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Identifier
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cpj0188
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Title
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The Cooper Point Journal Volume 6, Issue 28 (July 27, 1978)
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Date
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27 July 1978
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extracted text
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Bean feeds
and bear stew
In Yelm it began as a celebration
marking the opening of a road link
with Tenino. In McCleary Norm
Porter wanted to prove that Grays
Harbor bear meat was the best
tastini. around. Silverdale residents
,tarted one out of a lack of anything
lwtter to do during the summer.
Unique
histories
characterize
three annual
festivals held in
,uuthwest \\"ashington, the Yelm
Prairie Da,·,. the McCleary Bear
Festirnl and the Silverdale Whaling
Da,·~- This ,·ear's activities will take
,L;ce fro..;, Saturday.
July 22
lhn>u!(h Saturday the 29th in Yelm,
Frida,· the 14th through Sunday the
Wth in ~lcCleary. and Thursday the
20th throu!(h Sunday the 22nd in
,n,·erdale. The pride of the Rotary
Club and the joy of the Chamber of
I
Commerce, each offers a variety of
attractions to the weekend carnival
browser.
Main events of each include
parades (7 p.m. Thursday the 27th
in Yelm, noon Saturday the 15th In
McCleary, and 10 a.m. Saturday the
22nd in Silverdale), carnivals, contests and the crowning of local
queens. Inevitable are arts and crafts
and an ample supply of fast food
stands. Yet while pancake breakfasts
and salmon bakes (bear stew in
McCleary) '&re a dime a dozen at
this genre of local celebrations, each
has its own idlosyncracies. Musts
include:
- The Magnificent Mutts Obedience Show followed by a Boy
Scout bean feed. Yelm, 7 p.m.
Tuesday the 25th.
- A bear stew cookinl( contest,
McCleary 2-4 p.m., Saturday the
15th.
- Frog jumping contests, Silverdale, Saturday and Sunday the 22nd
and 23rd.
Shakespeare
alive and well
An exten·ded weekend vacation
Shakespearean England
alive for - Olympia theatre buffs.
Seven hours south is the Oregon
Shakespearean Festival held annual1y summers in Ashland. Festival
,goers can enjoy a full repertoire ol
Shakespearean plays in a setting
complete with a replica of the
Globe Theatre, Renaissance architecture, and swans gliding on the pond
located in the park at the town's
center.
Each summer the festival offers a
revolving selection of Shakespearean
plays plus a sampling of the works
of other artists. Performances are
held at the outdoor Elizabethan
stage, the modern Angus Bowmer
Theatre or the Black Swan Theatre.
Taming of the Shrew, Richard III
<,!,!\ ~ring
and the Tempest will rotate at the
outdoor stage this season, while
Tartuffe,
Timon of Athens and
Mother Courage and her Children
will play at Angus Bowmer. Miss
Julie will open at Angus Bowmer
August 3, and· Man-In-the-MoonMarigolds and Night of the Tribadies will be staged In the Black Swan
Theatre.
A mid-July reopening of the
Mark Anthony Hotel and the
constructlon of two new motels will
Increase the availability of housing.
A number of rooms will further
be available Jn private homes.
For information on housing and
campgrounds, contact the Chamber
of Commerce Information Center,
110 E. Main St., Ashland 97520,
(503) 482-4315.
will appear a1
l'lt never forgive Vincent Canby tor his
non-review ot Werrw,r Herzog'• ttew1 of
Olaa, so when I lea.med thllt he hated
Convoy, I dug up three bucka, went,
found It to be a textbook example of t
aforementioned p<tnclple. It'• new, It'
great, It's both. The ptot la almple,
abaurd, but slnca when doea tha
mailer? Ever ..
• HltchcOck fflOVMI,
Vincent? It's the ectlon, the cheractera,
tho dt.loguo, end Co<woy'o got plenty,
from the tltle eequence (one of the moe
pe,fectly
beautlful
plecH ot vlaua
poetry ever put on the ac,een) to the
Contemporary folk a la local group
PNC., BtNd •nd Land Band wlll play al
1t-• ..!lnu o.tl Thursday and Friday July
1 3 and 14 The group 1s comp.·lsed ol •
1ounda11onol three ar1ls1S, John carnon,
Sid Brown and Renny Selklrl(: occasion.
alty friends 101n 1n Next week, July 21
ano 22, the Deh will hoat the Scott
Law~
Trfo. /au with guitar. basa and
drum 1nstrumentat1on Cover is $1 00
LN •nd Lynn Meyer, twin-sister
,ian1111 will perform in a dual reclt•I 8
p m
1n the Recital
Hall of the
Communications Building at the Ever•
green Stale College The ctynwnk: duo
will play B•ch, Mozart, Schumann,
Pou'9nc and AKhrnanlnoft.
art
lut eecond.
Tho
e-v,_
The pk>t? Some truckera pound the
shit out of IOffll dNlrvtng 00PI In a
truck atop, and hit the rc.:t. The 00P1
follow. Men tNd<oro join tho corwoy,
and blcoml an uoatoppable ..,_.hlln,
roaring through the IOUthWNtem United
Statea. Ttwtlla and excitement lbOund,
blah, blah, blah. KIie K11811Df
.. wwwlwSa
the group-he'•
Rubber Duck. All
Suit•
Cot,_
Ut,rwy
A Juried arta ahow, ertlat•ln-Ktk>n,
SP«'-il wildlife and outdoor art exhlbUs,
continuous entertainment, and a c;;hlldren'a art lhow wlll be fNtul'lld at the 7th
Annual Fedlfal Way Artl FNttwal the
weekend of July 22-23. The rNtlval will
be held at Sacajawea Junior High
Sdlool, 1101 South Duh Point Road In
Federal Way from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. on
Saturday and 11 1.m. to e p.m. on
Sunday Participating will be otyrnple
Mttat VlctcK1e PoyMf and pon., Dan
Colo.
-v ,,..,
Page 12
Cent•
The travelling
uhlbltion
of the
American Watercolor Society wlll be
shOwn through July 20 at the Frye Art
MuNUm located In Seattle at Terry and
Cherry. The collection of 100 plecu
reprnen1s the bes1 watercolors from all
perts of the U.S. Hou,.. are Monday
through S.lufday, 10-~. Sunday noon to
6
Natlonally
known sculptor
LoulH
NeNlson exhibit• at the Linde Fanti
Gall4w'y through Auguat 27. Thia first
Northwest show of Nevelton'I
waneIs
located at 3l2-;ind S
The tong
heralded by
depertmenl
Martin, will
awaited King Tut exhibit,
a deluge of Tut aouwnlrs,
1101'9 displays and Stew
be on dlaplay at the fllll
-
IN OLYMPIA
Mk::hNI NwNte'a portrayal ot contemporary Ille In Belfast amkSst poUUcal
strife Is playlng at A CcwllNli.poriMf
lheet,. in Seattle. Show time Is 8 p.m.
tor • human look at the Impact lr1ah
palltlcs have upon the lives or vlsltora to
• run down pub.
