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Identifier
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cpj0183
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Title
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The Cooper Point Journal Volume 6, Issue 23 (May 11, 1978)
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Date
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11 May 1978
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extracted text
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DTF Proposes
Strike Policy
mer,
is
by John Keogh
A proJ)Osed replacement for Evergreen's current strikt policy,
which empowers the president and vice presidents to assume
absolute control over college operations in the event of a fitrike,
has been unanimously approved by the Collective Bargaining and
~ TheCooper Point
Strike Policy Review DTF.
If adopted by the Board of Trustees the proposed policy would
~Journal
Tlla&
significantly alter Evergrttn's official stance on employee walkouts. The college's present strike policy is embodied in Resolution
pwwwStalaeau..-
of the Board of Trustees No. 77-3; this document delegates to the
Olw
''"·""
- May 11, 1171
Volume
I, No. 23
Governor Announces
Boldt Task Force
by Nancy Ann Parkes
During a pttSS confermce held
on Tuesday, May 9, Governor
Dixy Lee Ray announced the
formation of a state agency task
fora to study unraolved environmental issues stemming from
the controversial Boldt decision.
The committee will meet for the
first time on Thursday, May 11.
The initial ruling in the Indian
rights fishing case came on
February 12, 1974, when Federal
District Judge George H. Boldt
concluded
that Washington
State's fishing regulations were
unlawful when applied to 14
Western
Washington
tribes
whose fishing rights were guar- •
anteed by treaties with the
federal goveinment.
To a large degree, th• regulation permitted Indians to regulate their own fishing. The
controversial "50-50" decision
guaranteed treaty tribes the right
10 half of the steelhead and
salmon run returning to off-res-ervation waters.
In 1970, the federal government initiat~ its suit against the
stat• of Washington on behalf of
the 14 tribes. Boldt cited a 1968
Supreme Court
decision
affir•
ming special fishing rights guaranteed
by
treaty
to
certain
Indian tribes as precedent to his
1974 ruling.
However, Boldt added in his
decision that .. ch of the tribes
would have to establish rigorous
fishing regulations and submit
catch reports to state fisheri..
and game officers.
The state
would only have the right to
regulate treaty guMantees in the
intnat
s.
REDUCEDRATES,UTILITIESINCWDED,
FURNISH-ED,_AND
FRIENDLY.
"'-
camp~ Housing
"Summer rental rates will be reduced 12% from Spring Quarter.
For Information and/or application, come see the folks at
Housing, Building A Room 322, phone 866-6132."
of raource conaervation.
Gordon Sandison, Dittetor of
the Department of Fisheri.. , will
head the governor's tuk force,
compriled of directon from the
Departments of Agriculture, Ecology, Energy, Natural Resources,
Transportation,
Reve-,
Ray maintains go beyond the
governor's
question of salmon allocation.
"Phase II in general," Ray
explained, "refers to the question
one.
According to Ray the $40
thousand job will be funded
of whether
through a Pacific Northwest
Regional -Commission grant.
the Indian
treaty
tribes shall have jurisdiction
and/or
veto power over all
actioruo by the state or other
parties, which can affect the environment of the fisheries.
"That mean, any kind of
cll..-tionat any river mouth or
stream bank, including such
thinp as logging, ports, and
shipping. Arty n,uonably broad
interpretation of juritdlction over
lar $40 thousand does come out
requested that Judge Boldt be
of the state of Washington
discretionary funds."
disqualified from presiding over
Judge Boldt won't preside over
the second major thrust ot the
Indian fishing rights battle which
was based upon a federal statute
providing that "the acquisition of
extra•judicial knowledge of facts
to be litigated
is cause for
removal of a federal judge."
environmental
concerns
might
affect
inclu~
almost everything
fisheries
that
could
that
happens, certainly in the western
part
of
the
state
and
the
Columbia river," Ray said.
Financial Management.
The task force will develop
Thomas Dickson, a former
member of Senator
August
"'Boldt Phast II" positions, and
Mardesich', legal staff, will l!ffVe
as Task Fora, Coordinator and
special liason to the Governor's
office. His position
on the
- Academic Fair Wednesday
Studenta will have an opportunity to register for swnmer and
fall academic programs at an
Academi~ Fair to be held on
Wednesday, May 17, beginning
at 9: 30 a. m. on the fint floor of
the Llbrary Building.
Faculty fflffllben from both
summer and fall programo will
be available
at this time to
diocull their own programa, u
wtll u offtr additional advice to
atudtni. about campuo oervlca
aich u affaln, admi.
110111, and financialaid.
S11mmtr 1971 Coordinated
Studin
pro1ram1
include:
Prtnch Cultutt: t.anau..Myth
and Rality, talllhtby s.Flbdll; Natm AnwicMI U..
tutt andArt, ofhnd by Mary P.
-•
and°"",__._,
~,~
mrv/Au
-&
, mordb 11rd
'The way the Pacific Northwest Regional funds are handled
under federal law is that a
certain percentage of the money
is reserved for discretionary
programs within each state," said
the governor. "and this particu-
nue, Game, and the Office of
will "examine various options
that may be open to the state in
settlement discussions", which
staff is a temporary
president and vice presidents the authority to, in the event of a
strike, suspend any and all rules and policies of the college and
"fire, discipline, demote, hire, transfer, reassign, and/or otherwise
effect the emplovment of persons at The Everlitfeen State College."
The DTF's proposed policy, in contrast, provides that members
of a striking constituency "will not be subject to dismissal for
participating", and that "all regular governance procedures, rules,
and policies of the College shall remain in effect" during a strike.
Assistant Attorney General Richard Montecucco drafted
Resolution 77-3 in response to a 1977 General Administration
Department strike memo allowing state agencies to hire outside
labor in order to maintain essential services. The Board of
Trustees adopted
the resolution
on June 22, 1977, and
subsequently appointed a Strike Policy Advisory Group composed
of nine administrators and one faculty member to provide it with
information on which to base strike policy decisions.
The Strike Policy Advisory Group prepared a 2S•page report
containing background information on collective bargaining and
strikes at institutions of higher education, reviews of applicable
laws and union status at Evergreen, and an analysis of the term
"essential services." In addition, the report details possible
approaches the Board of Trustees could take toward strike policy.
These include a "soft" approach, embodied in Evergreen's policy
prior to the adoption of Resolution 77&3 and defining ··essential
services" as the protection of state property, and a ..hard"
approach, typified by 77.3 and including normal academic
operation in the ."essential services" category.
President Dan Evans charged the Collective Bargaining and
Strike Policy Review DTF on January 27 to conduct a review of
the Strike Policy Advisory Group document. In his initial memo
to the DTF members, Evans stated he was convening the group to
"insure that sufficient review by all segments of the campus
community is carried out."
Members of the DTF. however, were strongly opposed to
Evergreen's current strike policy and decided to exceed their
charge by going on record against Resolution 77•3. They sent a
memo to Evans on February 22 recommending that 77-3 be
revoked and the old policy reinstated pending submission of the
final DTF report. According to Dave Gallagher, a student member
o( the DTF, the group recently questioned Assistant to the
President Les Eldridge regarding the Board of Trustees' reaction to
this memo. Eldridge answered that the trustees probably wouldn"t
do anything about it because they consider Evergreen's previous
strike policy inadequate.
DTF members, in their review of the Strike Policy Advisory
Group report, concluded that "essential services" is a meaningless
concept with regard to formulation of a strike policy because
according to Gallagher it "avoids the real issue which is the
ultimate right to strike." They discussed the question of whether
to go on record affirming the right to strike, and on March 1
adopted a proposal affirming the nttd for negotiation in good
faith by all parties, and providing that a constituency may call a
~trike or work stoppage by a majority vote, if such negotiations
break down, without being subject to dismissal.
Continued on page 7
by Alnara WIider and Dave
Hitchens, and Institute of W .. tem Black Culture, taught by
returning Faculty Member Rudy
Manin.
Group Contracu for the tummer include: American Folk
Music for Teachers; Prehiatorlc
CivilizatioN; The Imperial Self:
American Writing In the NlnetHnth Ctntury; Gtrman Studies; ArtthropoJoaical, Archatolotpeal and Ehnohlatorical Sourca; Methoda In Piold Biolol)';
Pottle: Lop:; Orpnic Gudmlna;; Summer ~ory
Theater:
Photosraph1;
Muoeum, and
MonWIIIIIII: Alplno Botany;
Plant. and Thllr u.., Odp,a
oi Ul-e: v-and haot:
BolicMal'-tlaandC....• ,,.
••••
Appllutlon1,
-
..
; Solar ...,.
and MaJor 1ft
began in his courtroom over four
years ago. Boldt recently in·
formed U.S. District Court Judge
Walter T. McGovern that he
would have to withdraw from
the case for medical reasons.
Although he will not preside
over Ph=
11, District Court
Judge Boldt will continue his
involvement in Phase I of his
controvenial decision after recovering from recent surgery.
Soon after Boldt declined to
preside over Phase U, McGovern
appointed Judge William, H.
Orrick Jr. of San Francisco to
hear the case. Boldt'• withdrawal
from the case will cause a delay
in the Phase II decision, which
had bttn expected by August.
·w. do not know until the
court
decides,
or the federal
further litigation. That appeal
At that time the state alleged
Boldt's "tours
to numerous
reservations", "emotional meet•
ings with tribal officials", and
viewing of "sites which the tribes
claim have sustained environ•
mental degradation
impairing
their treaty fishing rights" consti·
luted proof that he had acquired
facts to be disputed during the
consideration of environmental
matten in Phase 11.
Governor Ray hopes environ•
menta.l and allocation i.s&uescan
be resolved
outside
of the
courtroom. Ray, who wrote to
Attorney General Griffin Bell on
Tuesday advising him of the
state's desire for out•of•court
negotiations explained, "I feel
magistrate decides, how long any
postponement would be," Ray
explained at Tuesday's preu
citizms of thll state, Indian and
non-Indian alib, and the federal
cc.nfeaea.a.
On April 26, the 9th Circuit
Court of Appeals upheld Boldt'•
takeover of the oalmon flthery
government that Phase II of the
Boldt decision be l<ttled out of
court."
So far the govtm0r II pluted
and lilt allocation
with
of Hlmon
betw1111IJ'Hty triba and non-
lndlano.
1'1111-
not
thoflnl limo that
the atate had attnnpted
to
override Boldt. Laat fall, the
State Attomt-y General'• office
that it Is in the best interest of all
recommendation,
of a
national tuk force appointed by
Pldldent Camr to ltudy Boldt
Phaoe 11. ThtH ncommtndatlono, which concern the allocatioll lNuea p.-l by theorqinal
1974 Boldt ruling. "an being
worked out at the bargaining
table at the present time," Ray
said.
In a discussion concerning the
prospective sources of revenue
for salmon enhancement
the
governor explained that the state
"is already putting a very large
amount of state money" into this
program. She added that the
federal government's delegation
has "indicated" they would seek
legislation "if the task force
agreements can be reached for
the federal government to add to
that ~hrough federal legislations.
but it will depend upon an act of
congress.
The governor closed her for.
mal statement
on the Boldt
Phase II task force by saying:
··Boldt Phase II represents but
one of many issues involving the
legal relationship between the
state and the trHty Indian tribes.
TheH relationships are compli•
cated by the fact that the State
of WashinRton did not even
exist at the time the treaties
were being signed. Moreover.
the U.S. Constitution gives the
federal government certain pre•
roptivn
with respect to Indian
relatioN. The problmts we face
today. havr their origins in the
politia of the last century."
While the controversies 5lem-
mlnafrom the Boldt dodsion
are
far from over. tht' governor
.,..,._.i
hope that the proposod
Phue II negotiation II a step
towards a solution.
TIie Cooptt Point Journal May 11, 1178
n.
Letters(O))l]fiilllil@llllLetters~llllllll@llll
I
I
Bus Business
To the Editor:
Students, faculty and staff face
the prospect of a cutback in bus
service to the college unless the
administrators around here get
on the ball. Evergreen provid~
only $6,205.02 of its own money
to the mamtenance or tne bus
sys rem in 1977. They also
contributed the farebox revenue,
$5,112.00, whichlntercity Transit
rnms over to them. LT. had to
provide financial aid rn the bus
service to the tune of $15,234.45,
or $2.10 per mile. Next year,
T. E.S.C. proposes to reduce its
contribution to $4,800, increasing
I.T.·s subsidy 10 $16,638.73.
The issue is this: Givm the
high cost to lmercity Transit of
providing service to Evergtten,
the Transit Commission believes
that other areas of Thurston
County which want bus service
,md don't have it ought to take
priority over Evergrttn. These
areas would certainly generate
more revenue for the maimt-'1ance of the bus system than
Evergrttn contributes. Two pos::oibilitiesexist-either a reduction
10 or elimination of service for
the college. Service might be cut
to three or four trips per day, or
something similarly inadequate.
And then Evergreen would have
w supplement this service with
college vans. First of all, those
vans aren't big enough for the
number of daytime riders. Fur•
,her, if, as Intercity Transit
Manager Jim Slakey points out,
Evergreen were unwilling to
supplement
this meager bus
service with its own, Intercity
Transit would lose credibility as
a truly viable means of transponation;
he believes th.J.t it
would be in the better interests
of thl' Transit Commission to
scrap service to T.E.S.C. under
1hese conditions and implement
11 adequately t>lsewhere.
The college hu .- .-e-sponsibil•
11y to the students. faculty and
s1aff. and to community mem•
~rs who. in thl"ory, have access
10 college facilities. I mean the:
college, not the S&.A Board.
Busses an· not relied upon solely
by students. Funher. the college
has an obligation t0 make irMlf
.is ~adily available to the public
as possible. 6J)f'Ci.J.lly since it
da.ims to do so.
Apologies
From Floyd
To the Editor:
I just want~ to apologize for
the mix-up with the clocks. I've
been working here six yean. ilild
wouldn't you know it, the first
time I go out of town they go
bananas. Elma and me had a
good time In Disneyland.
Floyd R. Peppin
Fun And Sex
To the Editor:
"Sex education for college
su.1dents7" you ask. "Why7"
Well, you may think you know
about sex, but do you know:
I. how • diaphragm is fined
or insened7
2. ,he side effects of an IUD7
3. exactly how binh conrrol
pills work7
4. how many pregnancy te5ts
the Women's Clinic does each
quaner7
5. when genital herpes is most
contagious 7
Can you answer thrtt or mott
of these questions? Are you
curious about the ones you can't
answer7 Well the Women's
Health Clinic, the Men's Center,
and the Women's Center att
co-sponsoring a Sexua.lity Faire,
10 be held May 16th, 17th, and
18,h.
