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Identifier
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cpj0194
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Title
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The Cooper Point Journal Volume 7, Issue 4 (December 7, 1978)
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Date
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7 December 1978
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extracted text
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INSIDE
FINAL RARE II REPORT
BATTLE FOR ALASKA
HERE'S THE ERC .....
CULT MOVIES EXPOSED
arts and entertainment
COOPER POINT JOURNAL•NOVEMBER 20, 1978
Bowers to perform
Bryan Bowers has been busting open
folk festivals
all over the country
recently, as well as in Britian. The
amazing part is that he is doing it on his
own as a solo autoharpist.
Born on a Virginia farm 35 years ago,
he left to become a traveling minstrel,
playing in city streets and paying his
musical dues. Long established on the East
Coast and Chicago area, Bryan has joined
the ranks of many established music
people coming to the Northwest, having
recently moved to Seattle.
Bowers has developed his own style on
the autoharp, picking with an five fingers,
each finger doing its own thing, creating a
five-layered symphonic, harmonic effect
that bewitches his audiences. A virtuoso
on an instrument almost totally abandoned by modern society, he takes it to
heights with his style and technique.
Fully involved with his instrument, he
dedicated his album, The View From
Home (Flying Fish Records), to "all the
autoharps held in captivity in closets,
basements, and attics across the nation."
Often traveling
with up to seven
autoharps, he plays with gentle authority
both the traditional folk/country/bluegrass music of his roots, and more
contemporary
material from his own
experiences.
Bryan Bowers is quickly becoming a
folk music giant, gaining recognition
everywhere he plays. And he is bound to
make a hefty contribution, in his own
way. to the Northwest music scene.
Bryan Bowers will be performing in
Olympia at the Gnu Deli Monday,
November 27 at 8 p.m. Tickets are $3.
MUSIC
IN OLYMPIA
LOIS going on at the GNU DELI In
the nut couple weeks: Obrador le
Nov 20 at 8 p.m, On Friday and
Salurday, November 24 and 2!S Paula
WIiiiams and Cyndy Garay perform
onglnal acoustic with vocals. On the
26th there is a showing ol PETER
CAAA's drawings and palnllngs with
music by TRILLIUM. December 1 and
2, SCOTT HAWK, guitarist.
and
OSCAR SPIEDAHL, pianist.
HCh
present classical music with a poetry
recllal by JENNIFER SIOOLI. For the
non-musically Inclined on December 3
there wilt be an open show of orlenlal
carpels lrom 12-6 om.
CAPTAIN COYOTE'S presents Its
usuals:
GABRIEL
Nov.
22-25,
PEGASUS Nov
29-0ec.
2, and
SHADOW Dec. 6-8.
ON CAMPUS
A "Thank~ivlng Jazz Concen·· wlll
be presenled In the Experimental
Theater on November 28 al 8 p.m. The
concert wilt be performed by thrM jazz
group•.
Dava Friesen and John
Stowell, the Greg0<y Emal Quintet,
and lhe TESC Jazz Lab.
Dave Friesen on bus and John
Stowell on guitar record for lnterclly
Records In New York; this It the4r flr1t
performance In Olympie. Alto P•rrormlng will be lhe new ll~blr
Jazz band directed by Gregory Emal, e
recen1 graduate of TESC.
The concert Is t:NHngpresented aa a
benefll show tor Evergreen'• Chrt1tlan
Fellowship group. Ticketa a,. available
In Olympla at Budget Records and
Tapes, end Relny Day Records; In
Lacey at Music ec:xx,.and the Mu1lc
Bar, and al the TESC 8ooklt0f"9. They
are SJ 50 in amanca ind SA al lhe
doo<
In hOnor ol the approaching winter.
on Dec. 1, the Electronlc
Music
Sludln Progrem, In Coopertitlon with
Evergreen composers and performers,
wlll PfilHrll an Evening of El«:tronk:
Music. Beginning at 8 p.m. In tha
Recilat Hall, the progrwn wlll Include
sllO.tapea, lift musicians with pr-.
recoro.ci tape, and a ttwi performanca
featuring
real time
tynth11lzer
pn:,caalng.
Oealgned to explore more lhan llw
usual poulbUltles ol ll\19 preNnllillon,
the show wlll expose you to fflOf9 then
the usual, and ~ 1 bU of llw
unu,ual. The admlulon
la $1 for
student.a and Mnlor clllzena and $1.215
IQf ~body
elN.
VOLUME 7, NO. 4
TimBear Cafe
"'
The TimS.ar Cale was full of McCleary
locals that morning. We were ushered
past the counter ~d booths to a dining
room full of antiques and rural families.
Bacon and eggs, coffee,
and a
cinnamon roll were ordered. Breakfast
was excellent. Grease, using the Hucks
grease scale (1-10 with S as a normal
rating, less grease - higher rate) was as
follows, Bacon 7; eggs 5; hash browns
4. Five pieces of bacon were served,
slightly overcookod.
Eggs cookod to
order. Hash browns were unevmtful, but
tasty. Whoat toast was high quality with
excellent homemade
preserves.
The
cinnamon roll was outstanding. Homemade, huge, a real American treat. Cofftt
was average.
Service was good, decor: very early
vinyl, with Disney musi~, sort of early
sixties supermarket.
An excellent breakfast. If you go, sit up
front. That's where all the action is. No
cigars for sale.
BRYAN BOWERS
"Come and I0In us In an IIYM'llng of
music to celebrate the coming ot
winier
and new sounds,"
aay
sponsors.