Volunleer Peftl has been ·Invaded by
the Empty Space ThNtre performing
°'d-Ume slaplUck comedy . ..,,_ P\tlte
of ,... Yoftl" can be aeen Saturda)'t and
Sundays throughout July at 4 p.m. on
the green near the band shell. A "pit
blind" of electrk: piano and drum• will
NI the mood tor the clltthange, directed
by John Kauffman. Admlulon I• 1...
Evergreen students Dlvtd OtMnfleld
and Danlel Johneon take part In en
enHmble
ol actors producing "The
Syl>Ntor ..... ChiTllool19 -A ..,.,,_
ol Myth, L_,.i
ond lto,y"
In Olympia thla aummer. Upcoming
&howl Include "'TM Haunted Well," July
14 and 1& and -,Of'Nt
CNld," July
21·22, 28-29, noon on Fndeyt, 1 p.m.
Saturdaya.
Play• can be aNn
1n
.,_..
..... ot Copltol ond Logion
Way. Auditions arlG lnteMIWS IN open
to anyone wishing
to join In the
pertormeooee. F,w.
Cooper Point Journal
llong. She _,Id
-
bo loll
out entfnlly, • t• • rn, ocw.oc.:iiid, but
IM'• the Nlt obf«:t. She staya. tr,
oomrnorcia1thing, rtgtlt?
fllma
thaatar
IN SEATTLE
ON CAMPUS
A lectu,e and sttde presentation on the
ling Tut ew:hlblt and the Hie and times
of the boy-king Tuthankemun (waa he
,-Uy born 1n Arizona?) wlll be held af
,_. OlyffllM Communtty cenlef . ......, tne
.. Uy Otymplan, on Thureday, July 13,
Nglnnlng at 7 30 p m Helen Harper,
ck>cenl with the SMttle Art Museum for
u,ree yNra, will g;-.. the p,HentaOon
·spon...,..ec, by St Pet8f Ho.pita! Auxll•
PawlMonIn the SNttle
July 1&
An Gallery will i-t
Ponland photQl>- through 1~. Tho -ttte
Art
rapher Terry ToedteftMlr"a
pe,aonal
Mueeum'a ahow promltN to attl'aCI •
colloctlon of 19th oontu,y phot_.
worto-wktl foltowlng of Tut entnualuta.
through July 20.
Chembef Pot' a CooperltlYII
c· local
pal1en1, otters hand-bullt and .hee'thrown Items by group m-,nbers. Hou,..
are 11 • 30 to 5 • 30 Tuesday through
Saturday at 4&04 Pacific Ave. In Laoty.
Evergreen Summer Photography wUI
~nng Ann Hughes, graptdc dNJgner lo
liecture on "Photography .In Graphic
Design", Wednesct.y, July 19 ln Lecture
Halt • A graduate ot Portland State,
Hughes has designed the posters for the
Blue Sky Gallery' done ~ UluslrtiUons
&nd graphic work lor advertising agen..
c1es in Portland She wlll present slides
lfld discuss the meaning and use of
fholographs In design lo deYelop an
1nderstandlng of the cedlslon-maklng
.-ocesS&S Free and open to the public.
Sandy lives in Olympia. She's been sexually
abuse
ince she was three.
11 used 18¥11'1:Itimes In the PG fflOYI.
and In this article, eo If you're a chlkf, or
• ohlld with children,
you may be
offended)-Oon't be deceived! t(ere'1 a
llttle secret: the more widely a jt,f,wwane
by an established artist Is denOunced by
the critics. the mOf'e Ukely It 11 to be
something genulnely new, great,. or
both. If you're lamlllary with Dylan's a.ff
Portrait, NHhYllle Skyllne and New
Morning, you know exactly what I mean.
Captain Coyotes Sunday the 16th from 6
pm 10 m1an1grn Frww•y Jam, a rock
group making its debut in the Oly aree
Ntll
play Wednesday through Saturday,
July 1215 P1tcl'lers are $1 00 Wednes-oay a.1, Also scheduled are P't9,IM.11
Wednesd8!1',' the 19th and 0.nctf,
July
26·29. botl'I rock and rolt
Scneduled at AppMJam ate the S..
L.._. Ranters, tradltlonal American and
Bnlish Isles music for Frkiay the 14th;
·shape Note Signing" with Sacred Cow
Hermonginn the 15th; Singing ac:,oom~med by gullar, autaharp, and hemapa
some yodetl'\9 with Ma,y LltchUetd and
Karen Lohman. Friday the 21st; and
llloay'• 9•r and Orlll'•
music about
women. by women the 22nd.
JULY 27, 1978
Finally, highly recommended for
lfood, drink and entertainment are
'the Owl Coffee House, the Village
Inn and Jazmins.
l!Ull
11.11 Ill:
.. a1In Jazz group U~
OLYMPIA, COOPER POINT & THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE
.,_ •ICI E""te? Therli'e damned llttle
art In currently
vlawable
movlH,
(excepUon: Convoy) and u tor 1¥1ntl,
well, It'• atretchlng thing• to rlf•
to
Jaws 2 or HN,...,. Cen Walt u ........
ao whlle we wait tor ♦ J ~ c1t~pee Now, or
a new Hitchcock,
let's not dignity
prnent cinema twe with elttw term.
ON CAMF'US
Frtdly NIie Fllme P,Nenta Gregory LA
Cava·• My Mlln Qodf,.,,
~•
the
greateat comedy from Hollywood's "poet
d1pre11lon tunnlH"
peflod. Carole
Lombard and her family Mlaf'n a grNt
deal about them Nives from Godfrey,
their butler,
• once rich derellct
dlacover«t In the city dump during a
scavenge, hunt. 11'1 lnterHtlng
that
Carole Lombard and WIiiiam Powell
(Godrey) were married, and dlvoreect
three .,..,_ before they made this fllm.
Showing with: Flnctlng Hie vo1oe1 en
aerty animated ctualc talkle by Max
Flelaher ... Admlulon atlll $1 .00, llhowt
at 7:00 and 9:30, Lectu,. Hall One.
Corwoy 11 not a mov._ tor ldalleta
(moet of them), rigkl femlnleta, cope, or
Jeeut, tl'llakl, lt'a a movte tor WOrftlng
folk■, -Iota,
lndlvlduollota, and bon>-flngered Amertcanl, and anyone mlNd In
the worMday wor1d who wanta to__,.
It without ,_ng
tt. Tho law of g,_.,ty
11111IIPJ)tlN, and thel9 aln'1 no megtc,
Juel temporary abOlltlon of ,-ponalbUlty, pollco oultlonty, wolgh otallono ond
the ole doubi. nidtef (156).That's • lot ot
commae. So what. I know I'm no Qood
at thll, and I doubt It anyone II rtedlnjl
anyway. Thie 11 Juat flller, right? All or
UI .,.,.
at the CPJ .,.
trying our
damndeat to make the paper look IIM It
should, no b'-dt apecn, In the llt.,.I
NnN.