At the Sexuality Faire, we'll
have a good time. We will
discuss male responsibility
in
sexual health care and birth
control, sexually transmitted ~
eases, frminism, sexual politics.
and personal relationships.
On May 16,h, a, 7,00, in the
Board Room, Ms. Elaine Sehr~
der, Sexual Health Counselor at
the University of Washington.
will sptak on birth control
responsibility for men and wo•
me:n, and the relationship httween feminism, s,exual politics
and personal relationships. Dr.
Denniston, of Population Dy•
namics in Seattle, will talk about
male responsibility
in birth
control, and vasectomies,
at
7, 00, on May 18th, in Llb 1417.
Wednesday, May 17th, has
b.,n designated FUN &: SEX
day. At 2 ,00, also in Llb 1417,
Ms. Julie Brutocao, TESC Women's Health Oinic Coordinator,
and Chelle Robens, TESC Women's Center Coordirunor. will
lead a workshop entitled, "Sex
on the Evergreen umpw."
The
Evergrttn Burlesque Players will
present a series of skits and
songs for your enjoyment. It
should be an interesting and
informative thrtt days on the
Evergreen Campus. WATCH
FOR POSTERS!
Ellen Kissmanand
Chelle Roberts
Conductor
Captured
To the Editor,
RE, Last week's letter uklng
about information rqarding the
power of God emanating Into
Evergreen.
Well it's at my house buddy,
ha ha. I'm not sharing Her
either.
Name withheld on request
Better Red
Than Dead
To the Editor:
Re: Byron Youu' quoted ttmarks in the front page ar•
ticle, "Faculty Guideline■
Tightened" (CPI, May 4).
"Byron Youtz told the group
(of facul,y), 1, llttffll to me
you're raising a dead herring.
I've served on student commit·
tees for ye:an, and never, not
even in tht 'sixties, was there a
student coalition against a facul•
ty member.'"
Of course: not. But thtn
neither did those of us who were
students in the 'sixties raile dead
herring. We had learned a great
deal abou, people who beat dead
hones and railed red herring and
really had many mott imponant
things to do than take on
individual faculty memben.
Raising dead herring mull be
one 0£ those new faculty cult
activities (like gold fish eating of
earlier generations ot undergraduates).
I a11ume h has
grown out o( neo-spiritualism,
the recycling ethic, and bo~
dom. I would not discount the
possibility that peopi• who
engage In such a biz.an,, actlvity
might just be the lclnd oi people
against whom 1tt1dento would
form a coalition Just to scare
them silly.
I'd like to know more about
the cult. Where does it meet7
When 7 ls it union approved?
Were Byron' 1 remub the fin,
public acknowledguien, of the
cult7 Do they only ral■e one a, a
time7
Lynn Pattenon
The Meaning
Of Life
To the Editor,
After writing my ■illy letter
last Meir. (■tt Searching for the
Cosmic Conductor, May 4th) I
did ■ome lnquirie■ (■ly lnquirie■)
to find out if anyone had rud
the dumb thing. Tum, out that •
lot of GREENERSGREENERS,
'i A, I SAID GREENERS,rud it
and did not like It but what do
you know, they •
1111I wu
surprised to ~wr
that at lea■ t
the letter■ gd read ill tl,js paper.
I've wondered for a long time if
thett wu any "for ru.l" voice to
the lost Evergreen communlty,
and now I detect a ■pule of the
light of knowing that there I■ a
way to speak and be heard.
Sure, now what do you want to
say7 Well, hi friends. Sttms sort
ol silly but what can we ■ay to
each other. We at TESC wallt
around in an unreal haze.
alienated in whatever terms you
like. There is no Spirit hett. We
have no myths to ■upport an
abstract ~ of COMMUNllY, a sense of 'being of the same
type of animal, and belonging to
each other in some special,
magical way that is not and
need not be under■ tood. Down
through history people have
found each other and had love,
and thous}, I do not undentand
the phenomenon, I am a witness
to its groH absence at this
school. Now sure we can find
partner> and friends to fill our
time, but in the put 10mething
more, some elusive group spirit
has been known and this i1 not
to be found here: in our minor
interactions with each other as
w,, each pass obliviou■ly through
thl■ transient world, oblivious to
each other and to our import·
and to one another u Social
animals that need things from
, each other on a large ■cale if we
are to find fulfilJment, happiness,
and meaning In our lives.
i have no answers, but where
is that Cosmic Conductor to
send us to the source of
ourselves and give us each other
with fuJJ acceptance of the great
import of olir relationships, of
finding what it is to love each
other and to live sanely ilild
productively
in this world.
correcting ■ome of the nows,
perhaps never succeeding in
utopia but possibly at least
finding something more than
th01e that have railed us to fight
with our fellow humans and to
compete for ounelva with little
thought of the good our energies
might be doing if applied to the
woes of us all instead of our
own minor need.7
(Ever thought how insignificant it all is to the ■tarvlng
children7)
They just want to feed
themselves, not at all worried
about the Cosmic Conductor,
the Grat Manna In the ■ky so
blue.
How are we gonna do 117How
an, we gonna come t<>gdher In
some way we haven't thought of
as yet7 The old traditions have
fallen apart for us; ..., don't
want sports heroes to rally
around; we don't want cliques
and fnr h0U1D1.and yet they did
provide a aimple avenue for the
expression of group Spirit, that
I■, for the development of a
sense of belonging, community
man, ya know7 Maybe we don't
even want to have thl■, but then
I think that we do. The school is
constantly getting aiticl■ m from
its students for the lack oi things
to do, tor the lack oi excitement
maybe, this letter ohould show
how little life the place really
has, little happening In the way
of brilliant progre■s In coming
together as a united body of
people, feeling and making each
other grow and develop u wi
potentially might (who the hell
knows about potential anyways,
I just think we need to be freer
to hug each other).
Kent
P.S. This is from Myrna-I
can't sa.y anything; I'm just a
dumb chick. Laugh, laugh. Oh,
it seems, good start, there's a
illlil@IID
lack of communication here, um,
what was that, I can't talk, you
know that. This I■ what I've
been trying to write. It's not the
myth that'■ bnportant, It's the
belief in the myth. ·11·1 not the
meat it's the motion. Hu there
been any progresa7 Are myths
just baaed on the cycle of the
individual. Is the void the
womb7 How much can people
ever communicate7
Don
it
matter if you believe in ■pace
men7 Or Genesis7 Or Darwin's
rvolution 7 Does it matttt how
you Interact with people, or how
you don't Interact? Does history
determine what you do now, or
is it just the fact that you have
that belief what's important7 Do
we just use history in the same
way that UIiade' s sacred people
used sacred time as a means of
placing themselves In their ttality7 How was it that they did
that7 Through going back to
religious life, to sacred time, the
primitive man was not living in
the profane world, but In the
origin.al time of the unknown
cosmic void of what is, whateva
that may be. If this is true then
that means that there is 'no
'cosmic' reason for living and
what we do has no significance
beyond ourselves and there is no
moral and no significance to any
but each to herself, how self-<:en•
tettd. how sad. U evolution is
leading us forward into the
Inn-itable, and I have no great
cosmic meaning, I'm just a dumb
chide, there's no meaning other
than In my mind, rven if I
believe in my history, whatever
myths I may choose to use, they
att just artificial constructions
that we use to survive, not real
things that can give us some
ultimate, transcmdant value in
living. It's not that thett is no
meaning, it is just that the
ultimate transcend.ant value is in
the things that we create, not in
the Individual, but In the things
we create between ~ Individuals. That's okay. Thank you
and I hope you ttad and think
and love and respond.
Kent&: Myrna
I
Please express your concern
loudly and quickly 10 Dean
Clabaugh, and Lynn Gamer who
are involved in negotiations with
the Transit Commission.
Katie Harris
0
I
I
II
,
I
T.S.F.Y.
..
To the Editor:
Abbttviations an, really gdtlng on my nerves. COG Ill,
CPE, CPJ, it's all g?ftlt to me.
But that's what last Wftlr.'1 paper
looked like •• I looked for
■omething In-ting
to rud.
What thl■ paper really flftd■ are
some good hamand ea titla to
its storin.
Rading through
called "CPE h•ad mem with
students",
I found it very
interesting
however its title
sounded lik• mumbled nothing;
still the article was important to
Evffgreffl and needed to ■ay so.
Possibly with something like,
'Who's writing about Ever-
grttnf'
It seems
there are new
abnviation1
being invented
rvery day at T.E.S.C. and used
expediantly among groups while
many students attn't aqualnted
with them. Moreover, abbrevia•
lions make reading titles tedious,
and ohen they make the paper
seem elitist by appealing to
people who only know what
they (the abl'n'iations) mean.
But I've gone too far. Somt-body up there be creative about
your titles. For if the Cooper
Point Journal is to ttad and be
important and circulate, it must
be readable and appear Interesting. The last thing I want to
have to do is refer to the bottom
of the page to find out what a
COG Ill or CPE is just to read
the headlines.
Yours truly,
David Wylie
A Plea For
Cooperation
To the Editor,
To member,, of the Evergreen
communityOn Saturday, one of the days
of the Solar Exhibition, I was
sitting quietly with two friends
on the sundedt northwest of the
Seminar Building. While ..., were
sitting there, two deer walked
out of the woods befott us and
began to graze by the walkway.
W• watched them for nearly
twenty minutes u they slowly
toured the field for edibles and
continued from our sight down
the road.
For several moments, as 1
continued to face the woods, I
wa1 struck by the wonderful
combination of what was befott
me and what was behind. I
became anxious as I began to
reflect on how much the fututt
plans of our community will
continue to limit the frequency
of such an event.
Our community will never
reflect the values of th01e who
do not participate In it. One ol
the moot basic and fundamental
ways of J!arl\cipaling in this
communi!J iJ th!OIJlh
the food
cooperatiri.
"
A cooperative
i1 only u
effective a■ it■ m•mb•r■ hip
makes it. Collective action,
din,cted upon intuests held In
common, provides the dynamic
fora which makes cooperatives
work. The essential character or
quality of any cooperative is
determined by the effectiveneu
oi its action.
We need to take collective
action In order to Improve 11'<
efficiency of our cooperative. On
May 18 and 19 new articles of
incorporation will be offeftd to
the membenhip of the Olympia
FOOD cooperative for ratifiation. The articles will be
published in this week's co-op
news letter and the authors,
Charlies Lutz and myoelf, will be
available for questions about
them on May 15 In Lecture Hall
12 at 6,30.
Please join us and participate
in one of the most fundamental
ways of effecting change in our
community. If you are already a
mffllber, please become awatt or
the issues and vote.
In good faith,
Stephen Buxbaum
member of the board
Olympia FOOD Cooperative
Prisoner Wants
Correspondence
To the Editor:
My name is John Johnson. I'm
currently incau:erated,
in the
State of Washington"
at the
United States prison on McNriJ
Island. I'm 1wenty-eigh1 (28)
years old, 5 feet 9 Inches In
height, approximately l?ll lbs.,
brown eyes, an Afro hair style,
and born under the zodiac sign
of Llbra.
I'm not always getting myself
into difficulties nor am I habitual
as far as trouble is conettned.
However, I'm writing this letter
In hopes ,hat your paper would
consider publishing my name.
hereby stating that I'm prisoner
desiring correspondence 10 anybody who wishes to correspond
with me, Out of this multitude
of misery In this house of fury,
I've been totally rejected by
those whom I once considettd
loved ones, family, and friends.
So, in my desperation
for
outside communication, I'm •~
pealing thia decision to you or
anyone on your staff who will
assist me-so tha, I can hold fast
to the ttality of the outside In.
Thank you in advance.
Sincettly,
John Johnson, 139126
Box 1000
Steilacoom, WA 911388
.Y:TMENTS AV,HLAELE
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CooptM- Po&nl Journal May 11, 1171
3
~Ilrmll@llllRound Students
by John M....,Jy
Stop a moment and uy to
think of some bi, of Evffgreffl
armitectutt tha, I■ curved.
The Library Building. The
Seminar Building. The CAB, the
Rec. and Communications Building■. Even the L«:ure Hall is, on
second notice, not circular, but a
multigon made up of triangular
rooms. The sharp, straight lines
parallel us, intenect around us,
Forum
lead us to their ends.
It is odd that the curved space
we experience most often is
found in ashuays, wastebaskets
and toilets.
What has happened? ls there a
conspiracy against random pat•
terns or curved lines 7 Someone
tell me where I can find curves,
please! The eyes, anrmpting to
evade this geometry lesson, find
no relief staring off into space at
odd angJes. They are met by the
squares on the ceiling above and
the linoleum squares on the Aoor
below. Being boxed in by
squares. Escape outside onto...
oh no, no, nol Red Square.
Hundreds
and hundreds
of
rectangles! An ocean of them, all
safely contained within a grid of
concrete bars for those who
might drown. Even ,he grass is
carefully sectioned off. The
seemingly "free" gardens are
deceptively liberal: in them hide
riot suppression cubes. As for
the stately trees7 All enlisted into
columns with military precision
like the formations of lifeless
lamp poles next to them. The
straight lines are lying every•
whtte. It is no wonder we have
a hard time attempting
to
perceive a world of ideas free
from precise bounds, where
learning ought not to be di.sci•
plined imo boxes for administra•
tors and for those who cannot
swim. How can we learn of such
an unbounded world when our
very learning environment con•
cretely tells us otherwise7
Now this may seem like
feigned neurosis, but see here:
when objrcts are organized in
lines, all those lines, from the
viewer's standpoint,
emanate
from a point on the horizon.
Never mind .-bout architect's
blueprints because we don't look
at things from a thousand feet
up. The truth is, whichever way
you look, all those straight lines
are all reaching out from One
point which continually chants.
'The source is out here, the
source is out here, the source .... "
No wonder people think the
answers are "out there." Every•
thing points to that.
While persistently persuading
us to turn away from the
problems inside, our egos are
cajoled. You see. All of this is
very flattering
to us. The
emanating rays of -spotlights
shine at us from all organized
directions. We are told we are
the center figure on the stage.
But can't you see. Those ar,
not revelatory rays from the
horizon dawning on us, nor are
they from beacons or spodights.
They are from a projection
booth, imposing images from all
sides while physically fencing
lines al'ound us. h's a gruesome
scene for brainwashing. h's no
wonder we can't see. We've been
~linded ~y th~ lovely, irradiattng, straight Imes.
Square School
rH t(S/ll66·61B
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IHIIIDIUJ!mll!Bl
l~~IDJIBI
• ABKYOURSELF
IHAT YOUIANT FROI HOUBINB
THENCOMPARE
IHAT ASHOFFERS.