IN SEATTlE
PHEOBE SNOW and DAN HILL
come to the Paramount Northw••t
Wednesday, November 22, et 8 p.m.
The tickets are $8.50, $1.50, and S&.50.
Clasalcal pianist Cl.AUOK> ARRAU
performs BeethO\len's Sonata No. 7 In
D, Opua 10; No. 3 Sonata In B Minor
by Uut, and Brahm's Sonata Opus 5
Friday, November 2•, at 8 p.m. at the
Opera House.
Bruce Springsteen comes to Seattle
December 20.
Albatross Productions la plMNd to
announce a second HEART concert In
Seattle. Heart wlll perform on Saturday, December 30, 8:00 p.m. at the
Seattle Center Collaeum.
Appearing In concert Friday, December 1. 8 p.m. at Paramount Northweet
Thealre wlll be HERB! MANN & THE
NEW FAMILY OF MANN with special
gueal SPYRO GYRA.
JEAN-LUC PONTY will be headllnlng
a concert at the Paramount Northweat
Theat,. on Friday. December 1&, at 8
p.m. Hla special guest will be LARRY
CARLTON. The r....-ved Ucketa are
$8.00, $1.50, and se.,o Ind go on aale
Monday. November 20 at all the
Paramount outlets llated abo'te. JEANLUC PONTY la produced by Albl.trou
Productions
and Double Taa Promotlona.
ART
ON CAMPUS
Part of the EVERGREEN PRINTMAKERS show 11 on exhibit through
Dec. 3 in the Library Gallery.
NO¥ember 2ft through Oecembef 9
!here wlll be .., exhlbll In the fourth
floor Library <M,11ery.what It wlll be no
one Is really sure but there wlll be an
exhibit up there.
IN OLYMPIA
CHILDHOOD'S ENO GALLERY la
featuring through the beginning of
O.Cember an exhibit
of prlnta,
pelnllnga,
and pottery by STEVE
BARIS,
YOUNG
HARVILL,
end
OONALD SPRAGUE.
The COLLECTOR'S GALLERY la
showing
sculpture
by CHARLES
MULUOY and JAMES STAFFORD
through Nov. 30 and starting Dec. 3
will Pf9Mflt an 'OLD MASTERS' print
1how
with
acullure
by PAUL
HORIUCHI and ANNE MclLRATH,
IN SEATT\.E
The ARTISTS GALLERY at 919 E.
Pike Stf'Nt (eeoond floor) la ahowlng
KIM STEELE'aNude photoo through
Nov. 215and begins Setectlona '79 on
Nov. 30: Selectlona Is an exhibit of
selected WOik• of artists eichlbltlng In
79 at the gallery.
DANCE
IN SEATT\.E
The MARTHA ·oRAHAM DANCE
COMPANY comee to Seattle tor thf'M
days of perlonnanoea and WO<l<ahopa.
The pa'formancee wtll be held et The
Moore Egyptian Thut•r,
No-w~mber
2()..22. The 20th the company wlll
perform "°'verslona of Angeta," "Owl
and the Puuycat," and "Phaedra;" tlw
21st "Seraphic [)tajogue," ..Ecuatorlal,"
and "Night Journey;" and on the 22nd
"Appalachian Spring," "O Thou Oealre
Who Art about to Sing," and "Errand
Into the Maze." Times and ticket prlcee
have been hant to find out. On all
three days mMter dance a..... will
ba offered by th• company
for
beginning, lntennedl.ate, and adYllnced
danoera at • p.m. at the Paclfk: o.nc.
Center for S5 tor participating Of 13 tor
obNl'Ylng, a llmll of 30 for the flrat
Ind 15 for the NCOnd.
-
ON CAMl'US
Help Insure the survival of TESC,
J<Mnan open meeting In the Comer of
A dorm at 7:30 on Tueeday, NOYember
211 The topk: of the ew,nlng WIii be
centered on dl1trlbutlng
and dlacuaalng Information about Everg,.., et
high achooll during Chrtatmu bf'Mk.
For mor. Information call ~ Elllck
at 888-5183.
THE ASCENT OF MAN la prnented
each week by The c.nter For Llteratuf9
In Performance at 7: 30 p.m. In Lecture
Hall One fotk)wed by an open poetry
reading In the Lechn Hall Rotunda
complete with rwfreahmenta.
November ~Law
School lnfOfTJ"lellon Workahop, 10.12 a.m., CAB 110;
Medical Sc~
Information Workahop.
2◄ p.m., CAB 110.
December 1-Senlor Seminar: How
to Be Effective In an Employment
lntervtew, 3--1:30 p.m. Llbrwy 1213.
December 2-Romanlan dlnnet and
concert featuring the Oa.mlan Luce
Fotk Muak: EnMmble. Dec. 2, 7: 30 to
mldnlght, Olympia Community c.nter,
tk:klta
atudtnta and Nnk>r cltlnnl
$6. AdYanoed Nlee only, call Linde
Hwrla at 943-8803.
sa,
December
&-Graduate
Record
Examination Pracuce Teatlng8-12 a.m.
Lecture Hall Four.
Lllea Eckeqberg
ON CAllll'US
Friday, Nowetnber Z.. Frtdey NIie
Fllme preaanta a aP9Clal day-after
Thankaglvlng lhow with -SULLIVAN'S
TRAVELS, by Pnllton Stu,v.. Thia
1941 comedy II one of tha beat Ntlret
on Hollywood .,.
made. A movie
director wanta to produce ..eoc'81Iy
conacloua" tllma, but the atudlo want•
him to atlck to rtdlculoua mualcala. He
than Hta out ac:roaa O.praaalon
Amerk:a to Pf'CN'I his point, endtng up
In hobo campa and eventually a
aouthtm chain gang, where he dec:ldea
comedy 11 where It's at after watching
• Mickey MOUN cartoon lhOwn for the
p,taonera.
