:1vs tht-.
wPn I happC'n
'Wt.> may conw
up with <;1, altt.>rndt1ves, ,1lc;n we
will
he rep11rtmg
our
prngre'i'thr\•ugh11ut
tht• year tor .ipprov
al
Cn11c1sm can be vrnced durln>,; tht• pn1~ram. and thert> should
nc,t be ,my unexpected
change,;
at the t.>nd of the year
Tht· design
te.-im will
spend
th,., quarter
Kathering
data and
rr,t•arehmg
.111related design a.,fl('Cls to determine
the cost effec•
t1Vl'nt'"'" Jnd the de'i1rabil1ty
of a
1wv. budd1nR
Students
will also
ht• l''(dmmmK
alternative
energy
,11urces .1nd con,;;ervat1on
method,;; such a-. .,olar power
Thl'y
may u,e outside
consultants
1f
rt•-.earch
require-.
professional
eon,;;ult.1tmn
but they will try to

Enrollment Short
290 Students
by Chris Orange
Fn1m the way things are shap-

mg up m the Registrar's
Office it
looks like Evergreen 1s not going
to meet its projected
enrollment
g0al of 2.790 full and part-lime
c:.tudents Indeed. enrollment
may
even fall bel111... thr Fall '76 fig.
ures Last year we b.uely scraped
by the pro1ected goal with a head
count
of 2,b30
4Q7 ~,t which
were part-time
">tudent,
A'i ot
WednesJay
mnrnmg.
October
5.
J t11tal nf apprmomately
2.500
">ludent"> were registered
ahoul
400 t1I them l11r part-time
stud1e,
The .,tatt in 1he Registrar.,
01
hce and Enmllment
Serv1Ct''i Mt.>
""r,1tch1n~ their he.,d., m wonJer
ment and trymg
to l!gure
out
what
happened
According
to
Dean
of Enrollment
Services
Larry
Stenberg.
enrollment

the ILrst user meettnK with
-.tall
mrt'tmi
with
admm1-.tra
lt1r ..... ind ~atht'r1n~
data on tht·
e'(i-.tin~ bualJ1n~
The room thdt
the 1l',1m 1., u..,ini 1<,alrNdy
ldlt'd
with
!.ir)!.t' .,U\11led d,a~ram.,
,,t
In)!.

seemed to be well in hand back
m June. running
ahead of last

~et

1h1· material

nn their O\.•:n
expldtnt'l!
1h,1t
tht· >,;wur will
be "u.,m~
l•\'f'r
>,:n'en tu 11, tullt''-I
C,lpJCllV In d
t ,in-.ultant
n1ll' by dlll'ncl1n>,: 11thrr
pr,1gram
lrcturt_•.,
and !-,\· u,mg
i:vergrt·cn.,
lacilttu'"At th,· t>nd
,1t !-.all qu.,rter
thl· J,·,1,gn lt'.:lm
\,di ruhli-.h
.ind
pn•,ent
their
.1n.1\v,1· ,1! whJl 1-. TWt'lh d It• 1h1•
()tllu•
pf
t·.a,d1t1e, .ind IP th1•
"& A Rt'V1t·w Bn.1n.l

Om· 11f tht.• interns

DESIGN DEVELOPMENT
During
the <;econd
quute,
(\-\'mter
'781, they will contmut'
domg re,;;earch 1f neu•,;;<;.irv Jnd
th<'n develup
....
chemat1e drJwmg..,
which
retlect
the rrwarch
,rnd
u-.t.-'r op1nil1n,;;
Scht•m,111c Jr,,,,...
m~\ Jre rouKh prd1mm.irv
dr.iw
mg,
These will he prt•wntnl
tu
the D1rectnr
ot Fanlita'"
'-t&A
B,,ard,
and B0ard
t,t Tru,tt:.·c,

Jnn Collier.

.ind mu..,\

nwt·I
w11h .1pproval
lr11n1 t·,1ch It thnt'
,, .iny d1<,.ipJ'rnv,1l tht· d.-. ....111,lit·d pMly wdl
.1Ir 11hJ('lllll!l.., ,II d ruhllC" ITW('t•
1n>,; 1\ftl'f
!ht• ..,(hem,111c<. hJve

thC' <Jmpu'>
and
111 CAB
l'h,1..,t' I Ion l.(llher
1s an ent'r
geltl
man \-.:ho lo,,\.,_ the <;ldtr,
tv.11 at once when he led tht' .....,t\
up tt, thr prn1£'ct worn
In Au
~u,t he n•,1d Jhnut the ,,,ti m tht
5<·.itt!t· Tinw.,
.mJ h,· (1mt.ictr-d
Serv1d'" JnJ A(t1vl!•t·•
~C'\TC't,1r·.
":>tl'\'l' FrJno,
.it thf' S& A ,1tt1ct·
I le wa-. interl".-,ied m the ll·,KhtnK
,1..,r<'t.1 nl tht• 111h C111\1er ..,,iv, h1·
hJ...t,., Evergreen
\\'e \'e dnnf' J
l,,t ,n ,1 \\t'l'J... .ind I ,1m t·n(11u1
,l>,;t•d f·vNvnnt·
,JI ~-vt-rKrt·t·n h,h
ht•t•n hl·lptul
Jnd 1,111pt·r,1!1\'t'
\,1th ,;;uprtlrt
1dl•,1..,Jnd 1nt,,rm.1
!1"n
Ht, .,!talent.., "l't'm tP ..,h.in
,·\1u,1ll\ ,1 h•t•lin~ ,,t n·..,p1•n,1hdit\
!Pr dw pr1 1Ie<I thr,
a[.,,, ..,hJrt·
h,.., t nthti-.1,i...m

ht't·n ,111rr•Ht·d
tht· (lllll'),;l"
will
..,t•h·l 1 .in Ar, h1t1'( tur,11 l·.nKtnt·t•r
m~ !urn ti• \\1,rk •v,th tht• dt•.,1gn
11.nn ,lu,111;..-,'-.prin~ 4u,1rll'r
m ,l
1'1 .iw , .di, ,I c•,..,,~•nd1·\•·l11pmi.'nt
I >tri Ill)' 1111...... , I)!.(' th,· prt'\."l!IU"-IV
dr,n•,:n
up ,1 l11•m.1t11.., will
ht•
11.in,l.111•d 1ntP \,,,rl-.10~
dr.1v.
in>,-:, Hn.111w "'
wdl .1lrt•,1,h h,H't

th, \,,irk
th..1t
l•1Tn d11n1• h\

tfw dt·-.i>,:n !l',tnl
rh1 .·\ I l1rm
\,dl tlt>I r111•1v1· n111rn.1I p,11.nwn!
t,,r dt·..,1~n 1lt·v,·l,,pr111·111 II pl.in..,
1"1rk ..,mPPthl\
1,,11,1nurI,,11 ,,di
ht·~m in April .,J J',J"'1)
I Ill
\,1th1n

~IX l'Al!AMrTJ
I!½
dl·.,1~n 11·.im mu,t
.,,"\( p,1r,mwtt•r..,
I

\\•"~
It ,tn

COG III Comes of Age
by Karrie

Jat.obs

COG
(Committee
On Cover•
nance)
Ill. representing
a yedr
and a half's work
by the COG

Ill DTF

!Disappearing

Task

Force)
ts finally
ready
to
be
brought
before
the Board
ot
Trustees
for
.ipprnval
DTICha1rman
Niel~ Skov.
a faculty
member.
rE'v1ewed the ma1or differences
b('tween
the document
nl,w 1n use (COG
II). anJ tht•
proposed
document.
at the Sept('mber
2Q Board
of Trustee<;
meelmg.
A public
hearing
has
been set fnr the next Board meet•
mg. October
20 at 11 am
for
cons1deratmn
of the document

year's figures by 15 - 18% Then
around
m1d·August
applications
COG II CRITICIZED
almost ceased coming
in
When
In s.hort. COG 1s th(' document
final
registration
time
rolled
which ...rate-. the decis1on-makmK
around,
many who Wt'rc accepted
policies and orl-{an1zat1on ol Evernever c;howed up to cast their lot
grttn
Thr
fir'il
version
nl tht•
with d program.
dt,lument
wa, written
m 1071
Where we are most behind
c.ampu, w.:i<,
,a,d Registrar
Walker
Allen.
1<; when the FvNween
mnfl'
mud than com rcte
hv ,1
l,n new
lran<;fer
students
and
hanJtul
11! 1.icultv
,1att and .,tu
p.Ht-t1ml'
l'nrollment.
and we re
dent"> l OC wa,
rev1,;;ed fn1m
l,1llm~ J littl(' short ol nur lnre•
time ll1 time anJ 1n JanuJrv
(lt
(•""'
l11r returning
student\
as
1074 11 h<'~Jt COG II which wa,.
Wt•ll
The Registrar dnc.- a ll1t of
t·nrollmt•nt
h1recasting
To ht.>ar lar>,;dv 1gnt1reJ hy '-ludC'nl., until
Novl•mbn
tit 107.5 At th,1t tImt'
him 1.1IJ... 11 ,ounded
a little lik.e
,1 <,,t'flt'-. oi TllJ',<,, mt't.'lln~•
111111,..
.1 ,p11ri.. cnmmentatl1r
preda.tmg
rlaC'<' tn d1,tu..., <;tudt·nt 1nvnlVl'
thl· nuaome
,,f a foo1ball
game
ment
or tht.> lad. of ,;tudl'nt
1n·
11r a bnxmg
match
"The b1AAest
volvement
m curriculum
planninl-{
pro~,lem m forecasting
part-time
and
governance
Tht> mttt1ngs
l.ontmued
on page JO
resulted in the calling, of a mnra

ton um
tln
l lJS.,t'<; and
-,r-hn11I
bu.,tnt.'.,., .,11 that
d
teJc h-1n
c.oulJ
be held to e'(,lnune
the
problems
,,f pldnnm~ dnd ddm1nl"'lrat1on
at Ever~rt't'n
Bv the
time the twl1 day teach~m
t,,,,i...
rlace ( Novemher
24 • 25 I 0751
,tudt'nl.,
who prev1nu,ly
wouldn I
h,lV(' km1wn d
11 th('\' lt·!I
tiv('r l,rw. were arKuIn~ Jt-. v.1•rth
,1nd 1mplicatu1ns
There wJ, trl'
qut.'nt and exlremelv
vnC"al lrtt
1u-,m 111COG
II bc~au<.e 11 fl•lt•
gJted <.tudent part,upatmn
m Jec1..,111n•mdk1ng at Evergreen
Ill
thl• ··mput
lcvel
The Soundm~
Bo.ird provided
tor 1n the dt•t.U
mt.'nt wa, cleeml'cl 1netlectual
becau<;e 11 wa,; (.ind ..,till 1-.) merelv
.i u1n<;ultat1vt•
pool
with
no
actudl dec1'-1trn-maJ...m~ pmv('r
It
w~1.., dunni
thC' re.ic.h m pennJ
lhdt
former
rfl•-.1dent
Met.inn
,;;aid th.11 he would char~e a 11IF
111 revl"'e the.• KflVern,tnLt'
d11t.u
mrnt
.ind the ni.,tl'm1•
111 (()C
Ill h.h ht't'n m1,1.1J...1•nl\ ,lltnbu1t•d
d1rrctlv
to the f>\('nt,
111 th11,t'
tnl't'lin....:-hllt•d
J,n,·.., t\,11 ~"H'm
her., t1g11 In t,11t ( C.1(. II ,t,11t·,
At the· c·nd 11! evt•rv t\q1 ,t•,ir..,
th,· ,.,re..,idt'nt \-•nil l\ln\ t·1w ,1 I) rl·
110 >,:PVt·rnan<t· whl(h will 1nllud1·
IJlUlt\
...1,111 .,tud('nh,
,ind h·t·r
gr('t'n ~r.1du,llt'"t" t'1,,1lu.1te thl'
Evt•r!l,fl'l'n
KtWernJnce
,;;y,tf'm
II
will lw thf' fl'"pt1n,1hil~tv
t•I tht•
DTI- l11 atflrm
1h1• <'ltt'<t1vf'ne._..
tht• ,y,;;tt•m

coc;

"'

I

l h,111),.:t'', s()
LI \',.'a"- ,1 matter ut
t••urw
th.it an ad h11c n•mmillet'
i,,1.., l'<.t,1hli,hed
b\ YkC ann 1n
l 1·\in1,1ry \l\ J07o tn t•v,iluatt'
and
revise COG

II

In November
c,I JQ7b the COC
Ill pn,ro.-..11 w.1,;; presented to thr
Ev1•r>,;reen communitv
bv WJ\." 11t
1h1·

l OOl'ER POINT JOL'RNAI

.rnd '>P<lr"-t'ly
attended
publ11
ht•.111ng-. were held nn 1t Thl'
p111p,1...,,t underwt-nt
"time ,1lteral1tin.., ,ind wa._ '-ent !ti McCann
m
J:chruary
ol 1077
~kCann
re•
<ipt'nded tn the d,1cumrnt
m Apnl
.ind .1lter q1me Intcract11,n
be
twt·t•n
Mc(ann
and the DTF
l OC III.-, curn•nt
i'l_carniltion
\\J',
Jrr1vt'd JI It \\'<lf; f9n\Jrd1•d
Ill rrc<;1dent Evan, in !um·
,ind
t'- n1,v. 1n the hdnJ., ol lhl· Tru..,

THI GH)BOARD
ThC' mo.,t
n11table d11ferrnct•
ht·twe{·n lQ(..,
II .ind Ill 1., iht•
l.1ttt•r., rerlJlC'ment
11/ the S11und
1n!l, Hoard
with
,l
(,e(1!,,,.1rd
( utt· nanw a<;alt• ti,£• Genho.ird
h,1-. "lltnl'
dC'hn1te mnJit1(,1!11in,
.inti ,11!h11u>!.h.,tudent,
..,1ill \,,1n t
h.1\'t• anv real l11rm.1I drt 1..,I,1n
m,1l-.1n~ r11wc-r
( 0( I Ill
dm•..,
pr11v1de ,1 m11r(' v,.,1hle dnd r,1
ll'nt 1•r>,:.1n11JtH,n fht· Ct•11hnard
\\ ii! mt't'I .11 lt•J.,t b1\.\eeJ...lv and
"'t'fV(' J., ,l l0rum
tnr d1'-CU'>.,1on
,rnJ ,1dv1(e on i<;.-.ue.,a!tecllnK
the
cnllel(e.
anJ
.il,;;o will
have
a
( nntinu<'d 11n p,1x1• J

Letters~llIIDll@IIDLetters~llIIDll@IID
I

JuDGE.,

Yf:¥.1 (;/)rmA

)\JS'srr BY
ANDL£Tn1JS

HAPPUP

Just Can't Stop
Talking About
Star Wars

H~r·s DONE-IS DONE.
...
1111'.BAnl'.