Th«l's a lot I could t~I about
Convoy, but I think I'll encl here, Uke we
dkf It In High School: The Black Widow
(a black woman who runs an Independent rfg) Is third In llne ot about ten
trucks racing from the "beer. A.a they
cut through a small town, she IOIN
control on a sharp teft tum, rolling her
truck... It you wa'lt to find out whet
happened to hit, ... Convoy. lrs 11 the
Rialto
In Tecoma-Jhe armptt of
Puget Sound. The RlaUo ~t,.
11 a
l'NI rip. 13.2! tor a Coka commercial,
.......i
local car lot ads, about ten
Pfll'MW• end aatronomloal conoeaelon
prl011. But, It's the Rlalto Of a d,t,,e.ln,
Of wait tit' It comet to Oly, W'h~ may
never happen. Take a chance, and lnault
the butarda
me; there'• a lot or
things I didn't NY when I )eft.
-Gary Alon Moy
n..,,.
'°'
IN OLYMPIA
tMTAOOMA
"Fu1 trucks, tut
women, tut
food."
tNChO
movie It a lr1umph In mua entertaJ~
ment; It'• .-.rythlng
that Stal' Wera
shoukl have been, and lntlnlt~y fflON. If
)'00 .... tho ,..,-.,
you -y
think It's a ~ of ahlt-,(lhlt, the word,
Conwoy, Sem Peckinpah's latNt
Tho l'llunlCoun1y -...
C:0,,,mflllon 11 hotdlng a publfc hMring on
lhe propoNd deoelopment of 315 actN
on tho -1hom
boundaty of TESC. 173
houlN ara propoe,ed. The hlial1ng II NI
for July 19, at the oount, ...,.....,
Panone lnt .. tld In petitioning againet
the d1,1lopmw1t ahOukt oontact John or
I
Supression through fearin small towns, too
iµg wit
anguish
by Barbara Swain
Like many rapes It was well
planned. The assailant chose a
stormy night along Kaiser Road,
aware that young females sometimes
hitchhike to and from The Evergreen State College campus. Spotting a jean-clad brunette he pulled
to the side of the road and
mentioned campus housing In response to a cautious Inquiry about his
•destination. The victim's first clue
of trouble was that the Interior door
handle was missing from the
passenger's side. Then, despite the
darkness and poor weather, her
driver donned a pair of sunglasses...
The terror
that
Sandy (a
fictltlous name) felt as the car passed
the dorm cut-off and headed
towards an abandoned field south of
campus ls shared by thousands of
victims of violence against women
annually In Thurston County. The
abuse comes In many forms-rape,
sexual assault, beatings and mental
and psychological abuse. And while
the number of reported crimes ls on
the rise, for many the attacks remain
ugly, personal secrets, unreported to
the police, concealed from friends
and relatives and misunderstood by
the general public.
Sandy, now a 24-year old
Evergreen graduate working for the
Women's Shelter ln Olympia, has
*n
a repeated victim of semal
abuse. She endured forced 1erual
relationships with her step-grandfather from the time slie wu three,
until at eight she thiutened to call
the police. At 18 she was raped In a
Seattle alley by a man claiming to
be a police detective. Again In 1974,
the nightmare of rape was repeated
for Sandy minutes from
green campus.
These Incidences have had a
profound effect upon Sandy's life. As
a child she felt guilty about her
relationship with her grandfather. "I
knew there was something strange
about It, It was such a hidden, secretive thing. I had such a black,
horrible feeling, afraid more than
anything else my parents would find
out and punish me, not my
grandfather." Ten years after the
sexual assaults ended, Sandy was
again confronted with rape as a
young adult, and again reacted with
guilt and fear of disoovery. "I wasn't
afraid, only wanted to get It over
with. I just wanted to get home, act
normal and keep It a secret from my
parents."
Sandy's feelings of fear and
shame are common to many victims
of sexual violence. Jean Reichert,
Coordinator
of Rape Relief In
Olympia, explains, "Despite Increased public awareness, one of the
primary myths surrounding
rape
remains real to many vlctlms-that
the crime was ln 10me way their
fault, that somehow they are guilty
and responsible for the rape." Thls
guilt, for Sandy, led to four years of
penonal torment during which she
kept the story of her abuse bottled
up Inside of her, unable to openly
confront her own feeUngs.
"I was living In a feminist,
primarily lesbian household," she
says. "For two years I wanted
nothing to do with men-they were
all creeps. I had a few relationships,
MOli!lS,thjlt dour oul gentleman, suggested that If a woman
efend her husband against an attacker by "se;zing the attacker's
rivate parts," then her hand should be cut off. Women have been
ten and bullied by men since shortly after time began. Their
assertiveness has been continually met with brutal rebukes. Moses'
ideas may seem archaic, but how far have we really come today?
Crimes of violence against women today are still among the most
common. The problem hits home all too frequently.
Last Sunday morning, July 23, a woman was assaulted by a man
who had entered her unlocked apartment in The Evergreen State
College Residence Halls. An attempted rape; police are currently
investigating.
In Thurston County, reported cases of sexual abuse and assault
numbered about 250 In the past year. The F.8.1. says that five to
ten times that number go unreported.
That women live in fear has become almost a truism. Nationally,
one ii) ten can exoect tn h,, raned. Women are battered every 18
seconds. In cities, the dangers are greatest, but recent studies are
showing that rape is increasing fastest in rural areas.
America is probably the most violent society In the world.
Numbed citizens may find it hard to distinguish violence against
women from all the rest, or 007 from reality. Colleen Spencer of the
women's shelter in Olympia says, "I think that abuse-not
just
physical abuse-comes In· a lot of forms. We're taught pretty
effectively how to do it right from the start. Women aren't
necessarily exempt, but there's no excuse for using force."
(See page 4 for more on this subject. )
but they Inevitably went sour. At
Evergreen I wai barely hanging on,
practically Dunking out of school. I
knew something was wrong, seriously wrong with me, but I couldn't
comprehend my own emotions."
Some relief from her mental
anguish came In the form of a letter
Sandy wrote to her inother when she
was 22. "I began telling her about
my grandfather, and then It all
came gushing out-the five years of
forced sex, the rape In Seattle and
my unspoken fears, The feeling was
&11tazlng-like a total catharsls .
Sandy's discovery-that
much
support can be found for the vlctlm
of violence In sharing her experiences with othen and knowing that
other women go through the same
hell after being victimized-has
helped her come to terms with the
Impact her experiences have had
upon her life and to help others at
the Women's Shelter. After revealing
her saga to her mother, Sandy went
on to talk to other women who had
had similar experiences and spent a
quarter studying rape at Evergree<>.
By the time she was raped at
Evergreen in 1974, she was ready to
confront the situation.
"Although he had me at gun
point, I kept thinking of the
legalities of the situation. I refused
to have sex with him Insistently to
make sure I could later prosecute
without being accused of consent."
The whole time I felt I was better
able to understand what actually
was taking place, why this man
wanted to have sex with me. Rapists
are motivated by an Interest in
power, a need to control and
'conquer,
not by uncontrollable
sexual desire. After he parked near
!
--
Continued on pa((e five.
No welcome
for new neigh~ors
Shuffling the shelves
"Oh you can ' t scare me, I'm stickin' to the union
'
had to live with at the firehouse. "In the past
we've had a problem keeping people here because
of that atmosphere; so we're going to try and do
something about it with the union.
