The Cooper Point Journal Volume 6, Issue 9 (January 12, 1978)

Item

Identifier
cpj0168
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 6, Issue 9 (January 12, 1978)
Date
12 January 1978
extracted text
12

Volume 6 Number 9

The Evergreen State College

Olympia, Washington 98505

DTF To Study Theft

By Mandy McFulan
Campus thefts may cost Evergreeners the relatively frtt access
to the college's facilities which
they now enjoy .McDonald (Mac)
Smith, Chief of Campus SeClir•
ity, in his "Report on Institutional and Personal Losses Re-su.Jting From Larceny and Vandalism'' indicated a total loss of
$46,212 for the 1971,.77 fiscal
year.
Smith listed, in his report, the
items stolen during that year,
including bicycles, food stamps,
a hair dryer, a piano, a canoe, a
stop sign, art, a chainsaw, video
equipment, trees, cash, microscopes, scales, and typev.;riters.
Items that were vandalized
include phones, walls, vehicles,
furniture. vending machines and
shrubs.
According to Smith, all Evergreeners are guilty because "they
are nice, and they might even
help people load up the stolen
property! Many thefts occur because Evergreenen are a nice,
but cattless, group who trust

You won't find a flashy neon sign over our door but. . .
Right now, beginning Winter Quarter, there are
a limited number of vacancies available in
all types of Campus Housing Units. It's just the right
time to move into a warm, comfortable abode
and forget about commuting in the pouring rain
and slippery snow. With such conveniences as
central laundry facilities and community kitchens,
there's no need to venture out in those
chilling winter storms. And if you find yourself
in need of a bit of the ol' summertime warmth, the
college's Olympic size pool and saunas are
just a short walk away.
To take advantage of these vacancies, drop in
at The Housing Office in room 220 of Building A
or call us at 866-6132.
....

~ CAMPUS HOUSING

Come Live At Our Place.

everybody. AJk peoplf what
they'~ doing or report suspicious activity."
The college has no· specific
fund set aside for replacement of
stolen items. When a student's
car is stolen from one of the
lots, it is tot.ally the student's
loss, and when institutional
equipment is taken, there is no
guarantee of replacement. Central Services Supervisor,
Jim
Duncan, explains that in order to
replace an item stolen from the
institution. one must first seek
funds from the college's operat•
ing budget. If there is no money
available for the specific item in
that budget, the second source is
the President's or Vice President's institutional reserves. H
there is no money in those
reserves, the funds must be
specially requested from the
state.
DTFTOMEET
With the Eve,w<en Council's
approv~,
Administrative
Vice
Preident Dean Clabaugh chars·
ed a DTP to advise administrators on the lan:my and .vandal•

ism problem. ln a letter to the
Council, Clabaugh wrote ". . .
·'Evergreen wants to provide
maximum acces.s to facilities and
equipment for its students, but
the policy for easy access has in

Faculty Recruitment
In P_rogress
r::nr:-~,-~~..,...,.~""'""

opinfons will be considered by
the DTF during candidate reviewaJ. Anyone desinng access
to the files shouJd contact Eileen
Humphrey or Rhoby Cook.
Will Humphreys is handling
all questions pertaining to disciplinary emphasis personally in
order to avoid slowing down the
scrttning process. Present disciplinary priorities were determind according to recommendaions of the Deans'. Group and
ast year's FacuJty Personnel
DTF, and the demands of
Evergreen's 197S-79 curriculum.
ccording to Humphreys the
TF is "going to do the best job
e (it) can on getting women
d minority candidates." but,
~ points out that the current
J,igh demand for qualified mjnority teachers puts Evergreen at
ia disadvantage in competing for
!them because of its fixed pay
scale.
Candidates judged to be par·
ticularly attractive by the DTF
will be invited to Evergreen for
on~mpus interviews. Typically.
an app~icant will spend about
one-half of his/her time here in
scheduled appointments,
with
the other half free for unsupervised exploration.
Visitins candidates will meet
with DTF members,
faculty
members in their academic
speciality areas, at least one or
two deans, and with the college's
President or Vice President when
possible. They will also have the
option of appearing at open
interviews during which they
will make some presentation and
field questions from Evergreen
community members. As oncampus interviews may be conducted on relatively short notice,
anyone wishing to insu~ that
he/she will be aware of them
should contact Humphreys and
ask to be listed for notification
by phone.
Once the choice of applicants
has been sufficiently narrowed
the DTF will make recommendations to Humphreys based on
their interviews and application
files. Candidates 1"9iMSt
then be
approved by HurlYphreys and
subsequently Vice President and
Provost Edward K o r m o n d y
President Dan Evans, and the
Board of Truslees.

f:

By John Koogh
Academic
Dean
Will
Humphreys
has instituted
a
faculty recruitment drive 10licit•
ing applications
for approximately six permanfflt teaching
positions a.t Evergreen, and has
charxed a DTF of nine faculty
member,, headed by Don Jordon
to scrttn candidates.
The positions will become
availt1ble at the start of academic
year 1973-79 bocause a lUJ!erthan usual percentage of this
year's •acuity is on visiting
status, and beause one or
possibly two present permanent
faculty memben are tt1igning.
Humphreys says the large num•
her (about 1S percent) of visiting
faculty is attributable
to the
Legislature's late decision on
Evergreen's budget last year:
since "a national search was
unfeasible," most of last year's
hiring was done on a temporary
basis.
Candidates specializing in organic chemistry, geology. psychology and computer science
will be granted particular consideration in the hiring process.
Other priority disciplines include
humanities, plant/soil science,
modern language (French and
Spanish), two- and thrtt-dimentional art, and video/film. Becau5e of budget limitations
younger applicants who will fall
on 1he low end of Evergreen's

experi~based
pay scale will
probably be chosen to fill most
ot the openings.
Humphreys has advertised the
"t'ons in Th.- Ommlde of
er Education, The National
atlve Action Reahtu, and
Equal Opportunity N«ws, and
mailed notices to approximately
250 academic institutions.
He
and Assistant Academic Dean
Rob Knapp made trips out of
state during Decm,berattempting
to locate potential candidates. In
addition, present Evergreen fa•
culty members have been asked
to refer the names of qualified
people they think might be
interested.
Althouah Evergreen's Faculty
Handboolt stipulates that Faculty
Personnel DTFs should be staffed
primarily with members of the
college's existing f a c u I t y ,
Humphreys says it's possible that
a student could be chosen to join
the group. In previous years
institutional
and work study
funds have been available to
compens.ate students for the long
hours involved in such service,
but this year they aren't. Any
student interested in becoming a
voluntary member of the DTF
should contact Humphreys at his
office, LIB 2219.
Applicants files will also be
availiible for student inspection
and comment;
all attached

January 11, 1978

Problem

tum led to ail exceptionally and
untenably high level of theft of
college-owned equipment.'' The
DTF, which will be headed by
McDonald
Smith, will meet
initially on January 12, at 9: 30
a.m. in the Facilities Conference
Room in LAB 11-1254.
Smith says that he does not
want extensive lock-ups for
Evergreen. One of his alternate
su estions is alread
workin

on a small scale in the Seminar
Building. Under this plan, faculty members leave a list of
students with Security. Only
these people are authorized to
enter the buiJding after hours
One of the students is responsible for returning the key to
Security and for making sure
that only authorized people are
in the building.
Smith feels that a system like
this could work for all of the
buildings except for the Communications Building, because of
the amount of expensive equipment it con1ains. But 1he COM
building is already protected
under another plan (a full time
security guard) and so far.
nothing has been lost from it
The biggest loser from rip-offs ,s
usually the library, including
Media Loan. This is a partic;·ilarly difficult area to patrol at
night. Smith says that security
measures at Evergreen have
already tightened up a great
-ieal. 'We used to let people into
he buildings on their own word.
'.:,ut now it is necessary to have
people go and get faculty
approval. Ideally we couJd just
leave the buildings open, but we
:an'r do it;_:
___..,
.._ontinuru on pap 5