Dl'.CISION

r-J~ 11\1'.TOU(,HE.S
T

I E.'IE.R./MOE.! NN!

To the Ed11or:
What is so fascinating aboul
Star War<; 1s that 1t is so fascinat1ng. The heroic adventure against
the dark forces of the empire
captured the 1mag1nat1on of the
world's most powerful nation
and -.eems lo be still keeping it.
Such a frightening seige brings
que<;l1onslomind
lust why are we now so fascin,ited by the blatant symbolism
nl another heroic struggle against
·The Dark Forcer Being so en.imorecl by this struggle it must
lit' 10 us somt"how. Who are these
legion.., of the dark side to us
anyway?
They surely are not the Sov1<'1s.The allusions are made lo
Germans, fascists. not Russians.
The darkness is certainly not fasnsm. or an ideology since the
~ood guys are just as fascistic.
The foul flavor of the final afhrmation scene with the presentalion of medals before a military
formation was only surpassed by
the Cro-Magnon anti-idea level
nf olot and dialogue

NO sroPPIN' W~/11"
f/JNNA H~

·c·o·n·,-in_u_e_d_fr_o_m_p_a_g_,
_______

The slorm troopers' suits of
armor were white. There's more
medieval stuff with the Jet-ai
"Knights" and the sword-like
light sabers. But wait a minute.
If you've got a huge cavalry of
men in shining white armor with
vtiin•s like Apollo astronauts,
how cnme they aren't the good
guv..,7 Thi,; 1s not the first time
violence ha" been used to anesth<:'ti,e an aud1encl' from the
mort.' subtly violent.
George Lucas has become a
more refined dealer in the out of
place since his bald, bare breasted
women in his first movie, THX
1138.

He's got the '"Empire" that polit1cally out-maneuvered
the
"Senate" of the aristocratic old
Republic. Nothing out of place
about that. He said he wanted to
do an old fashioned Flash Gordon flic and he settled for an old
fa!,hioned America-the-new-Rome
routine. He's even got the be(raying disciple of the religion,
that Judas, Darth Vader.
A long time ago. in a place
far, far away you have a powerful government dominating diverse lands. The government is
in the last stages of takeover by
a powerful group seeking to have
tighter control over all the lands.
The final battle for power was
political. not military, and the

w_h_o_c_h_a_r_ges--□-T-F_s_t_o_re_a_d_inc O G

..watchdog" function as the place
part, "Inhitiatohrs of DThFs Gshall
where "our principles are reiterpresent t e c arge to t e eoaled and our actions are weighed
board prior to formally constitut• I h group. Th ~ G e~ boar d w1d
·11
for comp Iiance wit h t h ose prinmg
1
ciples." The board wi11consist of
p~o~1 e consu. tall~n. _1~p_ut,a~
the President or an appointed
af vice I to_ ass1sht t eh :mtl~~orTh,n
presidential representative, four
ormu at1n~ t e c arge.
e
exempt staff, five classified staff.
~rr ent vers1on of th~t paragraph
five faculty members: all chosen
1s c 1ear 1ya comprom1~.
by their colleagues, and 15 stuCOG III also lists five ty~ of
dents chosen in some manner by
action that may be taken by the
• h are cIear-cut
the student body. All DTFs dealG eo b oar d , w h 1c
.
ing with "non-trivial
matters"
when compattd to the Soun d mg
will be charged in consultation
Board's ability to "make rKomwith the Geoboard.
mendations for action." The GeoThere was some controversy
board can comment, give a votr
over the Geoboard being in the
of confidence, give a vote of no
position to charge all DTFs. The
confidence. drop a matter from
November 197~ version of the
consideration, or give a Vote of
document stated, "All DTFs will
Censure. A vote of censure would
be charged through the Geoboard
be ma~ against a person, not an
and will terminate at the Geoaction. "Disapproval of a single
board." The ~Oilrd
would
act no matter how strong the disalso have the powu to deny a
approval, does not alone warrant
petitioner a OTF. Objections to
a vot, of censure." Whether any
that particular function of the
of these actions when carried out
board were included in a minorby this Geo-body will have any
ity report issued by a number of
,clout is yet to be sttn.
DTF members including Niels
There will be a student forum
Skov, Head of Security Mac
on Wednesday, Octobtt 12 at
Smith, Assistant to the President
2:00 p.m. in CAB 110 to discuss
Les Eldridge, and Associate Dean
issues related to the Geoboard.
of Library Services Dave CamaAll rrierencn to the duties and
han, which was sent to McCann
obligations of the Information
along with the February 1977
Center have been deleted from
draft of COG Ill. They w•nted
COG Ill. which pa..,. th• n,the paragraph that....:d~e;•~lt.,iw,i,iiitiih.,;..:•:1:li,1,".,•i•b;il;it~y;.,_:of
disseminating in-

.J

Shocking?
Outrageous?
Quiche?
Tn .ill ,;;;1udents slafl and fac-

h

lll

l:1,1r
1 .1111-

this tountry club c n the
I \'1.'ant to take the time to
.ill ot v0u students reading

h1... h1r your

~enerous

donations

·,, ,1,,urt>that I am well-led, have
~hl'her nver my curly head. and
t<•r rn,v1dmg all the items neces,Jn t11ra ta1rly content and full,'..,m.lthed lite tor the nelCt year
Ht'l11r(' vou

<,cream

outra~eous·

ind "-hocking
nr assume a
\\ h.::1t-the-hell-1s-he-talk1ng-about
.1n11udclt-.ten to th,-.
I .im ta\...mg approximately

one

dPIIM Imm each and every ont'
,1 ,·l•ur p,,c\...ets and depos1tmg 11
1n m,

tru".>ty checkmK account

to

d,, with 11 a-. I please In return,
I :n c11ntr1buting my brains, tal1•n1" ,rnJ £'nerg1es to <;{'{' that the
,, 1n·1ccs AND ACTIVITIES
Bt1ARD d11t'<;it<; thmg A fair exh,1n~t'' Ynu each pay me a buck
ind 111 1.1\..f>car(' of the other
S~:! SO $48 50 fm ciut-of-<;tatel
1h,1tv11u"l' w11lm~lv entru!>ted to
mi
1hr,1u~h tht> paymt>nl of your
~u1t1nn Th.it.., the amount of tu1•11•nnl()ney Iha! gof>..,to make up
•lw $4C(l 000 Snv1ee" ,rnd Act1v1' 1n bud~C'I <;1dl <,Creaming
,h,1<king
and
11utra~eous 7
) ,111.,re' l-.1n1a..11c hecau..,<'now

1c EJ'e

Orwww f
end Tole ■ .op
Houn,

1c

1s your chance to do more than
<.credm
Six students, one staff. and
one faculty position are now
open on 1he Services and Act1v1t1es Board What does the Board
dol This Fall. nearly $25.000 will
be allocated The S& A Board
decides what will be funded. This
year a design team consisting 0t
an Architect-Consultant (S('e article 1n this 1ssut")and mnt" student
intern~ will reo;earch need~ and
develop a des1~n tor the second
phase nt the Campus Act1v1t1es
llu1ld1ng. The S& A Board will b,
involvt>d with this In the spring.
the JQ78 - 7Q budget (about
$400.0001 will b, allocated. The
S& A Board decides where
I hear sc, much gnpmg around
this -.chool about students ntll
being 1n poc;1tions where decisions
atlectmg our lives take place At
Ever~rt'en, more than at any
other msl1lut1on in the <;t.ate,studt'ntc; have direct influence on
the d1sburc;ement of S&A f('('s.
Id likt> people lo think ol the
conlrnl of S&A monies by stu<lents not as a pnvdege, Out as a
right to be exerused The quality
of this college's educational <;oc1al. aec;lhet1c, and moral atmosphrre 1s d1rec1ly affected by the
c;pendmi;: of YOUR monev If
you care aboul the quahl)' ol
your lite. ynu can have direct ellect a,;, to where th1c; money 1,;;
lunnded Come to my oflice m
(. AB 305 and tall... to me read
tht· .irt1cle about tht' 5l'rv1cec; and
Act1v111esBnard in the Onentat1on Issue of thf' CPI. march
over lo CAB 110 on Wednec;day

October 12 to the student forum
- at least lake some type of action and ma\..e a commitment to
,;how that y1,u will not passively
.1cnpl olht>r s deciding where
your money ought to go.
Who knows, I may even invite
vou over to a dinner of cheese
qu1thl' and Almaden wine. After
.111you paid for ti 1
S1gnt>d.
Steve Francis
Executive Secretary for
the Services and
Aclivities Board

back. Some of them were only
mine on loan.
Even More Grateful When
You Return The Goods,
Christina Orange
(866-2821)

dirty rotten, chauvinist, powermad, capitalist,
hypocr1t1cal
bruter
The eyes can do funny amazm~ lh1n~s Depends which way
y,,u look through them. 11'11be a
bri~hter
world considerably
when women·s liberation completely arrives, when we gain
true t.>qual nghls. What a god<,end for males that day.
Yours,
Jim Felton

The Good
And The
Not-So-Good
To the Editor·

Bring ·Back

A Godsend For
Males

Much has been said about the
food at SAGA. A little observation an<.l experimentation
will
show you thal some things are
good and some thin~ are not so
good. When good things are offered - eat and enjoy, sing and
dance lightly. When the shit 1s
offered, pass it by. Take a walk
in the fresh air and think of your
brothers and sisters who have
nothing.
Jim

My Wrenches
the Editor:

Tn tht• F<l1tM

T(l

01,n t yc,u thm\.. 11" damned
unlair that men dn<.lwomen have
,urh un<'V<'nJdv.:1nta~C'over each
nthn1
A w,,man <Jn hrt•..il.. the rule<;,
gra"Jl tor power
manipulalt',
pl.iv nutrag!'flUS ht'ad~ame'i
,m<l }.:t't dway with II .all They
Mt'
lo
bC' p,1mpered. treated
~t'ntlv ,1Jm1rrd re-.pected. given
t·vn\
11ppurtun1ty
helped to
,H.h1t'Vl'<,,ell«:xprec;<;ionand ccit'rC('d mt0 lmdm~ their total lreed,,m
But -,hlluld ..i man ,;ee\... p<·r..,nn,il ►'..tm m.1n1pul,ttl' reoplt'
rt',ll h c,ut t.,r 11r uc;(' powe.. or
"t1•p1111 .my Int'" tc..,pec1.1llywomt'n ..,1
tht· ...i..v tall ... m on tlw

To The Charitable Thief Who,
Stole The Socket And Wrench
Sets From My Volkswagen In
Parking Lot C On The Night Of
Sunday, October 2nd·
Thank you for so kindly overlooking the camera, the sleeping
bag and various other semi-valuable ob1ects m my car. For that
I am deeply grateful But please,
please, PLEASE give me back my
tools If you are as poor as I am
I can under-.tand your wanting
to takt· them, but I am a generous soul and more than w1\lmg
tn share what I h.ave (especially
a,;, opposed to having it stolen).
I <.Iont want to tlog you or throw
you m Jail I 1ust want the tools

•Ask

RAUDENBUSH

R<· DC\es Do~•vntown l.a1..ey
l{eally l:x1c;t7
The Bus Driver know,

SUPPLY

RICORDCO.

8 •.m. - 11,J>.m.

Tole painting •
Supplies • Classes
• Party, block ice •
Slushy • Beer• Wine
• Picnic,
party supp/tu
JUI Hackaa J57-7JJJ

I I 00 . 8 00 Mon

DRUGS
WESTSIDECENTER
943· ,,,

w1sn1n1

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NEW & USED RECORDS - TAPES
& LOTS OF OTl!ER c;ooDIES 1

dav
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10H

III Continue~

for~~l.ion, par t icu 1aTrFlyon thhe
act1v1t1es o 1 a 11 0
s, to t e.
Geoboard. The "Natural Consul•
PL?o I, "'ht hVe IC omm~1ty•
;,:11~e
. rvte
1std t ~ ~ unta7
rv,pee _dist ~nF I e hong I o~~~t
~es~ ents orum ave a so Dt."':n
ehhmmbatedfrom t~e docudmhenth.It
as_ .een quest1one
w el er
om1ss1~n from ~he .COG documen! signals extinction for those
.
d mslltu. .
o f t he a f orement1one
.
h" h
. f
. .
hons w 1c are stl 11 unct1onmg,
most notably, the Information
Center.
Accountability
is another
prominent theme of COG Ill and
it states "DKisions. and methods
to be used for their impl,mentation must be handled at the level
of responsibility and accountability closest to those affected by a
particular decision." The document goes on to define accountable as, "subject to consequences,
commensurate with the seriousness of the decision as well as responsible for justifying it." Presumably, accountability
is related to how well information is
disseminated, and that takes us
back to the Geoboard whose responsibility it is to "stt that an
ongoing system of information
dissemination,
evaluation, and
corroclion is maintained."'
The famous COG document

ne

.