"We find some of the conditions we have to live
under are a little ridiculous," says Strecker ... For
example, men and women can't sleep together. We
have no right to privacy, on duty or off. Duty
officers can just walk in on us any time they
want.··
Strecker admits that the union issue has caused
a flap and created tension between his group and
the paid personnel in the district. "It was really
disappointing that we had to create a confrontation situation in order to be taken seriously, but
the students bad various conversations with the
chief, and the response we got was either nothing
or just negative ...
District Fire Chief Charles Allison has been
opposed to the union from the start. Duty officers,
too, had reservations about It, fearing students
might cut into their salary pie In negotiations.
Chief Allison says, "The biggest reason I'm
against the union Is I don't consider them (the
students) full-time, full-uniform firefighters-no
way. They're novice at what they do. Right down
to driving a truck they need training."
Although Allison contends they aren't full-
"
fledged, students took the issue to the state Public
Employees Relations Committee. The committee
ruled that students met the criteria as full-time
public employees, and approved the formation of
the union.
Allison pointed out that few students remain at
the firehouse for more than a year. "How can they
form a group with any kind of continuity in a
situation like that?" he asks. "Our paid staff has
been here a few years and we know what they
want. We're saying this just Isn't a viable situation
in which to form a union."
Both the students and Allison seem to agree
that working at the firehouse is a valuable
ezperience. 'They're alot better off than those kids
out there pulling weeds," says Allison. Besides
immediate benefits, students are Interested in other
aspects of the job. Strecker, for example, talks of
the value of experiencing death first-hand and
working in crisis situations.
In contrast to Allison's emphasis of the fact that
students are just novices, Strecker feels that student
firefighters are able to operate on campus In a way
that volunteers can't. "Between all of us, we know
alot of the people we have to go and see here. We
get calls for things like drug problems and
attempted suicides-the
volunteers just wouldn't
know how to handle that kind of thing."
The budget process gets more complicated
Trustees bypass sports task force
TWO
•••
b~· John Seward
After working on it almost a year, student
firefighters at The Evergreen State College formed
a legal union this week. According to their lawyer,
Frank Denis, it's probably the only one like it in
the country ... This will give students the right to
have input in grievance procedures and living
conditions at the firehouse," says Denis. ..The
union will make all those issues bargainable."
The McLane Fire District employs ten student
firefighters at the campus firehouse. The students,
several paid duty officers, and volunteers from
off-campus are responsible for fire protection on
the campus and emergency
medical calls
throughout the McLane District.
Work.Ing 24-hour shifts, the students are Qn two
days, then off three. They put In about 40 hours
per week at the firehouse, receiving remuneration
of free room and board, and in some Instances,
incentive pay.
According to student firefighter Brian Strecker,
pay isn't an issue; what they want is a contract.
"It's just been a like-it-or-leave-it situation," says
Strecker. "'Until now, there hasn't been a
contract-none
of us liked that feeling of
uncertainty. There was just a feeling that student
firefighters weren't to be taken seriously. "
Strecker says that, in part, the union was
formed as a matter of principal-but
the principal
of the thing was affecting the atmosphere students
Further study of the feasibility of
intercollegiate athletics at The Evergreen State College was called for by
members of the Board of Trustees
following a July 13 report from the
task force studying the question.
Trustee Bob Flowers of Seattle,
original instigator of the study, felt
the report did not answer the
ciuestions he asked and called for a
new effort to be completed by
Activities and Recreation Director
Pete Steilberg.
Administrative
Vice-president
Dean Clabaugh, who presented the
two-page report to the Board, said,
..My impression is that the trustees
expected something more probingthey just felt the study wasn't very
thorough." Flowers and Steil berg
.vere both unavailable for comment.
The report submitted
recommended giving more support to sport
clubs already in existence, rather
than jumping into a full-blown
sports program. The Disappearing
Task Force (DTF) investigated sports
programs at other Washington state
c• tleges, and found their budgets in
th•· hundreds of thousands of dollars.
D rF member Carol Olexa said,
··1 ,ven our current financial situa-
-----g
--------o
If
you've
been
wandering
through your favorite section of the
library lately, you may have noticed
something amiss-something
there
that wasn't before, or visa versa.
On closer inspection, you11 find
books have wandered a little to the
left, or right, or in some cases joined
by others.
The library right now Is in the
midst of summer housecleaning. Meg
Menaul of Circulation says, ''We're
trying to shift the shelves around to
make space for new books. It's
summer quarter and a hell of a lot
easier to get it done now." Menaul
says library personnel hope to
complete the project by the end of
summer. When its finished, the
college graphics department will
print up new shelf markers. Library
addicts will regain their grasp
on reality. Although the disturbance
is minor, some users have reported
getting headaches whUe walking in
the aisles.
tion, we felt it would be an
extravagance." She said that a dean
at Eastern Washington University
specifically recommended that unless
pressured into it, TESC should stay
out of a full-fledged sports program.
Olexa pointed out an advantage
of club sports in the school's
relations with the Olympia community: people from outside the
college can take part in them,
whereas they would be excluded
from intercollegiate teams.
"It seemed like we never really
had enough time to do a complete
job, .. said DTF member Molly
Phillips. "We based most of our
recommendations on informal kinds
of information. However, I think
our conclusions were accurate.·•
• Olen sees the Issue as largely a
communications problem with the
trustees. "Apparently, nobody realized just how strongly in favor of
sports some of the trustees actually
are," she said. ''I was kind of
surprised it didn't die after we
submitted the report. We have some
new trustees, and possibly the
communication between them and
the
administration
Isn't
good
enough."
A new state law requiring the
governor to submit a· balanced
budget without raising taxes complicated the 1979-81 biennium budget
hearing process at Evergreen last
week. President Dan Evans, college
vice-presidents, and budget unit
heads met in open hearings Thursday and Friday, July 20 and 21, to
decide on budget requests from nine
"program" units. The decisions must
lieapproved by the board of trustees
COOPER POINT J
-
at their ·August 15 meeting and
submitted to the governor's budget
office by August 25.
The law required the governor to
estimate revenues and reallocate
funds to all state agencies based on
the level of expected incoming
monies. Funds allocated to public
institutions of higher education were
further divided into nine program
categories-instruction,
plant maintenance, libraries, instructional support,
primary
support,
student
services and public service. Specific
dollar amounts available for each
program were designated by the
governor's budget office. The total
sum allocated to Evergreen was
'19,140,404.
According to Budget Officer
Mike Bigelow the budget planning
procea necessitated by the law was
..a marked departure from what
we've done in the past." Previously,
budget unit heads requested funds
according to, ..what they felt they
needed, not to match a sum set by
somebody else." Unit !fbads planning
for the 1979-81 budget were foroed
to plan In light of the designated
sums, with provisions made for
requests in excess of the budget
ceilings.