Dean Search
Narrowed

Provost Edward Kormondy
and a ten member consultative
group, after conducting a national search for a new Academic Dean, have narrowed the
search down to three choices.
Present Academic Dean Willie
Parson's term expires this summer after four years. Parson
plans to return to the faculty.
The person who holds this
deanship is responsible for planning and managing academic
budgets, space, facilities and
personnel, and shares the responsibility with a co-equal dean
on faculty appointment, retention, and curriculum.
The search for candidates was
extensive and descriptions of the
job were published
in The
Chronicle of HJgher Education,
The Higher Education Referral
System, The Affirmative Action
Register, Bulletin of The Nation•
'al Association
for Women
Deans, and Adminlst.rators and
Counselors. Kormondy decided
on the national search "to assure
ourselves of having such a pool
of applicants (strong people)
from which a selection is made,
and to give maximum assurance
of a strong group of women and
Third World candidates in the
J)ool .
In no way however,
does this close the door to
internal candidates."
One hundred seventy-eight
applications came in on time for
the Dec. 1 deadline, and 75 were
received later. Interviews with
the three finalists were completed
on Jan. 11. The consultative
group will discuss each candidate
with Kormondy without making
a recommendation. Kormondy
will then make the final decision,
possibly as early as Jan. 17. The
new dean will begin working in
March or April of 1978.

Each of the three finalists
wrote a brief statement
of
opinion on education. The following quoted material is excerpted trom those statements.
Or. Frederick S. Weaver,
Associate Professor of Economics
and History at Hampshire College, Amherst, Mass. ' I do not
believe that rigorous and critical
thinking are promoled by a
curriculum in which knowledge
is narrowly compartmentalized
When issues are presented 10
students within the confines ot
an established discipline, there ,..,
so much pre-packaging involved
that students (although often les~
so than teachers)
are not
conscious of the degrte to which
many caSual mechanisms are
ignored simply by definition ot
the discipline. It is vital 1h.1:
students and teachers maintain d
constant awareness of the implications of various patterns ot
abstraction and that selection bt>
done explicitly. This is hard
work, but I believe thal it 1c;
necessary if one is to help
students develop a critical intellect capable of in deplh judgments about c o m p I e x phC'nomena
Dr. Ursula Sybille Colby.
Chairperson of the Humanitieo;
Division at l\irkland CollegE' m
New York State.
if education
is to be effective. intellectual an
emotional
energies must b
mobilized and encouraged
t
flow freely, as Blake said
·Energy is Eternal Delight.' Sue
a flow of energy depend,; on
many variables, among which
p e r c e p l I o n s
of connC'ctedness rank high
Then:
must bt>..t sen.-.eof (onnC'c!1,1non
the part of .:111those involved m
teaching and learn1nk Ther{'
must be connect1Pn with t'dt h
Continued on ~r
5

3

2

Lett

0

0

TI@Illi

DOG DREAMS

C.HEZ.

Help Us Out
To The Editor:
Enclosed please find an open
letter that we have written for
:he staff and students of the
campus.
We would very much appreciate it if you would publish it in
the next issue of your publicat1on.

As ""'' must furnish postage
tor all letters that we ~nd from
th1'> institution, it is impossible
fvr us to attempt any form of
mail out survey on this subject.
Therefore our only hope of
reaching the ma1or portion of the
<;tudents and
vour

•Haff

is through

of the student
and student radio

publacat1on

rarer
Your

cooperat1on

1n

this

matter would be greatly apprecated
Thank you /or vour time and
ons1derat1on on this

TALKED TO ANY
CONVICTS LATELY!
Have you ever talked to a
convict in any Washington State
prison1 Have you ever wondered
what inmates are like7 Or what
they think. or why they became
mvolvtd in crime? Have you
ever wanted to know from a first
account what 1s really happening
1n prison?
If you have answered yn to
any of these questions. there
may be an opportunity for you
to meet and talk with a man
actually serving time in the
Monroe Reformatory. At such a
meeting, you would be given the
opportunity to ask questions Of
ilny nature concerning
men
involved in crime, the actual
procedures involved from time
of arrest to release from prison.
iilso. any other questions you
might have. This letter is written
to all of you, both on and off
campus, to ascertain the possible
interest level of such a program.
We belong to a small group of
men, here at Monroe, who are
interested in providing speakers
for such a program. The speakers would be men who are
•ctually serving time at the
reformatory.
Penalogy has come a long way
in recent years, but one of the
most important
concepts
of
rehabilitation
has been completely overlooked. That is a
program wherein the people in
frtt society can learn just what
persons incairceratNi are really
like. and what our prison

systems are really all about. '
And. just as important, it gives
us an opportunity to hopefully
re-e,stablish some type of communication within the free society.

On this campus today are
many of the future leaders of our
state, and our country. And one
of the problffl'ls facing us all.
both within and without the
prison walls. is crime and
prisons.
If there is a genuine interest in
a series of lectures and open
floor discussions in this area,
then we can start lo work on a
program to make such meetings
possible in the near future.
If you have any interest m
such a program, please drop us a 1
note lo that effect, then we may
begin laying out a format to
submit for approval as soon a!i
possible.
Wr would appreciate 1t very
much if you will add any
personal comments and sugges•
tions that you might have.
Please direct your reply lo
either,Ed Barry. N257510 B-1-29,
P.O. Box 777. Monroe, WA
98272; or. John Lyons, #218226
B-2-29. P.O. Box 777, Monroe,
WA 98272.

Mind Your
Own
Business
To the Editor:
I had a really unple.as.ant in·
terchange with a woman this
morning _over my child and I'm
finally angry encwgh to write
about it. She objeltecf with con•
siderable hostility to my getting
angry at my child. I nttded 10
get somewhere fast, my child
was walking very slowly and I
was not in the position to pick
her up. Usually such hostility
takes the form of a cove.rt glare;
this time the.re was an out and
out altercation. UsuaJly I at least
attempt to be civil, I guess this
was just the last straw. The
point is - it is a good idea to
have experiencfll parenting (and
this includes living with your
roommates children, just having
Jived with a child and being in
the position of authority) be.fore
passing any heavy judgffl'lent on
a parent. Now, 1 love children, I
think they're beautiful, infinitely
charming and fascinating, 1 am
reasonably
tolerant
at most
times, sometimes even beyond

what my friend& are, but I am
the parent of a two year old
(you have htud of. th• 'Ttniblt
Twos" haven't you7) and as a
parent l have become aware of
some of the realities of parenting.
Children are not charming and
cooperative. all the time. Som~
times they are the essence of
uncharmingness and uncoope.ra•
tiveness.
They often throw
temper tantrums in the middle of
grocery stores because you won't
let them eat {or even keep) the
seven candy bars they are
planning on stealing. Sometimes
they run off in the middle of
huge department
stores (one
minute they're there, the next
minute they're not) and then
inform the nice lady who finds
them that their mother never
keeps track of them and will
probably beat them and make
them spend the night in the
cellar for this. Occasionally,
when you have • to get some•
where fast they will go as slow
as they can, ignoring frequent
pleas for speed. Sometimes they
get into your graduate thesis.
mix up. color on. or tear up the
pages of the only copy you
have, or at least the one you
planned to tum in. And, worst
of all. sometimes they will do all
of these in one morning, not
letting up for up to ten houn
straight (or even more). Do you
know what that kind of stress
does to a person 7