01 iga rch ies are t O be

avoi,ded," has been deleted, but
th'
emain unchanged.
sTohme .mgs rtion on mediation
1
en ire sec process remains
ande adjudication
virtually the same. Just like its
predecessors, COG lll begins,
"Evergreen is an institution in
process." Altering that would be
a little like changing "We the
le ... " just lo take on an
peop d
1
amen
Th men .
h h"ch ••d 10
e paragrap
w I
u=
d ..At th end of every two
rea
e

EDITOR
Karrie Jacobs

attir<' KJrnc·s un<:ntical, burm·J
rt:'vtt·w 1s a rt'm1n<lc•r that th,·
Coopt.'r [lomt Journal-. de-.pt•r<1tt·
net·<l for mon· v:ntn<. ha ... only
bn·n filled by th<· alr<·ady ovt'rwork<:'d '>IJtl I

Open
Community
Correction
To the Editor
rh1" letter 1s 1n re~ponse to an
article in y<1ur paper nn Au~u..,t
11 IQ77
··The Open C.ommun1ty School by lo Fddpt>r<.,nn
Tht•re wa<.. an err<lr macfr that
wt• lt'el nN•d.-, C{lHl'Cl1nn Tht·
Open (ommun1tv C,chnnl 1<., not
Barbara Ra1nev.., school
ratht'r
a ...chotll bt'lo~~lnK to the community 1l ~t'rves parent<. children, teachers and vnluntt'ers
Throu~h their cooperative eltmt,;,
the ~chool exists In the future
please refer to us a.., Thr Open
Community
Primarv
School
Thanks
Pam Hai~ht-Bat~
Barbara R.:1iney
Mike Gon-.alv<"s
Susan Lamoreau~
Ken Bat<>'years. the l'rt'S1dent will convene
a DTF on governance
now
reads "every three vear'> perhaps because ti seemed a little
impraclteal to go thrnui;:h cl yeara nd -a ~ ha It pron,;," evt-ry two
years Whatever the cc1~e. the
public hearing on October 20 will
be the last opporlun11v tor c1
while lo feed any input m1c, tht"
development of the Ever~ret'n
governance mechanisms.
Note: The entire COG 111
document will appear in next
week·s JOURNAL.

..•

Mandy Mcfarlan

FEATL RES EDITOR
Joh" 1<.,ogh

PRC'nt CTION MANAGER
1 ).., r ,1 Leigh Squires
, r~I TARY

BUSINESS MANAGER
Nathaniel Koch

ADVERTISING MA,"sAGLR
Rob,rt "Wall• Wall•" ~w•tski

n. COOPER POINT JOURNAL .. pubHehed __.ty tor et. •tudtlnta, t.cvlty,
end ataN of
E..,.,.an s111•
College, otympAe, WNNngton ll505. v .... axPfNNCIMa noC neceuartly thoN of n. E..,...n
Stala Coflege. Ad¥erttllng m11lllr1af .,,_.,lad
henln doN not ........,.ty
Imply w.do.w111Wtl by fhl• ••• p,pr
OIi- 1ft ,,_ ~ -lulldtng !CAI) 3011.pl,onoc
-.cm._...
and pt,ono, .... _,_
,._
policy, All,.._
to
the ecMIOJmuet be NCetMd by noon TUNdly tor ttwt --••
pubUc:atton.L.etten
muat be typed, doutN-~.
and 400 WOfda or ..... L.etNft ex.ceedtng 400
wCMdlmay be edited tor length. NamN wlH be wllhhlld Ofl NqUNt.

n.

......

To the Ed1lCH

MOTOR

from clean-cut respectable kids
who have a spirit of brotherhood, an interest in politics, and
true believers of "The Force."
They are the re1uvenators of the
<ild religion. They really c;hould
be selling flower~.
Here I should stop. But here at
Evergreen I should add more fascinatmg subiects other than Star
Wars like •·the a<lvancmg spin!
ol conservali~m." "the Moonies.'
..Jimmie Carter after Nixon,'' "the
perennial R<lman conquest over
the Germ.ans an<.l the Greeb,
,rnd. and, and. I don t like 11
(Note: Editor Karne Jacob..,
review of Star Wars tCPJ.
b JO 77 ) accented the fun and
the youthtulness of Star War,;,
Sht• wrote,
Don't get mt' wrong. J"m not
gom~ to teJr Star War<; apart
and mtelle<tualiLe about 11 That
wt,uld be like mtt•llectualmng
about Dism•yland
Don't get me wrong. I had fun
<;eemg Star Ware; three times
Theres something .ibout Disneyland, though. After visiting ,t
over ten times as a kid. thl' place
of my dreams became more
questioned a~ a man in sunglasses
told my father that his son could
nol come mside because stained,
holey khakis and Mexican shirts
were inappropriate
Disneyland

••--rfJ!JlfJUlllll/fJl

The Bus Driver

ET YOUR PRESCRIPTIONSI,

altitude of the people is, "I'm just
one person against the Empire;
what can I do." There is an old
religion that it seems nobody will
believe in any more and the last
thing ~eard about it was this disciple sold out the best hero of the
rt"ligion to the Empire. Those
who are still believers in the religion are out of favor, and ket'p
their beliefs to tht•mselves. Thf
gent"ral populact• are doubtful of
the religion and arc acidly peS)Im1stic about the pC\litical <;itualion.
That·~ .1 familiar settin1i;, the
1...ind of probl,m <;iluation that
m1ghtfascinatE"peoplempolit1cal
and religious vacuums. OK. But
how does Georgt" solve it1 He
get!; a kid with a hot rod air car
who is soon to go away to
school. He finally gels away after
rt'ce1ving the wise counsel of a
bcardeJ cuh1sh has-been in hiding. Once a graffitist, always a
graffitist. The kid never believed
m his father's religion, but when
a certain drastic event happens
to him, he is cut loose, and falls
in with those of the currently
suppressed rt"lig1on. But the Lucas
"rebel" is not your current kind
of hairy barbarian. No, the hairy
types don't t"ven get medals: the_y
are subhuman. The rebellion 1s
not to. come (rom a~ estranged,
barbaric l(roup. It 1s lo come

Westside

Center

357-4755

.,,,.-,

SPORTSWEAR
FOR
MEN AND WOMEN

FEATURING:
BNG,
SWEET
BABY
JANE,
CECILY,
BULLIT,
HIMALAVA,
HAPPY
LEGS,
A-SMILE,
AND MANY MORE.

~ii
~

COMING

AND

SOON:

STICKY

HASH

JEANS

FINGERS

Valentino's

'

on harrison

behind

skipper~

5

Introducing

Dan Evans: Evergreen's Trilateral Connection
Alan G. Nasser,
Member oi the Faculty

unfavorabie. As Huntington puts
it, "A decline in the governabil( Political Economy)
itv of democracy at home means
a decline in the influence of deWhat do the following illustnmocr•cy abro•d" (p. 106). Th•
11us ~enllemen have in common7
Crisis of Democracy reveals that
l1mmy Carter. Walter Mondale,
at least a substantial number of
'.\/Jt1onal Security Advisor Zbigthe more influential commissionn1ew Brazinski,
Secretary ol
ers are convinced that domestic
State Cyrus Vance, Secretary of
political conditions in the develTreasury W.M Blumenthal. Secoped market societies are indeed
retary of DefenSt" Harold Brown.
less-than-favorable,
and threat:\s!>1s1an1 Secretary for East Asian
ening to the stability of world
.rnd Pacific Affairs Richard Holcapitalism. How does the Coml•rc,ol...e, Deputy Secretary of
m1ss1on identify the problem,
'.:-t.iteWarren Christopher. Under
and what are its proposed solu~--crelary ol State for Economic
t1ons7
\ttatrs RKhard N. Cooper, AmA SOCIETY OF UNEQUALS
!w,~Jd0r !Cl thE' United Nation
First of all, the Commission's
·\ndrt•w Young Assistant Secreanalysts reflects a widespread be1.1n 111 the Trea-;ury C
Fred
l 1el among corporate
lt"aders,
l{t'rg,ten
and TESC Pre-s1prominent polit1c1ans and court
lt·n1 l1,1n1E'I I Evan, Tht>-;emen
,ncial '(1ent1sb that the current
1rt' Jml,n~
tht' member,;; ol the
C'C0nC1m1ccrisis requires a reI ,il.11,•r,11( l,mm1,._1Pn an or~anlrenchmt'nt of poltt1cal democ·,111,,n
n•nu·1\t'd
lunJed .rnd
r,Hv Prominent anJ pre-.t1gou::,
,-.t·ml~lt·ll h, Da\·1d Rt1cJ...etellC't t',t.:iblishment 1ourn.ilc. hc.1ve m
u'll'-tLlt·r lwth tht· mt1unlm~
n..•et•nt yearc. vt,1ced mcreasm~
, ,•111111111 pr11blt•m..,,1tti1, ting th1•
m1,~1v1ng, about the continued
, rl,I rn.11~1•1 -.v-.ft•m ,Intl 1h1·
nahd1tv 1.11liberal Jemocracy
\ \l\''-',,,
dt'OlPl
l,ll \'
,dlt'gt.•Jh
Thl' Apnl 1075 1-.,ue ot fortune
q.:,i,n)'
tlw dt·n•l,,rt'J l,1r11.11i
...1
lt·,itured ,1 p1t·n· bv Danit'! Bell
1 "''
1·~
I h1• t ,1mm1..,,1t1n 1-.
11!11.•J The R1•v1.1lutu1n
111 Rl'.-.mg
1 ,•-.1·d 111 multtn.Jlh1n,tl
r~11
11>r
I nt1tlenwn1<, whiCh M)o\ut>dthat
",lit·
,•,n ll!I\ t''- pPhla,11 n,•tlw hur~t'llnm~ Jem,rnJ., ol 1he
wlt·-. .ind .1 It'\\ l.ib11r lt•,1dC'r.., J1,adv,rnta~eJ that the govern,,,,111 dw L nitnl l..,1,llt',
\\'t',tt'rn
rnt•nt maJ...ethem "equdl" to other
f 1.r1•111· .inJ l,1p,1n ,inJ 11, m,11,1r
Amentanc. 1c.d threat lo the conp,,l1t\
rt·1,,1111nt'nJ.1111•n..,
hitvt•
tinued l.''<1,;tence ot American
t 11·1·n
rubli ...twd h, New Y,irJ...
t,1p11.ili,m The 1ntlut>nl1almaga' n1,·1•r,1t\'
l're,-. m 1075 m J v,1111m• The Public Interest pubhshe<l
unw 1•nt1tlt:d Thi' Crisi,; of Dea ,pen.ti 1,;sue ( No. 41, Fall,
mocratv: Report on the Govern107511n which Hunlmgtnn, Moy.1hilitv of Dt'mocracie... The Rt'nihan l 1pset and others argued
purl 1, tlw 1n1nt rt"<;pon.,1hd1tynl
thJt the political agitation of the
i,,11 \\ .11.inuJ...1 Michel (n,z1cr
IObOs had raised popular expec,nd l..,,1mut•I Hun11ngtnn
tht>
tat1(ln,;;;too h1ih, and that these
t ,1 m1rn,,,,,n "> three leading rape,pectat1ons wert> bound to be
r•orteur,
I) nu may recall that
trustratt"d since the social probHun1m~h1n. d professClr of Govlems ol the poor, black!. and
1·rnment al Harvard was the inother oppressed strata are m fact
1·n1,1r
Pl tht> Johnson-Nixon
insoluble,
an inevitable
and
,,,hr,
,-.1 lorced urbanization"
"tragic" feature of the "social
11 \'1etnam
whereby 1he counlandscape." BusinHs Week fol·n .,1J(' was extensively bombed
lowed with a series o( three arti1n flrder to !.eparate the masses
cles !December 1, 8 and 15, 1975)
,, the population from the guerentitled ''Egalitarianism:
Threat
rillas by torcing the former to
to a Free Market:" the title speaks
t.1J...e refuge 1n concentration
for itself. The Trilateral Commiscamps surrounding Saigon.)
sion. and its child the Carter AdThe Trilateral Commission is
ministration, Kht 1 thest> sentiu,-.ncerned primarily with two
ments.
oroad problems: How can the
The reasoning is simple: A
,ldvanced capitalist countries cocapitaHst Ckmocracy is ~rorerate to ameliorate the effects
ily a soci•ty of unequals. The
upon them of the protracted repoor, women, people of color,
te5sion-cum-inflation t-hat besets
and ot~r groups stand at the
hem all 7 And: How can thew
subordinate end of an asymmet-Jme powers effectively resist the
rical relation of economic and
Jt•mands of Third World counpolitical power to the superordines tnr a "new economic order,"
nates. But since the ~ order
(' a new international system of
is allegedly democratic, th, . .<lio
,11d trade and inve-stment which
advanta~
expect that t~ir poJ, •e-. not result in a net transfer
sition is temporary, and that if
,,t wealth from the underdevelthey only press their demands
llJ''f'd to the developed capitalist
for a fairu share of the pie upon
cnuntnes7 But the Commi..sion is
their political ''repf'fte'ntatives,"
convinced that the-se global probgovernment will respond with
l€'ms cannot be dealt with if dopolicies designed to raa IMir
mestic political conditions in instandards of living (i.e . .._ IINI
d1v1dual advanced countries are
incomes) and extend to ..._
a

greater share of political and economic power. This rhetoric ha.s
been a cornerstone of post-World
Wu II politic•! 'ideology. But
there is a catch. None of this can
work unless the economy is
growing at a rate sufficient to
generate the income required to
prO'lide government
with the
revenue necessary to finance programs designed to narrow the
gap betwttn th• •dv•ntaged •nd
the disadvantaged. And there's
the rub, For many of our rulers
know full well that we are not
likely to see again a period of
economic growth comparable to
the historically unprecedented
period 1947 - 1972. We are in for
a period of indefinite stagnation
- protracted recessions punctuated with brief. mild upswings.
(An indication of the magnitude
of the problem: in order for unemployment in 1985 to drop to
the postwar average of 4.8 percent, 36 million Jobs would have
to be created, more than twice as
many as were created in the prospenty period 1965 - 1975.) PostKt'ynes1an capitalism
can no
longer afford political democracy.
What 1s called for, from our rul-

cratic egalitarianism" {p. 60). The
''basic point," continues Huntmgton, "is this: The vitality ol democracy in the United States in
the 1960s produced a subst•nti•I
increase in governmental activity
and a substantial decrease in
governmental authority" (p. 64).
Get the idea? Governmental authority is inversely related to
governmental activity_ The more
government acts in response to
popular egalitarian demands, the
less is its authority, and the
greater its authority, the less responsive it will be to democratic
demands. Huntington even goes
so far as to suggest a causal relation between the modest success
("vitality") of democratic processes in the 1960s, and the erosion
of the authority of government
in the 1970s. as evidenced by
widespread public cynicism toward existing political institutions, decreasing party identification, etc. (pp. 74 - 102). Needless
to say, for Huntington declining
governmental authority is a bad
thing, since it tends to make democracies ungovernable.
"The
governability of a democracy depends upon the relation between