JULY 27, 1978
You're not alone·
The developments are getting
closer. A man named Bitar has hired
a developer named Frank Tobinsky
to construct I 73 units on 35 acres on
Kaiser Road adjacent to Evergreen·s
southern boundary. The units will
be duplexes, fourplexes, and fiveplexes.
j A group of local tenants are
organizing to prevent the proposed
! construction. Ellen Daffron, one of
~ the organizers of the anti-develop~ ment group, says they are planning
~-I
} community
meetings in the near
;; future to discuss possible counter-
I measures to the development. These
Library hours cut
Evenings at the library have
become impossible this summer-the
place closes down at 5 p.m. except
on Wednesday, when it's still open
to 9: 00. Revised summer hours were
announced
this week by Pat
Matheny-White,
Library Director
of User Services. The reason, according to Matheny-White, is that
demand is lacking, and also that no
one could be found to fill an evening
work-study position there.
Library hours for the summer
had been set for 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.,
Monday through Friday. Nocturnal
readers will have to wait until fall
for normal hours to resume.
A demographic study of the
summer population of The Evergreen State College by the school's
Office of the Registrar indicates that
641 students have registered for
summer quarter classes. This total
breaks down into 447 full-time
students, 194 part-time students, 348
A collection of photography and
men and 293 women. Out-of-state
transcripts from the wooden boatstudents comprise,14 percent of the
population, while ra.sidents accou~~ • ·buUdll'lg' conference held on campus
last year Is completed and on sale ·at
for 86 perclmt. The full-ttme
the TESC Bookstore. The book is
equivalent count is-553.
entitled Wooden Boat, and the New
Boat book finished
,
cafe intermezzo
TryuhalluQ.cla
oruleeclEs....OD a naa:, da:,I
Open Mon-Wed 9am-7pm, Thu-Sat llam-l0pm.
Crafuman, and was designed and
edited by Randall Hunting, a second
year student at Evergreen. It's 159
pages of material, which. according
·to Hunting, is "Mainly of interest to
people involved with wooden boats,
lbut also to craftspeople in general."
According to Hunting, 100 copies
of the book have already been sold
through the mail at $5.00 each. He
•says he needs to sell 100 more. If
you want one, but can't make it to
the bookstore, write to Lab I, The
Evergreen State College, Olympia,
WA 98505.
Produce for sale
Evergreen wUI join the farmer's
market movement as fresh produce
goes on sale Tuesdays from I l : 30
a.m. to 2:30 p.m. on the central
campus plaza. Twenty-four student
:far~C? fro1;t1the ·Q1g11nicFarm will
be sell!rlg. fr~~ ..veg~ables throug!t-.
ouf •summer quarter. Proceeds from
the sales will be used to buy seeds
for next year's crops.
include organizing landowners in
opposition to the development and
gathering
information
on local
opinions. Polls and petitions are also
under consideration.
Anyone interested in joining the
counter-development
effort should
contact John Harner or Ellen
Daffron, 527-1325. The Thurston
County Planning Commission will
be holding a public hearing on the
subject August 2 .
Three graduations?
The July 18 issue of the school's
newsletter says that Registrar Walker
Allen "has announced tentative plans
for graduation ceremonies to be held
at the end of each academic
quarter."
Judy Huntley of the
Registrar's Office now says that
information was a little premature.
According to the newsletter, Allen
has "already announced an October
13 deadlipe for .filing for fall quarter
gracfuatlon."
Regarding
this,
Huntley says, "I don't know where
they got that information. We didn't
hear about in until we read it in the
newsletter.
MANBARIN
ffBDSE
OPEN 7 DAYS
111 N CAPITOL WAY
212 W <Ith
!M3-7&e8
VEGETARIAN
DISHES
ALCOHOLIC
BEVERAGES
LUNCHEON
BUFFET
ORDERS TO GO mon-thurs
352-8855
11 :30 - 10:30
fri
11:30-12
sat
4 - 12
sun
3 - 10:30
open every day
10 - 7 Sunday
9 - 9 doily
WESTSIDE CENTER
.. t. .. •'"'-
o a
J
•'•
,, ...
WANTED
Math Tutor
1~i.
'/,..
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Two one-hour sessions per week
for the month of September.
Basic Algebra & Geometry.
Call 866-1364
COHIX,
SCIENCEFICTION,
FANTASY,
FANZINES,
PAPERBACKS
& POSTERS
At the corner of 4th
Avenue and Waahington
Street,
directly
opposite
the State Theater.
JULY 27, 1878
RICORDCO.
11:00 - 8:00 Mon - Sat
NEW & USED RECORDS- CONCERT
TICKETS& LOTS OF OTHERGOODIES!
Westside
Center
COOPERPOINTJOURNAL
357·4755
Women and violence
Going to the law:
The cops and the courts
b,· Barbara Swain
Last week a woman in her early
30-s filf'd a complaint against her
husband with the Thurston County
Sheriff. She had suffered six months
of beatings. and only two days
before her husband had threatened
to kill her. The only visible evidence
of abuse was the slight hint of a
bruise under her right eye. She
hadn ·1 seen a doctor and there were
no witnesses to the attach.
An
officer. while sympathetic, responded that the only assistance the police
could provide would be to stand by
and ensure her safety while she
1110,·ed her belongings. out of the
house.
To this woman. as to most
dctims of violence, dealing with the
justice system is an experience
fraught with uncertainties. According to Lieutenant Mac McFarland of
the Thurston
County Sheriff's.
Department ... After a woman makes
the decision to go to the police, she
faces a long ordeal, most of which
she doesn·t fully understand." How
much evidence is needed, what
treatment she can expect, what
authorities she will deal with and
how long the whole process will take
are questions that often go unanswered.
Where _to report.
If a decision is made by a
woman who has been a victim of
rape. sexual assault or physical abuse
to report the crime, she should
report it to the police agency which
has jurisdiction of the area where it
occurs. Crimes occurring within the
city limits of Olympia should be
reported to the Olympia Police
Department,
and those occurring
outside of any city limits to the
Thurston County Sheriff. If the
woman is uncertain
of who to
contact at the various agencies, Rape
Relief or the Women's Shelter office
at the YWCA will provide referrals.
The victim can expect two initial
contacts with the police. First, a
patrol officer will determine what
crime has been committed and seek
a description of the assailant. The
next weekday a detective will begin
the follow-up investigation by taking
the victim's statement. McFarland
emphasized, "It is important for
women, especially those filing complaints of beatings against husbands
or lovers, to realize the police just
can't
go out and arrest
the
accussed... Unless we actually see
the crime take place, the Prosecuting
Attorney must approve and issue a
warrant-a
process that can take up
to a week ... Instead, the police may
offer to escort the woman to her
home to protect her as she moves
Some are willing to help
by John Seward
chances of success if the woman
attempts to prosecute in the future."
Most people find extreme suffering of others something hard to deal
with. somethin11 they'd rather avoid.
In Thurston and Mason Counties
there are hundreds
of women
victimized
by
one
form
of violence
Before a woman is Interviewed
or another and often they are
by a detective, Rape Relief counseignored.
lors recommend she make detailed
Two programs being run by the
notes concerning the specifics of the
Olympia YWCA aim to alleviate
incident.
Olympia
Rape Relief
that problem to the degree possible.