. CALLANDTALK11TH
THEFRIENDLY
STAFF
ABOUT
YOUR
HOUBINB
NEEDS. ~~~ YIIDM~IBl~LW
Fr.I E.NtLY
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4
-~---"·-
Tho~
Evergreen's
Energy
Expo
Trident:
Two Paths To Power
by John Sewud
The weather was appropriat•ly
oE difficulties. LoviN' Soft Path
wann and 1Unny this Wftitmd u
tho Northw .. 1 Enorgy Exposition
took pl.act on campus. Tht
exposition amountlNi to something of an information blitz on
tnugy,
with over 40 events
schoduled.
"It really went very well," said
F;aculty Member Byron Youtz
•her the contttt=.
··1t tumod
out a lot of poopl•. and had a
nice, fe-stive atmosphett." Pfl>ple
came from throughout the P~t
Sound area and beyond to
attend the thrtt-d.ay event.
··A lot of poopl• ca= looking
for answers," Youtz said. "I
heard a lot of good sensible
_questions being asked during
somt of the topical sessions.
People wanted to know how to
gt-t some alternatives bui.Jt into
their lives." Subjects of work•
shops held during the confettnu
ranged from alcohol fuels to
e-nergy education in the public
schools. The workshops were
.irrangrd by various experts from
throughout the Northwest. Youtz
and memMrs of th, program he
1s currently teaching, Alternative
Energy Systems, planned and
organiud th, conference.
··Members of th, program
really came through in organizing this thing," according to
Youtz. ·w,·re all very appredat1ve for the financial and moral
support we received from a lot
of different groups.··
Two of th, wttkend's most
exciting events were keynote
addresses delivered by alternative energy advocates Amory
Lovins and Sim Van der Ryn.
Lovins, at the age of 30, has
recently become a minor celtbrity. He is a writer and lobbyist
tor economic and energy policy.
Van der Ryn is • one of the
country's leading solar architects,
and was appointed California
State Architect by Governor
Jerry Brown in 1975. As a boy,
Lovins trained himself in his
father's laboratory as an experimental physicist; at a~ 16 he
was acting as a consultant for
~veral companies. He went to
Harvard al 17, but left to pursue
a Ph.D. in physics at Oxford.
After several years there he
resigned his program out of
r~tlessness. In 1971, h, went to
London as the British representative of the Friends of the Urth.
Since then he has become
increasingly involved in economic-environmental policy. He hu
held private discussion, .ibout
energy with President Carter, the
rrime Minister of Britain, .ind
utility executives across the
country. and has also been
nominated for a Nobel Prize.
Lovins' address Sunda.y sounded well rohe•rsed. and brimmed
with facts and figures. Most of
the audience found his talk
hopeful and extremely convincing. Lovins outlined two paths
society might take in de:aling
with its energy nttds over the
next SO years. One he called the
Hard Path, the other the Soft
Path.
The Hard Path mean, essentially continuing a.long the s.ame
energy-source
lines
we're
following now, relying on nuclear and fossil fuels. The social
and economic costs of following such a path,
s.aid
Lovins. will become too great to
sustain. H" argued that as fotsil
fuels become more and more
sea rce, the c.apital needed to
rxtract them from the earth
be-comes immense. Drawing from
a vast array of facts and figurn,
Lovins maintziM'd th.at capital
nttds n~ by a factor of te:n as
oil is sought in inaccessible
placrs such as the arctic and the
ocun floor
Lovins also blasted nuclear
would bring problems In coordlnating a number oE different
IOUl'CS and dec:mtrallzlna
an already highly c•ntralind
onergy ayotem.
Lovins WU muctant to addreH th• i11u• of political
chang•. although capitaliam~ argummta often
ffltu Into dltcuuiona oE onugy.
He llftmed convinood that the
ptttent political ayatem Is capable of facili~tlng an fflffllY
transition. H• did acknowledge
that tom• ,pedal interest groups
.,. p,-.,tly
rals!Mlt to chang,e
but Itta his proposals "go with
our current grain, rather than
acroa it."
.
LoviN 1ummed up his argu•
ments saying, "Th• Soft Path is
in'elia~bl•. It offen advantaga
to everyone. It has jobt for tho
unemployod, opportunities for
big buai.nou to renew it.elf and
for tmall busineua to innovate:,
fflviro~tal
protection for the
conaervationisto, bottu national
IIOCUrity
for the military, exciting
technolOllia for the RCular, a
ttblrth of 1piritual valu .. for tho
migioua, world order and equity
for globalists, onergy indepondonce for tho itol&tionioto, radica I reforms for the young,
traditional virtues for tho old,
civil rights for tho liberals, •~tn•
rights for comervatives .... "
energy. "The world nuclear
enterprise is rapidly turning into
a pumpkin," ho said, ttfttring
the audience to a graph. '1t
appears it won't amount to .i hill
of beans before the oil runs out.
By the year 2,000, it's down in
the firowood league in terms of
the potential
energy it can
provide."
Lovins doesn't 11tt tho possibility of simply running out of oil
as being a roal difficulty. s.fott
that happe:ns, he contends,
remaining oil will become so
expensive to extract th.at countries simply wouldn't be able: to
foot the biJI. This situation is
alttady beginning to dev•lop. '1t
would be impossible for any
country outside the Persian Gulf
to use these technologies. These
things a~ so expensive, they're
starting to look like future:
technologies whose time has
already passed."
Side effects of tho Hue! Path,
Lovins argued, would include the
nttd for a complex bureaucracy
and a strong central authority to
~late
the use: of energy. Most
othe:r se:ctors of the economy
would be dangorouoly starwd ot
capital, and extremely high rates
of innation and unemployment
would develop. Lovings summed
up his rather bleak view of the
Hard Energy Path by saying, '1f
this happons, thett would be no
object in pursuing what"er it ii
you're doing risht now-you
might as well dig a hole In tho
ground and pull it in after
yourself."
Th• second SCfflario Lovins
discussed was tho heart of his
m.... go. It's what h• calls 'Th•
Soft Paft," from th• title of his
book So# Energy Paths, ToW11rd
a Dur"ble Peace. He envisions a
transition away from f<>11ilfue:ls
employing small-seal• applications of solar, wind, and biomass devices. These technologies
can be mass produced, making
them che.ape:r and ett.ating more
jobs than do the power plants oE
today. '1t's not an anti-technology program," he said. In fact
there's some very challengins
technology involved in making
things sophisticated
in their
simplicity, rather than in their
complexity. My father u..d to
say that any fool can make
something complex, but it talc.es
a ~nius to make it simple-I
think wo'v• lost sight of that
sinc-e around the war." Lovins
believes
that most of the
technology for such a program
already exi1tJ, but estimates it
will take about 50 yean to ~ it
in place: "Not becaue it isn't
there, but because the pl'ftfflt
energy system is so big and
sluggish."
Amory Lovins
"Th ore's still a low p•opl•
around who think this is all a
big conspiracy
by the: oil
companies,
and that maybe
they'll give us cheap oil again if
we just ask them, or maybo if
we nationalize them," Lovins
told the crown. "The:re's not
going to be a day whon you
wake up and say 'ah-ha, we've
just blown it forever,' but it i1
going to ~ hardt,r and hardt,r
to turn things around."
In discussing thoso two paths,
Lovins said, "You have: to
choose what kinds of probloms
you want. There ii no such thing
as a frtt lunch-although some
lunches att cheapor than othon."
Tho two paths offer difttrmt ..is
Lovins made it clur that a
sane onergy policy Is a necesaity
that traNCfflds idoological boundaries. 'We:'ve never trie:d to
make an energy policy by
consensus, but its time to start,
tho lim• loft to do it is ohort,"
Van der Ryn oaid during his
addross S..turday that thon Is no
single answer to the energy
Solar Development
In Red Square
While walking acro11 Red
Squaro this week, you may have
noticed something that wasn't
thott th• w.. k bofott. If you
habitually look at your fttt.(and
thorefott didn't Stt it) It's •
"passiv•ly dnignod 10lar house,"
according to Olympi3 Architect
Max Knauss.
Knauss and Fttd Tuso, his
co-conspirator, came up with the:
idea of building tho houlM!ju1t
nine days bofott they comploted
it. Work commenced
Friday
afternoon, and the project was '
finished on schedule at the ond
of the energy conference Sunday
afternoon.
"On Friday, when we had tho
Aoor platform done:, we: were
yolled) In thrft days."
Knauss and Tuao are umnbon
of th• Olymp13 Atta Owner/
Builder co-op, a now organization intended to a11ist prospecUv• owner/buildon. According
to KnaU11, ''Thott att a lot of
people who want to get into
building their own ho~,
but
they lack either tho confidena or
tho supplieo." Tho co-op intends
With tho addition of wood
to help by providing ownor /
stove and a lot of rodes under
builders with a vehicle for
the floor boards, the house
buying material, in bulk, and
would b• .. 1f-1uffici•nt for
providing work1hop1 in 1klll
heating purp<>IOI in this climate.
dovelopment. Knauss oayo tho
'We wanted to show that doing
orsanization
has receive:d en•
10mothing like this Is ttl&tiv•ly
cow-aging ttsp<>nM! 10 far;
simpl•." Knauaa Kid. "The ffltitt
thing WU built Uling IIOffli.skllled poople showed up for its lint
labor (1 tttenl
that,' IO~M
~ting.
thinking this might have to be
for a oquaro dancing exposition,"
Knauss said Sunday. 'W• woren't •utt whether anybody would
como up with tho matmals.''
Supply compani<1 In Olympi3
and Shelton loaned and donated
all tho matmal needed to build
the: structure.
In so doing,
the Senate:
ushered in another in a long line
of "improvements" to the Unlttd
State, nuclear anenal. Trident
fits neatly Into a nuclur jigsaw
puzzle called Triad, consltting of
three major components: Inter-continental Ballistic Mitoiles, nuclear-armed
bombers, and •
nuclear submarine fleet.
I
I
I
Thus, the anti-recovery policy
advanced by Rumsfield would
require an increase by billions of
dollars in de"fense spending,
boginning with the decision last
April to construct 29 Trident
submarines inste:ad of the initial
16.
In addition, th• Army lo
dtnloping th• new Ml11il•-X
capablo of gruter accuracy and
survivability than p,......t Minuteman mi11iles. Clearly, t.he
land-based nucle:ar force:s are
continually boing modemiud,
resulting in an eacalation of
nuclear arms production.
In the skies, the Alr Force
maintains a forot of 325 B-52
bombtn and 66 FS-111, 156 of
which cany nucloar bombo.
missile, ttpttsenlo .a tochnological escalation in the arms race.
Finally. tho Unit•d Stain
presently maintains a fleet of ten
Polaris of 31 Poseidon nuclear
submarines, packed with a total
of 656 nuclear missiles.
And now, Trident has arrived
to augment and eve:ntually
replaco tho Posoidon Ottt. Tho
24 missiles on each of 16
submarines are
known
as
MIRVs. MIRV stands for multiple indepondently-targotable reentry vehicles, meaning simply
that each of the warheads on
every missile: can be aimed at a
separate: target, and be assured
of hitting it from over 4,000
miles away. There are 17
warheads ON EACH MISSILE,
providing • grand total of 408
warheads per submarine.
With the above capabilities,
Trident is tho most dntructivo
we:apons system ever to exist on
earth. Tho military is expanding
In every aspect of tho Triadboth qualitatlv•ly and quantitatively. Thett is no doubt that
this cauan an ncalatory spiral,
s!nco th• Sovlot Union now has
tho impotua to dev•lop their own
Tridents. The spiraling arms raa,
continuH, with tho only ond In
sight-nuclear holocamt.•
Though tho bl&dt cloud oE
nucle:ar war hovers over the
world today, military 1trategilb
Embarking on a peace conver. sion program
sensitive
and
responsive to those who would
be _critically affected seems to ~
a humane alternative to spending
the 40 billion dollars required for
the dubious "deterrent" value
and threatening first-strike capability of the Trident system.
Szilard's policy is known as a
finite or minimal policy of
deterrence and has never been
seriously considered by an administration. A change in U.S.
deterrent policies causes a corresponding change in the amount of
money required to match such a
policy.
Tho Army controlo two typft
of Intm:ont!nental Ballistic MJ.sU.. locattd in underground oiloo
hardonod aplnat nuolw oxplo1iona. The flnt oE U-. 1 It a
misoUeknown u the Mlm,tmw1
series. There att 1,000 Mlnutoman missilH ranging from 200kiloton to !,megaton U~ldloton) in sin. Th• Hiro1hlma
bomb produced a blaat of
20-kilotons, 10 tho Minuteman
missiles .,. considerably largu.
The second typo of ICBM It tho
g13nt of all nucl•ar forces-tho
Titan miuile. Th• 54 Titan
rn1sou.. pack 10-mega\l>II warheads which paclt 500 tlmO&tho
dostructivo powor ol the Hiroshima bomb.
Laat year Prtsidtnt Cartu
shelved tho B-1 bomber which
wu d .. igned to roplacc the
aging B-52s. The emphoit hao
now shlft•d to th• Crui1e
mislil .. , which can be launched
from commerdal jetlinen, travel
at low trajec:torla (MWral hundred feot) and 11111maintain
noceuary accuracy. Th• Cruilo
missil•. lilr.• tho Army'• M-X
The production
of nuclear
weapons is a capital-intensive
industry. According to ~veral
different studies by the Bureau of
Labor Statistics the number of
jobs generated by one billion
dollars of military spending
hovers around 71,000. That
same billion dollars allocated to
other areas could create 187,000
jobs in education and 139,000
jobs in health fields.
but can be realized in a myriad
number of different policy options. As early as 1964 Leo
Szilard, a physicist who contributed to the development of
the atomic bomb, advocated a
"meeting of the minds I to l
reduce their !Soviet Union and
U.S. l strategic striking forces,
step by step to a level just
sufficient to inflict 'unacceptable'
damage in a counterblow." This,
Szilard argues, would necessitate
a reduction in nuclear forces to
50-to-100 nuclear
weapons.
Clearly, the present stockpile of
30 thousand nuclear weapons is
far above the n~essary "deter•
rent force".
In 1973 th• Unit•d Stain
Senat•. by a vol• of 49-47,
approved funding for tho construct ion of a pow·erful new
weapons system-the
Trident
submarine.
I
f
f
l
L _____________
claim that Trident Is nocaaary In
order to maintain an umbttllii
doterttnt fore, which will pttvont the outbttak of a nucl.. r
war.
Howeve:r, the large number of
varying deterrent policies show
that the:re is confusion as to how
much force: is necnsa.ry to deter
a nuclear war. In the past the:
Department
of Defense: has
advocated maintaining the level
of force necessary to inflict
"unacceptable damage" on an
opponent, which Secretary of
Defense Robert McNamara defined in 1969 as "one-fifth of the
Soviet Union's population and
one-half of her •industrial capacity."