"What this requires . . . is that
capitalist governments act to increase capital's share of national
income at the expense of labor's
share."
ers point of view, is the maintenance of existing class and racial power differentials, minus
meaningful improvements in the
welfare of the working population. What this requirn, given
the rising international economic
competition
resulting from a
globally synchroniz.ed recession,
is that capitalist governments act
to increase capital's share of national income at the expense of
labor's share. We have just ~un
to see the emerging pattern: corporate profits are hightt th.an
ever, while our real incorMS diminish annually.
WIDESPREAD
PUBLIC CYNICISM
The Trilateral Commission's
primary concern in Th~ Crisis of
Danocracy is whether the subject
population will •ccepl the increasing unwiJHn.gMSSof api~list governments to respond to its
democratic demands. Rapportwr
Crozier writes that "frtt-world"
political systems ''are overloaded
with participants and demands"
(p. 12), and Huntington •dds th•t
this "problem" first ~ame
noticeably critical during the 1960s,
"a decade of democratic surge
and of the reassertion of demo-

the authority of its governing institutions and the power of its
opposition institutions" (p, 91 ).
''During the 1960s the balance of
power between government and
opposition shihed significant!'('
(p.92). The •nti-war, black and
women's movements' were on the
ascendancy, and the authority of
government was therefore on the
decline. This must never happen
again.
Huntington would like a return
to the good old days when rulers
ruled without the nuisance of
popular interferena. But h, fun
that those days •re for<Vff lost.
'Truman had bttn abl• to
govern the country with the cooperation of a relatively small
number of W •11 Strttt lawyers
•nd bank•rs. By the mid-19605 ...
thi• was no longer possible" (p.
98). That po15ibility must be restored; the democratic "surge"
must b, checked and rev..-...!.
"Al Smith once remarked that
'the only cure for the evils of democracy is more democracy.'
Our analysis suggests that ...
some of the problems of governance in the United States today
stem from an excess of democracy . _ . Nttded., instead, is a

greater degree of moderation in
d•mocracy" (p. 113). Wh•t this
"greater degrtt of moderation in
democracy" means in concrete
terms is clear. Witness the bald
takeover of N,w York City by
the banks and the gradual dismantling of the welfare system
there, the crass fiscal conservatism of the Carter Administration and the steady decline in ◊-ur
real earnings, accompanied by an •
historically unpr-Kedented rise in
corporate profits. And this is
only the handwriting on the wall.
AUTHORITARIAN VALUES
Will we put up with this7 Huntington has his fingers cros~.
We must be lulled into "creedal
passivity" (p. 115). "Political authority is . . . peculiarly weak
during a creedal passion period
of intense commitment to democratic and egalitarian ideals" {p.
115). So we need less "creedal
passion" and more apathy. In
fact, apathy, i.e. our willingness
to lower our political expectations and reduce our demands on
government, is good for (capitalist) democracy:
"the effective
operation of a democratic political system usually requires some
measure of apathy and noninvolvement . ." (p. 114). Trouble
signals when "groups" - blacks,
for example - begin to take participation seriously: "Marginal
social groups, as in the ca!.e of
tht" blacks. are now becoming
full participants in the political
system
the danger of overloading the political system with
demands which extend its functions and undermine its authority still remains" (p. 114).
The Crisis of Democrary, the
official position of the Trilateral
Commission, is replete with antidemocratic
and authoritarian
values. It is allithe more alarming as it expresses the ideology of
the Uberal element in our ruling
class. And it is to be taken seriously. After all, Rock•f•ller's
Commission has given us all the
k,y personnel of th• Carter Administration (which could carry
us, incid•nt•lly, right to 1984).
Thus, commissioner Dan Evans
comes to us with a formidable
pedigree. But wh•re does Presi<knt Evans stand on thew questions7 This is not intended as a
rhetorical question, Some of the
commissionen heatedly deb.tied
the basic thrust of th, R,port,
and perhaps Dan Evans was on
the right aid• of the debat,. In
fact, on• hopes that •t th, next
Commission meeting in Bonn this
month, PN!Sident Evans will argue vigorously and penistently
against what appears to be the
frightening concensus among the
most pow,rful ,lites that peopl•
like us must be prepared for an
epoch of increasing politic.al and
economic austerity. enforced, if
necessary, by a powerful authoritarian state.

FORUM is a column of commentary on issues of possible
interest to the Evergreen community. The column is open to
any individual or group on campus. The opinions expressed in
FORUM are solely the author's
and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of the college or the
st•ff of the COOPER POINT
JOURNAL. Address •II corr••·
pondence
to: FORUM,
the
COOPER POINT JOURNAL,
CAB 306.

by David Gallagher
When it came time to draw up
Evergreen's first governance document, our illustrious founding
fathers did not hesitate: the cherished ideals practiced in their
planning sessions - the spirit of
voluntary cooperation between
students, faculty, staff, and administration,
the principle of
mutual conciliation, and the wish
to come to decisions by consensu~ - should be preserved and
institutionalized as the basis of
our governance system. Since
that time, the impracticality of
such an assumption has been
demonstrated; ironically, its deficiencies have shown themselves
to be most damaging to the students - for whose alleged edu-.,..
cational benefit the ambiguous
stipulations about "input," "consultation," and "participation in
decision-making" had been written.

COG II declared that, "The
Evergreen community
should
avoid fractioning into decisionmaking constituencies with some
sort of traditional representative
form of government; e.g., faculty senate, student council." Instead. there was the "Sounding

Board," "an important all-campus information and coordination body" which consisted of:
the President, members of the
faculty and staff selected by their
deans to serve on the board, and
15 students "selected by their fellow students in a manner d!!termined by the students." Since
there was no student organization, there was no developed
way for students to !.elect their
members; each year started from
scratch: if there was no student
willing to put energy into it. the
task of finding student members
went to the Dean of Student
Services; either way, their only
resources were the "voluntary
services list" and the "third floor
groups." While this may have
produced about as good a cross
section of the student population
as you could hope for, it also
produced a lot of disinterested
members. And since there was
no real obligation to show up to
the meetings beyond a queasy
admonition to "arrange for a
substitute if he or she is to be
absent," the attrition rate was
high. To add to this already debilitating condition of its membership, the "powers" given to
the Sounding Board were its final
insult: "This group will make
recommendations for actions as
issues pertinent to the college
arise." That was the extent of it;
the Sounding Board had no defense against the deaf ear - a
phenomenon
which, unfortunately, has been far from extinct
at this institution. This ineffectualness weighed heavily on the
few dedicated members who resolved to stick it out for a quarter - they became reluctant to
serve again.
With the Sounding Board as
really the only institutionalized
forum for discussing campus is-

The

sues, students resorted to other
more spontaneous means of expression: the most recent of these
was last spring's "Demo Memo
Coalition;" the most spectac.µlar
would have to have been the Fall
'75 teach-in. These events were
exciting and educational. but in
order to organize them, it took a
lot of energy and sacrifice on the
part of a few students, and then,
the fruits of all this effort were
expended in the instant of the
event and nothing was left over.
Many of these organizers have
~ome burnt out upon realizing
this fact, and we who sit back
can no longer be assured that

The new "Geoboard,"
on the
other hand, has the power of
public sanction; by majorit)' vote
it can comment on. support, or
condemn a policy and it can
censure individuals for their actions. This procedure has quilt' a
b,t of clout - the rulings become
public knowledge and, among
other things, must be noted in
the administration
evaluation
procedure. Additional improvements allow the Geoboard to
more closely monitor DTFs than
could the Sounding Board: also,
an attempt has been made to
mitigate the attrition problem
with =m alternate list and stricter
attendance guidelines.

FORUM

Another important change in
COG Ill is a rewording of the
part about "fractioning into constituencies" cited above, It now
says: "The Evergreen community
should avoid fractioning
into
constituency groups which replace rather than augment the
deliberations of bodies composed
of all major constituencies." The
phobia that elemental organizations must by necessity break up
the Evergreen community
has
yielded to the realization that
such organizations may in fact
be necessary to keep it together
and functioning effectively. The
idea of forming a student union
has been a perennial and hotly
debated issue at Evergreen. 1 have
personally been very leery of it;
yet I have also experit'nced a little of the frustration inherent in
not having any kind of vehicle
for student organization. In the
past. the most vocal proponents
of a student union have, perhaps
with gooJ reason, ignored the
Sounding Board. Therefore their
proposals essentially involved
"replacing rather than augmenting•· th1-, b(,dy. I teel that the

similar events will come about
each time our interests are threatened.
In the original
Evergreen
scheme of things, conflict had
been a dirty word; we have since
been reminded that it is unavoidable. Deficiencies in the state of
campus governance have been
apparent for a long time: since
its conception. the "COG" document has gone through two
major rewritings. COG Ill, which
is now before the Board of T rustees for adoption, is, I believe, a
substantial improvement. Ambiguities have been clarified and
much "wishy-washiness"
has
been eliminated. Most important
for the students are the changes
relating to the Sounding Board.
The Sounding Board had not
been empowered to take a position on an issue - as it was felt
to be contrary to the consensus
ideal, there had been no voting.

IGH

RESEARCH
AulatalCI
ALL SUBJECTS
Choose from our library of 7,000 topics
AUpapers have been prepared by our
slaN of professional writers to Insure
eiccellence
Send S 1 00 ( ■Ir mall
postage) for the currenl edition of our
mail order catalog.

r--------------1
EDUCATIDNALSYST!MI
PO Box 25916-E.
: Los Angeles, Caltf 90025
I Name __________
We ■ leo p,oride OfllN'IIII
, ... arch -- all ftielda.

Tl-lo-■-let~

••

•w•IIM»M.

I Address _________

I
I
I

City __________
State ___

'--------.J~--------------J

I
I
I
_
I
_

_
Zip _____

I
I
I
I

TIDE
18 w.5th
943·9968
smoking
paraphernalia

20% OFF ON ALL ~IS
117N. WHllillstH

945-1997

TH A.NKSq[Jrll
s·lAFfKENJ.'.,

'\ 1·,

.ii:.

JL'DY Hl INTI\
Tl I~ ~•'.,,I~ 'D
FOR f:1.U :',;(, , Jl 'R

APTS.
,~

l'INort1e2.~ ...

J[CON~ HAND
GIFT~ l+t:P,flitrS,frt .
/dr-/'z •
e S"Mi
,,-, .,,,LJv-JO
MI/If. .:001'-

'f 'f .J.-5d.

Geoboard can be a valuable and
viable medium through whJCh
students can express their opinions on campus issues and make
their needs and interests known
to the community. But I also
recognize that the students, unlike the faculty, staff and administration, are only here for a limited amount of time. It takes
each student a large chunk of
that time just to get to the point
where he or she understands this
unique community and can truly
identify "interests" and develop
opinions. Some type of student
organization may therefore be
desirable in order to provide the
sense of history and continuity
nt>Cessary to properly utilize a
body like the Geoboard.
I am very interested m seeing
this matter discus!.ed. More importantly, I am concerned that
members of the Evergreen community understand and appreciate the differences between the
Sounding Board and Geoboard
so that the improvements embodied in the Geoboard can be
properly utilized. On Wed. Oct.
12 at 2:00 in CAB 110, I am
calling a Student Forum to discuss how we should choose the
Fall '77 student members of the
Geoboard. I strongly urge all
students and other interested
members of the community to
come and discuss these issues

David Galla.gher wu a member of the Sounding Board last
spring, ,md is currently enrolled
in the Social Origins of Art and
Ideology audemic program.

NotesCC~ruIB~mi~N@i@~CampusNotes


save a
buck
at
budget
\n,
in

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!{t·\1 '-lquJrt' .. A., onE' might t"xr1·1 t 11 .1rpt'Mt·J
nnly as the re-.ult 1,1 -.1,rnt· unusual
but neatlyt,1l!Jb,ff.1tm~ urcum ...t,:mce,;; Nut
th1• lt'.l'>t

important

.1n £'ncnunter

that

nt

these

wa:,

S1etan Schin-

had with h1!> cousin
m
Or.1n~t· ( ountv lalitnrn1a dur1In~er

tht.· !>umnwr of J076
Stl.'l.rn wa.., an Ever~reen

ing

drnp-

tht: tmw H1!> secret dream
m lilt' wa.., tr, huild .i UFO which
h1.•u1uld llr over tht• city of Lm,

t'Ul

ct!