Like ell of Sturg11' fllma, the
dlatogue la witty, the humor biting,
and tlw utlre ecathlng. Alao on the
ume bUI Is Wlneor McCay'a OamE
THE DINOIAU", the "'1I,.l" animated
cartoon, made In 1909. If you're
around, pleue show up at Lectu,- Hall
Ont at 7 or 9:30 (no 3 o'cJock ehow
thla week). It would be nk>e to brNk
..,.,.., end you'rw QUIIIWltNd to en}oy
youl'Nl¥N for only • dollar.
flu • ,._,
20 a 21-EptC pruenta
AfflCA, a tum about Nelton Aockefell•r•a brutal 1971 maeaac:re. A
speaker wlll be thera to hetp remind ua
of a tlrn«t and ..ent we ehouldn't
to,oet. November 20 at 7:30 p.m.,
Nowmber 21 at 10:30 a.m. Lecture
Hall One. FrM.
NOVEMBER 218Tho ,._le
Fllma
Series hae e good one with THE
LONELINESS
THE LONQ 011TANCE RUNNER, dlroctad by Tony
Richardson (NTom Jonee," "Look Back
In Anger," etc.) and w'1ttttl by Altan
Slllltotffrom hla own no¥91. lt'e a ta6e
"' • WO<l<lng-Glaaa
---·
tllght
from authortty, whk:h, although .,..,
r.nlnl10ant of "The «>O Blowa" In both
atyle and c:ontent, ._ atlll one of the
beet British mma of the IO'a.
o,
Tom Courtenay le excellent u the
young f9bel who oet• bed!; at the
reform 1ehool offk:lala and au of thoM
who tried to c:ontrol hll life. Let'• hope
we'll be pruented with a good prtnt
thll lime (when It lhoWld here a
coup19 of yeara aoo, the eound wa
almoet lnaudlbt.). Plua: AIU CIRCU:
THE WORK
DORII
C:HAH.
t..cture Hall One, 1 :30 and 7:30 p.m.
·-·
o,
The Evergreen State College, Olympia, WA 98505
DECEMBER 7, 1978
CPE report recommends changes
by Bill Hucks
Lost on a Sunday breakfast search, we
stumbled
into the small town of
McCleary. One loop down the main strttt
produced just one open eatery: The
TimBear Cafe. That name may serve to
remind you of the annual McCleary Bear
Festival held each summer to celebrate
something concerning bears. Eating bear
meat is part of the activities, so I imagine
it's not too popular with the local
wildlife or some vegetarians.
...................
3
3
5
8
DECEMBER 1a,RID,\Y NITE ,iuas
la proud to -t
THE COM,OIIIIIST
by Bernardo Bertoluccl rtut
Tango In
Pwla, .. "1900'1 about a rising young
fotlower of MuN04Inl In 1830's Italy
who muat aaaHalnate
hla former
profN8or, a Man:latIn pout al ex.lie,
In order" to pr<N'e his loyalty to the
Fuc:lat atate. The Him, one or the beet
of the 7f/a, 1, r1ch In Yisual beauty,
phll-lcal
t-,
gc:hanct"'1zatlona, and au.apenN. Jean Loul ►
Tr1ntlgnant and Oomlnkiue Sanda 1tw.
Aleo featured la IIEADl.ll'S DKIEST
INTERYIEWI Sl'tllO T. AGNEW (1972),
an unlntentlonelly
hllarlous ahort.
Lectu,. Hall One, 3, 7, and a:30 p.m.
Only a dol!~:
D£C£118£R I- The Academk: FIim
Serles hH George Steven•· 1842
WOMAN
THE YIAR,
moatly
notable a, being the ttrat of the
Katherine Hepburn/Spencer
Tracy
teem-upe. Tracy playa a aportawrt•
who faJla for and man1ee Hepburn,
polltloal ambltlona her
-,
from her cllcnl at homo (lak,
tlk). At n,.,, the film INffll
to be
making eome aort of feminist atat•
mant, but ends up • NKlat drt¥el with
Hepburn becoming a good wife. Stlll
aome tunny momenta, though. Lact...,..
Hall One at 1 :30 & 7:30 p.m.
o,
IN 01.YMl'tA
THE CINEMA ta currently running
oort o<a
"Who'll
Stop the Ralnr IOf lloeralS
(Whet? You mlaaed "Who'll Stop the
Raln?N Too bed). Jon Voight la the
crippled vet, Bruce Dern la the
mllltarlatlc IOktler, and Jane Fonda 11
hit unfaithful wife In Calltomta In
1aee. The thing la - why wun't this
film made In 1988 when we needed It?
It wotka better u a companion p-.
to one of Aahby'a pravloua lllma,
"Shlmpoo", a 70'a tllm that atao take
-ln'flll.
Hal Aahby'a OOIIINQ -1,
Anyway, Voight and Dom dell,r,
good pertormanc:ea, and there'• •
beautlfully edltted NqUMOe with the
Chambers Brothe,a' "Time" on tha
1oundtrack. But why la Hollywood
putting out all thaN ap.c:ltlcally
anu--v~nam fllme thla .,.. when they
never have beforw? Nonett,•••••
It's
atlll worth aNlng. Woody Allen••
INTERIORI atar1a after Thankeglvtng.
Call 9"3-&91 • tor show tlmH and
Information.