However, in the 1978 Defense
Department report there seems
to be a dangerous shift in the
focus of U.S. nuclear forces.
Defense
Secretary
Donald
Rumsfield doscribos this shift:
"An important objective of the
assured
retaliation
m1ss1on
should be to rotard significantly
the ability of tho USSR to
recove:r from a nuclear exchange
and regain the status of a
20th-contury mili~ry and industrial power mott rapidly than
th• U.S." Rumofi•ld has ohlfted
th• focus from d•fining th•
deterrent force necessary to
prohibit rocovery by th• Soviot
Union after a nucle:ar war.
This has very direct and
ditturbing rarnificationa. Finl,
according to a Congreuional
budget roport, thlt anti--rocowry
policy would requitt incrH ... In
dettnse spending abow prnent
Journal May 11, 1971
Analysis
by Steve Francis
problem. 'W•'tt talking about a
wholo palet oE 1tratqla. I try
and do It by creating exanplary
models. W• r-.1 a solar heattd
homo on every block In California-aomething the pooplo can
aee."
Van du Ryn ditcuaed economic trmds and tho !ncrouing
difflcultia our oociety is facing.
"An !ntetttting thing happoned
in 1913: it WU tho lint yoar that
the traditional formula oE!nv.. tlng mott fflffllY and capital Into
the oconomy didn't result In a
bigger GNP. '73 WU tho fint
you that ttl&tlonshlp rovonod
ittelf; mott onergy and capital
didn't result In a better matmal
quality of life. W•'r• on •
downwud turn."
DlscuNing tho mott hopeful
lido of things, Van der Ryn Kid
a rocent Harris Poll showed that
Americana att willing to trade a
hiaher income for a better
quality oEUn. ·w.·.. ttally not
talking about technology hett,"
Van du Ryn said, 'What we'tt
....Uy talking about Is valuos."
Van der Ryn implied that ho kit
tho lituatlon wu largely In th•
hands_oE politicians, rather than
tochnologitto. 'What politicians
are sood at, in my opinion, is
the symbolic manipulation of
valuH," he said. 'What I can do
as a te:chnologist,
ia make
available more appropriate technology."
Van der Ryn also made a sort
of pragmatic plug for tho
establishmont, saying, 'We have
to involve the mainstreaim cor•
porate American In this. Otherwise, we:'re: fighting a losing
battle. All we'll ~ Is a lot of
.. If-rightoou..,... and I uw too
much of that in the sixties."
A Military
-
,~...._...,.....
__
_.ol
levels. Increases in defense
,ponding will of couno ttSult In
less spending in other economic
and public sectors.
Second, this policy, if pursue:d, will be seen as an
aggressive move which may
result in a new arms race of
unprecedented proportions.
A Congressional Budget roport
shows that a policy of finite
deterrence: would result in a
reduction of $28.6 billion over
the next five yean. This money
could be: diverted to other areas
of society such as education,
health clinks, etc., which are
cripled for lack of funding.
Two measures before Congress
would help with convtt1ion from
a war-time to a peace-time
economy:
the
McGovern•
Mathias Peace Conversio11 bill
and tho Transfer A=clment.
The Peace: Conve:rsion Bill
would not reallocate any resources. lnste:ad, it would set up
peace conversion plans which
would tttrain workon displaced
from their jobs in the event of a
reduction in military/industrial
contracts.
John Maynard Keyne~. an
economist whose theories explained the Depression of the
1930s, stressed the necessity of
government spending to create
employment ahd thus stimulate
the economy. The "stimulation"
to the U.S. economy in the '301
was in the form of World War 11
and military. production. MUita ry expenditures
now reach
$160 million per day, and some
people claim should not be cut
precisely because of th.at stimulation. Politically,
the cut or
transfer of military monies to
meet human needs has not
occurred. ln rflerring to uselesa
government stimulation such as
nuclear production, Keynes said,
"it would indeed be more
sensible to build houses and the
like, but if there are political and
practical difficulties in the way
of this, the above would be
better than nothing."
Perhaps it is politically impossible to bring about this
change. Many people believe it is
not. A demonstration "to open
up the ba .. for the pooplo" on
May 21-22 is designed to
stimulate political action to
reroute government spending to
socially useful and humanly
satisfying goals.
(For those interested in participating in the May 21-22
demonstration
and acquiring
more information, there will be a
general meeting of Trident resistance forces on Tuesday. May
16, in CAB 108).
The Transfer Amendment advocates transferring funds from
wasteful military spending to
mttt human nttds in urban and
rural development, health, and
other social programs.
Thirdly, whethor outwardly
expressed or not, the anti•recovery policy requires such an
enormous amount of nuclear
force that it is a first-strike
system designed to ensure U.S.
global superiority aher a nucl,ar
war.
This third critique has in fact
been leveled against the present
"deterrence"
policy.
Bob
AldridJe, an ex-missile designer
at Lockheed, argues in the May,
1978 issue of The Progressive
that the Pentagon's s«ret strategy is just that-prttmptory
first
strike. He points to Trident as an
embodiment of that first strike
intent.
Aldridge maintains
that a
force the -size and accuracy of
Trident is not necessary for
deterrent
purposes alone. A
small number of low accuracy
missiles is enough to dete:r.
Trident, with ill multiple, extreme:ly accurate warheads, is
actually targotod for hardened
rmiuU. 1ilos. Aldridi<, qu<1tions
,why the U.S. needs to "kill"
empty mlslil• ,nos. An opponont'• mi111l.. would 1Upposedly
bo flttd In a lint 1trilr.•.
It it important to ttalitt that
detom-ena, it not a fixod concept
EDITOR
John K•ogh
BUSINESSMANAGER
Nathaniel Koch
MANAGING EDITOR
Nancy Ann ParkH
PRODUCTION MANAGER
Malcom Baker
FEATURESEDITOR
John S.ward
SECRETARY
Joyce Baker
STAFF WRITERS
Lauri• Frankel
ADVERTISING
Mule. Chambers
Joel Lindstrom
John Martin
LIN A«ming
PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
Thomas Hood
Tho COOPERPOINTJOURNALle --ly
for .. -•
-.hy,
n1 tlaff ol Tho E"'V,_ Sitto Collogo, Olymple, Wuhlngton-·
u-- oo1 _.,
ol Thor•-eoi1ogo
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111Wp. ... 1... ......_doelnot1
orttylfflptJ•••••
.. bJINl:za
I¢
,
110
- ............
In ._ buelneee
Collogo ......
-Butldlng
!CAI)potloy:
- ..........pMM:
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,,,,,
: ......
Letlltn
.......
,..., be....,_.
by l'IOOlt T..edly tor tt.t ...... ;ubllc Ila ;. Letlla
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The Beaux Arts Ball Through
by John Martin
It 1s a unique
thing
in
Wa!>hington when the sun shines
tor more than three consecutive
dav.,, It 1s also a unique thing
when Th£' Evergreen State Collq~( has a large ball with two
l1vl' b,rnd.., and plenty of wine
,ind bet'r II makes one nervous
1l' havc- this much good fortune
,ll
Evt'r~reen
I couldn·t bring
mv..,elt
to
dCcept
such
7
-~--lloy11,1ffl
-~--lloy11,1ffl
6
good
turtune remembering last year's
Reaux Arb Ball with its milell1n~ lines at the kegs and the
~eneral 200 of people involved.
My pilot and I gel into the
Green Machine", a panel wagon
\\'h1ch resembles a Rainier Ale
lan with wheels, and drive into
tllV•rn
where we rob the local
Stalt' Liquor Store, remaining of
course. polite, so as not to give
our already-badly-publicized colle~e any more bad publicity. The
woman clerk is most accommodating and brings me the liquor l
as!-. for without any unnecessary
requests lor 1.D. or money. The
manager shows enthusiastic interesl 1n my sawed off shotgun
as he has never seen one up close
bet ore.
The liquor situation having
been taken care of, my pilot and
I decide we must have some sort
of a nutritional foundation for
the night's festivities. My pilot
suggests McDonald's. I d.isagrtt.
).1cOonald's food has a nasty
tendency to expand at the wrong
moments. We finally decide on
Kentucky
Fried Chicken-a
three-piece dinner with a side of
two dozen rolls, which are
similar to sponges whm it comes
to soaking up a half-gallon of
lose G. Gold and a pint of
Gordon's Gin.
Bloated and thirsty we head
towards campus and some pregame warm-ups for the Ball. Gin
and Tonics flow freely, the
Gordon's is quickly consumed
and we make our way to the
Beaux Arts Ball; the Gold safely
in ffiy pack with lemons and
limes.
•
We are quite drunk now and
make a point ot stepping on
slugs and making obscene remarks to people we pass. We
notice many people in costumes
heading toward the library. My
pilot and l were to go as harp
seal and hunter but the skin
didn't make it down from
Canada in time. We are half an
hour late now and expect an
ungodly long line, but there are
just a few people going in. Not a
good sign.
l felt confident that my ticket
wou Id be free as I am doing an
article for the CPJ. Th, guy at
the desk tells me I don't look like
a Greener much less a CPJ
person. See what happens if you
don't conform to the Evugreen
dress code and don't wear
baggies 7 After purchasing our
tickets we wait in a line where
two SS types det,rmine whether
or not we are 21 and if so we
must be stamped accordingly. I
pass through th• tine babbling
that I don't drink and I fall into
th, ballroom at the fourth floor
of the library.
I listen and notice the silfflce.
It's nin• o'clock and the band
hasn't •ven begun to play. My
pilot suggets we go out on the
patio and drink ourselves into
oblivion and ming]• with peopl,.
I look around as we wallc.out to
the patio. The decorations are
minimal, unlike last year's Be.aux
Arts. 11ter<aro no camels and
this up,,ts m• very much. I
scream for camels u my pilot
pushes me through the door 011to
the patio. Th, Gold is broken
out once more and my atttngth
is renewod.I tab a look around
me at the various costumes,
moot of which display """"' !IOrt
of energy theme. The zeroes
have opted for the rich Arab
look and wrapped a coup!• of
Cannon towels around their
heads.
A Haze
Finally Geoqpa a,_, a country rock band which plays
Washington versions of Jerry Jeff
Walker and other Amlin, Texas,
music begins to play and people
begin to dance. I b,gin to
stumble around· looking for
som,on• faintly familiar. The
task b«oma easier as I dooe
one eye and l am now able to
s,e just one of everything. I
decide to go io the kitchen an,a
and s,e how the beer and win•
are coming. It tum, out that
only on• of the six keg, hu been
drunk and th•re aro. about 16
gallons of wine left. I lean th•
kitchen encouraging more alcohol consumption.
More people are arrivinst now
and I see familiar faces. I am
drooling uncontrollably but people just think it is p.1rt of my
costume. I recognize the keynote
speaker from the "Sun Day"
celebration, Sim Van der Ryn,
the California State Architect. I
know his daughter and decide to
ask him if she inherited her
slouch from him. "Yes she did,"
he says quite fondly.
I ask him about Jerry Brown
and Linda Ronstadt; if there is
anything to the rumor about
Jerry and Linda sleeping together, though l did not phrase it
so tactfully as I have here.
"I know if he were me that I
would," comes his reply as he
wipes the drool off my chin.
I laugh and so does he. Stat•
architects
are very amusing
people.
l look around and notice my
pilot hu departed. 1 also hear
the clamor of st .. ! drums in th,
background and the Caribbean
All Stars have started playing
and they hav• promiKd to do !IO
as long as anyoM is there to
<Witt. I am .comforted at the
thought that I have somewhere
to sleep for th• nlght. Th, dana
floor ls a mass of sweaty bodies
insanely dancing. Then I notia
that the music isn't playing. 1
become woozy and rTach in my
pack for th• Gold and tak•
another drink. The lemons at the
bottom of th• pack have become
obnoxious,
lint-covered
balls
that I suck on, swallowing littl•
balls of ·what looks Ilk• Kleenex.
The lights are suddenly on and
I begin to panic. What have I
donel ls it overl Where will I
go·1 Olympia has no De-Tox
center. It is only the judging of
costumes.
Paul Sparks, an Evergreen
faculty member helps out in the
judging. 1 look at him and decide
he is definitely hiding a keg in
his stomach. The contestants
range from a woman dressed as
a fish to a male individual with a
sock stuffed with what appears
to be other socks hanging
between his legs.
The contest continues but I
decide to take my leave· with
fellow writers who are in much
the same condition as I. The
Caribbean All Stars will continue
to play until 3: 30 in the morning
for a group of die-hards, until
the band itself is consumed by
the S.aux Arts Ball.
Chautauqua Offers Workshops
The Chautauqua Production
Company will offer three days of
scheduled workshops and miniperformances of mime, clown
and circus pieces May 15, 16 and
17 on Th• Evergrttn College
campus.
"Chautauqua
Productions,
Etc." is a group of student
performers engaged in a unique
trainers progra_m in the perform-
117 N.
Waahl""°"
Olympia
CLOSEOUT!
RALEIGH SUPER CORSA
REYNOLDS 531 FRAME
RE0'2AO
SALE S175
OPEN MON -SAT 10 TO 6
M3-1H7
ing arts, Students are given the
opportunity
to conceptualize,
produce, promote, stage, and
perform in a variety of styles
and local,s.
In th• past, the group has
performed in such diver,,t places
as colleges, military
bases,
churches, and penal institutions,
always retaining the aims of the
original Chautauqua, daconded
Need a housesitter
for the sumnier?
references
Please call 866-5041
evenings.
from the classic lyceum: to
entertain, educate, and inspire.
This year,
the group is
performing
in a style the
members evolved from Comme-dia d,I Arte. Commedia, like th•
circuses of yesteryear, is often
characterized by a quick pace,
vivaciousness, and flair.
Chautauqua inV'ites its audience to sit back and relax as student performers spin stories of
Pierrot, The Captain, Harlequin,
Punch and Judy, and a dozen
others.
"A Clown's Play," an original
theater piece by the Chautauqua
Company, will be presented May
18 and 19 in evening and
matintt performances here.
Th• play, produced under th•
dittction of Evergreen Faculty
m,mber Joy• Pmin and student
dittctor Bonni• Schell, will b,
p.-...:nted at 8 p.m. on th• 18th
and 2 p.m. on th• 19th.
Montessori
by Laurie Frankel
A kindergarten employing the
Montessori teaching method is
scheduled to open in Olympia
next September. The new kindergarten is planned to supplement a presently
operating
Montessori preschool.
The Montessori
teaching
method was developed by Maria
Montessori, an early twentieth
century educator who believed
chldren should be treated as
"'self-activated
learners"
and
placed in "prepared environments of programmed materials
which encourage autoeducation."