An~ele-.. but ht· wd-.n

!ww

ti'

~11

ab<,ut

t
1t

quite sure
Then

h1::o

u1u-.1n rt>latt>dtn him the story nf

•m L''l:pt>rimenl h1,;,art teacher 1n

l.1pan had Londucted
The art tt'.acher
logically
t'n\1u~h. hJd -..u,pended himself
nude trom ,1 hr1t air balloor. carrvin~ b1l11t't'dhack equipment
durin~ ,1 -..ol.ir eclipse A light
..ht1v. prPtl'ltt'<l trom the ground
"VARSITY"COMPACT
REFRIGERATOR
p!Jvt'd Pn tht• balloon·s surface
The R•f-rigerotor
thot goH to Coll99•!
"" tlw ..i..v JJrkened
But alas,
ONLY
hum.1nl!\ -..till bt"ing sub1ect to
.,
...__ _
95 iht \\ him-.. nt the element~. a
. ,......,
._.,_
$
,t1 1rm
Cdmt' alun>;, blew away
l•nth h.illnon ,1nd balloonist, and
Or Rent it for as little as
ru1m•J the t''l(pl'riment
'9.95 Per Month.
Stt'l,rn wJ<.,O\lOethelE"ssinspired
l1v
th1~ tJle HE" immediately c;et
301 I.5th
nut In n•.,earch the subject of
DOWNTOWN
OLYMPIA l1ghter-thdn-.i1r tl>•in~ craft Conv1nn•tl thJt he wanted to con_.,;;;;:==::;:::;:;;;;,,..
_______
..,trud J rJd10-controlled blimp,
ht' returnl'<l t<1Evergreen and got
an 1nd1v1dual contract with Mattht•w Haltant to continue h1s reSt'.lrch l lpPn delving dt't'per mto

__
__

.. 1 59

RARE~ FIN£

TOBAc.co, CIGARS

Rape Reported

-~..,p~.5

/JlzrJ

the technical problems posed by
h1-..amb1t1on. he dnfled toward
the conclusmn that a helium and
a1r-fillt:'d balloon would constitutt' J more practical undertaking. Thus was conceived Th~ Porpoise.
S1el.1n spent lhe en11rt> Fall
quartt'r ol 1976 conducting re'>t'arch and drawing plans for his
balloon He began its actual con'itruct1C1nm January of '77, worl,__tnK in .an upstairs room of Ever~rt•l'n" steam plant. and weanng
only a bathtn)( suit (nol m emul.1t1Pn of his Japanese mentor 11 WJ'> hot up there) All told, he
"-pt'nl twer a thou'>and hours de.,•~nin~ and building his creation .
Atldmg Wl'ight to the argument
th.it one balloon 1~ never enough,
Stt'lan has founded a fledgling
enterpnst> called "Upward Mobility.
through which he plans to
continue building lighter-than,ur aircraft. He secs many possible uses tor them, including advt•r11smg. transportation to areas
nnt
srrved by roads or airstrips,
dn<l protest signs to be carried in
Jemonstrations. He is also 1nterestt•d m balloon-sculpture as an
Ml tnrm, one of his latest inspirations having come to him as a
v1c;1onof a giant human heart.
S(\ don't be alarmed if, sometime
in the not-too-distant future, another inflated object. this one
'fwrting auricles .ind ventricles
1n,;tedd of fins. is spotted float1n~ ~l..yward over tht> Evergreen
<dmpus It will merely be an a1rht·art

It w.i, reported to the Wome-n's
lenter last week. that a woman.
who ~•1~he<llt1 remain unident1fit>d w.i<. rape-d al gunpoint in
the v1nrnty of the campus The
~,•oman who was not an Ever~reen student, was picked up
h1tchh1l..ing near the Mods by a
hghl blue foreign-made station

wagon with Washington plates.
The car had a white interior and
was driven by a man of medium
height and weight with fairly
short brown hair and a mustache He was described as "well
dressed, clean and reliable looking." If you are hitchhiking, exercise caution.

Curriculum Planning Time
The second annual Fall Quarter curriculum planning rush is
on. During the past week, the socalled "natural groups" of faculty
had their first meetings of the
year to discuss Coordinated Studies, Group Contracts, and modules for the 1978 - 79 and 1979 80 academic years, and a small
group of students began work
with the Academic Deans to organizt> student involvement in
this year's planning process.
Eighteen months ago, a major
rt>view of the Evergreen curriculum conducted by faculty and
students on the Long Range Curriculum Planning DTF found
widespread demand for increased
predictability and continuity in
the college's program offerings.
Both students and faculty wanted
to know sooner and more reliably what was going to be taught
here in the future. The Long
Range DTF responded to this demand by recommending that the
portion of the curriculum devoted to the nine Advanced Speciahy areas and to Basic Programs, composing roughly 60%
of the total. be planned two
years in advance. In implementing this recommendation,
the
Academic Deans responded further to this call tor predictability,
in scheduling earlier publication
of the annual Catalog Supplemt>nt Last year and again this
year, the Supplement has been
slated lo appear by January fi:·o:.r
The January first publication
<late poses a tight time limitation
on both faculty and students who
are planning
curriculum
for
1978 - 79. A student organizing
group met with Academic Dean
Rob Knapp on Monday to disruss ways of promoting student
involvement. Two main directions emerged: first. an immediate effort to make students aware
of their potential role in planning
and to solicit an initial indication
of students' interests for next
year; second, to mount a major
campaign to get student response
to something called the Trial
Balloon. The Trial Balloon will
be a "rough draft" of next year's
curriculum, that is, a tentative
selection of programs which will
be posted at several locations
around the campus for community discussion and critique.
Current plans call for the Trial
Balloon to go up next Thursday,
October 14 and to stay up until
October 20. To stimulate thinki;ig about curriculum, the Academic Deans will be circulating a
pre-Balloon que-stionnaire, .isking students which subjects they
would most like to study next
year and which of the nine present Specialty areas interest them
most. (The areas are: Environ-

Bakke Decision:
Protest Scheduled For October 8

mental Studies, European and
American Studie'li, Expressive
Arts, Human Development in its
Social Context, Individual and
Community Health, Management
and the Public Interest, Marine
Science and Crafts, Northwest
Native American ",tudies, and
Political Econwn· )

for students from "disadvantaged"
backgrounds. These special admissions slots have been filled
each year by minori1y·students
Bakke filed suit .igainst thl'
University in 1974 charging that
he had been a victim of "reverse
discrimination" because some uf
the 16 minority students admitted
were "less qu~llfled" than he In
September I 076 thr California
Suprem(• Court ruled in tavor ot
Bal...l..e,based on his higher ~cores
nn entrance exams Thl· cuurl
c;a1d that it was unconst11ut1l1nal
1\1 tdvor min\,rily applicJnt ... unit•..,..,tht> Univer~ity had 1ntl·nt1on,1lly d1,;<.
nmin<1ted d~dt0!-1 mmnr
1\1l''>in thl' p.1-..1 c1nd lc1bt'led tht'
.1dm1,..1urv, p11l11.\ n·vt>r..,e d1<.·
<.riminatil1n rh,· UIUrl
1~nt1n•J
lht' tao tha1 thl' 84 rq~ul.,r aJ.
m1!-'>ton,;,
npentn~.., g,1 c1lm11
...t l''clu-..1velyto white·.,
The ca-..e 1-..dn 1mp11rt,rn1111w
because 1t threatt'n'-o all <iopl'(1.d
Jdm1..,,;,1\1n~
and alt1rmat1Vl' ,l<t1,1n
rr<,Krams The U S Suprt•nw
C11urt will hear oral ..ugumL•nt..
<1n the Bakke 1.ase ,,n Octnb('r
12. and October 8 ha, been de
dared d day of nat111nal prntec;t

In addition curriculum planning meetings were held September 28 and October 5, and two
more curriculum planning days
are scheduled to take place on
October 19 and 26. The meetings
will be held on each of these
dates al the times and location'li
indicated below.
a.m
Annual Programs
Lib. 1417
WHO SHOULD COME,
People with specific program
proposals which belong in
Annuals or may not fit in the
Specialties, people with wellthought-out views about pnorities in selecting the Annuals.
European and American
Studies - Lib. 1200
10-10,30 a.m
Deans· Group Mttting~
Rob Knapp - Lib. 3500
Lounge
Will HumphreysLib. 2219
Willie Parson - Lib 2218
Bill Winden - Lib. 2,04
10 30-12 noon
Environmental Studies
Lib. 4004
Individual and Community
Health - Lib. 1504
Marine Sciences and Crafts
- Lib. 1503
Expressive Arts - Lib. 2205
Human Development in its
Social Context - Lib. 2204
.30-3 p.m.
Basic Programs - Lib. 2205
WHO SHOULD COME,
People interested in working
in Basic Programs in either
of the next two years. These
are a cornerstone of the present curriculum - the advanced Specialty offerings
count on them to do a big
job of preparation.
This
means that a continuing supply of good faculty and
strong programs is vital to
our whole teaching program.
Q

Northwest Native American
Studies - Lib. 2204
"Science and Philosophy"
proposal - Lib. 1417
3-4,30 p.m.
Management and the Public
Interest - Lib. 2205
Political Economy - Lab
1419

A march and rally aimed at
<1venurning the California Supreme Court's 1976 "Bakke" decision will be held in Seattle this
Saturday, October 8. The demonstration, which will b(, part of
.t nationwide
protest, is scheduled to convene at the Seattle
Federal Courthouse, Fifth Avenue
and Madison Street. al 12:00
noon. A car pool bound for the
event will leave from the library
loop J! TESC al 9:45 a.m.

We Get
A
Free Zucchini
For
Printing This
Saturday, October 8th, 1s the
day when many farmers, gardeners, and craftspeople will celebrate the harvest season and a
successful summe-r for the Thurston County Farmer's Market,
The Farmer's Market, which has
been open every Friday and Saturday throughout the summer,
alongside Capital Lake, calls this
Saturday's affair a Harvest Market. and invites any grower who
1s worried about frosts to come
sell his/ her produce and join the
festivities.
The Market is a forum to be
used by all. be it for sellin2 the
last of the season's squash, or
for staging a community service
bake sale, or for just buying some
apple cider and soaking in the
atmosphere of an outdoor market. and it's all happening Saturday, from 10:00 to 2:00 at the
corner of Seventh and Water.
For more information. call 8664016

'What 1s the Bakke dec1s1on?
you might ask. In 1973 and 1074
a 34 ~ar old white engineer applied for admission to medical
school at the University of California at Davis. He was rejected
both times. The medical school
has only 100 openings each year,
yet in 1974, there were more
than 3,700 applicants. UC Davis
medteal school a!so had a special admissions program which
reserves 16 of its 100 openings

Bulletin

AFGHANIE

KOOCHtE
DRESS !NOi

VIDUALLY
HAND
EM
8R0IQEREO
PERFEC

Or1~1nal score.., by <.,tud{·nt
ltlnlp(-,..,t'r-..and rnu-,ic lrom the
t•Mlv twentieth century will be
te.itured in a concl.'rt ot "Fveri,tr~en Pt!rformers and Compo,e,._"
Oc.1~1be112, heg1nn1ng di 8 rm
111the l<l'Ut,d Hall 11! L11mmun1
L,1111111-..
0udd1ng
I )r ( ,rei-: ~temk,· l:Vt'r~ft't'll
t.1u1h \ mu,n I.m ,, di h11th dirn.1
.ind pt !1111n1 1•n tlw 11!-.,w in tlw
1·,,·ninr ""mt·rl
\,huh \,di Ptl1•r
1•11•.,t•nt,11111:i..
bv "t'\t'n .,tud1•11t
mu-..I1.1Jn..,

Adm,..,..,,,,n •,,
11>0(('r!

i-..

$1

11 1 1

1!11 ll1,.'

m1nu1,,

th, g,·rw1,il 1•ub

50 11•n1, l••r I hddr,·n
,knt ... \,ith
1d11,ii111,1'••"'
-..t·nu11l 111/t'll',
li1.

...1 1
1"d

r

FOR THOSE
SPE(.IAL

NIGHTS

HOUSE OF

I



*•*** ..
**•***1a:1

STUDENT
11!!1
DISCOUNT
11ii1

*.1.-..•.···•
P 1 A7~



TA~OMA
Announcements to, lhe Community
Bulle!m Board must be suom,lled by
noon, Mondey on the week ot pubhcahon All items must be typr.rr,rttt.,,,
double-spaced

Interviews for the pos111on of DIRECTOR OF ADMISSIONS are S11111ak111u
place All lnl81"'<1IewsWIii be held In L,
brary 1118 and interested par11es a,e
welcome to allend
Thursday, October 6 - 2. 3 pm
Don Udlock
Monday, October 10 ...- 2 - 3 P m
Arnaldo Rodriguez

The Duck HouM Is a non-profit store
lunded by S&A fees which provides a
ptace tor student crallspeople
to sell
their goods, for students 10 buy handcralted goods, and tor sludents to sell
anct buy used books
TM Ducil HouM needs a new name
to go with its new Image A chOlce ot
five dollars worth ol books FREE IO !he
person whose name is chosen Deadline Oclobef 10

Fall open studio n0urs; • , iro,
Metel Arts Building ,11(
Mon ~ 10
Tue 12 1()

w~

A Mlt-delenH
worhhop
WIii be held
Saturday, October 29 from 10 to I at
the Olympia Community Center. 1314
East Fourth Street Seattle Rape Prevent10n Forum will be ottering
lhIs
workshop, which covers mytns abOut
rape, vert>al assertiveness,
and physical self •defense Call Rape Rellet tor
further inlormat,on at 352-2211
OrNm Seminar - Introductory MeetIng Thursday, October 7, 7 pm
1n
lab 11,Room 2207 led by Edward McOuarrle, adjuncl membef of the taculty
This workshop will emphasize dream
reflecHon O\ler dream analysis, dream
play O\lflr dream work, and the dream
Poet O'l8f the dream censor (Anyone
desiring a subcontractor
In dreams,
symbohsm, or righl hemisphere processes should come to this meeting 01
call Ed al 357-5269 ) Fee $25 00

Several envlron~t•I
groups .n the
Thurston County area wilt be presen1mg an lnlormellonel mNllng about the
organ,zat,ons and their act1v1J1es
All interested persons are mv1ted 10
anend lhe meetmg, which will he on
Wednesday evening. Oclober 12 at
7 30 p m m Room 110 ol the College
Acl1vlt1es Bu1ldmg at The Evergreen
Slate College
Part1c1pat1ng grol.lPS include
the
Black HIiis Audubon
Society.
The
Mountelneerw, the Nlsquelly 0.11 ■ As•
IOCietlon, the Siefrw Club. dM
th(
WHhlnglon Environmental Council
Representa11ves of e,1ch ol these
qroups w,11 give short presentat,om,
aoout theu orga111za1Ions and wtll be
ava11abh;,10 answer queslIons ,1nd pro.
v1de membership mlormat1on tor those
WtShtng lo 1am
Refreshments w1I1 be sen,eo

.Sl4•679Z

115 Eut 5th

352-7527

i:.,

Ttlu• "i 1,,
Fri 10 ·1
Hours IOI tnl' 201 Cen1m1c$ Bulld,nc:

.,.