1

fast. They can respect your
possnsions and your space, even
down to making sure another
child respects thtm. Thty can bt
adorable for an audience, too.
My child is incrtdibl• whtn sh•
thinks strangers are watching.
Sh• lovts and hugs and htlps me
with everything she can. It all
depends.
Nothing pisses a parent off
more when a value judgement is
made on his or her reaction to a
situation it would re.quire previous knowltdg• to understand.
You cannot always know what
happened befott, whethtr th•
child was being an angel and the
parent is over reacting,
or
whether the child bit the parent
on the leg, tore up a book,
threw a temper tantrum and
smeared excrement on the walls
before the parent finally blew
up. There's just no way for you
to tell. and it is not making the
hard job of parenting any easier
to lay a bunch of hostile, unpleasant, uncompassionate. shit
on the parent during an already
difficult situation. If you honestly think th• chld is being abused,
it is one thing, but passing
judgement is a whole other
thing, one I personally can live
without.
Martha Spitr

times are posted at the Women's
Center office.
Mrmbtrs of the
Lesbian Caucus

Now
Hear This
To the Editor:

The other day my professor
asked me to write an evaluation.
I've always felt faculty evalua•
tiom we.re bunk and held in low
esteem. I ask you why write
something if no one reads it 1 So
here it is an open evaluation.
I've found my pr~ram to be a
great course of stvd"y, infonna·
tive, enlightening, and refresh•
ing. The sponsor is a thoroughly
good fellow. Attending
this
course has been an event of good
fortune, and it. is likely that he
will continue as my mentor
through next year.
It may now appear that I feel
good about this and I could let it
go at that, yet I fttl the nted to
enlarge the scope of my evalua•
tion to the world at large, in
EVERGREEN,and to shon my
vision of its goals and needs. I
feel there has got to be some sort
, of faculty review so that students
can oust incompetents and dips
combined. Also I fttl the nted,
as did Richard Jones, to point
out the decay in the fabric of our
philosophy toward. a dqmerat•
type of traditionalism. I took
Childttn att pt<>pl• and take
several mods as we. call claues
up spaet. Childttn, btcause thty
To the Editor:
httt
in goeduck land and I' v•
are a full-time, eighteen year
found them to be a terrible
occupation,
infringe on your
Late in November a group of
mistake.. I left the kin-ass tradispace, just as you infringe on
EvttgJffn Lesbian-fm,inists met
tionalism bit behind in my ninth
the.in. Be around anyone con•
to discuss our relationship to the
yur of school and I ,.. the
stantly for eighteen years (or
Women's Center. We. concurred
tendencies towards mods, deeven two) and there are bound
that our nttds and goals u
partments, and bureaucracies as
to be diffttences and, occasion- • political Lesbians wm, not bting
a honifying)y ,.,,.J pouiblllty.
ally, arguments.
met by the Women'• Center
Somt might say so what and
strategy (neither in the Womm'1
leave it be in it's totalitarian
Children perform best for an
Cmter statement of purpose nor . stupor. But what about DEM0.1
audience. Many a child will
I in practice.) Therefo~. we de,CRACY It CHOICE? We, as a
scttam and kick, pause, look
, cided to regroup and organize
group, faculty, students, and bil
around for an audience or a
, politic-1ly among oune:lva. It ii
must join to protect what i1 UI
reaction, and they either coni ntcftlary for Lesbians to work
help make it better before
tinue or cease. depending on the
autonomomly to deal with the
EVERGREEN becomH th• pits.
existence of a reaction. This
oppression particular to us. Since
A monthly forum would not bt
muns they often pick th• public
we. share oppression common to
a bad thing to do to promott the
for the place they wish to throw
all women we chot,e to remain
health of this plaa,, DANIEL
a tantrum. After the third or
within the Women's Center,
E V A N S must bt aca,saiblt to
fourth tantrum, you by God are
addttui.ng our double opprasion
the faculty and students in a way
going to react, no matter where
as Lesbian women. Information
that promotes growth of underyou are.
obout th• Lesbian Caucus can bt
standing
in our goals as an
obtained from the Women's
institution.
Cmttr, Lib. 3214. All women
Thew are just a few of the
Right on,
are welcome at the bi-weekly
realities of children. They can
youn truly,
mttting,,
with
an
undentanding
also do the positive of aU these
Timothy Baer
of the caucus'
voting
and
things. They can cooperate, help
mtmbtrship procedum. Mtttlng
you and make things go twice as

Double
Trouble

Well, greetings from your new
Editor and welcome back. I hope
you like the paper you're reading. Since this is my first week it
may contain some structural defects (I don't know yet) but
hopefully no blank pages or
anything. I'm tempted to unload
a lot of you'd-never-believe-whatthis-is-like comments here; instead I'll keep them to myself
and say a few things about what
I consider my job to be.
First off, I think the CPJ' s
main purpose is to carry inf ormation. Accordingly, I see the
Editor's main function as that of
deciding how best to distill the
available
information
into a
newspaper. It's now my job to
decide what, of everything that
happens at and around Evergreen, will be of the most interest to the CPJ' s readers when
included 1n the paper, and to
make sure that what I do include, whether articles, photography, poetry or whatever, is of
the highest possible quality.
Right now the CPJ has a staff
of seven, and one of those is a
typewriter.
I think the most
important thing I can do for the
quality of this paper,·, aside fro~
tending to my daily duties, is to
try and generate as much interest
and participation
among the
readership as I can. We need a
new Advertising Manager, for
one thing, but most of all we
need writing contributions. Four
people can't write the kind of
newspaper the CPJ ought to be:
if we had just two or three articles contributed each week the
paper couldn't help but benefit.
This isn't to say we can print
everything that comes in the
door, but we are willing to read
carefully everything that's submitted and talk with people
about what they've written.
If you have any articles, ideas,
photographs, etc. that you like
and want to see in the CPJ,
please bring them up to CAB 306
anytime but Wednesdays.
DENNY'S AUTOMOTIVE
service and repair
free pickup and delivery
357;5175
2643 martin way
olympa, wa. 98506

~o,JonyG/nn
~

1111 E'<IEA0AEEN

PAAK 0fHVE

MM 50a month
a11utmo.. Included

90•7330

S&A Distributes Surplus Funds
Th• Servicn and Actlvitin Board and approximattly 36 other pt<>pl• met on Wtdnesday, O.Ctmbtr 7 to
decidt the fatt of $9,874 in SltA Ftts. After a fiftttn-hour marathon huring during which proposals for
nearly $35,000 wtre P""""ted th• following allocations wtte madt,
Amount Allocated
Proposals
!I.qua!
$2000 (4091 ttvenut)
1. Transcripts
$6971, $4101
S 250 + revenue
2. Jau Eruffliblt
$1000
S 800
3. S.lf-Htlp legal Aid
S 800
$ 150
4. Campus Recreation Center
51500
Note: Marine Insurance - Director's Reserve, Watch stealing of barbells
$ 70 + revenue
5. Mtn's B~kttball
$ 200
Note.: $70-Basketballs, e.ncourage fundraising
$ 150 ($100 revenut)
6. Mtn's Soccer
S 250
$ 352
7. Wom•n's Baskttball
S 352
$ 305
8. Wom•n's Soca,r
S 387.16
Not•, $150-lugu• f..,, $SO-lint aid, $150-equipmtnt
$ 170
9. Volleyball
$ 200
Note: $70-two nets and balls, 5100-rental of practice space
$
0
10. Rtcrutional Arts
S 270 ($3415 n,venut)
Note: $270 available for allocation if potters come to the Board
S 150 + revenue
11. Center for Liter•tur< in Per.
$1200
Note: $150-offia, support, try to ust Cofftthouse
$1036
12. Third World Forum Film
$1035.75
Note: Try to finish befott July 1, 1978
$ 811
13. Driftwood Daycart Center
S 810. 94
S 500
14. Energy Northwnt Confettnc•
$1510
$ 274
15. Environmental Resource Center
S 355.50
Note: Money for Selectric available, help with Energy Conference
$1500
17. KAOS-fm radio station
$2413
$
0
17. Organic Fann
S 800
Note.: No money reserved for upkeep of truck, gas, etc.
S 50
18. Unnamed Student Organization
$ 100
$ 250 + revenue
19. Supplemmtal Special Evmts
S 500 (500 revenue)
$ 484
20. Tidn of Change Productions
S 185.50
$
0
21. Women's Mountaineering Course
$ 288
$ 40
22. Women's Clinic
S 40
$ 500
23. Women-of-color gather-in 1978
$6012
Note: Money is for promotion of the gather-in.
$ 200 ($200 revenue)
24. Evtrgrttn Folkways
$ 390 ($350 revenue)
$ 60 ($60 revenu~)
25. Boat Club
S 120, budg•t transfer
Note : Approve budget transfer, $60-one paddle
NO ACTION TAKEN
26. MECHA
$1364
Note: No one showed up to present this proposal
NO ACTlON TAKEN
27. Men's Resource Center
$1031
Note: No one showed up to present this propo1a.l
NO ACTION TAKEN
28. Organic Farmhouse
$ 500
Note: No one showed up to prnent this proposal
If you have questions about any of these allocations or the Services and Activities Board in general,
please come to CAB 305 or the next S!t:A Board meeting on Wed., January 18 in CAB 108. The next alloca•
tions will take place some.time early in Spring Quarter. ~lay tuned.