Teachers
in the Montessori
method try to place children in
active, rather than passive learning situations.
Montessori believed that as
children develop they
pass
through a series of sensitive
periods during which they an,
most capable of acquiring particular skills. Her teaching method
holds that it is best to begin
schooling a child as early as as•
three, in order to take advantof these sonsitiv• periods. Children taught in the Montessori
method fr,qu,ntly acquitt ruding and writing skills by the lim•
they'r, five yean old.
Mont....,ri classrooma are designed to stimulate learning by
presenting children with controlled environments consisting
of such tools u luming games
and functional, chllckb:ed fumltutt. Children aro allowed time
to work individually, and ar,
expected to fo\low ru1.. intended
to_facilitate cooperation between
them. The environment ls flexibl• enough to aUow children
l,eway in deciding what they
want to work on and when.
Mont,ssori's theory of luming
divides education into thrtt skill
groups: motor, sensory, and
inteUectual. Motor ddlJs such as
good postutt and diction aro
doveloped through exercioe. Sensory education f<>CUMton such
topia as the distinction between
quality and quantity, and inteUectual education on reading and
writing. Sandpaper letten and
moveabl• alphabets an, med to
teach th• latter skills.
Sharon Schnall, dittctor of the
Pacific Mont,ssori Preschool, is
starting the new kindergarten
because she wants "to give
parents who aro conamed with
their children's education and
getting them off to a good start
the choice of a Montessori
kindergarten." Schnall adds, '1
hav• heard negative things about
the public school program, for
exampl• that the children aro
bor,cl. I want to give parents a
choice."
Some of Schnall's current
prechool children will be old
enough for kindergarten
next
_year, but they will have alr,ady
reached the kindergarten level
academically at the pr,school.
They wouldn't fit w,11 into
public school kinderprttn
according to Schnall, because,
''Everyon• has to be in the same
group at the sam• time doing th•
same thing" in those programs.
Schnall does feel, hOW1'vtt, that
most of her students will mak•
the transition from the Montessori kindergarten into the first
grade "pmty w•ll", since "the
public schools have different
programs, and they can test the
children and place them in the
group they're prepared to be in.
So if they're reading when they
enter the first grade they can be
placed in an accelerated group."
Toys, except for some specifically designed for the Montessori
program, are used only in the
beginning of the year at Schnall's
preschool;
after that they'n:'
removed from the classroom.
and children play only with
Montessori learning materials for
the rest of the year.
These learning materials are
designed to educate children in
four different skill areas: practical life, sensory, reading, and
mathematics. Children learn such
practical life skills as how to deal
with money and sew. The Pink
Tower, a set of pink blocks
teaches them size concepts, and
the Broad Stair, a set of different
sized brown blocks helps them
grasp the idea of width. Montessori teachers employ sandpapercovered letters to teach children
how to read, and such devices as
number rods (sticks decorated
with repeating
colors),
and
numbered cards to acquaint
them with mathematics.
Schnall believes that most
non-Montessori preschools ··an
play-schools with a littl• bit of
learning on the side, but mostly
an opportunity for children to
inte-ract with other children." She
maintains that, '1f you approach
children in th• right manner they
really want to learn:·
The new kindergarten
will
mttt five afternoons a week, and
tuition will be $80 a month for
each student. Sharon Schnall can
be contacted at 357-6003 for
more information on the school.
Marathon A Success
Strike Poli~y Continued
After further discussion DTF
members decided their proposal
was insufficient when applied to
Evergrttn's classified staff, due
to the great variety of working
conditions experienced by that
constituency. They appointed a
four-member sub:group to study
the problem and develop an
amendment to the proposal. The
sub-group produced and submitted a plan breaking down the
classified staff into several constituencies according to budget
area designations;
this plan,
however, was rejected because
the proposed units were too
small, potentially
allowing a
small minority ot statt employees
to disrupt college business by
calling a strike.
Instead the DTF passed a
proposal amending the affirmative vote requirement for authorization
of classified staff
strikes to one-third. According
to Gallagher, this amendment
"would avoid the possibility of
the tyranny of a tiny minority.
At the same time, it would make
possible the expression of a
legitimate grievance by a significant segment of workers subject
to common conditions which are
not necessarily shared by the
whole constituency labelled as
'classified staff'."
The DTF on March 18 sent a
memo including the following
statement to President Evans:
"We believe all differences must
be negotiated in good faith by all
sides. tf such negotiations break
down, an affected. constituency,
to wit: faculty, classified staff.
exempt staff, or students-may
authorize a work stoppage Or
strike; in the case of classified
staff by an affirmative vote of
one-third, in the remaining cases
by a simple majority. Following
a constituency's vote to authorize a work stoppage or strike,
the members of that constituency
~ill not be subject to dismissal
or participating In the-Work
!stoppage or strike. Authorization
Opening
Kindergarten
of an individuals' s participating
in the work stoppage or strike
shall end upon a simple majority
vote of his or her constituency to
return to work."
Evans replied in a March 29
memo which stated: "l read with
interest the memorandum
of
action taken by the DTF. While
it is quite sketchy, l find at least
one aspect of the statement
adopted to be rather unusual:
•... in the case of classified staff
by an affirmative
vole of
one-third ... ' The authorization of
a work stoppage or strike by a
minority of an affected constituency is not only unusual but, I
believe, bad policy. I am rather
confident that the Board of
Trustees will have real difficulty
with that concept as do I."
Members of the DTF, unsatisfied with Rnolution 77-3 and
some aspects of the Strike Policy
Advisory Group report, concluded that th•y should draft a
proposed ,trik• policy based on
their assessment of the strike
issue. They asked L,, Eldridge if
it would be appropriate for them
to exceed their charge in this
manner and, according to Gallagher, Eldridg• told them in
ffiect, "DTFs can do anything
they want."
'We used that as guidance and
justification for going on," says
Gallagher.
Th• DTF developed and on
May 3 unanimously adopted an
initial draft of its proposed strike
policy. The document stipulates
that labor disputes must pass
through the Evergreen Grievance
Procedure before a work stoppage or strike may be authorized, but protects striking employees from dismissal
and
allows for sympathY strikes by
members of unaffected constituencies upon majority approval.
the proposed policy embodies
the same principle for minorityauthorization of strikes by the
classified staff outlined in the
DTF's March 18 memo to Evans.
Campus community members
will have a chance to air their
opinions on the DTF's proposal
at an open forum Thursday,
May 18, in the second noor
library lobby at 12 noon. At
that time DTF Members Peta
Henderson and John Aiken will
present the group', proposed
policy, and a general discussion
will follow. Copies of the DTF's
strike policy are now available at
the Campus Information Center.
The KAOS Spring Marathon
ended May 7 after bringing in a
total of $1700 in listener pledges.
Numerous "premium" items were
donated by local merchants,
making it possible for KAOS to
award some contributors with
merchandise valued comparably
to the amounts they pledaed.
The Marathon closed with an
exciting auction of items such as
plane rides, records and calculators. Money raised during the
Marathon
will be used to
maintain the non-commercial
radio station. KAOS is funded
largely by S & A, but must
make up a substantial part of
that funding each year to meet
its total budgetary needs.
Station Manager David Rauh
says "the staff is very pleased"
with the results of the Spring
Marathon, although it raised less
than th• $2,000 collected by last
fall's extravaganza.
Business
MANBARIN
HEIDIE
OPEN 7 DAYS
111 N CAPITOL WAY
VEGETARIAN
DISHES
ALCOHOLIC
BEVERAGES
LUNCHEON BUFFET
ORDERS TO GO mon-thurs
362-8866
11 :30 - 10:30
frl
11:30-12
sat
4 - 12
sun
3 - 10:30
Manager Karrie Jacobs explains
that the station would have
brought in more pledges this
time around "If the weather
hadn't been so good and people
h3d been inside listening to the
radio instead of outside playing."
Tapes
a.
! Recorcla
BEST SELECTION
OF All KINDS OF MUSIC
AT THE LOWEST·PRICE AROUND.
LINDA WATERFALL
ALBUMS NOW IN STOCK.
1'111W
_
_
1'111I.OW--
8
Tho~-·-·
Moy 11, 1111
-~---"·-
Funds Limited
S&A
by John Seward
An SoltA budget proposal
mttting was held on Wednesday,
May 10, and a tentative decision
was reached to cut back ten
percent from the overall budgets
of the Campus Recreation Operation, Equipinent Issue, Recreational Arts, the Activities Building and CAB Operations Sup-
port.
This decision was made after
was allocated for S&:A
Board Operations.
$3,115 for
$5,00C,
trar:'scripts, ¥d $5,000 for"" the
Otganic Fa-house.
An additional $15,000 was set aside for
the farmhouse completion, pendmg formation
contract
of
an academic
next fall. AJlocations
are still subject to final revision
after all proposals have been
heard.
The Wednesday meeting dealt
with the "Operations·· category.
Still to be heard from are four
more ·categories of S&A-funded
groups: Services, Recreation/
Sports, Culture, and Human
Rights, S&.A Executive Secretary
Steve Francis explained, "If we
go through the next three weeks,
and the total we come up with is
still greater than the total we've
allocated, we'd be over budgeted. We'd have to go back and do
some more work.··
During the morning session of
the meeting, the nine budgets on
the block were open for discussion. "The purpose of the
morning was to have the budgets
reduced voluntarily,"
said
Francis. 'That didn't work."
QUACK
HOUSE WANTED:
ARTISTS SEEKING ~~HOUSE TO LIVE
, "',"\ \
AND WORK IN
i
3BR OR
-. '
2BR W/GARAGE
KATHY OR JEFF
352-1821
There was disagreement over
funding the Organic Farm. Three
plans were offered. One plan
suggested simply that the Farmhouse board up until more
student interest in the project
arises. A second plan involved
only finishing the exterior, at a
cost of over $5,000. The third
proposal was to allocate enough
money to finish the building.
Rick Tessadore of the Recreation
Center said, "All I have is
someone else's word on student
input out there, but it doesn't
seem the project is ready to have
$20,000 put into it yet." A
student spokesperson
for the
farm conceded that "the few
people who are into it are really
into it, the others just sort of
drop in and out."
Weatherproofing the building
seems to be the most urgent
problem with the farmhouH'.
Because of the way the building
Is designed, all of the windows
must be custom fitted. 'We have
had to go the route of getting
RAINBOW RESTAURANT
4th & Columbia
375-6616
THIS WEEK'S DINNER.·
SPINACH
LASAGNE
Friday 6 - 10pm
■
custom windows made in a
shop," said the spokespenon. It
was estimated that windows and
doors for the building will cost
$5,000. with an
additional
$15,000 needed to complete its
construction.
A DTF report conefflling the
Farmhouse was passed out during the meeting. The report
noted that completion costs for
the building would run $.5 to
$7.50 per square foot, compared
with $30 to $35 per square foot
for most local raidtntial housing. "Financially the project will
be well worth your while to
complete," the report stated.
During the afternoon .... ion,
the meeting voted five to three
to allocate $.5,000 to the farmhouse for weatherproofing, and
earmarked an additional $15,000
should there be an academic
program next fall to complete
the project. There is a ttrong
doubt that such a program is in
the offing, however.
"Will
Humphreys told me that there's
no money to hire new faculty for
the Farmhouse next
year,"
Franc;is told the sroup. "But he
said the Farmhouse hu top
priority ii there's any opportunity to shih a faculty member into
it next fall."
Funding for transcripts and
portfolios was left as it stood.
The budget there had alttady
been cut back to a minimum, at
$3,115, and there was a consensus to leave it at that.
In a discussion concerning
Lighled dance floor with over 2,000 lights. Outrageous I
■ Dance co./,est. First prize $50.00
■ Cover charge $3.00
■ 21 and over
■ Leave your blue jeans and tee-shirts at home
T•
~
l<M on ~5:or E.....,
l'lltt ~ on US. IOI
TIIT NDMATION
aNCIM.111'1 IINCI ta,
VloltOUrClftttn
AndSN fo, Yatnolf
WIIJw.-Tllo....
Call l)ayt, £vu I WHlllld1
for Inf.,-
o..,c.,,...,
Call
SIATTLI
Un.-ity
9434000
v.... .......
IM.200
T.... dore pointed out that they
serve several functions besides
providing towel., both in the
prevention of theft and vandalism, and in providing some
measure of safety in the locker
rooms.
During the afternoon session
funding decisions were reached
on the Farmhouse, SoltA Operations, and Transcripts. With five
more budget propooals to go,
those attending
Wednesday's
meeting realized that 27 percent
of the budgets would need to be
cut.
However, a good deal of these
budgets wen, made up of fixed
costs, particularly
the CAB
Operating Budget. Rather than
making specific decisions as to
where these budgets should make
cuts, a ten percent reduction waS
requested. The groups will attempt to mue the cut and return
to the S.!<ABoard next week.
Board member Bill Hucks
commented on the need to have
a more specific idea of what
money was available before
dealing with proposals from the
other ·student groups. "My discomfort here is, we're leaving big
holes in what we're dealing with.
I'd like to be a little more dear
on things before anybody starts
thinking about other groups."
Library Studying
Tape Access
by John Seward
Changes are coming to the
Evergreen Audio Collection. By
next fall It's likely you will no
longer be able 10 check out
tapes-in fact there might no, be
any there. At least that'• the way
ii loob to George Rlckenon of
Technical Services.
Rlcbnon is cum,ndy on a
DTF that'• boett developing a
new access 1y1tem for the
library. The DTF was formed 10
aJISWff
a problem that ha, come
up Involving new copyright
laws. "Based on information
we've aolted for from the
attorney General's Offia, about
five percent of our tapes Weft
made illegally, We didn't do it
knowingly,'' says Rlcbnon.
Before 1972 there wen no
ttStrictions on making coplH of
records.
In that year,
an
amendment to the copyright
laws was passed allowing =rd
companies to copyright their
materials by printing a small "P"
on the record coven. About five
percent of the tapes have been
dubbed from records with this
mark.
Another law went into effect
as January 1, 1977, making it
illegal 10 reproduce any ffi:ord,
markrd or not, without permission from the record company.
A)J of the cassette tapes on the
shelves h~ve been recorded from
discs in the library's collection.
ln order to preserve the discs,
access to them has been highly
restricted, while the 4,500 tapes
circulate freely. The DTF II now
faced with a dilemma: how to
continue ,to increase the audio
collection, and still provide
aCCHS
to newly acquired material.
"Realistically,
there's rwo
thinp we could do," oays
~
~
206-523-5224
6Re0DCOO<>t>IDD
Recreational Art,, a spokesperson for the studios told the
meeting his budget was "really at
a bare minimum: I haven't even
budgeted for equipment maintenance, of which we have a sizable
amount." He noted that lab fees
have tripled, and material priCft
have also risen. "If I have to
make cuts, it will be in the
darkroom. If people learn the
game, they can get into the
academic darkroom, on campus.