~•"1
ll,u,
F,,

There will be a Sludenl Forum to
d1<;cus, ;io:1s1t-I.. selec!ion processes
fer the F.1I: 1° ..7 student members of
tt>e G~rd
o,· WedneSday, October
1la·
,nSAB110

1;

11,

S.i1
1 t,(:

t,r!,I

rfl"'f>ll"Q

1"

\I
HJ

M
~

t

11
• l'

, ,.

<#ot-

leehous•. to, every-,,<> ,,,1, r•..,
HII
be Monody, Octot11-•r10 a•.:
CAB Cofleehou'it !fu ,m 1,11 • "·
pose ot this mt.ict,11Q, ,; lo chr,ose -" c.r
ordlnalor ano !•J <1.. velr,11 lt\1!> vPiH ,
CottMhouse program

111 N W•sh1ngLo

94.5-1907

A rep1esental1ve from 1ne Cahlom,,.
College ol Podlalric
Medicine
-..
Franc,scul w,U 00 on campu~ ,,, '1 ,.
wdh interested students
Time
Tues<lav Oc10IJf'1 1 •
1. 3 pm
Contact Ca1c-A1 P!anni,HJ 111, ! f•I
mt'nl I, ,r morP ,nlo ctt
Library 1:>14
IMit, 1 1~ \
GRAPHICS HELP NEEDED
,., t
1I1e Alaska Pcnmsu!a r--,.,,~,
1
!indl rcpon of !h,s 10 ",,nn r , •
"'',"iifth
c1nd plann,m1 ,,,..,1v G•
e•
nc·,r rvl' dnd po1tl1,',
rir,ter ,,.-,,
\Jet,1,1~r•mlaC! J;i,c 11 "-H' Jo'llll,,,nr,,,,~,
Sem1n,1141:?l ,.,, o ....ell ',. to'{
l AB II
3274 A66 616t

special
mies
!or~roups

GETITIN1HE
SOUIHSOUND

DAY PACKS

NEW HOURS
MON· THURS 6 a.m. to
6 a.m. to
FRI
7 a.m. lo
SAT
8 a.m. lo
SUN

LACEY-OLYMPIA-- TLJMWArt:R

9
3
3
2

p.m.
a.m.
a.m.
p.m.

• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••
••
••

,..,


I••
••

.A"J l'I IEF> I· S& I\: E \TS.I RESH BAGEL~

.

:

: Free order or gr1ls and eggs and homemarlP b1scu1ts wilh pur:
: chase or meal of equal or greater value with lh1s ad. this offer!!•
• expir(>s Oct. 31. 1977.


SandwichShop
357-7268
1013 Capitol

Composers
In Concert

IU>'O'}ff>OIIT

OLYMPIA SPORT SHOP

I ORI I·. I I

Evergreen
Performers
And

BoardC@~.1nrJ]:oJJ1J1IIDfiiw

ED STIEGLER'S

"R0 1

FREE
PARKING ON
SATURDAYS

Way

•••

FOUR SIZES
ASSORTED COLORS
719 EAST ~th • OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON

:•••

98501


••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

•••
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1

.

6outh6ounct91ationalc8ank

q

Creating A City Of The Future

fflj§ffl
~

HAVf
YOU
TR
IfOOUR
WH[AlG[RM
lOTION~

by Rohn Finard

1f you haven) you should. super

fatted with wheat germ oil.
makes this a super rich lotion.
which may be scented with any
of our 60 natural perfume esSt>nces.

35 cents per ounce. we charge a
30 cent deposit on bottles, or
you may bring your own.

~

943-2707

~fffl
Ol_y,npia
Tuttrr:_ir
&-~rt Suppl_v.
Inc.
1822.W . .J-lurri.son.,
Olympia ,W,Z\98502
943·5332.

Olympicl<.'i/115

.J\rt Supplus

Wllltls. I.looks

vils.Aoyius

(lu.y

Bn.ufits.
uvwa.

i;,.

Gl.iw

it1ulio

·Wr Delivrr

If we Jon:tFi.ave
i,t; 1-Wwill3ct it.
student

discounts

Oct. 7th - 141h

---0=1
&
FRI tll
9:00 pm.

THURS

Communications
Building
Understaffed,
But Nearly Complete
by Mandy McFarlan
After three years of construction and about five years of
planning, the Communications
Building iS. at last. open to students. I hadn't seen the building
since the days of bulldozers, so I
decided to have a look. Things
have changed. As I walked up •
the path near the REC Center, 1
noticed a landscape man spreading beauty bark around the Communications Building. He looked
dwarfed there, working in front
of 84,000 square feet of building.
The building cost about six and
a half million dollars. It is a very
functional building, according to
Associate Dean of Library Services Dave Carnahan. There 1s
also the option of someday adding a 1,500 - 2.000 seat auditorium.
The building isn't completely
finished yet. About 40 sound
doors that should have arrived a
few days ago aren·t here yet.
Some of the audio wiring needs
to be finished. The Recital Hall
doesn·t have its projection equipment, some equipment hasn't
bttn accepted by the college yet
because there hasn't been time to
see 1f 11 all meets the specifications. and one projection screen
had to be replaced, but it's almost ready. Students are using
the budding while the constructmn continues On my visit, I
heard someone playing the piano
1n harmony with a power drill
The, building contains theaters.
art studios, dance rooms. sophis11cated electronic
equipment
(video, audio, film, lighting),
practice rooms. and more Some
ol the larger rooms are the ExpenmE'ntal Theater, Recital Hall,

Orchestra Recital, and the Chorus
Recital Room. On the second and
third floors there are control
rooms for lighting and audio
controls. The two dimensional
art studios and workrooms have
skylights for natural lighting.
Everyone raves about the Experimental Theater but there are still
ominous signs on its doors saying "Keep out, Construction personnel only." I talked to Facilities Director Bob Strecker, who
leafed through a large book of
Communications Building blueprints to show me the versatility
of the Experimental Theater. The
stage and seating arrangements
can be altered, so that the seating capacity can be 310, 242, or
184.

When faculty member Charles
Teske was a dean, he acted as
the planning coordinator of the
Communications Building project. He wrote a paper on the advisory task force's recommendations on priorities for the use of
the building. These priorities still
apply and planners are still following these recommendations.
Under the heading Assumptions
Charles Teske wrote, in part,
"This is an instructiona.J building
suited for the study and learningthrough-performance
of drama,
music, musical theatre, dance,
audio-visual
communications,
cinematography, and two-dimensional art. Though some advanced, specialized work can be
and should be done in it, the attainment of 'basic literacy' in
the--.e areas through interdisciplinary study by large numbers
of students is to be preferred.
Therefore priority in the equipping and scheduling of spaces 1n
the budding goes to academic
programs and contracts empha-

sizing interdisciplinary study relating the arts to larger concerns.
Unfortunately there are some
problems now with the "instructional building" concePt. There
was some question about opening the building at all this Fall
because of Evergreen's tight operating budget. The Washington
State Legislature funded the construction of the building, but
didn't fund its pro~r staffing.
Associate Dean of Library Services Dave Carnahan says that Library Services had four staff
people in their original budget
request. Instead, there is only
one new staff member, Ralph
Tipton, the electronic
media
maintenance technician. and one
old staff member, Ken Wilhelm
who will be moved into the new
building. The office of Facilities
is going to hire a guard to prevent burglaries by making sure
that anyone in the building after
six is authorized. Tipton will
take care of the equipment, and
Wilhelm. along with some workstudy students, will fulfill requests from faculty (such as controlling the sound for a concert).
Wilhelm is also teaching an audio-recording module using the
building's facilities in the evenings
but the number of students who
can take the module is limited.
For now, only a few students
will have hands-on access to the
equipment. Carnahan says that
Library Services and the academic deans are trying to provide
opportunities for students to use
the equipment,
without
the
proper staff and faculty to do so.
Evergreen will make a special
budget request to the Washington State Legislature next session
to try to get the building fully
staffed

Arcology (architecture
and
ecology) is the term developed
by the architect and philosopher
Paolo Soleri to describe the concept behind his experimental
cities. Arcologies, as Soleri's cities
are called, did not pop up with
most of the other "liberal alternatives" of the 1970s, but instead \
have been an outgrowth of 25
years of research work at Soleri's
Cosanti Foundation in Scottsdale.
Arizopa. The program al the
Foundation was and is engaged
in the betterment of man's condi- •
tion and in the conservation of
nature, inasmuch as they both
depend on the creation of efficient and human cities. The
Foundation is investigating new
urban patterns and the structural
system necessary for their existence. In 1969 Soleri published his
book Arcology: The City in the
Image of Man, which both summarizes his philosophical
and
conceptual perspective and shows
drawings of 30 of the Arcologies
he has designed. The cities in the
book can be inhabited by 2,000
to 6,000,000 people, and are designed for a wide variety of locations and climates around the
earth. Arcosant1, the only city to
date being bu1h, is seen as a
small scale experiment involved
m the testing of tht' underlying
principles and concepts behind
arcology. The complex of structures at Arcosanti, which includes
housing, a drafting arec1. library,
restaurant,
amphitheater,
and
ceramics and foundry studios, attemps to nurture a more harmonious and sensible relation between man, community, technology and the natural environment.
lt has been under way since 1970
through the resources and energy
of a transient international community of students, teachers, artists, etc., now numbering over
3,000 people.
My intere-st in Paolo Soleri developed out of readings, past
work at Evergre-en and my roommate who had spent the last two
summers studying a.t Arcosanti.
In the spring of this wl year, I
decided to study with Paolo SoIm at Arcosanti during the summu and gain fint hand experie~ with the city.

TWO PERCENT FINISHED

wind bells, made at Arce>Hnti
and Cos.anti, and the tuition of
summer students studying a.t the
city. The city could be finished
in four to six years if the Founda.tion had the money. Even with
financial difficulty facing the
Foundation, it is not only surviving but growing larger and larger

in the urban environment.
The compacting of the nat
megalopolis into a multi-layered
human environment gives man, a
creature of culture, the instrumentality to increment his reach.
Education, politics, culture, play,
service, and an untouched countryside are at his fingertips. Dis-

ADDITIONAL OREENHOUSES
RESIDENCES (ALONG BACK FACE)

and Arcosanti each day is becoming more of a reality.
When Arcosanti is finished it
will rise 28 stories high, covering
12 acres (four of which will be
gre-enhouses extenJing down the
south face of the mesa) and house
approximately 5,000 people. All
the resident areas and many of
the working and living areas will
be on the C'luter shell of the city
structure overlooking
the immense desert wilderness that surrounds the city. The building itself is an environmental architect's dream in th.at the design,
without the use of additional en•rgy producing technologies (oil,
coal, nuclear plants), will most
likely be able lo provide the neces&iilry heating and cooling for
lhe cify simply by more fully
utilizing the sun's radiation.

MINIATURIZEO
URBAN ENVIRONMENT
I arrived like a good student
on time and p~red
at Cosanti
Foundation for the June 27 workshop. After being shown around
Cos.anti and having a first meeting with Paolo and Colli (his
wife) Soleri, we traveled 60 miks
north into the heart of the Arizona desert to Cordes Junction,
where Arcosanti is now under
construction. It was late afternoon when we arrived and the
traditional strong, cool summer
breeze was blowing across the
top of the mesa where the city is
being built. As I looked over
mesas I could see the existing
complex of structures and the
possible future city design.
Presently Arcosanti's structure
is two percent finished. The relatively slow progress on the
building of the city is due to the
limited financial base entirely derived from the international sale
of Soleri's ceramic and bronze

car in a. traditional urban area
ever could. Quick and easy delivery of water, power, information, health services, etc., and
the retrieval of waste, garbage,
storm water, heat, etc., all become feasible on an urban scale.
But does all this make the city
more desirable?