Coordinator Jean Reichert explains,
They are Thurston County Rape
the woman will be interviewed
Relief, and the women's shelter,
extensively about the assailant's
called "Harbor House." With offices
identification. Details of the assault
under the same roof and seemingly
will also be asked-what
occurred,
different goals, the two groups work
in what sequence, how long it took,
on facets of the same problem.
what threats were made." The
Nanette Westerman of the Harbor
detective who interviews the woman
House staff says, 'We try to work
will prepare the case for court, since
together whenever pos.sible. We've
in the case of a felony such as rape,
worked together -on public educathe Prosecuting Attorney argues the
tion. Sometimes we shelter rape
case and the Thurston
County
victims when they need us and
Prosecuting Attorney's Office does
sometimes we refer people to Rape
not have an investigative staff.
Relief."
Medical evidence to substantiate
Rape Relief serves people in a
the crime is essential to successful
number of capacities. In the past
prosecution, Rape victims will be
year it has dealt with 48 cases. Jean
referred to St. Peters Hospital, but
Reichert of the staff there explains,
Group Health also can take evi"When a woman Is raped, all the
dence. Reichert stresses that the
institutions she has to deal with are
"victim should see a doctor immedmale institutions. For the most part,
iately, before showering or douchthey're- institutions of power (police,
ing." Supplementary evidence such
legal bureaucracies,
etc.). For a
as photos or witnesses should be
woman wl:ii:>
~ti·t .. rtl\/e, .that can "
gath~red by a wo,oiaJi )!VliO has beeii
be- hard to deal with.~ Rape Relief
a victim of physical abuse.
provides help In the form of legal
and medical advocacy, and emotional support.
If enough information has been
Reichert stresses, "We don't give
obtained to have a warrant issued
advice,
we let them know what
by the Prosecuting Attorney, the
procedures
there are to follow so
assailant will most likely be arrested.
they
can
make
their own decisions.
After he is booked and his past
Most
women
don't
need counseling;
criminal record checked, the assailif
they
do,
we
refer
them to where
ant will be freed on bail. At an
they can get It."
arraignment, the trial date will be
Harbor
House is a newer
set which must be within ninety
program
than
Rape Relief. Nanette
days. Plea-bargaining
may take
Westerman
says,
"The program has
place during this time; if not, the
been
in
planning
for a couple of
trial will take place. The entire
years,
but
the
shelter
opened last
process from filing a complaint to
month.
As
of
last
night,
we've
the trial will take a minimum of
sheltered
17
women
and
13
childthree to four months, and can drag ren.••
on infinitely depending
on the
The women's shelter concentrates
length of the investigation.
on
helping battered women and
Following through with prosecutheir children from Thurston and
tion can be a difficult ordeal for a
woman who has been a victim of Mason Counties. It offers shelter to
sexual or physical violence. As Jean women whose home situations have
become physically or emotionally
Reichert explains, "Only the victim
dangerous.
"We've seen all kinds of
is going to live with her decision of
women,"
says
Westerman.
Some
whether or not to prosecute. What is
have
been
badly
beaten,
others
have
important Is to explain to her what
been
beaten
in
the
past,
but
are
she can expect so she can decide for
suffering
more
from
emotional
herself."
problems."
Westerman
says the
shelter has served women from all
economic backgrounds. So far, their
ages have ranged from_18 to 62.
Be prepared
with details.
by Daniel Farber
Westerman says that sheltering
isn't all the women's shelter does.
'"fhere's several different things we
d°ii.Not everybody wants or needs to
go to the shelter; we do phone
counseling and run a couple of
support groups." Westerman says
that the support groups operate
through discussion. One Is just for
women, and the other involves
couples.
_
Colleen Spencer, also of the
Harbor House staff, says that
battered women often find themselves in a syndrome that's hard to
break out of. '"fhere are instances of
couples who are addicted to that
kind of violence. But they can ·1 go
on like that for too long. In a sense
they die; they just turn it off,
they're frightened and numb."
Spencer says that battered women often find themselves involved
in self destruction; alcoholism and
suicide are common. '"fhe other
route would be resolving
the
problem, but I can't think of anyone
who's managed it without some
form of counseling or support ...
In the courts.
out.
Judy Lynn of Evergreen Legal
Services in Seattle maintains there
are a number of things tlip1,olice
may neglect to tetl 1the v~n_i- "_For
example," says L)'nrl", "Physical
abuse is a criminal offense, not just
a household brawl. Even if there is
not sufficient evidence fo1 a battered
woman to prosecute,
filing a
complaint could help her further on
down the road. The more incidences
of assault recorded, the better the
FOUR
COOPER POINT JOURNAL
In midst of the furor,
what's been done at Evergreen?
JULY 27, 1978
--Continued
A woman was pulled Into the
bushes by a man with a Winchester
rifle and raped. The time was 1973,
and the place was a small field near
the student housing parking lot of
The Evergreen State College. It was
the first reported on-campus rape in
the history of the school.
Student reaction was immediate.
Groups of women and men organized, with the help of Security, a
24-hour escort service for any
woman needing to walk across
campus. In addition,
a drop-in
center in a campus dormitory was
formed to provide a haven for any
woman looking for safety or just
discussion.
Through the intervening years
between that first rape and the
present, there have been many
efforts made on or near campus to
inform, educate about, and try to
prevent violence against women.
"Rape Awareness Week" has been an
annual event here for the past five
years, offering speakers, discussions,
movies, and advocacy on the topic
of rape and how to deal with it. The
Women's Center has catal)'7.ed such
developments as the "Sister Share a
Ride'' program, Assertiveness Training Workshops, films and discussions
about rape and abuse, and the
Feminist Karate Union. Women
have offered their dorm roolll!l for
other women. Men have proposed
bicycle patrols along campus roads
and jogging partners elsewhere.
Many of these efforts and
suggestions came in response to
outbreaks of violence which have
periodically plagued the Evergreen
community.
One such outbreak
occurred
during the summer of 1976 In the
Overhulse Road area. A series of
rapes near the bike path brought a
group of local women together to
talk and share their own erperiences. 'We were outraged by that
• rape," remembers Barbara •Marino
member of the discussion group.
"We wanted to get something
material going for the next school •
year, but It never really happened."
What did materialize
In the
spring of 1977, though, was another
rape in the Overhulse area and
impassioned reaction to It. Groups of
women went door to door Informing
people about the rape and their
desire to stop future ones. 'We were
,making people aware/
Marino
insisted, ··that we cared, we knew
what was going on, and we didn't
like it." They organized a rape
prevention program in the Overhulse
and Evergreen areas. A communication network was set up, a ride
board at the Women's Center listed
cars which were wllllng to pick up
stranded women, publicity was put
out community-wide, and a close
working relationship with Campus
Security was established. In addition, the rape prevention program
helped set up local ~ups
in the
Eastside, Westside, and Steamboat
Island areas.
The program lasted until the
ummer of 1977, then disbanded.