...

Bert Lance Maybe?
charge of developing biennial
and supplemental
institutional
budgets, developing budget procedures, setting up methods for
gathering and anal}'.zing bud.get
input data, and rnterpreting
Evergreen expenditures and fin·
ancial data to the executive
and legislative branches of the
state government in terms aimed
at obtaining optimum funding.

Administrative Vice President
Dean Clabaugh will choose a
new Budget Olficer on or around
February 8. A seven member
screening committee and other
interested people who attend all
the open candidate interviews
will submit
ratings
of the
applicants to Clabaugh.
t:vergreen's current B u d g e I
Officer,
Bill Robinson,
has
resigned and will assume the
position of Coordinator
for
Business Affairs at the Office of
the Council of State College and
University Presidents. Robinson
has served as budget officer since
March of 1976; his resignation
becomes effKtive January 15.
Budget

Officer

is in

Minimum requirements for the
position include a year's exper•
ience in budget development and
analysis at a college or university, central execu.tive office. or
legislative appropriation
staff
level.

I

the post by the end of February.

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GRADUATE SCHOOL
EXPLORATION
WORKSHOP
A workshop on exploring
gnduate school options and
making application.
Date: Wednesday. January 18
Time: 3:00-5:00 p.m.
Place: Career Resource
Center
Library 1213
Registration required at Ca•
reer Planning & Placement,
Library
1214. Telephone;
866-6193

5
4

New Recruits:
Vanguard Of Tomorrow's Evergreen
By Nancy Ann ParkH
New students at Evergreen
often give themselves away by
snapping Poloroids of mindless
slugs. They keej, asking ques1\ons like, 'When is it going to
stop. raining7" Clothed in unpatched flannel and frighteningly
crisp denim, the newcomers
Jrrive with high expectations of
the school they hope is about to
change their lives.
Although many of them have
J.ttended college elsewhere, they
.ire yet unaware of the unique
qualities of these hallowed halls.
II s refreshing to talk with men

basis, and do a lot of individual
counseling with students. This
winter and spring I'll also be
doing a series of career workshops in the fields of Humanities, Computers, Sciences, Economics, Political Science, and
Performing Arts.

to survive on the: job, and that's
the type of learning environment
that I thrive under.
CPJ, What do you think
you'll get out of going to school
here that you couldn't have
gotten somewhere else7
Miles: An education.

and women who don't yet know

the meaning of DTF, or worry
.iboul whether or not football on
lampus could someday lead to
the Third World War.
We at the Cooper Point Journal decided to randomly internew

a few

of

the newcomers

,md find out what their first imrressions of Evergreen held.
Among them was Elane Bills.
TESCs new Career Counciling
Specialist
This 1s what Elane and others
had to say:

Debbie Kime, enrolled in the
program, ''Health Perspectivn."

CPJ, What college did you
attend previously7
Kime: Western, and the last
year I attended Western was
19n_

CPJ, What do you plan to
study here7
Kime: I want to study the
social and scientific parts of
nutrition.
CPJ: What were your first
impressions of Evergreen7
Kime: Well, my first impressions were, it kind of looks like
a bomb shelter as far as physical
appearances.

Elane Bills, Career
Counseling Specialist

CPJ: Where are you from,
and what were you involved
with before coming here7
Bills; I've come to Evergreen
t rom Tacoma where 1 was born
and raised. During the three
vears previous to joining the
Evergreen staff I worked at
Employment Security as a Job
Information Specialist. P I a c e ment Interviewer. Career Coun-:.elor. and Test Administrator.
During that time I was also
1ttending graduate school at the
Jniversity of Puget Sound where
I earned a Master of Arts in
Education. with an emphasis on
i-;u,dance and counseling.
CPJ: What are your respon-.1bilities as Career Counseling
'ipecialist7
Bills: My major responsibility
1<., to provide
career planning
groups within academic programs. and on a college-wide

Nancy Stolov, enrolled In tht
program, "Short Actions."

CPJ: What are your first
impressions of Evergreen7
Stolov, I think there's a lot of
opportunities here. There's a lot
of things happening, different
activities that a.re posted on
different bulletin boards, so if
you want to, there's a lot of
things to kttp you busy.
C:Pi, Where else have you
attended college7
Stolov: I went to the University of Washington
for two
years;
I went to Cornish
Institute for a semester; I went
to the Univenity of Minnesota
for a summer quarter; I went to
Seattle: Center Community College, and 1 want to get my
degree and finish here.

O.Ford, I think so. That's
kind of th• reason I quit last
time. It was so loose and they
had just started to do it; and it
~as so unorRanized that the
teachers were Still organizing.
CPI , How do you feel about
the cultural environment
at
Evergreen7
Deford, I like it. The main
reason I like it is because I grew
up around here:, and I know a
lot of people, not just at th•
school ... but around town, so
that helps.

Alas, all new students must
someday becom• old students. A
common disease of veteran
Evugreeners is "Graduationitis."
The most apparent symPtoms
include high blood '"pre:11ure,
which stems from putting· t<>gether a resume, frequent moans
over transcript fees, attempts to
enter graduate
schools, and
intense anxiety attacks due to the
fear of earning a living.
But that's another story which
many would prefer not to be
reminded of.

Continutd from 1
Often equipment is lost because of an honest mistake.
Smith suggests that students and
faculty take inve:ntory at home if
th,re ls a possibility of •finding
borrowed equipment. Evergrttn's
isolated location makes it an
easy target for rip-offs. Security
anticipate:s a robbery involving
the on-campus bank, but so far
there have been no robberies and
Security has not been forced to
use their gun. (They only hav•
one and it isn't carried.)
COMPARATIVE FIGURES
Evtrgrttn's theft figures look
esptcially bad when compared to
other W a.shington college:s. For
example, Western Was'1ington
University. a school that is fow
times Evergrttn's size in student
population, had a total personal
and institutional loss of $30,590
during the same year in which
Evergreen's loss was $46,211.
Western has 31 full-time security
employees supplemented by ten

students, while Evergreen Security has seven including both full
and parttim•. All buildings at
Western close at 11,00 p.m., and
students are permitted access to
locked buildings when security/
police staff unlock i n t e r i o r
rooms.
At the University of Washington, each building has a coordinator who helps with the
building's security and lock-up.
Access to equipment is also more
r,stricted than at Evergrtffl.
In spii• of all the theft and
vandalism, Smith fttls that this
is one of the most crime-free
campuses in the state. He noted
that problems with narcotics
have declined during the last two
years.
Emphasizing the importance of
student cooperation,
Sm ith
wanted to remind Evrrgrttners
to ask questions or call Security
when someone is carrying a
typewriter (or a piano) across
Red Square.

MQke your morning a
little less hectic. from 8
to 9 am there wl II be a
group relaxation/meditation offered at the
corner.

--

Dave Miles, enrolled ln "Data
Structures II," and "SociAI Rtstarch Methods."