T .J. Simpson
by Mark D. Stump/
Let's join a group of nrw studmts in
t/mr first d,,y at coll,g,.
It's o lively campus the newcomers ~e
around Ihm,, swarming 1DithMarly 4,000
students. Hundreds more ,zre enrolled in
off-campus programJ on th, edg,s of th,
state.
LDoking into one bad/Jing, th, shulmts
see a kctur,r sp,alcing to hundnds; in
anoth,r, th,y find a s,,ninar of a dotm
students quietly eich,mging
ideAJ.
O,,ming another door, th, shulents might
find others reuuing In a coffH •hop,
po,.ibly di5cwsing thl prosp,cts of th,
college's soccer te•m again.st a rival
univ,rsity, or the qualilJI of the band that
is to plRy at an upcoming dtmce. Realising
the time, th, nno studmts rwh off to
meet with their 11dvisors, who are
perm,mently assigned to guide them
through th,ir colleg, yean.
Little, if any, of what lhu,
new
students Sle su~
them. Most , ,zre
from high .schools or community colleges
within the region, where students,
grodunt,s, faculty and rttruiters from the
college spent a lot of Hm, upl,,lning ii,
mostly in trtulitional educational terms.
Simple, stralghtfonoard brochurn backed
up th, personal ,,,-totio,u,
and the
students may have seen the school's
televi.sion promotions. Many of their
parmU, and older brothers tmd sisters,
have attended p11rt•time and evening
classes there.
The college nnphllSized in its public
relations that its combination of
conventional courses and interdixiplin11ry
studU, relate directly to future careers, to
jobs upon graduation, and how its many
degree and profn,lonal-certification programs h.,,,, bttn designed with th• nttds
of employ,rs in mind. Curricula d,dthd
years in advance assure studmts that th•
programs th,y want will be off.r,d.
Promises of an active social life and a
popular intercoll•giate--othlttics program
further attracted them. And the college
miuh it "'5y for th- students to attmd,
accepting nearly evnyon, who applild by
completing a faiTly st11nd11rdcollegelUlmis.sionsform.
Not much choice in their first-yt11r
program is 1,ft to th, studmts. They'll
spend it developing basic shuly skills and
becoming familiRr with the fundamentals
of th, humanities and scimcn, a., -11 as
being introduced to th• new ways of
learning th, college off.,.,, and how thly
can bnt uu th• different fomu. By th,
time of graduation, they will hav,
demo1Utmted their grou,th in a senior
proj«t of some kind, and will """'
participated in 5et1ffll! forms of lnming
including, perhaps, cloHly reiulat,d
indioidiud contracts and internships prooided they are th,,,,.,.loes quali(ild
and can find a faculty m,mb,r qualifud
to superoisc them.
Studmts will spend their Y""' at th,
colleg, working to..,..rd 8.5. or 8.A.
degren in a variety of fi•/Js. Many will
be tr11inlng for jobs in government,
forntry or fishuiu. Some will b, training
to b, tNchns, in a program op,rated on
cAmpu.J in cooperation
1Dith •notlr,r
coll,g,. Upon grod1U1tion,som, '!"illmt,r
th, coll«af• groduat, progranu, likelycentering on public administrAtion
or
~.. education,
Gr"""4da vrlll Int,, thl ""'"P'" with
c/Nr 1111dcondu muucript•. c,rtiflling
thllr education Ill an iJutitution that m,t
thm ,,,...gn,otic nuds 1Dithout b,tnq,mg
its o-wn unconventional,
liber11l-11rts
tradition. Tlt,y11 find thl ...,,,, mthuaia.,m among ,mploy.,., or ""'""'1•,chools
thlir pr,d«nsors mjoy,d In th, Hrly
days of th, colt«,,. Jiut as important-at
Analysis inside
least to the government and ttupayers
that support it-the groduates will ;,.,,,,
behind a finanCU:dlysolvmt institution,
costing no more per student thma other
state colleges and universities, one using
its physical plant to capacity, and
constantly rn,iewing its ovnhetul mad
11dministr11tive costs with economy in
mind, its curriculum reviewed by other
institutions and approved by " state
11gency.
The coUege, of course, is Evergrttn-
tho TESC of 1984. The scenMio sketches
the changes Evergrffll would probably
oxpmena ii it adopted th• =ommendations of the 200-pag• preliminary draft of
a rq,ort by a stat• ag,ency released la,t
Wttk.
'Th• Evergrffll Study", prepared by the
stall of the Council for Postsoc:ondary
Education for tho us• of tho State
l.egisbture convening in January, was
mandated by tho 1977 Logislaturo.
Impetus of th• mandato was Evergroa,' s
high cost per student-in 1975, $3,075
compared to a state average of $2.074-
and controversial
public image. The
report's recommendations are aimed at
boosting enrollment to bring expenses
down to what the stat•' s other highereducation institutions spend without, the
report maintains, undercutting the "good
base" of nontraditional education TESC
has built.
Concluding that an onroUmmt of 4,250
full-time-equivalent
students would be
required for TESC to achieve "cost
parity" with the state's three regional
universities, "lhe report recommends Evergreen be given a four-year "breathing
period" to achieve that goal without
interference by state government. By the
end of th• lint two yean, "tho coUoge
should be able to clearly demonstrate
evidence of enrollment growth and cost
reductions."
Potential for that 93 percent enrollment
increase exists, the report says, among the
graduating high school and community
-:,,U~ transfer student!! in the region now
going to other coUeg~, and among those
adults in southwest Washington
who
could be served by off-campus programs.