"'People got burned out," Marino
plained. "Most of us felt good
JULY 27, 1978
Dealing with
the anguish
enoup;h about what we had done to • Mac Smith has genuine fears about
say, 'Well, we've made peop.le self-defense and its effectiveness. ''I'd
aware, we've contacted Rape Relief, like to think we've cooperated well
we've worked with Security, we've with some of the student groups on
done alot. "'
campus. But there are certain things
But last winter, an unparalleled
that I don't agree with. So many
incidence of sexual assault and people want to teach women
harrassinent on or near the Ever- ~lf,-fi,fense,- but unless they get to
green cainj>us resulted In the most the rtage that they're n!ally profiorganized effort .to stop violence cient in what they're doing, It could
·against women on campus to date. be very dangerous. Some rapists get
In the first three months of 1978, really turned on when a woman gets
Campus Security registered one violent with them. Percentagewise I
rape, 13 reports of males with
don't know which way ls better. I'm
suspected sexual intent, eight inde- just saying that it's the first fear I
cent exposures and one sexual
have."
assault. In response to those acts, a
Smith stressed his support for the
series of meetings were held culmin- variety of services now available for
ating in the formation of the Rape women and hoped more could be
Alert Network in April.
done. '"fhis fall, Lieutenant Jan
The Network-still
In operaMarx, Evergreen
graduate
and
tion-acts as an Information-sharing
specialist In women's issues for the
and referral system, Using bulletin county sheriffs
office, will be
boards, telephones, and resource
conducting workshops for our stucenters at various campus and
dents and ourselves," said Smith. "At
community locations, •a person can that time I Intend to try to get the
post or report Information about
Women's Center, the Men's Center,
suspicious characters or possibly
and any other organizations
on
dangerous people with the Network
campus to come as well. Then
to Inform other members of the maybe we can all get on the same
community.
track to preventing this type of
As another way to fight the thing."
terror of attack, many women are
In the past, many organizations
turning to the Feminist Karate
have found Security to be open to
'Union (FKU). Started in the winter new ideas and programs. "We want
of 1976, 1:-·K
U, meeting In the
to impress upon people that Security
Campus Recreation
Center, bas
will listen and does care," Smith
grown steadily to now include over noted.
40 dedicated women. "The first
Much listening and caring will
three classes were a little difficult for be needed in the future as Evergreen
me," noted Joyce Kilmer, a member
tries to grapple with the problem of
since Its Inception. 'They on! y met violence against women.
on Fridays, it was a huge class of
beginners, and classes were exhausting. But ·after that, I lov!'(I it and I
still do." Kilmer sees FKU as more
than just a path to physical prowess.
"On an individual basis I think it's
very effective. I've watched women
go through dramatic changes in
terms of their self-confidence. But It
does more. When people know that
there are women who can defend
themselves, and when people can't
tell which one can and which one
can't, then having women In the
community trying to do Karate Is a
very beneficial thing."
But Chief of Campus Security
COOPER POINT JOURNAL
from page on,e---
the field we spent two hours talking.
mostly about him-his
family life.
his relationships
with women. I
retained intellectual and emotional
control over the situation, but he
wanted to prove that he had
physical control. The gun established
his power. Sex was not the motive,
when we finally had intercourse he
could barely get an erection."
Six months and two rapes later.
Sandy's assailant was arrested and
sent to the sexual psychopath
program at Sedro Woolley. Although
she battles what she calls her "'liberal
guilt complex·· and dislike of a
prison system which "houses mostly
the poor and minorities", Sandy feels
prosecution is the only way in which
society can show that sexually
violent behavior will not be condoned. At the Shelter, Sandy feels
women must be encouraged if they
are to deal with the courts. "Women
who have been intimidated by men,
especially those who have been
battered all their lives, will be
discouraged very, very easily ...
San_py is now involved in a
personal campaign to assist other
women in communkatinJl;
and
coming to terms with their own
experiences with sexual and physical
ebuse, .am;l.to hl'lp ease the ordeal of
confronting the justice system. For
her, release ·from 20 years of
personal hell is an escape she would
like to share with all victims of
violence,
FIVE
C
C
Hello,
everybody
hello
/('/7
~(_
~
_ti)
__,)
~
Your newspaper says hello. We'
!Jlo<!o
:~
explain what we're trying to do here.
\
This is the second issue of the new summer and
78,
-1~ what
is known around The Evergreen State College &l'~W "CPJ" ~need
SEE-PEE-JAY). A newspaper by this name
ou~
couple othe • publications, or at least their
w
Th,, We,,kly (D)rag and then simply The Pap•--i,cumbed.
The Cooper Point Journal was named so, they said, because c
Papn. while starkly chic. got to be boring after awhile. More to
however. the staff wanted to denote that the newspaper w
for more than just l,;vergreen, but the community surrou
well. At the same time. calling it the Journal implied a
CJualit,· features and in-depth reporting beyond just tradltio
\\'ell. it's been five years since those aspirations were voiced, and we
ha\'en't counted how many editors and formats the CPJ has gone through.
But we have thought about it, and the original ideas seemed good to us. A lot
of people are talking about getting back to basics and all that, like Howard
lan·is. and while we think Howard is an old fart, in this case we thought we
might try turning back the clock and starting anew with a communityoricnted. feature-oriented Cooper Point Journal.
Brieti,·. our format is this: Every issue of the CPJ will deal with one
, ajor topic of importance and concern to both the entire Olympia area and
: e community at Evergreen as part of the whole. We will devote several
~es to this in an attempt to deal with the issue meaningfully in both a local
I • rspective and on a larger scale. At the same time, we will continue to cover
11·, ot l'he Evergreen State College in a thorough and hopefully interesting
,. . On the whole, we hope to serve Evergreen readers in a more
anin~ful and satisfying way while also building a new element in
community journalism for Olympia and Thurston County.
Two more brief but important notes: Our funding was cut severely in
the Services and Activities funding process last month. It's understandable;
there are some severe budget problems, especially in student funds, at this
school. Bitch to your legislator to raise the S<l<Afees that haven't been
changed in many years. Also ask why the school can't pick up the tab for
things like transit service. Anyway, all this is why the Co°F faint Journal
_ will only be coming out four, times a quarter,,~
~
n<jlng is found.
~Our rrext:lwo issues ii.reAugust 10 and 24. '
' • '
.
Lastly. Write to us. What's the point of doing all this If nobody is going
to say you're good or you're bad, right or wrong? Or just write to complain
about your dorm kitchen faucet dripping. We welcome letters, but request
that you follow the few instructions in the staff box below. Please include you
name and phone number (or some other way for us to get in touch with
mu). Thank you.
Your newspaper says hello, and please write.
Talk about the CPJ
Let's have a meeting and find out if anybody has any particular thoughts
and reactions to the paper, or suggestions for how they'd like to see things
happen. We've put out two issues now, and it's time for some talking about it
if anybody wants to. A meeting with the editors will happen in the
coffeehouse, room 104 of the College Activities Building, TESC, next
Wednesday, August 2 at noon.
-Brian
Surprisingly, the best predictors of obesity
are not genetic or metabolic, but social:
relating to family, sex, national origin
and social class.
'
·~
....
..........