Arcologies, as you c.an tell
from the description and drawing
of Arcosanti, are miniaturized
urban environments. They can
house modem city populations
on three to four per~nt of the
lanG, leaving the rest to remain
as wildemns. U we reflect on
the sprawling, f'SSentially flat cities and suburbs that are covering
the surface of the earth, we start
to feel the desirability of the interiorization and miniaturization
of human environments. The car
and the one-sixth of our country's resources thal surround the
car (parking lots, highways,
roads, gasoline stations. etc.,
etc.) no longer need to cover the
landscape. Transportation in Arcosanti can be done with a five
minute walk from one side of the
city to the other. Arcosanti oHers
greater mobility and accessibility
lo all parts of the citv than the

If, for the sake of understanding. we divide the activities of
man into two categories, the
serv1ce-mainlenance and the productive-leisure kind, we can say
the first kind tends to be the less
desirable kind, the kind which
entails toil or drudgery and unpleasantness. Any organizational
and structural device which will
cut int"' ti•1· 1-ir:...and operational
side will by definition render
man more human. If a city finds
a way to cut into the bulk of its
services, including the bureaucratic machinery governing it, to,
let', say, 25 percent, then it is a
better place to live.
So Arcologies cut into the
maintenance service side of activities of man and free up productive-leisure time. But the true
task of any society is not to provide a technological structure for
survival, but to go beyond survival, into the human, giving
meaning and direction to the
productive-leisure side of existenc-e. In order to att~pt
to do
this one must pursue an understanding of human nature. It is
Soleri's a56umption th.it man is a
collective phenomenon, in that
his identity is to be only found
in the context of society and history. Without society man would
have disappeared eons ago. Without history society would be a
fossil case. That is to say that
man is essentially a cooperative
and cultural animal. Cooperation
is a virtue of necessity. The urban
environment is seen as the center
of collectivity, where society and
culture are m the process of giving birth to an increasing identity
and personality for humanity. If
man is to be in the stream of
growth-life, it seems he must
move away from the isolationism
of suburbia, and toward the centralization of culture and society

tance is a hindrance to human
vitality. Let's take some specifics.
PERSONALIZED
AND ACCESSIBLE
Education, like most elements
of society in Arcosanti. can be to
a great degree deinstitutionalized
and pt>rsonalized. A child, early
in life, can be exposed to first
hand experience (as opposed to
TV and film) to the complex nature of society and culture, without having to wait till he I she is
in college to take ••101 Introduction to Music Theory." How
many potential musicians never
realized their talent because of
never having the chance to listen
to the intense beauty of a live
symphony first hand. Beuus, all
aspects of society and culture are
easily accessible, ''environmenta.1
e-xperien~" can become a common means of education in Arcosanti, offering a balan~ to the
often abstract, rational, information of the classroom.
As .ill of Arcosanti can be considered a learning organism, so
in the true sense ArcOSilnti can
be considered a total medical
care system. Home nursing becomes possible. Nurses and doctors can move from home to
home, as from ward to ward. lnfinnaries, clinics, and hospitals
are always at walking distance,
leaving no pockets of indifference
that might be ignored. As with
education, we agam can see the
personalization of an element of
society m an arcology.
A TOOL FOR EVOLUTION

To be a social thinker in our
modern society means almost to
be a social outcast. Our ethical
and moral responsibilities in directing our life usually come once
a year, when we go to the ballot
box and make a decision between

the Republican or Democratic
party. As much as we ask the
isolated individual in suburbia to
take some political responsibilities, he/ she never Sttms to listen. Political activity in Arcosanti is a natural outgrowth of
the technological and socia.1structure. If there is a riot on the
twentieth rloor there is no way
of retreating into the quiet complacency of the home TV and
beer. With individual responsibility and extreme mobility in
ArcOSilnti come the possibility of
the decentralization of decisionmaking. Political power may not
have to remain under the auspices of a select few.
Soleri's cities are not seen as
Skinnerian boxes in search of social management. It would be
silly and destructive for Soleri to
prete,nd to dictate how a society
should fashion itself Arcology l!i
seen as a tool where evolution
(man) can further realize 1tselt
Thl' creation ol all that I havl'
d1,;<.usseddepends on having an
aesthelically compassionate environment where faith m the col
ll'ct1v1za1111n
ol man can permeatt'
all ot sonl'ty Solen I thmk. 1,
aWJrE'of the, tendenne<; of peoplt•
at lime'> whl'n colll'ct1v111ng. IP
t<1rm m-.tead ot a comp.as,1onate
tnmmun1ty, c1 totalitarian stall'
devoid of human JOY, diversity
and soul I have briefly outlmed
s<1me of the ways m which Ar
cos.anti·s structure, works agam,.t
these tendencies and wward the
personalization of society Hopefully thf' development m Arcosanl! of the best of history's tribalism, twentieth century's md1v1dual 1sm. and the unknown
combmallon of both, will be evidence of this.
NOT UTOPIAN
It 1s easy and often negligent,
lo term anything radical as utopian. ln lo0king at Arcosanti we
shl111ldbe careful not to fall victim rn lazy analysis. "The flat
cities and suburbs that are eating
up the surface of the earth are
'utopian' in the negative sense
that they a.re absurd and unworkable," asserts Paolo Solen.
As our present suburbs and cities
grow we become more and more
aware of the inequities
they
spread. The medium (technology)
grows while the message (society) becomes ever increasingly
smaller. The opposite is true in
ucologies.
Margaret Mea.d, a
well known
anthropologist.
Sttms to express this view when
she says: " . . but if you say
you're going to be free now from
the terrific burden of the search
of m.iterial things, th.1t we can
begin to build cities where pN>ple
can again stop this separating
people up in their artificial liltlf'
boxes. all built for the families
with minor children - where
there's no place for the unmarried
and no place for the adolescents
and no place for the poor - and
begin to build communities agam
where people can have .a 1oy in
each other. All these things are
cht"ap. They don t pollute they
don t put an undue burden on
human resources
We need .a
total reorganization ol society."
The last word 1s Solen·s
··in the 1hret>-dimens1onal city
man defines a human ecology In
II he is a country dweller and a
metropolitan man m one He has
made the city m his own image."
Arcology. The city in the image
of man.

ALL WArs TIIAtfCL Ulltllt:C.

HerdtheGnus1
• Olympian Hotel Bldg. • 943-9242)
WaaTalD&

OLYMPIA.

...

o,.~,

...

C&NT&•

WASHINGTON

l#t:.'

11

The Sixties Are Gone But The Dead Lives On

by Jnhn Kec1gh
Tht• veJr h.ippem
to be 1977
.ind the pl,tee Seattle,
but the
, r\•wd outside
the Par.im0unt
\JlHthwest Theatrl' tonight Is part
,,t J 11melt..., ... hl1undlec;s phenom1•n,,n
It 1-. a Gr.itetul
DeJd
, r1'h,J

Tlw-.e
r.,tl

pec,ple

with

their

htd blue 1eans, long hair and

111• m.i\...eur
lol"k the same J'(,:-,11etul DeaJ tan<. anywhere
fhl'\ n· lnlt'rr...han~e..1ble
You
,•uld p1cl.. th1-. nowd
up l'n
,,,,..,,. ta\...t• 1t thn,u~h
11mt• .1nd
.p.hC' h'
-.Jv (1nunna11
c1rc.1
,.rJ
.ind "t'l 11 \.l1•h'n
1n tronl ot
,,· , dw.:itre th.11 pl.inned ll' Je,1t .r,· tflt'1r l,i,,,nt,·
h.1nJ w11hm
' l
nt•,I \\ t·t•k

, '• ,\,.. t \\ Ill'

: ht'\ -.1.111J 1n .i r.J~>!l'd \mt'
,,u1 ,1n,J tivt.> .ilirt•c1.-.t
doin),!;
i,,11 l,rJ!t•lul
IJt>aJ t.rn-. evnv,, !•t•rt· h~.i, t· ,1lw,n•-. dl1ne 1\,1,inv
.,r tihm
ha,·e ht"en J('tnK iu,;t
th,11 ll•r "t'\t'r.1I
h11ur-. nPw
-.'.mllm,k! In l.1w Jnd t'nce the
,, 1 1•r, ,1p1:n tht'\
II u,ntinue
to d,1
·n-.1de
i'" d1~ht laLJe., anJ lht' city s
~ht-. ~t' ('" The line inches tLH1,.ir\l ('Hn the>u~h tht' doors are
-.1111<:ll,,eJ
Weight
is shifted
tr11rn ll'lt t.,l,t to nght and hands
rt~,1Lh into pc,c\...ets to mak.e sure
th.it 1ht• TIC"'-ETS are still there
.;trret musIc-ians play their wares,
In-.1rument lases open but are by
n,, me,rn~ overflowing
with the
t•v1drncE' ol charity. These people
havE'n t got the time of day for
,;tret>t musicians. tonight. frankly.
They c.:1me hert> to see The Dead.
.'\1,on wa, sent to limbo. South
\'ietnam tell ll1 tht' Communists.
The pnte ol ~asoline tnplt>d and
1,ht'rt' have y0u gone. Joe Di·
ma~ll' i' But the Grateful
Dead
-.1dl rercolatE'
G.:1rna walks onstage, finally,
llt,uJ., ol !:>moke billowing
out
.iu•und has head The hair and
beard are streaked
with
gray

mw.': Phil Lesh s bass rests on a
pol belly: 806 Weir still looks

repertoire. They can throw a few

boyish,
but somehow
that has
nt"vt>r seemt>d remarkable
before.
Thesf guy,; are no spring chickt:n-. Thl'Y t,1k.t> their time tuning
up cJsually ad1usting dials, milkmg the fans anticipation.
Weir
p\Jys a couple chords that make
e-.:,•rvl,ne
wonder
what
song
tht'V re ~,img to start with. Then,
.1-. it thev .ue playing
to a group
\•I l h1-.e tnends
in somebody'!_;
ltnn~ rnnm. thev slip into "Mis.,i.,sIppi Hall-Step...
Dt>-.pite evt>rylhtng
backing
tht•m up
more n1ncert expt>rienlt' than probJbly
any other
r\1lk. b.1nJ and a cu-.tom-built
..,,und -.v.,tem that',; one of the
nw-.t elalioral"'
in the world
_
l!w qualitv ul the Dead's perf,,rmance ,;till rests on human tn·
t.1nKihles Jerrv Garcia's
guitarplJvmg ,.. the most important
of
thC''-l' element~. It 1, Garcias gui!Jr thdt lead-. the band. either
Jt•ltlv or dum~ily.
from the begmninK verse., of a number
into.
and through the inevitable
Jam,
and back to Earth for the finish.
II hes having an off night these
transItwns can sound like a mus1cal first date. but when he's
hot well. 11-. ~ort of lak.e listen•
mg to the foreplay of the Gods.
And tonight ht> is hot
They
approach
the end of
'Half-Step,"
toning down
their
instruments
verse-by-verse
until
the audience has to sit quietly to
hear them. It sounds as though
thev're about to fade out completely and release the applause
that swells al tht>ir fans' seams,
when suddenly
they're
singing
again, a number
this time for
which they've already played the
introduction:
..Across
the Rio
Grande •
One of the Dead's
greatest
strengths Is this ability
to move
with finesse into, out of, and betwttn the different songs in their

Inlo the middle of "Johnny
8.
Goode,"
or tailor
the end of
..Truckin'"
to serve as a beginnmg for "U.S. Blues." As well as
attesting
to their
talents,
this
flexibility
also points out a major
weakness of the Dead; much of
their material is boringly
similar.
While each of their numbers has
a distinct beginning and end (all
you really hear on their studio
albums). the protracted
length of
,;ongs m their concert
format
gives way to a homogenized sort
ot filler-jam
that commands
far
too much of their live playingtime.
No one here tc,night, however,
u1mplains too loudly. The Dead
.irl' masters al the stuff of orches!rating their fans· reactions. Just
when things have been soft and
slow for a while, when everyone's sitting
down
and their
backs are starting
to hurt, the
music will turn fast and loud and
the audience will be dancing. The
rapport
Is fantastic.
The Dead'
are able to exchange energy with
their
fans rather
than
merely
project 1t to them, and if things
are going nght the result is a

~

minutes'

worth

of

"Dark

Star"

_!L~------,-1

HOMESEEKERS
I

Bob D1ckh,on
Zip Andrrson

Srrnodlnr Trone\
Clolr Pierce

-th

357- o430L=====~

and also offered
some related
ideas, such as the light summer
employment
market, and the fact
lhal a large percentage of the
Evergreen ,;tudent body tend to
he financially independent.
Whn ,ets these enrollment
l(Oals .:1nd why is it important
to

Horry

4S6 1JS9
9d 0836
943-0819

Lockho'1

it

now:

"Never

learn,

never

meet them

1 It

all boils

down

to

matters of money and b-u-d-g-e-t.
Enrollment projections are a collaborative
effort of the college
and the State Office of Financial
Management,
based on past enrollment figures at Evergreen and
other state colleges and universiti~, and on things like population growth
and a myriad
of
other vital statistics. Where the
money comes in is each year
Evergreen presents the legislature
with a budget figure (how much
money will be needed to run the
school for a whole year), and
another tentative figure for how
much money the school plans to
generate on its own (of which
tuition is a part). The legislature
then sees about making up the
difference.
Of course it's much
more complicated
than that, but
you should get the general drift.
If Evergreen fails to supply its
\hare of the money everybody
ts
faced with budget cuts.
That 1,; only one of the prob-

tween" terminal
tedium and sublime subtlety
(I won't
mention
which side l walk on). but the
Dead have got it on this one and
it's wonderful.
rm not even annoyed by tht> prt>sence of string
and horn s~ct 1ons as arranged by
Paul
Bud.master.

I can remembN thinking, when
Blues for Allah came out. that
the Dead had put out their first
listenable album in a long time
and that there might be some
hope for the future. Soon afterwards, they released yet another
live album. entitled Pull My Face
or Stu.I Your Face or something
like that. and it was abominable.
So much for false ho~.
Now
comes Terrapin
Station, and I'm
confused again. The Dead are
difficult
to figure out. I have
never been able to understand
why they have defined such a
narrow range for their music (everyone knows the Dead "sound").
I still have not come to any conclusions. on a personal level, as
to whether their entire effort has
been worth it or not. They have,
in their lifetime.
relea~
veritably tons of music. Their percentage of weak efforts to successe-s
1s the highest of any m.ajor band
that I can think of. ls it worth it
lo wade through
the brine
in
order to discover the few precious
pickles? I can't help you with
that one. Ask me after the release of a few more Terrapin Stations and I may have an answer
for you.

e

lems created by underenrollmenl.