'That's not true with the ceramia
and metal studios."
Several propooal1 dealing with
the Campuo Recreation Center
were discussed. One person
suggested cutting out the locker
room attendent1 and moving
that service to. Equipment CheckOut. Rick Te11adore of the
Recttation Center oald, 'That's a
susgestion. I think that's important, We need 10me option,. If
you left it up to me, I would
force the issue and cut back on
hours.· ,In. the past that's what
I've done to cut the budget, and
the bitch tickets have just come
in in droves."
Tessadore, however, was op-,
posed to the idea of dispensing
with locker room attendents.
'They often ~ to be doing
nothing, but I see their job as
vital." Others present agreed.
Rlckenon we could either write
to the record c:ompanie, for
permission to dub, or we could
think of a way to have acca.s
without dubbing." Rlckenon ~
lieves that not all companies
would give Evergrttn permlslion
to dub, and the library would be
faced with the problem of only
panial acass.
An example of acaso without
dubbing II the oystem at the
Univenlry of Washington's MiniMedia Center. Rickenon explain, that there, studtnb
requHt a staff penon to play a
particular record on rushquality'
turntables, th111minimizing wear
on the disa. •
Rickerson oay, that were such
a system installed at Evergrttn,
existing tapes would probably be
disposed of In some way. 'We' re
not just going to throw them
out. We don't know what,would
be done with them yer." Thett is
already a backlog of unprocessed
records in
the
collection.
'Whether or not we get a listening center depends entirely on
money," says Rlckenon. 'The
way it looks now, it's not going
to be anything fancy.
It Stttns likely, according 10
Rickerson, that next year a
temporary listening facility will
be set up using existing Evergreen equipment. Setting up a
system more appropriate to the
collection requittS capital funds,
and the earliest time the library
will be able to request such
funds will be next spring.
"The primary factor we're
considering is, what will provide
the best service to usen," Ays
Rickenon. "More we do anything, information will have to
be gotten from the community,
especially from people who use
the collection heavily."
:
Tomorrow's
Today
[,ag.MJ1
yet another
this Wftbnd.
all over the
the campuo
idut about
tion.
will be the Ii~ of
spring conference
u educaton from
NorthwHt flock to
to collaborate on
alternative educa-
''The New Age Education Confa-ence" II being 1ponsored by
the Cascadian Regional Library,
a non-profit networking uaociation involved in INueo of social
change. Nearly 50 workshops
aimed at innovation in education
are slated for the three-day
"ent.
According to Sego Jacbon, a
teacher at the Thunton County
Off-Campus School and co-coorsfinator of the education confa-ence, information to be shared
by educaton will range in theme
from preschools to doctoral
work.
In 1977, a group of educator1
at the "Equinox" gathering in
Oregon began laying the foundations for this weekend's confa-ence. Jagcson and coworker
Debbie Leung later 1uggHted
Evergreen as an appropriate
location.
Since that t~ the conference
staff has grown to include nine
memben, and has been co-sponsored by EPIC, the Men's
Center, The Outdoor Education
Program, and the Washington
Alternative Leaming Auociation.
Jackson ·expects Evergreen students to attend because, as he
puts It, "A lot of people around
here •have fantasi.. of starting
their own ochools."
One of the groups to attend
The New Age Education Confa-ence will be comprised of rush
school 1tudtnts from the Mountain Open School in Colorado.
They will discuss a program
they're involved in called 'Urban
Experiential Education".
Rather than confronting situation, in the wilderness like an
outdo0r education
proa;ram,
these 1tudtnts have confronted
that Jndespa,oable unit of civilization: the city,
Another highlight of the conference will be the "New
Games". "Evff)'one's welcome to
come and play the gama," snys
Jackson, "the more the merrier."
The penon who II running the
game workshop II a profaslonal
down from Seattle.
The games often inVolve
gadgets, such u an eight-footrushInflatable "Earth Ball"; or,
''Boffen", loam rubber non-violent owords, "Most 1port1 today
involve the whole winner-I-,
syndrome," Jackson explain,.
'7hese are gamH that people·
play to have fun. Tl>ty encourage contact, and there's llo
losers."
Registration for the three-day
confettnce will begin on Friday,
May 12, at 3 p.m. on Red
Square. Fees are based on
Period A SATIJRDAY 9-11 a.m.
Play as Therapy
Dmtystilying Reading for Teachen
Storyttlling
Gay Rights and Education
Teaching History Through Rock 'n l{oll Music
Alternatlv.. In Public Schools
Leaming Skills in Drug c:ow-Dlng
School, SchoolJng, and Education - An They Synonymous7
Teaching the Three R'1 Through Movement
I've Got Half A Mind lo Teach You A Lason
Dreaming a, a Tool in AlternatiVI!Education
Developing Environmental Education Curriculum
Behavior Modification
,_
1120LEGION WAY .
0pon Mon • Frl
...
a- ,
Sal
9-4
S7UDENT DISCOUNT
Information available In CAB 306.
11
-
Nod• 1111-.
--pad
to Dot --hlln,
P.O. Box
2.a3, Olympla, WA 118!107.
--
Student1 lnt ....
ld In attending law
to attend I Law
Woouhop on Tit_,
May 11
from 3 to 6 p.m. In CAB 110. Vllrioua
~ will bo tat.-.
Algllt• In
IChool ..
encouraged
advance at CarNr
-··
Planning
and
Library 1214.
Tli«o win' bo a WOfllDl'I CENTER
BUSINIEU IIEETINO on May 17 at
8:00
p.m. In the Ubrary 3l500
AIIE ___
_ lounge.
to attaidll
a.m. In lhl CAB Colfoohou.o. Dlcllloni wlll be mat1- on the 1~79
budg1t1 fcir recreation I 1port1 club•
and cultu.al g-.
E,wyone who
ltayt the -.tlro day may hllp -·
Allwelcomo.
HE1PI We aro trying to bulld ....,_
up tho Blc;yclo Shop bofoni
the aummer and c:ennot do ao until
folks claim their bk:yc._ and pan-.
M111Y"8ve bNn theN for owr - monttt..
We will bo Nlllng off bleyclol
and partl 111the and of thl1 month, ea
pl-.
...
1/0Uf part• homo. Titanic
and cl-.
you, Andy Spel• and Lenny er.nnan.
THE FAIIK.Y QIICUS THEATER 11
looklng for a new member. The
nl,..._member ,.....,
ooll«:tlv9 hM one
full ti.no pold l)Olltlon Of)On IOon.
tntervtewn and audtt1on1 begin May 20.
For men lntonnatton cm, ~7270.
or
pick up an -lcatlon
It 221 S.E. 11th
Aft.
Port
...-Ion
~ will bo
hald T,-Y,
Illy 18, It 4:00 p.m. In
tha 2IIOOloul,oa o4 thl Llbrart.
Alptna Botany F-lly
LOST: COIIP08l110N IIOOI( 11 • x
0.ted
March througn Aprll.
Pw11ona1journal, ~ tum In to
8
1
'.
llocu,tty.
Tho WOMEN Of COi.Oii UNIT151
CONFEfllENCE, happening at TESC
May 19 and 20, la looklng tor
voluntNfl
to work In chlldc1r1,
regl1tr■ llon and houalng. Anyone's
hetp would be appt9elated. womeno,
.-.. Contac1 Joy<>oKIi.,., 88M644,
or the Women'• Center, 8M-81&2.
Competition
for the FUL ■ fUOHT
GRANTS opens May 1 . Theee grants
.,. for graduate study and '9lelfCh
abroad. lnt•rHted
•tudenta should
contact the campus Fulbright program
advlNr, CarMr Planning and Plaoe--
ment, Library
121 ◄,
The Wuhlngton
Minority
Rlghta
MotMQ
888-8193.
Coe.lltlonfor
Sexual
and The LHblan
National Defenee Fund .,.
co-aponsorlng a Mother'• Olly march
end rally In support of gay right• and
eapeclally gay parents' r1ghtl. Tt'lflrally
will gather at noon, Sunday, May
1 ◄ th at Freeway Pan(_ We will march to
Occldental
Park where a rally la
IChectuled at 12:~. We urge everyone
to come. Bring your paranta and
chUdrwn with you In support of gay
r1ghtal For further Information call:
CfTIZENS FOIi RETURNAaLE BEVEIIAQE CONTAIMERS aro hold Ing an
Important meeting at the Gnu Dell,
Wedneedly, May 17, at 7:30 p.m. If
you want to ~P circulate pet:lllon1,
this la the meeting to be at. Any
amount of time you can donate will be
muc/1 llf)pl'lciatad.
There wlll be a TEACHER CERTIFICATlON WORKSHOP on May 17 at
Planning and Plac«nent from 2
to ◄ p.m. CAB 100. Advanced
regletratlon required at Library 1214.
career
A SELF EVALU,ATION
WORKSHOP tponlOl'ld by
Advt1lng and the Regl1trar'1
be held Thuraday, May 11,
3121from 3 to 5 p.m.
MU.SIC
MAY II. Thursda)'
TINA BLADE
A LUCY SHEEHY.
Former Otymplan1 back &om • ytar In
EugeM will be tHdlnt
lhelr rec:nt
-'ll·
NAY JI, JJ, Frt & Sat
~
ELECTRONIC MUSIC SYMPOSIUM
A Gnu Dell fln1. A hl1h quality
quadraphonk
sound -vst•m wlll be
UHd to play musk creatitd -,«:tflally
°'"tape
combined
with IM periormance. Works bv Jim
Stonenlphu.
Paul Tl.an. Michael
Huntsberg«, Mark Vat., John "11dns,
Je-ffrey Morgan. Peter Alkins. Phll
Hertr. Robert Donke, and othn1.
GNU DELI la located tn
downtown ()tympla on the
cornerof w... ThuntOft
AVIMIN aad Capitol Way,
P..-formanca begtft at nine p.m.
0.. .ton. .......
M,-..-.,
MS-1371.
- .
G,
-le
Otfloe will
In Llbrarv
FOR SAI.E: 111"Centurion 5-
10
apeed. Thia bike hH hardly been
uNd; 11 needs a OOodhome. Best
offer 0¥81' 1100. 352-4010 "'"'
•·
Whether you're a specialist whose
tape
WRITINQ
Classified
You'll understand the world and
yourself a whole lot better after a year
or two of experience asa Peadc Corps
or Vista volunteer .
magMtk
-
HERE ARE LOTS OF WAYS
TO SEE THE WORLD.
WE'LL GIVE YOU
A•WAY TO UNDERSTAND IT
Can You
aeoyo1e,
b
-
Sheehan wlll be on campu1 for
·~-Ion'
on May 17. HI will bo
-to di..,.. tho progrwn,and
,.._
ape,1,elioe
l'NUIW.
lntereet.d
peopNi lhould him or wrtte him
(Incl_,...)
-•
·Biology Dept. 1800 Mcloughlin llftl.,
Vancou.-er, WA Nee3. Call Suean,
-.o:274, for morwInformation.
322-1023or 322.s3.
SERVICE AND ACTMTY FEU wlll
bo dlocu---.
May 17, at 8
11.50 per page
after 5:30
and dl!J'ml weekend,.
-
AND
fa,
voluntNra
who are lnlerHted
In
teaming Cf'f.. a lnt.wnt.lon Mdll1 Ind
.,. able to make a minimum of fOUf
houra per WNk commlttment. Thia
work lnvolwH 32-houfl training. If
lnt.. tld In working tf'lla eummer,
Where
By registering early, you can
save $2. If you are able to
contribute thtte houn of work
• at the conference, you can aave
an additional $3. Food and
houoing will be available at cost,
and free child care will also be
available.
Peay Harrie
-
ThoCUNIC Of ..,._
THUlll10N COUtma 11 -ng
Period D SUNDAY 8:30-10:00 a.m.
Networking the Northwest's Alternative Leaming Community
Initiative Games and Group Chall~
Courte
Role of Music in New Age Education
Science Education: An Experiena for Fulfilling Real Needs
Exploring Alternatives in Childcare
Meditation and Children
Education in Cuba
Decision makins Process in Alternative Schools
Starting a Private Alternative School
income. Those making over
$4,000 a year will pay $22, those
making leu than $4,000 will be
asked to pay $15.
......1e.
111y
A '100 ICHOLAIIIHIP ~lllll
Period C SATIJRDAY 4-5:30
Seth Concepts: Education In a Multidimension World
Mountain Open School
Working With Familia
New Games
Dance/Movement/Rhythm for Utde People
Experimental Collega
Surviving as an Aiternatlve in a School District
Creative Poetry Writing Method,,
Non-racist, sexist, ageist resources
Obtaining Federal Funds
Learning to Learn
Outdoor Experiential Education
Pb456-0022
---l
lar 1111
-•
and ooo.dluck.g budglt
.. .and -Ion
..
.
Thia la • It-Ip
poaltCan
,_Iring
a --•
oanwnllb1•1t. Moro
being offered by the Northwnt
lot c,.- ......
Studlao
lar thl undlrgn,don -.
--tal
1oplc. Pl!>lir
fllUlt
bo IUllmlttad by a ItIOIOOad In
etthlr a two- or four.,._ oolteoe «
unlveralty In the Pacific NorthWNI
during tha 1en.71 academic ,... ,.
ProfeNo.1 .,. al10 Invited to llftd In
1tudent paper■ they think merll
con1lderat1on. Ellglble atatn are:
-ngton,
~.
ldalto, _,_
and Atuka. The ONdllne la July 1,
1971.
Period B SATIJRDAY 1:30-3:30
Dmtystilying Reading for Parents
Urban Experiential Education
loving Touch - ~ with Children
Eliminating SexualBarrien
Self-Care and the New Age Educator
AnandaMarga Education
Alternative Graduate Schools
Voucher System: Alternatlv .. for Government Supported
Education
Teaching Human Sexualty
Acclimatization
G.E.D. - How, Whet\, and Why7
Radical Approaches to Teaching/Coaching Sports
Teaching Job Finding Skills
Exploring Evergreen
•
Innovative App~ches to T,aching Math
Speaken from Evergreen include Willi Unsoeld, Stephanie
Coontz, and Bill Aldridge. During the co~.
a brand new
NorthwHt educational organiu:
tion will also be fttablilhed. This
is a first according to Jackson.
who oays, 'The organization will
be a clearing house for alternative education activity in the
Northwest."
lwergreen wlll be hoatlng tf'le
NOIITHftlT IIICIIONALAIIOCIA,,011 HUIIAIIIITIC ,afCHO' LOGY CONl'WM:I J..,_ a.a. A
""""°"'
Applcallon
ad
to T_, -
TERM PAPER TYPING
IMPORTED CAR PARTS
WAIITW,
COCRDlllf RIii TIii
WdCIIANDMfflWIIW---·
-- tar 1111; •••
-•
I gl s•,o In .klly, ....,_
1117L
_______
-Miao
_,
-llallng
1H KA
T1MNow Age EdacatlollConlua,ca
Schodale Of WOl'bliopo
Registration for the following worbhopo will be held Friday
from U to 6 in the second floor Library lobby.