Losing it at Murietta
by Steve Roth
How violence against women
affects one man
One
evening last winter I was often, a potential rapist. I usually
wa!ldng briskly to school. Just the consider myself, and would like to
day before, I had heard that a be viewed by others, as a fairly
woman had been raped while complex but decent human being:
jogging near the parlcway and on gender ignored. The violence against
this night l found myself rapidly women lo our society doesn't allow,
closing the space between myself me that luxury. It distorts my
and a lone woman about 50 yards appearance, restricts my mobility~
ahead.
and oppresses In the strongest waj
. Suddenly I stop~.
What was my 1t112rlli.lensibillties.
,
she thinking, 111,ouh"fue?
JNa/:--s"iie
..,. ~i!forces
me to examine, in a
scared? She might have been.
most painful way, my own behavior
l let that woman walk on to and attitudes towards women. I
school well ahead of me. Not don't like all of what I see. The
because I consider myself a danger- pervasiveness of rape, battering,
our person. Nor because l had any sexual molestation and other crimes
intention of scaring her. Only now against women in our society tells
am I truly beginning to realize the me that there is something terribly
full reason I stopped that night. To and fundamentally wrong with the
that woman l was a potential rapist. way men and women are relating,
"It's a hard thing for women to and that wrong is at least partially
deal. with," Barbara Marino was In me. l am ready to try changing,
telling me, "but it could be your but it won't be easy. As a person
brother, your lover, your father, the and as a man, I will support efforts
bus driver, or anyone." It could by women and men to do the same.
have been me, the man walldng Attacking violence against women
briskly from behind.
will be beneficial to all of us.
Frankly, l don't often think of
Daniel Farber
myself as being "a man". Far less
Cantwell
books weren't in the files. Some books
,n the files weren't on the shelves.
Normal.
Some shelves
claimed to carry
whole series of books that weren't
there Puzzling; time-consuming. A nice
young lady requested me to leave so
the library could close in 10 minutes. In
two minutes, in a new section, she
asked me to leave qain. I remarked I
couldn't find the fucking books. This
frightened her, which in turn em•
barrassed me. I asked if I was readinM
the shelf labels properly. She said she
thou~ht so and I sh0u10 ask downstairs.
SIX
did. The next nice young lady
laughed sympathetically. She explained
that lots of books were on new shelves,
but there was no point in re-labeling
them till it was all done, and all I had
to do was stay in the right general area
to find what was supposed to be in a
given specific area. Maybe there could
be a sign, I offered. Oh ha ha said the
young lady, everyone knows about it by
now.
Good for "everyone"! Too bad for
inane, out-Ot·it mel How professional!
How courteous! Nice, nice, nice. So
much for this trip to town.
c-liady.
5-Clwiltlan
(Jmt a '-lane:•
lntellecttoal
11Mltlc:b)
"°"'
+--~-------------------....:..._..
Nevertheless. it seems obvious
that attempts must be made. "Fat
farms" are one example. (This is not
to mention innumerable
books,
articles, advisors, pre-packaged diet
plans, etc., etc.).
These institutions are operating
across the country at prices ranging
from $100 to $1,600 a week. The
services offered range from eucalyptus-scented
saunas and dietetic
Coquille St.-Jacques
to unsalted
vegetables garnished with jogging
and calisthenics. Weekly weight loss,
depending on the program and the·
individual, is purported to range
from four to 12 pounds.
Camp Murietta offers a middle,I
•·'
I'•
line approach
to losing weight,
combining the two essentials, diet
and exercise. The food is not strai!(ht
vegetables,
nor is it gourmet
fare. A typical lunch might consist
of one hot dog and bun, cole slaw,
some melon, and a diet soft drink.
As far as exercise, the girls do
everything from dance to swimming
to volleyball.
Despite Science'• discouraging
statements about obesity, weight loss
is definitely possible. Camp Murietta
is just one of a multitude of ways to
do it. Keeping it off after they've
lost it is where the hard work comes
in.
~\%1(0)
mID)•@if • JMI(Q)
mrnlfil
1
Im(Q)(Q)JI~
.WNtlldt Centw
' 30a:-(l720
•
•
•
•
•
Mon. lhN Sat.
10 toe
Open 7 days a week, 11 a.m.-2 a.m.
Homemade sandwiches.
Free pool all day Sunday.
Shuffleboard.
Stereo.
210 E 4th Ave
call 866-6213.
I
obesity is becoming more hotly
debated. At a recent conference on
"Obesit) and the American Public,"
investigators admitted ignorance as
to the causes of obesity and how best
to treat it. Surprisingly. the best
predictors of the condition are not
genetic or metabolic, but social:
relating to family, sex, national
origin, and social class. The factors
contributh)g to obesity are multiple,
and the only widespread conclusion
is that treatment should be tailored
to the patient's particular type of
obesity.
It is discouraging to report that,
according to Science magazine,
"only 5-20 % of obese people can
lose weight and keep It off after
dieting." They continue, "Cure of
obesity Is virtually unheard of, and
ev~n control is only rarely achieved."
- HELP WANTED The COOPER POINT JOURNAL la In need of a Production Manager for
the month of August, and Into fall. Duties lnclud, design and lavuut of ads
and some layout work for the newapaper In general. Experience and/ or
art1at1c talent helpful. The position la paid only for the weeks that the paper
Is published, approximately four times a quarter, 15 houra per week at
approximately S2.80 per hour. Apply at the CPJ Office, CAB 306, TESC or
CPI:
Todav ,n the library I looked up
some call numbers around 4 p.m. Some
In the past few weeks a group by
the name of Camp Murietta bas
taken up residence in D building of
The Evergreen State College residence halls.
As to why they choose to spend
their summer (and upwards of a
$1,000) in this pursuit, the answers
are numerous.
Health,
physical
fitness, appearance,
parental and
peer pressure all play a role.
Regardless of their reasons, the girls
are here, and that phenomenon in
itself bears investigation.
Obesity in America is on the rise.
Doctors and investigators report that
patients of the seventies weigh more
on the average than those of the
sixties. Other sources state that
10-30 % of Americans weight at least
30% above their "ideal weight."
At the same time, treatment for
'
Next to the State Theater
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FOR FUTURE REFERENCE.
J[Q)lUJrrm
ffiJ
~
Editor: Brian Centwell
Associate Editors: John Seward, Barbara Swain
B11slnessManager: Elizabeth Ulah
Production Manager: Malcom 11811•
Advertising:
Joel Llndatrom, Mark Chambera
Photography Editor: Sonya Sugg1
Artist:
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Staff Writers: One~.
StRoth, Daniel Farber
Tho ~ Point lo JMIbt-ty
for tho ~ Point Otympto
CC>fflfflllnltloo,tho .. -.
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Coo,,,. Olymplo,
_,ng1on
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Ach9rtlllng mater1al pi_,W
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dolN not ......tty
tmpty w.doiw1•1l by tNa
••• P Pl. OIi.. In tho Cdtogo Actlutldlftg (OAl)·:IOI. p11one,
-3.
Lalwa policy: AHto 1111
odttorbl ....... I, .lid bf
noon Turlldlly fOJ that __.,
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t Md be Q
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for longtft. -
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Pli I08/IIIMIS1
wlO
bl JULY ZT, 1978
COOPER POINT JOURNAL
SEVEN