Nobody

I talked

with

('and I

talked with quite a few) cared to
speculate about how the legislature might react if Evergreen continues to fall short of the mark.
But far from being discouraged.
Enrollment Services and the Registrar's Office are already taking
steps to find out "what
went
wrong" and correct it if they can.
They would
also like to find
ways of making up for the loss
by incrtasing
part-time
enrollment and diminishing
the usual
full-time
drop rate over Winter
and Spring
As Larry Stenberg
put it. "We may have lost the
seventh round
(this being our
seventh class), but we certainly
haven't been beaten. I think it's
healthy that we have an unpredictable legislature;
it helps kttp
us on our toes."
Note:
Walker
Allen Is interested in hearing
any student,;
ideas about the enrollment
situation. Contact him 10 the Reg1slrar's Office

FILM
ON CAMPUS
Friday. October 7
BEAUTY AND THE BEAST (La
Belle et La Bete) (1946. 90 min l O!rected by French poel and writer
Jean Cocteau, this adaptation of
the well known fairy tale Is one ol
Coc!eau·s al1empls al creating !he
visual equivalent of the poetic 011•
penance Also LEISURE, an Oscarwinning shon by Bruce Pelty LH
One, 3. 7 and 9.30 p.m, 75 cents
Monday. October 10 and Tuesday, October 11
TESTIMONY The story of a 13
year fight lo unionize the J P Slev•
ens te11t1lecompany J P Stevens
Is notorious lor abusing Its wont8fa.
thousands ot whom have been dis•
abled by brown lung. The company
has been found gultly of v1olatlng
lhe National Labor Relations Act 15
limes since 1963 Also ARTHA
ADAIR, regional coordinator lor the
ACTWU wlll discuss suppon actlv1tIes ln the Nor1hwesl Spoosored
by EPIC Free LH One, 7:30 pm
Monday and noon Tuesday
Wednesday. October 12
BONNIE ANO Cl YDE Two minor
desperltdos of the thlr1Ies In a big
11me movie of the si11tles Directed
by Ar1hur Penn and starring Warren
Beally and Faye Dunaway, 1 :30 and
7 30 pm .. LH One. Free
IN OLYMPIA
STAR WARS has been at the
State Theater forever, and will prob•
ably remain there !or al leut as
long $ef> It 20 or 30 times and
you·u be a hit al parties - 357-4010.
SMOKEY ANO THE 8ANOfT stat•
ring Bu,1 Reynolds and Jackie
Gleason A movie about happy CB·
ers 11's going to be at the Olympic
Theater tor a couole of weeks. Isn't
Olympia amazlno? Also MY NAME
IS NOBODY - 357·~22
THE SPY WHO LOVED ME is lhe
last Ian Fleming book to be made
into a movie. This could be the last
James Bond movie, bul somehow I
doubt ii The book was lnleresllng
because II was Flemlng writing In
the first pet'son as a woman It was
also bad for that reason. The Wm
ls probably bad tor numerous other
reasons Capitol Theater. 357-7161
THE APPLE WAR at the Cinema
through October 7
THE RULING CLASS at the Cln•
ema through October 11
BETWEEN THE LINES at the Cinema lhrough Oclober 18
IN SEATTLE
GAY USA is being shown as a
benelil for the gay community with
the proceeds going to the Washington Coalition tor Se11ual Minority
Rights, Seattle Muntclpal Elections
Commlllee lor Gays, and the Union
ol Se11ualMinorities 11 Is a lull
1ength documenlary ol this year"s
Gay Pr.de Marches Saturday. October 8 al the Moore Egyptian Theater Doors open at 11 30 p m For
more intorma11oncall 329-9387
DOUBLE INDEMNITY (194~) Otrecled by Billy Wilder (SUNSET

BOULEVARD, LOST WEEKEND) An
insurance salesman murd8f'S his
lover's husband so that they can
collect on his lite insurance policy
A ·•per1ect crime·· lllm scripted by
Raymond Chandler, It Is hlghly regarded lor Its handling of suspense
Fred MacMurray as the salesman.
Barbara Stanwyck as the wife, and
Edward G Robinson as the insurance company investigator October
6 • 9 al the Rose Bud Movie Palace
on Pion.ar Square, 682-1887.
CRIA A movie that people keep
on telling me to see. I haven't seen
11 yot so I don·1 know what It's
about Maybe you shOuld go see It
and hnd out Dlrecleel by Carlos
Saura, with Geraldine Chaplin and
Ann Torrent MOOfe Egyptian Theater, 622-9352.

MUSIC
IN OLYMPIA
THE FAMILY BATHTUB Puppet
people (?) from Seattle presented
by !he Evergreen Center lor Utera•
lure In Performance Oown1own at
the Gnu Dell. on Capllal Way towards Sea-Mart Thursday, October
6. 9 p.m Admission Is $1.00
JUDY COHEN and JERRY MICH·
ELSON wlll play classical piano at
the Gnu Deli on October 6 and 7
The doors open at 8. and the music
Slat1S at 9. One dollar
ELSEWHERE
MICK MC CARTNEY and JAMIE
HOLLAND Friday, October JO at
The Other Side ol the Tracks, 106
W. Main, Auburn. 633-9927
DALE SCHMIDT, MIKE BALL.
and GLENN HARRELL October 8 at
The Other Side of the Tracks
BLUEGRA$S FESTIVAL A benelll
concert to help finance improve•
lnftnts ol the Darrington Community
Cenler's acousllcs and sound gear
There will be two lhree hour shows
at 2 and 7 p.m Bands include
THE TENNESSEANS, WHISKEY
RIDGE, THE COMBINATIONS, and
THE WHITEHORSE MOUNTAINEERS AdmtS!jlon is $2.00. At the
Darrington ( Et51ern Snohomish
County) Community Center, Octo•
- JIM
8 PAGE at Pacific Lutheran
University In Tacoma. Saturday,
October 8. LE 1-6900.
BLUEGRASS SPECIAL from the
Twin Cities (Centralla and Chehalis)
wl1I be playlna al lhe Evergreen
Playhouse, 226 W. Center Street.
Centralia on October 8 at 8 p m
DOC WATSON and WILLIS ALLEN RAMSEY will be playlng at the
Paramount In Seattle on October 8
OOOIIIE BROTHERS and PABLO
C~ UISE at the Coliseum tn Seattle
Oclober 9
RAMBLIN JACK ELLIOT at lhe
Rainbow Tavern In Sealtle October
10 and 11
DANCE
IN OLYMPIA
Applejam ,s sponsormg a YUGO-

SLAVIAN FOLKDANCE FESTIVAL.
October 7 and 8 at the Olympia
Commun1ly Center, 1314 E -4!h
Ave Events include a him, FOLK·
LORE DANCES OF YUGOSLAVIA.
Balkan snacks, and hne dances on
Friday night Th8fe will be dance
workshops. slides. a Yugoslavian
dinner. and a festlval party on Sal·
urday Admission prices tor the
events vary. For further inlormat1on
call Linda Hams. Pro1ect Direc1or.
al 943-9603
FOLKDANCING takes place every
Tuesday night al the Olympia Com•
munity Center from 7 to 10 p.m.
and Sunday nights on the second
lloorol theCABfrom7 301011 30.
IN SEATTLE
THE Bill EVANS DANCE COMPANY wlll perform on October 11 at
8 p m. In Meany Hall (on the uw
campus) Call 322-3733 tor more in•
formation.

ART
ON CAMPUS
Painllngs by WILLIAM CUSSON
and SUSAN CHRISTIAN are currently on display In lhe l1b<ary Gallery Christian's paintings are acry1•
ICS on paper and are lllled
WEASELS. Cubbons calls his sertes ot
watercolor paintings RELAYERS
The exhibit wlll be up un!U Octooe, ,.
IN SEATTLE
ART IN TRANSIT Is the result of
a cooperative effort between Melro
Transit and lhe and I or gallery The
gallery Invited over 100 art Isis to
produce orlglnal works on recycled
Interior bus signs, and wound up
with a portable collection of pholo•
graphs, graphics, drawings, poetry.
fabric constructions and collages
The won<s are currently touring the
city on tour Metro coaches that
contain no advertising. These won<s
will be on 1he following buses until
the 14th of October;
Bus 1647, Routes 1, 2, and 13,
Oueene Anne • Madroma
Bua #548. Route 15, Wes! Sealtle
Bus 1254. Roule 33. Fort LawIon/ Discovery Park, Roule 37. Alkl
Bus #732. Roule 7, 15th NE/
lake City

MISCELLANEOUS
YOGI FATHER SATCHAKRANANOA, an ordained Eastern Calho•
lie Pries! (Syrian Church of AnHOCh)
and spiritually
Initiated yogi Is
coming 10 Evergreen to show the
movie A LIBERATING CHAKRA and
talk on yoga Yes friends, the editor
of letters to Satchakrananda will
be m LH Two on October 8 at

66o 110.0
90

LOUIS

Mon - Fr
11.30-1100

ffBDIE

sa,

4:00 - 12 00
:::,un
3:00-11
00

VEGETARIANDISHES
COCKTAILS &
EXOTIC DRINKS
LUNCHEON BUFFET

THUR

&fRITHE APPLE WAR
a contemporary

plus short:

fairy

tale

ban apple gas by cat Stevens

SATTU[S
THE RULLING CLASS
out-rs-geous
- "Oagrant in charactl'r;
heed
less of authority_
or modesty,
shocking
in
conduct;
exceeding
bounds:
immodC'rate:
enormous: extravagant.'"
- noah webstcr
'"an outragC'ous
starring

pNer

film'·
o'toolf'

-

Judith

cri-H

and alastair

sIm

*************************************************************

*************************************************************

']4>,I

Open

'nm

BECOMEA COLLEGECAMPUSDEALER
Sell Brand Name Stereo ComponentB at lowest
prices.
High profits;
NO INVESTMENTREQUIRED.
For details,
contact,
FAD Components, Inc.
65 Passaic Ave., P.O. Box 689, Fairfield,
New Jersey 07006
Ilene Orlowsky
201-227-6884

400(0

491 Jl90

JOfln Worc,en

Doris!,!

JS7l'IM

)51

Olive, Brollv

MANEARIN

The Enrollment Pict

Larry Stenberg concurred that
lag-time
on the tuition
increase
could be a conlributinl(_
factor

ll----'2-

•11 (...,tel
w.,
t-,..,,.4.
w ......... , C.H

learn ... "
It probably does not help my
fading reputation
to me-ntion that
although
Europe 72 has been
long-exiled
from my collection.
it has recently been replaced by
i\ copy of the newest Grateful
Dead record, Terrapin
Station.
Don't ask me why or how these
things happen. I don't know. myself. What I do know is that Terrapin Station has cau~
me to
reevaluate my feelings about the
Dead. I can't write the vicious,
scathing piece of yellow journalism I set out to write because
now I have heard the Dead in all
their glory.I'm
talking about side
two of the new one. the 16-minute title suite (side one is sleep
city). There is such low-key,
restrained energy here that I can't
help but be captured bv it. Too,
too often the Dead walk
the
wronR. side of the thin line be-

doubled

1

DIAL THE HOME TtAM 943-6550

ahead, trouble behind7), but then
it just may be that I'm not attuned to the proper wavelength.
energy level, or aura
I had decided, before I began
this process of putting words on
paper, that I was going to state
that the Dead have become an
American institution.
having imbedded themselves in the hearts
and minds of millions of Americans over the course of the last
ten years. Then I intended to say
that like most American
institutions, the Dead have grown tired
and pointless and old and in the
way and that they should
be
abolished before it gets too late.
I mean, my god .
they have
inflicted
upon us some of the
most boring.
monotonal.
simplistic music ever, which is both
a sin and a crime. The Dead havt'
bombarded
us with a barrage of
live recordinR.S of off nights (672

rmJrrore
rcrm
experts

Call the professionals at
for all your real estate needs

albums al last count), the likes of
which have not been seen since
the dark ages (1956 - 60). I can
only shake my head in amazement at the range and breadth to
which the American
public has
been duped. I myself, a certifie-d
member of the cultural vanguard.
purchased unknowingly
the famous three-record
live set, Euro~
'72, when it was first released. I am still
considering
methods of revenge. I eve,n once
sported an official Grateful Dead
T-shirt
which
I subsequently
traded away for a Yes 1974 North
American Tour shirt. I can hear

enrollment,"
he said, "is that we
just haven't had enough experience with a part-time
program."
The part-time studies option was
only added in 1974. In an attempt
to explain the underenrollment,
Allen mentione-d the tuition hike
as a possible factor. Full-time
instate tuitnrn went from $169 to
$197 per quartl'r and part-time
from $80 to $118. Out-of-state
tu1t1on tor tull•t1mc
took
an
ama11n~ Iump 0°f $208 a quarter
over wh.it 11 was last year, and
part-time
for out-of-state
almost

and EventsA1ri~ fIDITD.@
JEw@ITD.i~Arts

Olympia Real Estate

by George Romansic
Aargh.
What can you write
about the Grateful
Dead? Better
still, what can I write about the
Grateful, Dead? I am not a Deadhead. you should be alerted to
that from the start. If I were I
could probably
run on (or off)
for countless pages on Jerry Garcia's godliness (or buddhahood.
choose one), the Dead as the
voice of our generation
and of
generations to come, or the Dead
as mystical
communicators
of
ancient secrets, which they may
well be. I don't know they
don't seem to communicate
any
ancient
secrets to me {trouble

-C_o_n-1,n-u-ed_f_ro_m_p_a,-.,
-I -

_:'.'.=:====~:....________

they come back out. These people would be here until they petrified if they didn't get an encore.
Hands applaud, feet stomp, and
the fans chant,
"Dead.
Dead,
Dead ... " Anywhere
else this
would be considered morbid, but
in the Paramount
Theatre,
tonight, it's the livest thing you
could ever want to hear.

Between Terminal Tedium
And Sublime Subtlety

0

)L;..::::C='.'._ _

self-fueling
tempest
of excitement.
But finally,
the music stops .
After four hours and only one
intermission
the Dead are getting
ready to quit. They'll lay down
their instruments
and walk offstage, and if they have any sanity left in them at all they'll sit
down for a few minutes before

4th Slat Pacific &Martin Way·943-5914

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