Though nonresident students comprise
"the only area of enrollment which grew
in fall, 1978,"
the report
doesn't
recommend a campaign to attract more
out-of-state students. "The currmt ability
of students to reclassify as residents could
result in substantially increased expenditures with little, if any, growth in service
to current state residents, particularly in
southwest Washington."
Stress on service to southwest Washington throughout the report and recommendations reflects its analysis
of the
priorities of the legislators and state
officials who first conceived of the college
in the mid-1960s: ••.
. their major
interests were directed first to service to
the area and to the Olympia governmental complex,
with the thought
of
something educationally different added
later, in some respects as a response to
the turbulence then in evidence on various
Washington campuses.··
The hiring of Dr. Charles J. McCann as
Evergreen's
first president
in 1968,
however, made development of nontraditional curriculum the primary goal. Only
in recent years has the college focused on
service to the area and liaison with state
government, the report says. The result of
this order of development. it says, is that
the college's ··earlier trials and tribulations
left it '!Yitha reduced appeal."
Contm111'dnn page o
Farmhouse needs money
by I. DoMe
Will tho Organic Farmhouse over be
completed?
This is not a new question. 1n fact it's
live yoan old. Since 1974 tho construction
of tho farmhouse has crawled a.lonx duo
to bureaucratic
red tape, inadequate
supervision, tattered coordination
and
lack of funds.
Five yun ago the Farmhou,e Project
-was approved by tho board of Trust .... It
was financed by th, Sa.A with $20,000
dollan which wu taken from th, Cab
Phase II reserves. It is now about
two-thirds linisliod. When completed it
will be tho only structure on campus
made of wood and th, only building
designed and constructed by students. It
will have a multi-purpose lllffling room
and commercial duty kltchon. It could
provido a market for tho Organic Farms
produce and gmorate revenue, It could
serve u an academic meeting space and a
pl&ce for students involved in a.ltunativo
onorgy tochnology to dovelop and
domonstrat• their energy systems. The
FarmhoUM could /unction as a satellit•
Campus Activitin Building-an organic
cofltthouae.
Last spring 520,000 wu requnted from
th, s.A Boardfor the completion of th,
building. This llgutt did not µ,dude th•
cost of labor. The s.A /undod
th, project
at $5,000 with th, undontancliJig that an
additional $10,000 would be made
availablo this fall ii there wu evidence of
continued student internt and academic
oupport. But tho 1Aan'1 wat unable to
provide /acuity becaua,of budget cub.
Betwttn last spring and !he fall quarter
oom, Vfl}' minor work wu don, and th,
Farmhou•• budget ahrank to around
54ooo.Thia llgutt wu conaldered by the
on•aite eupervlaor.
Jamn
Comer
R-..w.,
u not ..vm enough money to
continue with construction.
R-..w. ntimated that with material,
_.1
labor cosb and oom, profe.ional
help /or th, plumbinx and electricity it
Tho Organic fumhouso:
from completion.
would coot $35,000 to complot• tho
building. The Farmhouse cannot be used,
due to legal reuons, until th, plumbing,
lighting and hut is inaWl,d, The "Ao
You Sow" program, which had intmdod
to UN the building winter quarter /or
twice a Wttlt mtttinga, Is out of luck. So
Is the rest of tho "EVergrttn Community".
At the Sa.A allocations meeting (Nov.
29) $4169 wu allocatod for further
con1truction. Thi ■ bring■ th• total
Farmhouse budget to $8,169 only $27,000
■hort of the ntimated completion figure.
The new money barely keeps the project
movins-It will pay /or the completion of
the building envelop, (exterior finiah,
gutter■ ,
trim) and ptt'Vffll
further demi-
only $35,000
oration. It will also pay for the interior
partitions.
staircase and loft for the
cattta.ken atta.
It must be emphasized
that the
"project" will still be far from completion.
The SltA Board and other mombers of
tho student body at tho allocations
rnttting reached a contm1us that th•
Farmhou■e must be completed soon. Tho
longer it ttmains in ita pramt stat• tho
higher th, cosb wiU be in the future.
It llttffll that this should be tho yoar to
completo th, project. It hu a coordinator
in Gomer, who is not only a highly
skilled con•truction
supervisor but a
person dedicated
to his task.
hs
Continutd on page 7
news
THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL
NISOUALLY
DELTA
PRESENTATION
DEC.
7
A slide show and discussion concerning
the Nisqually Delta and Weyerhaeuser's
proposE"d export facility will be presented
December 7 under the auspices of the
Evironmental Resource Center.
Participants will include members of the
TESC team of biologists who researched
tht.> Nisqually, a representative of tht
N1squally Delta Association
and a
representative of the Black Hi11sAudubon
Society
The presentation will be in Lecture Hall
Three at noon and 7 p.m. For further
information,
call the Environmental
DECEMBER 7, 1978
Other firms conducting
interviews
include: General Telephone Company of
the Northwest, Inc.; International Business Machines Corporation (IBM); Standard Insurance Company; Weyerhaeuser
Company; The Boeing Company; J.C.
Penney Company; Marsh &: Mclennan,
Inc.; Pan American World Airways; Pay
'n Save Corporation; Safeway Stores and
the United States Navy.
Graduating students interested in registration information on the College Career
Clinic should contact their local coltege
placement office. Details are also available at the Economic Development
Council of Puget Sound at 1900 Seattle
Tower, Seattle, or call (206) 622-2730.
Resource Center at 866--6784.
COMPUTER
WOMEN'S
POTLUCK
DEC. 8
gathering
to tap Jewish
resources in Olympia will take place
Friday
December 8 at 6:30 p.m.