CPJ, What made you decide
to come to Evergreen7
Miles: One, it's in the ana
where I live. Two, the standard
classroom environment and myself don't get along. When I've
got to motivate myself, then I
can accomplish things. The type
of work I've been doing I've ha<l
to go out and learn a lot in order

- HELP WANTED The Journal needs a new
Advertising Manager to start
immediately. Tht Ad Manager ls
responsible for st1llng ads, supervising other ad salespeople,
kteping the wttkly run sheet and
logging ad sales. Commission
rate is 25 percent. This job
generally pays more than any
other on the CPJ. Anyon•
interested should c o n t a c t
Nathaniel Koch at CAB 306,

Don O.Ford, enrolled In the
F.0.N.S. program.
CPJ, ls this your fiBt college
6perience:7
Deford: I went to Evergreen
in 1974, but I quit ~t
away. I
only went for a couple of weeks
CPJ, Do you think you
understand the nature of learning
htre7

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th-sat 1 pm-11 pm

Flying Saucers, Dancers, ~d
By Nathanltl Koch
It looks as \hough Steven
Spielberg has another hit on hls
hands. Ooot Encounters of the
Third Kind, which cost Columbia Pictures $19 million to make,
has already grossed a record
$39.4 million in tht first 20 days
of its release.
Oo1e Encounters deserves the
popularity, it is a wonderful
film. This is only Spielberg's
third major motion picture: but
he has lea.med how to combine
technology with a simple story
to achieve an almost magical
efftct. The film rarely makes
attempts at profundity and only
occadonally d overly sentimental. Not bad, when you consider
the subject matter is "the
common people" making contact
with friendly beings from outer
space.
Our hero is Roy Neary,
played by Richard Dreyfuss (also
starred in Spielberg's Jawt), who
lives in a suburb of Muncie,
Indiana with his wife (Terry
Garr) and their three kids. Neary
is a power-company
lineman,
called into tht field ont rvening
when thetltctricityfor the entitt,
city mysteriously
fails. Lost,
driving out in the middle of
nowhere, Neary stops his truck
to consult his map, waving a car
approaching from the r e a r
around him. Later, still lost as
ever. Neary must pull over again
to navigate. ln an absolutely
supurb scent, wt see the lights of
another vehicle pull up' to
Neary' s !ruck. Concentrating on
his map, he again waves the
driver around and we watch in
horror as the lights silently begin
to make a vertical ascent. nte
unsuspecting lineman is a.bout to
have a close encounter of the
fi.-.t and second kind.
He is not the only one. People
from all over the world are
having similar experiences. The
film details a few: electrical
appliances Sttm to tum on and
off at will, a child's toys come
alive in the night, refrigerators
empty their contents onto the
noor and U.S. training planes
that have been missing for
thirty-two yean suddenly appear
m Sonora, Mexico. In perfect
condition.
An international U.F.O. tx('trt, the Frtnchman Lacombe
(Francois Truffaut), taktsnote of
other phenomenon: the appear~
ance of sunburned skin after a
close sighting,
a group of
worshippers in Northern India
chanting tht same melody that
U.S. government radar stations
are picking up from oute:r space,
and individuals from all over the
country seeming to be obsessed
with a mental image of a larg,,
rock tower.
Spielberg ii building to a
grand climax, which tAkn place
near Moorcroft, Wyoming, organized contact with e:xtraterrestrial lift. This is the visual heart
of tht film. Tht space craft are
different from the well-worn
vehicles that appured In Star
Wan. They are instead, agile
orbs of light that perform
delightful acrobatia aaou tht
horizon. The gigantic mother
ship features two entire city
skylines and radiatn an intenae
white light that bath<1 it•
tme111in8inhabitants in an almost camouflaging brillance.
Most of the credit for tht
masterful visual tffi!ctJ go to
!)ouglas Trumbo and a team of
five cintmatographen headed by
Vilmos Zsigmond. There are
momen.,ts in CloH Encounters
that lnsplrt pUrt awe for their
visual complexity and beauty.
But Speilbers is cartful not to
lose his characttn and 1tory in
thls technical wonderland. It is
still tht story of tht common
penon's fucination with tht unlc.nown. The movie'• dialogue is
recorded using 12 track tape
equipment and the efttet is often
similar to that In Robert Altman'• California Spht or Nashville: little bits of speech stand

out and become memorable parts
of the film. After a bunt of in, decipherable m111ical and color
communication with the mother
ship, various technicians can be
overheard exclaiming, "It's the
first day of school, fellas." and,
"I'm no Merit Haggard, but it
was great!"
What ls most enjoyabl• about
th• characttn in Oote Encounters is the humanity (for want of
a bette:r word) and humor that is
conveyed in their actions. When
Roy Neary is trying to describe
the spaa, craft to his skeptical
wife, ht attempts, "They looked
just like an ice--cream cone." She
replies, 'What Aa.vor1" In a nice
twist, it is the woman who helps
the man in a dramatic ascmt of
the foothills near Devils Tower.
Francois Truftaut's portrayal of
Lacombe adds much to tht spirit
of the film. Hls Lacombe is a
polite intelligent man with a
complex inquiriry! mind, who is
~tive
enough to permit Roy
Ntary to 1Qjn the U.S. astronautical space~eam boarding th•
mother ship at the film's conclusion.
Oose f.ncounten does contain
some weak s_pots. Th• portrayal
of the U.S. Govtmment and Military as th• villain barring public access to tht U.F.0. landing
site SttmS clumsy and simplistic.
Tile final scene:s of contact with
the aliens att almott too sentimental and sweeL John William's
(Star Wan, Jaws) music for the
occasion aortainly doesn't help,
sounding like a reject instrumental from an old Moody Bluts album (i.e. an overabundance of
strings and angelic voices).
However, it is evident that
Strvtn Spitlberg ha, written and
dittcted an imaginative, enjoyable, entertaining film. The visual effects are so astonishing
and memorable that the nying
saucers alone an worth the price
of admission.

Thtrt are two films that sttm
to be turning up on movie reviewer's "Best of 1977" lists.
Both contain tnough elements to
make them worth otting, but art
far from being exceptional filmo.
Tht movies are the Tumlna
Point and Th« Goodby• Girl and
they have one thing in common,
Director Herbert Ro11. Ross
starttd out as a chortognpher
before dirtctina his lint film,
Goodby•, Mr, Cid.,., In 1969.
Th« TumJna Point ls butd
around a rather tirtd conapt.
Two women are reaching t:uming
points in their lives. One is a
profasional ballet dancff, Emma
(Anne Banaoft), who, after a
long_ and distlngushtd c:areer, is
reaching tht point where she
can't compete with the younger
dancen for parts. Tht other, ,
Deedee (Shirley Maclaine), 11 a
former dancw who quit to raile
a famUy before she had a chance
to realiu her full potential. Sht
i1 now having RCOnd thoughts
about her choice. Whtn Dee<ke'1
da"lhter, Emilia (Leslie Brown),
i, uktd to Join Emma's b,,lltt
company in New York, tht two
women att given the chana,. to
test their friendship and compare
their lives.