MANJJsemi, &
REPAIR SERVICE
MOWERS TILLERS SAWS OUTBOARDS
2/3 TO 3/4 THE PRICE OF OTHER SHOPS
FREE PICKUP AND DELIVERY
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
CALL STEVE AT 888-0852
AFTER 3: 00 PM
Education
•
wish is to sharpen your professional
skills in engineering, education, math,
physical and life sciences, health,
business or a dozen other areas, or a
liberal arts grad cager to share your
talents while acquiring new skills and
insights, the Peace Corps and Vista
will open an entire new world to you.
You'll not only experience a new
culture and learn a new language,
you'll also share in the development of
an emerging nation, or help the poor
and powerless in America to gain
more control over their lives.
Complete information on volunteer
openings beginning this summer in
Africa, Asia, Latin America,
the
Pacific, and throughout the U.S. is
now available.
FOR INFORMATION
C,ALL OR WRITE:
THE PEACE CORPS I VISTA
1601SECOND A VE.
SEATTLE, WA 98101
Telephone 442-5490.
Collect calls accepted.
The
10
Tho -
PointJou-
May 11, 1171
Fiction JFfi©ikfL@IID
Fiction JFfiegifi@IID
Fic1
A Matter
..
i
·'•
Of Necessity
at which one takes one's life into their
own hands and just, by damn, lives it."
and said, finally, 'W.U .. .it's jUSt every•
and he rumed to the television. But
flicken of light from Ule setting sun
thing, you know. All of it. I just can't get
to sleep." He sighed, or breathed out very
intruded on the screen, making the
deeply and sipped his drink. After a
colored
faces appear blotched.
He
wondered if there were not some way the
moment, he lifted his-head and looked at
her when, she sat in the dim light, restive
windows could be more like those in his
and impatiem. He thought with a flicker
office, which were well above eye level
of humor 1hat he certa.inly wa.s the
and only provided skyligh1. It was
"¥15wer man." But the humor did not
annoying to have the evening sun glaring
draw him in. He was struck by th, sense
in on him. He thought of the whole thing
;n terms of his wife, who also dish,trl>ed of his own soul. unsaved and unanswered
when it called out for some ceruinty like
him as she-sat ne-xt to him on the couch,
sleep. "All I can say," he said, "is that
sipping her drink, Sttmingly content.
those funny feelings that keep us
After dinner his wU. left to play bridge
awalte ... well, tlutt !lttfflS to be how w• all
with her friends, whom he thought of as
discover life. Having no dreilml is like
falling in a certain caugory of people tlutt
having bad dreams. They just show that
he disliked bu, liked to imp...,. She came
something must be done or changed. I
in late and went to bed. He sat with a
know rhat for me and for the family it
bottle of brandy on the table next to him,
can't go on the way it Joa on now." She
droning into the dictaphon, and n,ading
was so much like him.
from a than on his lap, each .phrase
Then, like a man knttling and praying
entered
with
a
drawn
out:
to his own life he began to talk, to cune,
''UUUHHHH ... " At eleven o' clbclt, he
to convince his lootened, spirited mind of
turned off the wnp, and aher gazing a,
the validiry of his own existence tlutt
the dry lights and the headlights of can
lftmed, at times, 10 wut-ed amidst· the
flowing by through the window, he fell
clutter of his ocheduled and confined
into a dose, his hand in an unclenched
days. His daughter, lilce an empty gla.,
pooe around the ltffll
of his brandy gla..
becamethe silmt, imopol«n rKtptaCI, for
At tw•lw-thiny he wu awakened by the
his confaalon and his drum. Th, nlaht
sound of his daughter stirring In he
opened up the poooibillryfor -=ape and
bedroom upown. In the dark,he
off,red room for th• dream. Th•
heard he NY, otandin&
at the door to the
turroundlng
darknn1
drank up the
livlna room, '1 juat can't olftp. Can't you
patt,rno of the clay, lavin& than do oomeduns-I mun IOtllfthlnar Iv
distant u the faint points of llaht In the
pulled himMlf into a fuJJy upriaht pooitlon
valley below.
and, habitually rubbq hlo hand .,_. hla
He had bftn up nonh recently, In
chin, told he to a,tt a puo, a brandy
Canadaon buliJMN.There, he had _,
gia. from the liquor cabinet. "You11 hew
to uo, a Hool and loolr.- on the far • great lore1t•d land■ , unchrlliz,d and
unclaimed. To his daughter he dacribod
rtaht-hand olde of the top of the wlf.
an expanH, almott unimaginable,
of
They're abow the llqu,un." .,,_dy
ah,
fonst where they could buy In and ■enle
...,ppam1 with the ala- and olowly
Into • new Utt. He told her, In laa, that
lfttled Into the chair that ,...,d ■t a rtaht
■ome chanp had to traNpift or he would
angle to the couch where he Nt, Sftina
conaidor hi■ whole Utt a wute. H, felt hi■
hff, IO much his image, he thought
heart wu bad. His doctor had mentioned
deeply about his Utt.
certain llignl. At that wry moment he felt
After a paute, whkh wu, more or lea,
a dull ach• In hi■ !,ft armpit. HI■
a profeM!onal pauo,, he ulced her why
daughter wu ■upri■ed. u oh, should have
oh, could not llttp. '1 can't drum any
been, for ■h• had never h,ard him
real drum. I just worry and that lo all
mention NI il1naa before. For a moment
there ii. It drivn m, crazy," oh, oalcl.H,
they ■hand the knowledg, Wt he WU a
~uttd a finger of brandy into he gia.
arid told he to try it, "Sip It olowly. It
.nan with hiddeTI powers: with the
power,, In fact, to die. "But that b not the
huru at lint." She wu young and ho
point," ht, voice broke through th•
tried to tneat he u young but he found
himKlf ukinshff if theroWU totnethina dul<MN. 'The point lo that one just ■ t • certain point and wher, I NW that
dMpor than lack of olftp that """" bo
country I jult knew that there lo a point
troublin& he. She blew throutif,her llpo
The daughter had moved to speak
srveral timn u her lather talked on.
Finally, like • p,non ■kipping a rock into
a atttam, she asked, '1■ there land up
there, father, to be bought, I mean. Did
you see anyf' To him, it wu not a
quntion of whether he had _,. the land
or not. It was there. To hi■ daughter he
said, ''Yes, liftttn thoUAitd acrH in the
middle of Alberta, with two lakes and
cabins around thetn. '1 might as well
add," he said, anticipating her joy, "thett
is a good place for hona and enough
spac-e for uch of us to have our own."
His face had become blotched with
patches of red as the dark liquid, the
transpon of hope, suffused his veins. His
daughter became the listener, a rol• which
all human p.;1ns must eventually include
and which she played beautifully for him
when he spoke of his dreams. 'What will
you do there, father," she asked. And he
repli~ that it is not what he would do
but that he simply must go: enact some
change, or his hean would drive him to
an early death and his life would have
lived itself out without him having lived
fully. He would write in the woods as he
h.ad always meant to write. But his main
occupation would be to take people out
into the forest and guide them about or
take them Ay fishing. He could tie his
own flies. He held up the bottle with a
look of accomplishment and offered his
daughter another joint, not a finger. She
•ca,pted, and as he tricl<leda little of the
drink into he glass he proclaimed tlutt
there was only one mean rutted road into
the whole place. She drank quickly and
then said, "But father, ■o fu up in the
woods would we ever have any friends
and besides when, would I go to achoolr'
Rubbing his chin he said, 'Why couldn't
we ~ke some friends with us and why
couldn't • helicopter take you to school."
Yes, it would do nicely to tffld her to
school by air.
There came that inhalation of silence
that descends when there is only dukness
that surrounds a man's dttam,. 1n a
breath from the shadow in which his
daughter sat he heard her say, with some
emotion, "but do you really think it's
possible; the money, I mean, for all tlutt
property." Alneady like a woman, he
thought; trying to iron things out. With a
bunt of en"'l!Y, which wa1 like n,aliry
itself, the doctor said tlut1 he had bttn
thinking about the matter a good du! and
that Jim NellOn would probably malt• it a
joint venture. He had been a logger once,
although he was a lawyer now. Th,
daughter moved in her oeat and said with
some impatien<:e, "But do you really
mean it's true1 I just can't believe that
you really mean h. looking
at his
daughter, lull in the face, he told her, "By
God do I mean It'■ tru•. 111 pr on the
phone rtaht now and all Jim." Iv turned
to the coffee table where hi■ phone Nt;
it's number wu cllflttimt from tlutt ol the
re1t of the family. Flippin&throuah
a little
rotating Ille that Nt at la lid,, he found
th, number and dialed.
For the daughter the room wu not a
room, but • dream flllecl by her father.
She liotened to hi■ amiable bantering with
Jim, wondering. Shortly, the doctor hung
the receiver on the phone and told her
that he WU ulttp and p,od for nothlna
at th• moment.
"W,'11 talk again
tomorrow," he ■aid. Sh, uked th•
~n
apln, "Oh, but do you rmJly
mean it'■ nuer· Waving hi■ hand In the
brown llaht abov, his head, u an act of
conviction, he said olowly, '1t ii not •
matter of meaning. It lo a matter of
neaaity. It muat be IO," At this, W roo,
from the chair relucrandy, Nying, ''Y"'• it
could be the best thing in the world. I
really think IO. But l'w got to g,tt to
olftp. Tomorrow ii school, you know."
He ailed alter he u he watched h,r
olight ligur, rectde Into the complet•
darkne. of the hall-y.
''Night babe...
And 1hortly, he wu •&•in do1in1,
expectin& olftp.
Journal M1y 11, 1878
I
11
AndEvents&1ri1~Ailll@JEw®illli1~ArtsAndEvents&1r~~
Randy Finley has rewritten lhe hltle
guy's rules again w11h the opening ol
his latest theater, the Crest Formerly
his warehouse, !he Crest w,11 boaSI an
S18 m,lllon leather in 11s seconCl-hand
cap-CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE
THIRD KIHO In 70mm Dolby stereo
What can a PoQr boy do? This autho,
(who really does w,sh Randy all the
best) can't wait tor ENCOUNTERS 10
die a mlserable dealh and be replaced
by OERSU UZALA IN 70mm DOLBY
STEREO Gall The Seven Gables tor
delalls. and put In a gOOd worcl tor
OERSU. 632-8820
MUSIC
ON CAMPUS
Tom Foote's Performance and Production Cluster will sponsor a May 13
dance featuring EUPHORIA, on the 4th
floor ol the Library at 9 p m.
by SARA DIXON
Be(on, 1he doctor left the office that
eve_ninghe took a call from a palinu he
had bttn consulting off and on for yean.
It was a chronic cue. He spoke at
intervals, bearing out the patient's story:
··vn...well...uh huh ... tlutt's right ... W.U, I
chink you'n, getting all upset with .. .!
understand your conettn ... Let me just tell
you what I know and maybe that will
help. As a physicia.n I can assure you tlutt
11 is impossible to contract ... Wait, can
you listen to me7" The patient's low,
rambling protests continufti as the doctor
held the rKeivu slightly away from his
Par and gued at a large, ceramic circus
elephant that stood at the foot of his
couch. It seemed to slumber there in the
semi-darkness at the bottom of his office;
1he only opening to the outside was
through a strip of narrow panes directly
below the ceiling. Leaning forward in his
chair. the doctor brought the conversation
to a close: 'Well, John, just hold on 'till
Thursday. We'll have an appointment
then. Just hold off on this 'till then. We
can get this whole matter straighten~ up
at that point. Right7 Okay7 Are you
Okay7 Okay." He hung the receiver on
the phone, the perpetual phone and then
srnod, gathered up a s,ack of charts on
the desk, stopped at the closet to pick up
a dictaphone and left the room.
Louise, his nurse, greeted him with a
Goodbye." As he passed her in the
reception room he thought of her, once
again, as being born rasily into this
world. He left the office that evm.ing
thinking of her. He knew that it was
thought they were having an affair, but
,his was not the c~. Although this was
never acknowledged by him or his wife. it
was an important
factor in their
relationship and brought out the uncer1aimy that passed between thmi. and
made their life together miserable. In his
profession, he thought almost automatically about reaction rather than truth. In
h,s h•nd he held the power of diagnosis.
When he thought about it, the situation
betwttn them, he knew it was the very
silence of her steady demands upon
him-"for the sake of the family" and the
fact that she thought he had to be coerced
inio being a father that turned his rath
against her. He thought of asking her who
and what it was that made him so
unrespohsive. That certainly would draw
trom her a hostility
and an open
accusation of his ina~uacy
that he
could hate without reserve. For years he
had been quite conscious of a wish nor to
be like his wife and possessed of what he
termed and referrfli to aJoud, even in her
presence, as her Protestant Ways.
After stopping at a liquor store he
continued home and entered the front
door of the house with a fomaste of
aversion. She would be there, fixing
dinner, or, as he liked to think, fixing his
life. Entering the narrow, galley kitchen
he walked around his wile who wu
smelling spiCft in a jar over a pan of
bubbling spaghetti sauce. H• spoke to her
over his shoulder while he prepared
maninis in a tall, cylindrical gla., ''What
did you do about the bankr' After a
pau5", which held '°"" thought, oh,
"'5ponded: "Oh, I don't know Hank.
You've jus1 got to be mon careful. They
Wff< Y1!ryundentanding." Ii, NW her U
• woman who naturally had he own
money. Her tall forehud and her carwd
nos, cneated in he that look of havina
bttn bred. And oh, had bftn, u he had
not.
His daughter, who bore his ,__
blanc,. was In the living room watching
something on the televwon. H, IIWitdted
the channel and Nici, chttrily, 'Time for
,he newol" She 1talbd from the room
with • black look and lay clown on the
deck in a chaiM. H• could - her throutif, •
1he windows which formed one whole
wall of ,he room. H• wondered, briefly,
how she had grown thintttt yean into
chis world while he had only .., up: th,
fixidhy of his own aistmc,
drow despair
1hrough him lik• that of a man who is
cmain ,ha, his IU. will be ,,nln1uilhed
without distinction or recognhion.
A
familiar fftling of lonell,cltiot..clecl
COOS-P~nt
LINDA WATERFALL wlll appear In
concert on Sunday, May 14 at 7:30
p.m. on the 2nd floor of the library
building.