Interested persons are encouraged to bring
lewish food. music, dance and energy.
The potluck will be at 302 Ellis Road
~E Call 357-3295 for questions and/or
d1recti0ns
S(c1al
COLLEGE
CLINIC
APPLICATIONS
CAREER
STUDY
SCHEDULED
Fourteen top Northwest firms will be
C\,nductmg preliminary job interviews at
the tree College Care-er Clinic scheduled
1,,r December 27 and 28 at the Olympic
Hc_,te!in Seattle
During the clinic, which is sponsored
l-v the Economic Development Council of
Puget Sound. the firms will interview
~raduatmg college seniors and graduate
students interested in career employment
upon completion of this year's studies.
Graduates in business administration
and finance are of interest to many of the
participating em,1loyers, including Rainier
~ational Bank and Seattle First National
Bank. Similarly, design engineering and
industrial engineering graduates are of
primary interest to Kenworth Motor
Truck Company.
by Bob Dash
On October 1, 1978, most Americans
missed a chance to help decide the futun,
of wilderness lands in the National
Forests. That was the deadline the U.S.
Forest Service used for public rnponw to
it's RARE II (Roadleu Atta Review and
Evaluation) Draft Environmental Impact
Statement.
This plan it meant to be a final
allocation of wilderness within the last 62
million acres of road.lets areas in the
WANTED
The Computer
Services DTF has
compiled a questionaire
designed to
determine how well Computer Services is
fulfilling the needs' of the college and the
community.
They
urgently
need
responses.
Copies of the questionaire may be
obtained from Computer Services in
Library 2417.
DUE FOR
ROOMS
The last date applications for study
rooms in the library for winter quarter
will be accepted is January 3, 1979.
Application forms are available in Room
2306A of the Library proper. A selection
committee, comprised of two students,
one faculty, one academic dean or
appointee. and one Library representative,
will read applications and make the final
determinations based on: 1) demonstrated
need for library resources; 2) documented
requirements of programs with regard to
library usage; 3) other.
Study rooms are assigned for only one
quarter at a time. A use survey will be
conducted on an on-going basis. No one
assigned a study room for a quarter may
assume that privilege will be continued.
Each quarter the needs will be reassessed
and rooms reassigned on the strength of
the written applications.
•
Studies
Israel to
be offered summer
Studies in Israel will be offered Summer
Quarter by faculty member Ted Gerstl.
His two-month summer study program
will be the topic of an information
meeting Mon<!ay, December 11. beginning
at 7 p.m. in the 1600 lounge of the Evans
Library on the TESC campus.
Gerst), an Evergreen faculty member
in organizational psychology who has
twice visited Israel in the past three years,
says the Monday evening meeting is
designed to discuss plans for the cmlitgenerating study and to explore with
potential students the aspects of Israel
they' re most interested in examining.
Summer Quarter classes begin June 18
at Evergreen, and Gerstl says his group
will leave campus by the end of June and
return to Olympia the first wee.le of
September.
Much of the two-month study will be
spent on an Israeli kibbutz, like the
agricultural cooperatives where Gerst! and
15 Evergreen students spent six wtt.ks
living and studying in 1976. Time will
also be allotted for tours of Isreal to such
areas as the Sinai and Negev Deserts,
/,
,
/.'
I •
.
• ti'
l'llnTRY
1-,.,,12
-~
i_l
JS!-1111
DAILY
210I llarrisol
Ill,,..
Jerusalem and Galilee.
The program, which is being coordinated \l;\rqu&!\. th~ .~merican Zionist
Youth foul)dation
in Lo$- Ange:les,
requires no foreign language skills. Total
cost, Gerst) estimates, will amount to
about $1,200, in addition to Evergreen
tuition ($206 for full-time students who
are Washington State residents). Part-time
study opportunities for shorter duration
may also be available.
Persons interested in enrolling in the
"Summer Study in Israel" program but
who are unable to attend the December
11 meeting are invited to contact Gerstl at
Evergreen (866-6702) or at his home
(357-4999).
BRYOLOGY
MAY
BE OFFERED
Dr. Elva Lawton of the University of
Washington plans to offer her bryology
course again if there is sufficient demand
for it. It would be given either In spring
or fall of 1979. A background in b.,sic
botany is necessary. It is a senior level
coune carrying 3 quarter hours of credit.
It Is demanding and time consuming, but
a rare opportunity. Pe:nons interested
should contact Al Wiedemann as soon as
possible (6063 or LAB 2016).
•
ca e -intermezzo
GROCERIES,FRESHMEATS
IMPORTED BEERAND WINE PRODUCE
SUNDRIES, MAGAZINES
SELF-SERVICE
GAS
2010 DIVISION N. W.
357-7483
National Forest system. All else will be
designated as non-wilderness (open to
logging, off road vehicles, recreational site
development, mining and hunting) or set
for further planning.
The Forest Service has used nearly
300.000 public comments to help dewlop
its final report, to be released late this
month. At that time there will be a thirty
day r,sponse period. Afterwards. the only
public Input will be through lobbying and
letters to Congress, who will receive the
report in January. For a copy of this final
Environmental Impact Statement, call the
Forest Service office in Olympia at
7S3-9S34.