This potentially
interesting
-idea i1 unfortunattly lost in a
bad script by Arthur Laurenti
l(Tbt Way Wt Wen,) and nat
direction
of the acting by
Herbert Ross. Tht actors gtt to
•repeat such chestnuts as "They
'(kids) don't know how fast time
goes by, do they7" or "I wish I
.knew who I was." And if that's
not enough, tht film closts with
Emma and Deedee standing on
stage looking out on an empty
theater after a successful performance featuring EmUia. Deedee exclaims, "Oh Emma, if only
she knew everything we knew. .. "
To which Emma replies, "lt
wouldn't matte:r a damn!" 1 don't
envy the actors.
For the romantics in the audience, there is a pleasant love
scene between Emilia and a
Russian dancer Yuri (Mikhail
Baryshnikov).
It begins as a
dance between the two lovers,
filmed in rich brown tones. almost fantasy-like in its exrcu' tion. The danc;.e ii transformed
to a blue bedroom where the
grac:r of their movement carrie:s
over into lovemaking. As the
soft locus lens picked up the
light glinting off Lesli• Brown's
red hair, I sat poised, ready to
hurl my popcorn at the screen,
but was pleased to see tht affair
stay_within beuable limits.
The best reason for viewing
The Turning Point is the filming
of the dan<:1!sequenas. Ross and
Cinematographer Robert Surtees
know how to capture the excite-ment and power of ballet, involving the audience completely.
They use a series of long shots
with quick pans and various

Quips
ose ups to follow a dancer's
tire movement across the stage
ith a wide angle lens. In one
imaginative wide angle shot, the
me:ra was placed. on the lip of
ht far side of the stage. Included
•n the frame is not only a large
rtion of the stage, but the
cers awaiting entrance in the
ings and a bank of colored
ights on the stage lip.
The Turning Polnt may generte the same level of excitement
in those unfamiliar with dance as
Rocky did for people uninterestin boxing. The petty intrigues
that occur off stage in The
·Turning Point are certainly
bout as profound as the love
~story in Rocky. Mikhail Baryishikov has it all over Sylvester
~tallone.
r Herbert Ross doesn't fare too
·well with Neil Simon's The
Goodbye Girl, but here, it is the
occasionally snappy dialogue
and acting efforts of Richard
Dreyfuss that give the film its
best moments.
I Neil Simon has written the
1
kind of extroverted-young-actorjmeets - hardened - citr - woman. •with - prKOC'ious - child romantic
comedy that was popular fifteen
years ago. It has been updated a
bit for the seventies: when she is
upset about him having an actress in his bedroom (a bad example for her daughter) he has
only to remind her that she had
been lovers with his best friend
for months in that very apartme:nt. There is even the classic
good natu.-Ni gibe: at homosexu•
ality.
The main problem is that Ross
doesn't seem to know how to
keep the actors under control. In
the opening scenes, they are
constantly getting hysterical over
t~ slightest of things. Later, it
doesn't leave them much room
when a real emotion! peak is
called for.
Still, Marsha Mason, who
looks like a plump Genevieve
Bujold, and Richard Dreyfuss, at
his jocular best, are gifted
enough actors to make moments
of The Goodbye Girl entertaining, hilarious, and touching.
Which is about half the time.
Unfortunately, when the formula
wears a little too thin, The
Goodbye Girl comes off about as
lively as a television situation
comedy. Herbert Ross just isn't
the kind of director who can
make this type of material look
fresh.

Continued from I
• nonnal coursework in the form
of practicums,
internships, or
other, connection of a particular
similar situations. Effective: edarea of inquiry with what Ii~
beyond, connection of the pres- ucation must be a personalized,
ent activity with a still hypo- individualized experience:. There
thetical future, of specifics within are no universal, pat solutions
to a.II
the universal. Whenevtt such a which are applicable
and all times and
sense becomes a rulity. no one, students
not even the quieteat mem~r of places. Students differ as do
subject matters. So must metha group, is any longer passive."
ods differ. An approach like
Dr. Barbara Lelah Smith,
Associate Professor of Political Evergreen's is not applicable to
Science and Director of the a.II students, but it should have a
Cmtennial Educational Program · dominant plaa, ... "
Complete files on tne three
at tht University of Nebraska at
Lincoln. " .. I believe it is highly candidat~ are a v a i I a b 1 e in
desirable that students have an Konnondy's office at LIB 3131.
May the best wo/man win.
applied component
of their

412 CHERRY
943-3650

lffll)Of19dcardaand IUttionery
5-s,
loliona. oila
Ha,.duaftad toys ttnd jewelry

Come See

Ua Soonl

A.ReHif->ALD
SISGftRS

..._""

•~1-

SENIOR
EMPLOYMENT
SEMINAR
HOW TO WRITE A RESUME
& LEITER OF APPLICATION
Date, Tuesday, January 17
Time: 3:30-5,00 p.m.
Place: Career Resource
Center
Library 1213

Baha'is of Tumwater will spon•
sor a Seminar on "Family Life"

Saturday, January 14
Potluck dinner
4 30 p m
Speaker
6 15 pm
Film: "Step by Step" 8·00 pm

Public is invited
Call 352-3436. or 352-77 10
BAH'\"I FAITH

.,

IMPORTED CAR PARTS

Discourn 10 Stuclerns
on ali non-sale Items
from

The Corner is happening
over in A building 2nd
floor 7 to 11 nightly.
Take some time off and
relax. It can happen at
the corner.

.
,,

EDITOR

John~
MANAGING EDITOR
Mandy Mcfarlan

MANAGER
Nathanltl Koch
PRODUCTION MANAGER
Dan.a Leigh Squirft

Ff.ATURESEDITOR
Nancy Ann Parkn

ADVERTISINGMANAGER
Liz Cooke
Toni Holm

We need ideas for thE
use of the corner. HavE
you any suggestions?
Contact Gwen-866-5160

6

1

Announcing The Brand New

150
LUNCH
FOR
A
ERE
135 ''
PLAN

Arts and Events~Irit~ tIDrmcdl
mw@mit~Artsand ~EventsA1rit~tID1ID

Ford Gllbruth

IN OLYMP1A
THIN RED LINE, January 1~14 and
JAX on January 17-21 at Captain Coyotes on H1rr1aon. Both play top
forties type music. 12.00 cover
eha,QO.
PAT GILL, a rag time guitar picker
will bl at the Gnu Dell (Capitol Way
and Thurston) on January 12. Start• al
9 :00, S1.00 ocwer.

JERRY MICHELSON, an old time
jasa (sic) planlal and singer returns lo
the Gnu Dell on January 13 and 1 ◄.
iuX> p.m. s1.oo.
SAUSALITO, a disco, funk type
band will be at Richard's Roundhouse
in Lacey at •110 Market Square. $1.00
cover charge on Fridays and Saturdays.

-0

IN SEATTLE

MUSIC

Applejam
is having a Greek
folkdancing festival at the Olympia
Communlly Cen'ter on January 13 and
14 The PANEYIRI CHILDREN'S
GROUP lrom the Greek Church of the
Assumption will perform on Friday,
sometime after 8:30. For further Into
on !he testlva1, call 352-0593.



OANCE
QREEK FOLKDANCE FESTIVAL
with Yvonne Hunt, Jan. 13 and 1'4, at
the Olympia Community Center, 1314
E. 4th In Oly. Performance by the
RASHAAD TROUPE, who wlll Interpret various etyles of Middle Eastern
dances. Friday. Call Linda Hanis at
IIU-9803. $2.2!5.

LECTURES
DA. Q. SIEQFRIED KUTTER wilt
give a free public
lecture on
"Evolullon of the Stars." Jan. 10, 8
p.m., Recital Hall, Communications
Building. Lecture will Include slides
sr'lowmg the progression ot 11ara.
A OECADE OF SOCIALIST FEM•
INISM la the theme of a RAOfCAL
WOMEN'S conference at the Admlralty Resort In Pon Ludlow, WA, on Jan.
27, 28 and 29. Myra Tanner Weiss,
Keynote speaker, wlll address ..The
Soclallst Woman." For Into, contact
Radical Women at Freeway Hall, 36t5
5th Ave. NE. Seattle, WA. or call
632-1815.

CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE
THIRD KIND
Directed by Steven
Spielberg. Starring Richard Dreyfuss,
Melinda DIiion and Francois Trutfaut.
35mm print. (See review.) (King
Cinema, 6th Ave. & Blanchard,
Seattle, 682-S007 and VIiia Plaza
Cinema I & II, VIiia Plaza Shopping
Ctr., 10601 Davisson Road SW, Tacoma, 588-1082,)
THE TURNING POtNT Directed by
Herbert Ross. Starring Anne Bancroft,
Shlriey Maclaine, M I k h a I I Baryshnikov and LeaHe B,owne. (See
Review.) (Varsity Watk-ln, 4329 Unlw,iilfi Way NE, S.ttle, 432-3131.)....
THE GOODBYE GIRL Directed by
Herbert Rose. Written by Nell Simon.
Starrtng Richard Dreyfuss and Marsha
Muon. (See Review.) (Cinerama, 2100
4th Ave.. Seatt1e, 223-3983).
1800 Director Bernardo Bertoluccl's
4½-hour fllm. Starring Robert Ce
Niro, Gerard Oepardlet, Dominique
Sanda, Burt Lancaster, Oona
Id
Sutherland. (Seven Gables, NE 50th &
Roosevelt, Seattle, 632-8820.)

FILM
ELLIOT SCHWARTZ. conductor and
piano sololsl wll1 give a concert of
modem muelc on January 12 at 8:00
p.m. His compositions have received
awards from the National Endowment
on the Arts and Gaud•mua Found•·
tlon. Recltal Hall, CommunlcaUons
Bulldlng, 1 dollar tor adults, 50 cents
for students and senior cltlzena.

( Or How To Eat

$ 15 Worth Of Bagels

For Free)

Actually, now you can eat breakfast, lunch, dinner or anything in between on our
plan and save a bundle of money. Here's how it works:
The college is offering a food contract scrip plan, available to students, staff and
faculty alike. You simply buy either one book or two books at a time of transferable
coupons (transferable meaning that friends and co-workers can share the cost and
reap the benefits together), and use them for one quarter of the academic year.
They're good at the cafeteria, snack bar, coffee house and even the deli. One book of
scrip, for $150 worth of food, costs only $135 (that's a 10% savings into your pocket).
Or, you can invest in two full books of scrip, redeemable for $300 worth of food, for a
mere $240 (a 20% discount). Good deal, eh?
Winter quarter scrips are now on sale at the Housing Office (just ask for Linda).
To find out more about those free bagels (and the entire plan), drop in at the College
Housing Office, "A" Building, Room 220 or phone 866-6132.



H a r p a I c h o r d I a I DR IOHN
HAMILTON wlll perform the flrwt concert In Evergreen's new "Tueedaya al
Eight" series on January 17. Recltal
Hall, Communications Bulldlng. Tlcicets at Bookstore and at the door are
$3.00 general and $1 .!50 for students.
Seaaon llckes for all el8Yet'I''Tundays
at Eight" are.$18.

OUT OF TOWN
Al THE OTHER SIDE Of THE
TRACKS on Jan. HS, AIRBRUSH, funk
and modem Jazz quartet wtth homa.
One buck, mlnora welcome. 108 w.
Main In Aubum. (Exit 1'2A off H5.)
January 18 at the Seattle Opera
HOUH, 305 Hantaon Str'Nt, at 8:00
p.m. RAINER MIEDEL, conductor and
NELSON FREIRE, planl1t. For Info
call 447-4700.
ART
VISIONS
OF COURTLY INIIIA
Indian miniature paintings will be at
the S..ttl•
Art MuNUm, Voluntetr
Park, until .Jan. 15. Alao at the
museum, Afrtca, Pr&-Columbtan and
OoNnlc pleca on dlaplay.
Photography by DIANNE ARIUS ot
the Sliver Image Gallery, 83 s. w.. ~
tngton In Seattle. Through January.
Photography In the Library gallery
by MICHAEL COHEN and KIRK

THOM,-.
The Collector'e Gallery, 2103 W.
Harrtton, 1, tea.turtng a group ehOw
by tour northwnt artl1t1 Janua,y 3
through 21 . Wonco by DONli,lillt;
UN CHIEN-IHI'!, WAYNE CORYELL
AND ANDIIEW nOFIIEtm,R wlll be
on dlaplay. For Inf or call 352_...n, .

ON CAMPUS
THE ACTRESS (1953) George Cukor
directs the story set In a Boston
suburb, circa 1912, by Ruth Gordon
based on her play ''Year, Ago."·
S I a r r I n g Spencer Tracy, Jean
Simmons and Anthony P e r k I n a
(Lecture Hall 1, January 18th, 1 :30 &
7:30 p.m.)
THEY MIGHT IIE GIANTS (1971) Directed by Anthony
Harvey and
screenplay by James Goldman (their
previoua effort was A LION IN
WINTER). George C. Scott playe a
New York Judge, wno beUevee he'I
Sherlock Holmes. Joanne Woodward
Is a paychlatrtst named Dr. Watton.
They fall In love. Rated G. (Lecture
Hall 1, January 13, 3:00, 7:00 and
9:30.)

IN OLYMPIA
OH,OOD Goerge Bumi pi.ya God.
John Denver It a superman,et
manager. Directed by Carl Reiner
(Wllelo'a Poppa?). (Sllte, 357-'010.)
YOUNQ FRANKENSTEIN (1974) Directed by Mel Brooke; starring Gene
WIider u Baton Franken1tein'1 Amerk:an grand'°" and P9ter Boyle • the
mon.-t«. With Madetlne Kahn, Many
Feldman' Clotll Leachman and Gene
Hackman. In btack & white. {The
, Ctnema, 943-WI •; thru 1117, poulbly long«.)
THE WORLD'S GREATEST LOVER
Written by Gene WIider. Olrected by
Gene WIider. SllrTlng Gene WIider.
With Carot Kane (Heeter Street) and
Dom OelulH.
(Olympk:, 357-3-t22;
thru 1119.)
PETE'S DRAGON Starring Helen
Reddy, Mk:key Rooney, Red Button,,
Shelley Wint.,. and Jim Backu1. Partlally animated. From Walt Disney
Productions. (Capitol, 367-7181; thru
1117.)

DERSU UZALA {1975) U.S. premiere
showing. Directed by Aklra Kurosawa
(Seven
Samurai) and winner of !he
hlgr,est award at the Ninth Moscow
FIim Festlval
In 1975. Engllsh
subtitles. {Harvard Exit, Brdwsy &
Roy, Seattle, J25..18.17.)
THE UNIVERSITY OF
WASHINQTON
THE 1110 SLEEP (1948) Howard
Hawks directed this adaptation of
Raymond Chandler'a novel (WIiiiam
Faulkner contributed to the acr.enptay) after fllmlng TO HAVE AND
HAVE NOT (1944). It atars Humphrey
Bogart aa detective Phlllp Martowe
and Lauren Bacall as the spolled
favorite daughter ot a rteh, ekterty
general. The plot la amusingly
Indecipherable ln'IOlvlng gambflng,
drugs, murder and blackmail, but the
dialogue la 90 1nappy and rtddled
with Innuendoes that the confusing
murder aequencea become lmmat«lal. AIIO starring Martha Vlck8f'1 and
Dorthy Malone. Note : THE BIG
SLEEP It currently being remade with
Robert Mitchum, Jamaa Stewart, Sara
MIIH and Richard Boone. A-N-0
CH IN AT OWN (1974), Romon
Polanekl'a tala of corruption, lnont,
and acandle NI In the expanding L.A.
1of the 1930'1 surely ranks u one of
Amertca'• g,-t detective tllme. Jack
Nlchot10n It Olttea, a hllrdbotled,
tough, urcutlc
private eye, (with a
heart of gold) who becomes profee-,
\ alonatty and romantlcly Involved with
the t o r m e n t e d daughter (Faye
Dunaway) of a corrupt powerful
tyCOon (John Huston.) Tha orlglnal
•scrHnptay
by Robert Towne 11
IOOHly baaed on the L.A. water
tcandte or the period. Polanskl and
1Nlcholaon are at their vwy beet. (Jan,ua,y 13th only, A.S.U.S. Mojo, FIim
1Serles, Seattla.)

I

I

LAND OF S I L f NCE AND DARKNESS (1971 and SIGNS OF LIFE
(1987) Two films by the German
director, Werner Herzog. (January
14th only, A.S.U.W. Major Fllma
Ser*, Seattle.)