Advance tickets can be
purchased n Olympla for $2.50 al the
TESC CAB Duckhouse, Rainy Day
Records, and Childhood's
End. S3
night of the show.
Nobody seems 10 know anything
about THE INCREDIBLE MELTING
MAN It seems 10 have r-ut Seallle anCI
seems to be rated R Watch tor 11 in
Olympia If 11's what its adven,sers
claim, you won I have long 10 wait Ar
various Iheaters. check a paper
JUDITH COHEN, a senior music
student at Evergreen will present a
graduation rec Ital on Wednesday, May
17. at 8 p.m. In the Recital Hall. Her
performance wlll Include pieces by
Bach, Schumann. Bartok, BeethOven
and Glnastera FREE
Several people have saI1 nice tn,ngs
about FM. showing at the Ouwam1!>n
lhe Kenmore lhe Sea1ac S1• cne Ba,
and showing with Brian DePa!ma s
PHANTOM OF TrtE PARADISE a! lht;
Crossroads Twin In Bellevue FM al
6 40 and 10 00. PHANTOM al 8 25
(Crossroads onty check a paper or call
for 1nforma11on concem,ng the other
places) Sounds like fun I WANNA
HOLD YOUR HANO Is showing at
some ol the same thea1ers-Sea1ac
Si•. Crossroads.
and lhe Aurora
Cinema ll's about crazed Bealle !ans
II lhere·s space, let's ltll 11with Iokes
from RABBIT TEST "My doctor says
Ifs e11hera boy, girl or cantaloupe/ Its
my own fault I d1dn·1 take the pI111
Where do you buy ma1ernIty Iockey
shorts?" It's a movie about a pregnant
man. see?
OLD TIME COUNTRY DANCING? It's
still happening, every Wednffday at 8
p.m with a llve band and caller on the
1st floor of the library bulldlnQ. "All't'9
and Kickln"·. Donations, donations,
donations.
Boy, will I be glad when I graduate
lrom this boring school and my uncle
gives me !he Dally O for a graduation
present and I can write confusing
edltorlals
Instead of stupid little
blurbs.
TAVS, GRANOLA JOINTS, & MISC.
(In Olympl->
APPLEJAM preaent1 MAY and ANN
DRAKE on Frldav. May 12, with
Nauthentlc ~Ina
Mountain muak:
aklllfully played on Oddi•, gultw, and
banjo." Also, ITOVEl'll'E INYDER
"telllng stories and pk:klng a gultw
and btowlng a hot harmonica..... On
Saturday, May 13, St.-w. Cooper and
Mark Brlgh•m pick up the billing
prnentlng "muak: of the Brttllh ,,._
In a rowdy 1tyte. 220 E. Union. Main
Act at 9 p.m. Minor,
welcomed
perM>nally.
j
N
On Fr1day and Saturday nlghta, GNU
DELI will preHnt an ELECTRONIC
MUSIC SY11-.u11.
A high quality
quadraphonic eound 1y1tem wlll J>1
uHd tb play mu1k: crNted epeelflcally
for megneOc tape or tape oombfned
with live pwtormanoe. Wonta by Jim
Stonec•lpher,
Paul Tlaon, MlchMI
Huntsberger, Martt v•, John Aikin■,
Jeffery Morgan, P•ter Alkln1, Phil
Herz, RotNlrt Danker, and othere.
Comer of Thuraton end Capitol Way,
g,a..1311.
IN OLYMPIA
LECT\JRES
IN OI...YMP1A
STONES, BONES, AND SKIN, 1
show by student• on contract wtth
Paul Spa,t(1, will bl In the library
Gallery lhrough May 20.
USA HORNIROOI( ANO FRIENDS
wtll be gMng I poetry ,._,lf'IQ at the
Cale Intermezzo on May 11 at 8:00.
IN OLYMPIA
CAPT A.IN COYOTES
PEOAIUS <Net lho -·
Hamaon. 357-4191.
will
THE PUI TAVERN -,to
TARY MAN 0'tJel'" the WNMl'ld.
feature
2'10 W.
IIOU123 W.
5th.,-,
RICHAflD"I ROUNOHOUR
wtlh IAUIOUTO
night. 45tr2222.
l
contln-through Saturday
TH! GREENWOOD'INN conun....
wtth MAJtc 0'tJel'"tM wNkend. But wait
folks, thll Ian'! all. Beginning on May
1' "you con -ly
get off on alt 10<.•
THE OREENWOOO 11 about to open
the IWO-t dllCO In the NotthwNt. So
If you're 21 or owr, ..,..,.
your blu.
jelnl and t .. lhlrtl ■t home" and get
Into the dllCO 10er18 at the QREEN-WOOD.9'3-<000.
IN CENTRALIA
Don'! forget Centralla Community
College'• ILUEGRASI FESTIVAL. Fr1·
day night
at 7 p.m.,
Saturday
beginning at noon.
ART
ON CAMPUS
A TEXTILE AND CERAMIC SHOW by
E"9fgreen 1tudent1 Blair Lewtu and
Julle Pickering will be In the lecture
Hall Rotunda May 15 through 18 The
shOw wm bl open from 8 am to 10
pm
The Evergreen State College Photog•
raphy Module prHenta A ITUDENT
PHOTOGRAPHY SHOW
May 10
through 17 on the third floor of the
library Bulld1 g
Prints and bru1hwortc poroelalne by
RUSI HIJIAIIOTO,
and paintings on
by JEAN HARRINGTON_.. on
dlaplay at the Chlldh0od'1 End Gal~
through May 31. :z:rz
W. •th.
Pllotog,_
DOUQ l't.UIIIIER will
be exhibiting his WOl1lsthrough May
20 at tM Gnu DIii local~ at Thuf'9ton
and Copltol In otympla.
RUIS
ON CAMPUS
Mondey, May 1& EPIC pr9Nnt1 tM
Acadlmy Award winning documentary
HAIILAN COUNTY UIA. Tho fllm
chtonlclN 1M lltfor1a of coal mining
famUlel In their lt,ugg._ to wfn •
United Mlne WOl'kln oontract at the
Brookalde mine In Harlan County,
Kentucky. TM atrtke t,eg■,, In 1973
tho Plko Compony IWIUNd
to sign • contract wfth the miners. The
fllm crew tptnt two .....,.. In Hal1an
County, ltvlng with the miners and
sharing lhelr hardahlp1.
7:30 In
L.cture Hall One on Monday and
TUNday at noon.lt'a Frw.
""'°"
IN SEATTl.E
THE JEFFREY BAUET retum1 to
S.ttt•
for five pe,1om.-.c::ee at the
0pora HOUN Ttlwougtl SatlK•
day, May ~27. ""'1onnonooo... Mt
tor 8:00 each night. Tickets for thtl ftve
pe,1orrnanc:. are on sate at the Bon
Man:he and IUburt.n OUtll11,
Friday Nile FIims pr911nt1 Pier
Paolo Puollnl'o DECAIIEMay 12
ot 3:00, 7:00 and 8:30. on Tho
Doc■rno!on by Boc-.:lo,
It 11 one of
PHollnl'1
few comedlN,
and 11
lltENEWABLE RQOlHICEI,
w, exhlbito Hit. •
Uon of pt,otograpl\1 by IIATT GIIAGG devoted al,,:no11 entirety
WIii be on dlaptay It Photo PT1nt'#Oftt1,
114 Elllol W. In Seattl•. The major
emphasis for the 1h0w 11 compr1Nd 0,
PHollnl
hlmHlf
plays the central
ch,aracter ltudlH
111oclated wUh th•
figure of the film, the palnler Ok>tto,
"gypo" logging tradnlon. ~I
14 tG who pop1 onto end off of lhe ea.n
May 14,
unexpect~ly. Showing with
IE
GLAD WHEN YOU'ii£ DEAD, YOU
RASCAL YOU, a Betty Boop lhor1 with
Res«vallons .,. 11111avall~e
for
mu1lc by Louis Armstrong.
This
!NI Ever;reen FoundaUon'1 '"TUT ADprogram la Rat.ct X, what...,
that
VENTURE'". This Includes a lecture,
means. Lecture Hall One, 75 CW1t1.
allde show tlhd Egyptian Banquet, u
weU u ac:hnlHlon to a private Mowing
of "Tut Tl'Mlurea" this summer In S.
altle. Call BM-8565 lor more Int~
The Academic FIim Serl• prnenta
lion
AU HA.SAAD BALTHAZAR, a lesser
known WOf1itof Robert Bresaon, maker
of PICKPOCKET and MOUCHETTE.
Artist V1CKI SMITH wlll be exhibiting
Ullle Is known (and nothing la taught)
1prawlllng and painted earthen ware
ol Robert Bresaon al TESC, ao hie
May 5 lhrough May 20 at t"8 Artists
movies muat speak for themselves.
Gallery, 9'19 East Pike In SeeHle.
See II at 1 :30 or 7 30 m Lecture Hall
One on Wednesday, May 17 II'• Free
ru
Wanna JULIA? Tonight's the
n~ht, ■I It lea¥N lhe STATE, only lo
bo roplecod by Herbert Roos' THE
TUR-G
l'OINT. Who ....
you ,_
to oo to S.ttle? Who knowa, maybe
pretty aoon th•y'II have a Stenley
Kr■mer retroapectlve and bring him all
the w..., tw. to be keynote ap;Nker ..
anyway, JULIA lhowa at 9:00 for thtl
final time tonight,
and TURNING
l'OtNT begin I Fr1day. Call for show·
tlmea, 357-4010.
At the Capitol? Joen Rlwq' RABBIT
TEST, and something called THE
CHICKEN CHRONICLES. Uh huh.
Rabbit at 7:07 and 10:15, Chlcbn at
9:00. CaU for a human meuaoe
atter
8:"5. 357-7181.
SEA GYPSIES 11al the Oiymplc, and
presumably
moat of the ragular
employee1 are taking a well--med
vacation. The 1M gypalN (aocon:Ung
to a nHrly unimpeachable
1ourc•)
rented the Olympic for their own
purpoNI, and pay a percentage to thtl
ownera. lt'a an lnlerNtlng phenomenon. '"The advent!Jf9 of a llfetlme ... " at
7:20 ond 8:05.
Winner of the Academy Award tor
"Belt Sentlmentallty" and t,.
OM
tor "Most lmo1obabl• SJ1.reotypea"
ANNIE HALL (a n•rvoua romance)
return, lo Olympla. Aside from lhe
cinematography,
which la
subtly
1tunnlng, It 11 merely another Woody
A114Nl
movie ("S.1t Woody Allen Movl•
of the YW1-qulte
tunny and often
dull. 11·1 at The Cinema. Cell for
lhowtllT'IN, 943-5814.
IN SEATTLE
"They're not peta anymore .. :· THE
PACK. WIiiard'• rat buddies return 10
the ,creen disguised IS hounds ot
he11. TerrOl"lzing at least elghl Sea111e
theaters
F.1.S.T at the Town Sly Stallone
fights his wav •·up from the slreets
with his words, with his hear1, with his
fists " Also 1tarring Rod Steiger and
Peter Bovie 7 05 and 9 15
fhe Third Seattle International Film
Fesllval
at !he Moore Egyptian
Thea!fe• May 11-Simone Signore! in
MADAME ROSA (Best Forlegn Fllml
8:00 p.m. May 12-THE TOY, a French
comedy at 7:00 p.m., 1nd SUMMER
PARADISE. a Swedlah dlreclorlal debul
at 9:30. May 13-THE CHESS PLAYERS by Satyajtl Ray at 7 :00 and
IILA.CK JOY, an ethnically
pure
Engll1h FIim at 9:30. May 14-WHO
AIIE THE DESOLTS AND WHERE010
THEY QET 11 KIDS? USA 7: 00 and
THE ASCENT Sovunlon ll 9:30 (also
Monday at 9:30). May 15-(MondayJ
THE PROMISED LAND by Andrez1
Wa,da, call for tlme. May 18-THE
IA.KER'S ■ READ, ··a charmer" at 7:00
and THE DEVIL'S PLAYGROUND, from
Auatralla al 9:30. May 17-ISAHIA by
Marc•I (BLACK ORPHEUS) Camus,
■net EFFI IRIEST by Werner Rainier
F■ublnder al 7:00 and 9:30 respectively. Or81t God. Some recommenda•
t1on1? All ot the ■t,c:w,e.
IN SEATTLE
This 11 your lut chanoe (In this
country, anyway) to Me SIA OERAJNT
EVANS portray the !Ille role In V«dl's
FALSTAFF. Others to appear In the
Portland Opera exchang9 production
al the Selltle Opera HouN Include
Vtctor Braun, Karen A.rmatrono, Ashley
Putnam, Adrienne Leonetti, Michael
Coualn ■, WIiiene Gunn, John Ouykera.
Howard Fn.ct and Stanley Wexltw. May
13, 17, ■ncl 20. With a dlff.,..,,t casl,
the opera WIii be prnented In English
on May 19 and 20. Tickets are available
In Otympla at Yenney'• Music.
Louis Malle's PRETTY IA.BY, the
film thlt touched off the furor over
ci'llld porno, Is sltll at the Uptown
People w\11tell you that It's surprising•
ly mlld for an R-111tedfllm. BeHeve
them. Brooke Shleld1 (who WU the
11,-t clothed woman to be preeented in
PenthOUH, and probably !he first
12•year~d) plays a chlld pr01tltut1 In
1917'1 New Of1ean1' red llght dlslrlc1
Keith Carradine playa the photographer
who lovn her (whoN
photographs
exist today: It's all baaed on truth.
Ne) and SuNn Sarandon play, her
mother. Brook•'• rNI mother was there
all the time, r1ghl bef"tlnd IM camera
7:20 and 8:35.
Jon Voight, Jane Fonda and Bruce
Dern star In COMING HOME, which
sounda like a soeper lboul a Viet Nam
vet (Voight) and hie rNdJuatment to
peaottlme. Can't .. Y lor sure, because
this Is a premiere, and no one who'll
talk haa aeen It. S1art1 tonight
(Thuraday) and shows at 7 •00 and 9 • 15
at the Gulld '5th
STANLEY KAAMEA ot "Tho Caine
Mutiny" and "Oealh of • sat .. men"
and Douglas Trumbell,
no11d le
special effect, in '"Silent Running" a1
··c1ose Encounters of tne Third Kina·
wlll be among twenty.five
guut
speakers at the Eleventh Motion
Picture Seminar ol the Northwest to be
held June 2 and 3 In the Seattle c-,n1er
PlayhOl.lSe
JAWS 2 1s coming June 1& To
Sea1tle Somewhal ;ater to Oly npta
BFD