When the draft EIS was released last
June, the Forest Service asked for
responses in support of either a wilderness
or non wilderness position. They also
wanted criterion to base their decision
upon. The most commonly stated reason
in favor of wilderness were "high scenic
beauty and wild values." with "scenery
The Battle for Alaska
patioI salon
HJIRDY
THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL
Final RARE 11 report due
SURVEY
RESPONSES
JEWISH
A
DECEMBER 7, 1978
new hours:
mon - thurs; 9 to 7
fri & sat; 11to 10
e1preHo, europeen coffteaa end pa1trio1
1birbuclc'• coffee• end toe
cerolyn atrHt
proprietor
212 We,t Fou,tl,
The last fragments of a once vast North
American wilderness are rapidly vanishing. Although some 15 million acm;
are now protected
in the National
Wilderness Preservation System, close to
3 times that much lies under pavement in
the nation. And more is threatened by
bulldozers and chainsaws every day. At
the same time, the demand for wilderness
recreation is rising more each year.
Backpacking is increasing at 6 percent per
annum while the general population
grows at roughly 2.1 percent pe,r annum.
Fortunately America has one last opportunity to save a truly magnificent part of
its wilderness heritage, Alaslca.
Until the last decade, when oil was
discovered in Alaska, little attention was
paid to our 49th state. Tino discoftry,
coupled with the • ri•i~g .. ctemand for
petroleum and timber•reiated products
focused more attention on Alaska and its
resources. As a result, much controversy
has arisen over the future use of Alaskan
lands.
With statehood In 19S8, 37S.000,000
acre Alaska was almost totally in federal
ownenhip under the Bureau of Land
Management. Congress, upon admitting
AJ.. ka to the union, allocated 102,000,000
acres to the state in a generous land gift.
In attempting to settle the growing
controversy over Ala.slc.an land use, in
1971 Congress passed The Alaskan Natlve
Claims Settlement Act granting '4,000,000
acres and about a billion dollars to the
aboriginal Alaskans (44,000,000 people).
In clause 20 of the act, Congress
provided for the allocation of up to 125
million acres of this land to meet the
notional interest as national parks,
monuments, forests, wildlife refuges, and
wild and scenic views. The remaining 80
COMPOSER
NEEDS
MUSICIANS
Margaret Barrows, a composer and
student at Evergreen, is looking for
musicians to perform some of her works
for recording. Ms. Barrows writes popular
jazz, musical comedy and classical music.
Some of the music was written for a play.
Interested persons should contact Ms.
Barrows at 357-4877 or write at 2117
Jackson NW, Apt. C. Olympia, 98502.
million actts of federal lands would be
allocated to various uses.
One of the provisions of The Alaskan
Native Claims Settlement Act of 1971 was
that Congress would have to act on the
..2D" lands by December 18, 1978 or they
would be allocated to multiple-use
management (opened for development).
The legisbtive process was slow, but on
May 19, 1978 Representative
Morris
Udall's Bill. H.R. 39, which was backed
by conservationists, passed the full house
by a 9 ;o 1 vote. The action next moved
to the senate where Senator Metcalfe's
Bill. S.B. 1500 was tabled in the Energy
and Natural
Resources
Committee,
chaired by Senator Jackson. Senator
Metcalfe died and Senator Jackson gave
ptiority to Pre-sident Carter's energy
proposals. The bill had 19 cosponsors.
Conservationists felt that Senator Jackson,
usually favorable to conservation, would
push the bill through committee and onto
a full senate vote. He didn't.
When the summer ended environmentalists became alarmed and began a last
minute push for senate passage this year.
Senator Gravel (R-Alaska) threatened to
filibuster any moves on S.B. 1500. The
senate hurried to campaign for elections.
On the final day of session all parties
had come together on a compromise bill.
Senator Gravel fllibu.,tered. Finally the
house passed an extension to tM Dec. 18
deadline. Senator Gravel filibustered a
similar attempt in the Senate. On Oct. 16
the Congress adjourneil.
Conservationists
then began a final
effort to encourage the Carter administration to protect the pristine Alaskan lands.
He was encouraged
to invoke the
Antiquities Act of 1906. The· administration (O.pt. of Interior) Invoked 204C of
The Federal Land Policy and Management
Act on Nov. 17. A few days later 204D
was invoked. Finally, on Dec. 1, 1978,
President Carter invoked the Antiquities
Act of 1906 to add 56 million acres to the
nation's National Monuments.
There will be 11 million acres protected
In the· 16 million acre T ongass National
Forni. Additlonally, the balance of 125
million ac:ra will be studied for possible
fYlie flolal !l!o
Styling Salon
4132 Market Square
Lacey. Wash. 98503
inclusion into the nation's wildlife refuge
and national park preserve systems.
Environmentalists are elated. This effectively protects these 125 million acres
until Congress takes up the' issue again in
January. If Congress fails to take any
action these lands will be protected from
development
by this administrative
action. Environmentalists feel that President Carter should be praised for his bold
action.
It is important that new bills similar to
Udall's H.R.39 be reintroduced to insure
that many of the provisions be enacted
that are important, that President Carter
was unable to enact. Two examples are
additions, to The National Wilderness
Preservation System and addressing the
claims of the native Alaskans, Interested
people are strongly urged to thank
President Carter for his action and to
contact their members in Congress and
encourage
them to support
strong
Alaskan legislation.
It has bttn a remarkable year for
enyironmentalists.
The efforts of the
Alaskan Coalition have bttn successful
~use
of a well organized and dedicated
organization.
Addrresses are,
President Carter
The White House
Washington. D.C. 20510
Rep. Don Bonker
HoUJe Office Building
Washington, D.C. 2051S
·s.n.Warren
Magnuson
Sen. Qffice Building
Washington, D.C. 20510
Sen. l,lenry Jackson
Sen. Office Building
Washington, D.C. 20510
More information mav be obtained at
the ERC. or call Andy Keller or Paul
Hooper at -5029
or -S197
or stop
by Building A, Roon, 5fY7.
and preserving wildlife" the important
criterion. Those opposed listed "negative
impact on economy"
as the most
important reason, while "motorized access
and recreation,
economics, jobs and
timber values" were suggested as decisionmaking criterion.