THE FEMINIST KARATE UNION, an '13-15, Is aimed at students who want to
organization of women teechlng women
Improve their ettectlvenesa In groupa,
karate and Nlf-oefenN,
will hold four
lhetr Nmlnar aklllt and thetr leadership
claatel • week at TESC Winter Quarter:
skllls. Cost is $15 for the weekend. Sign
Monday, noon, CRC 202; TUffday, 5:30,
up at the Countellng Center, Lib 3223, by
CRC 307; Thur9day, 5:30, CRC 307; and
Thursday, January 12. Other wOt'kshops
Friday, 9:30, CRC 'JIJ7. The COit Is S30
In the aeries include • SELF HYPNOSIS
per quarter for any or all classes. Call,
training group on January 21 and 22, and
357~78 or 352-9926 tor more Informaprograms In ASSERTIVENESS F O R
tion.

WOMEN, DREAM REFLECTION, and
AMERICAN YOUTH HOSTELS, INC. Is
IMAQE IN MOTION. The Counseling
ottering tree llt8fllture abOut hOatellng
Center also olfer1 lndlvldual counseling,
and the more-than-4,500
world-wide
the New Evergreeners' Group, • compullocations where members can stay tor as
slve eaters' group, and lnformtllonlreterllttle u $2.50 to $3.50 per night. AVH
ral to Olympia community resources. For
also offers a folder of pf9-planned, 4-6
Information call 866-6151.
week trips through Europe and the Far
THE EVERGREEN COFFEEHOUSE Is
East. For Information write to: Anne
looking tor performers during the next
Coyner, Travel Dept. Manager, American
week to fill up our Winter Quarter
Youth Hostel•.
Inc., Oetepltne,
VA
schedule. We have sign-up sheelS on the
22025 ..
front lace ol the Information Center anCI
lnttructors of 51 LEISURE EDUCATION
on the bulletin board In the second floor
WORKSHOPS will introduce their prolibrary lobby. II you are a performer or
• grams Wednesday, January 4 from 7 to 1O
know of a performer you'd like to hear,
p.m. In room 4300 ot the E'l9fgreen
please write their name, or your name. on
Library. Registration for the programs
one of our sign-up sheets this week The
begins January 9 and continues from 10
coffeehouse is interested in a variety ot
a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays through January
performances.
18. Special evening registration will be
THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE
SKI SCHOOL is offering ciasses open
held lrom 6 to 8:30 p.m., January 11 snd
12, In the College Recreation Center.
lo students, staff, I a cu I I y
and
Complete Information on all the winter
c o m m u n l t y m e m b e r a. CHUCK
programs Is available at the College
SHELTON, lhe director, says they'll be
, Recreation Center, 866-6530.
skiing at CRYSTAL MOUNTAIN again this
season, "THE PREMIER SKI RESORT IN
A class called "TOUCH FOR HEALTH".
teaching a new and practical approach lo
THE Northwest."
Sessions begin ,n
restoring natural energy In the body, Is
January, and lessons are held on either
Wednesdays or Saturdays. For a brochure
being offered by THE WASHINGTON
or more Information. go by the College
ASSOCIATION FOR HOLISTIC HEALTH
Recreation Cent-,, room 302 or cal 1,
and the POSTURE OAOUP. The first
866-6530.The skiing Is already great, and
meeting wu held January 9, but five reChuck say,, "our program promiSM truly
maining HHlons
will take place on
professional Instruction and a great lime
consecutive Monday, beginning January
!or all!" Think skiing and register soon 16 from 7 to 10 p.m. at the Unity Church
first come, first served.
on the Westside. For further Information
THE E M P LO Y E E SUGGESTION
call: 943-2285 TI.Hlsday through Saturday
AWARDS BOARD has decided, due to
between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. At10 on Januln1utficlent
funding, that EMPLOYEE
, ary 16, WAHH wlll hold a 12 noon meetSUQOESTION AWARDS PROGRAM sugIng at the Unity Church where local
gestlona submitted after December 1 .
echool nurses will dltcuts and answer
Hin, wll1 not be accepted tor processing
questions on health care In local tehools.
and award.
TffE REJ CO-OP In Seattle la conduct•
For Sale - 1H7 INTERNATIONAL
Ing a eerlea of outdoor cllnlct (to take
STEP VAN (MODEL M1500.) Engine Is 220
, piece Indoors) Thur9day ~Inga
at 7: 00
c.l., 8 cylinder, and runs well when tuned
at 1&25 11th Ave. Cllnlce Include:
up, which It needs to be. Call Diane,
January 12, WAXING F O R P E R ~
86&-9002.
FORIIIANCE; Janua,y 19, CUIIIINO IN
THE DIIIFTWOOD DAY CAAE CENTER
THE LAND OF THE AZTECS; and Januha one wont study Job openlno for Win•
ary 29, COLD WEATHER FIRST AID
tar Ouarter. It pay1 S2.80 per hOur 10<
IIAO■ LEMS. For lnfoonatlon
call Pam
eight hour1 a week, and appUcants must
Granstrom, 352-8333.
be available Tuesday•.
A NriN of PRAYER AND MEDITATION
There will be a Nmlnar on the results
WORKSHOPS 11 being offby Tho
of tho STUDENT ORIGINATED STUDIES
Evergl'Nf'I campua Mlnletry at THE ASH
grant funded
by the National
C£NTER,. L 103 .A.ahtreeApta., on five
Sclenal Foundation, THE ECOLOQY AND
Wednndaye between January 18 and May
BEHAVIOR
OF
THE
HARBOR SEAL IN
10. COatof the .....
1, 150 per perlOO,
WESTERN WASHINGTON IN RELATION
S75 per coupte, and 15 per NMlon for
TO CHLORINATED HYDRO C A R a O N
1tudente. Cell ee&-e1"5 tor more Inf~
CONTAMINANTS on WednHday,
Jantlon. Alto aponec:wwd by the Campus
uary 18 at 3:30 p.m. In LH l. All
Mlnlttry le a -of YOQA WORKlnlereeted people welcome. For more
SHOPS to take place on aht Wedneedayl
lnfonnatlon call 886-«171.
betWNn January 25 and Merch 15 at The
Thera's ttlll time to elgn up tor DREAM
Ath Center. Cost of thll eeriee 1, S15 per
WORKSHOPS. Ed Mc0uan1e Is t.-:hlng
person. Again, for Information
call,
a er.me and Cfeetlw Wrtllng WOfkehop,
IIIIMU5.
that meet• at 6:00 p.m. Monday and
A lwo-i>Ol1
UTAT£ l'LANNINO SEMIN•
AR wlll be conduetod by THE EVER•
Wednesday wenlngs, and • o.m,~
WOfklhOp that meet, Wedneaday morning
QREEN STAff COlLEOE FOUNOATION
from g to t2. The flr1t is for people who
Janua,y 2&and February 2 from 7 to 9:30
want 10 uN dreams as a stimulant to
p.m. In LH 1. Advence ,...,.,.uone
are
t~r writing. and the eecond Is tor people
required by January 20, and can be made
who a,.. lntereated In aelt-lnslght through
at the EvergrHn Development Office.
dreams. The fff
le $25 and $20,
Coat le $15 per per9on or
per couple.
respectively. and each Is a quaner-long
For Information and reHnatlona
call
WOl1teh0p. Call the Counaellng Center
A QROUP DEVELOPMENT SKILLS
Due lo typeeettlng llmltallone the new
training group will mark the beginning of
CPJ deedllne for announc.rnente 11 5
a HrlH
of COUNl!lLINQ
CENTER
p.m. Friday for succeeding Thursday
sponaoired wc:wkthopl for Wlnter Quarter.
IHuel. Announoementa ehould be IUbThis W'Nkend ... ,ion, offered on January
mltted typed and dOu~ed epaoed .

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