Ten alternatives were outlined in the
initial report, ranging from all wilderness
to none. Among the criterion used in
these choices were: wilderness
sit,
quality, resource commodity value, landform and ecosystem {at least one of each
example in the country
should be
included), wildlife and accessibility/
distribution.
The Forest Service avoided offering a
preferred alternative, choosing instead to
present ten ideas of equal potential.
Several
conservation
groups
have
attacked these alternatives
as biased
against wilderness.
The Sierra Club
writes, " ... balanced alternatives are not
in the EIS which thousands will review.
Many will simply pick a favorite
as
though ·professional judgment' had determined these to be the reasonable, superior
possibilities".
Most would agree that a balance is
necessary although few would agree what
that balance is, or how to achieve it.
For example, Charles Goff, District
Forester from the Industrial Forestry
Association, feels we already have enough
wilderness in Washington. He explains,
"Olympic National Park took the lions
share of fine land area on the Penninsula.
How do I answer a banker or hotel owner
who says bullshit to more wilderness?
People management
is our greatest
challenge now. In the next ten years
there'll be an explosion of growth in this
state. The people will demand recreation,
and the majority
won't look for
wilderness. They want campgrou.nds,
roads, hunting, trail bikes ... if you lock
up land on the Penninsula as a buffer.·
they'll demand the national park be cut in
half."
Goff, along with representatives from
The Sierra Club, Northwest Four Wheel
Drive Association and the Big Game
Council, will participate
in a panel
discussion at The Evergreen State College
on January 9.
Some would argue that we've fought
war with the earth, that each defilement
of wild places leads us closer to our own
destruction. Can we afford to lose any
more?
Others believe our survival is based on
our ability to utilize the resources so
plentiful on the planet. What will happen
if we lock them up, protected from our
material needs?
Let Congres.s or the Forest Service hear
your ideas.
we're moving!
456-6190
0 ~pia 'Pottti:y
&.'ArtSufl'!y.Inc.
18ll W.J-/a,risort.,
o{ympfa
,WA96502.
GIFTCER11FICA1ESAV~LABLE
943·5;ll2.
WE'RE MOVING.
TO CAB 104. NEXT TO SAGA.
WE'LL BE THERE STARTING
TODAY.
LOOK FOR
US IN OUR NEW SPOT. AND COME IN AND
WRITE FOR US AND HELP OUT. DON'T LET OUR
NEW LOCATION
DISCOURAGE
YOU. WE NEED
YOU. RIGHT? WRITE.
THE COOPER
POINT
JOURNAL,
CAB
104,
868-6213.
letters
THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL
DECEMBER 7, 1978
Students can
effect Curriculum
by Laird Bauer
The community Forum affirmed a
-;1udent motivation for involvement in
Evergreen affairs. The most important
tactor in the definition of Evergreen is the
curriculum. ht-cause this is, believe it or
not a community based on education.
Recent tours of Red Square have given me
a st>nst>that students feel alienat~ from
administrative decision making proces~
in general. and from curriculum planning
m particular. This is an effort to clarify
the avenues now open to student input in
curriculum planning.
There are three ways for students to
affect the curriculum here. They are as
tallows:
Trial Balloon-you just missed it. Even
though the trial balloon involves no
person-to-person responses, our comments
on those ballot sheets are seen, read and
considered by real Hesh and blood
administrators. Its influence is felt in
several ways: it provides an awareness of
what students feel is missing from
curriculum, indicates the programs that
ne-ed slight alterations, and points out the
on-target
programs,$
Faculty Conveners-there
is one represt>ntative faculty member for each
specialty area. A good place to find them
en masse is at the "curriculum open
house" the week following the trial
balloon. This was used for the first time
this year. Student tum out was weak. In
spite of this. Dean Rob Knapp felt the
open house concept was valuable and
should be offered again next year.
Studet1t Proposals-one student proposed progr.im will make it to print in the
catalog supplement this year. Ke,ep in
mind that your proposal must have
appeal beyond the original planning
group bE-causehistoricaly, most proposers
do not enroll in the programs they plan.
These three methods .,. effective only
EDITOR'S
NOTE
Editor·~ note: We received .a rather
amusing Inter this weiek that carefully
suggested the present Journal editor was a
"fascist" and that the Journal was boring.
We won't argue with the writer's
contentions but we couldn't publish the
letter because it was unsigned. Unsigned
letters cannot be published in the Journal
(or any newspaper) b«:au.se of possible
legal complications and a sense of fair
play. Names can be withhe:ld on request
but each letter must originally contain a
signature and a phone number where the
author can be reached.
As always, keep those cards and letten
coming in.
TALKING
ABOUT
DOING
To the Editor:
I realize that Evergreen ha, an image
problem and is sorely misunderstood by
outsiders. In the last few weeks I have
heard an overwhelming number of fellow
students lamenting its plight and speculating on its outcome.
At the s.ime time I have seen a notice
posted asking for 1tudent1'a aid tn
oreaching potential students by tpeal:ing
about Evergrttn's method of teaching and
it's value to Evergrttnen.
As students, we know that increued
enrollment at Evergrffn would mean lea:
pressure from outside to change the
Khool to • traditional teaching method,
that more faculty members could be hired
for special interest group,, and that
n,w claJS offerinp could be made. We
•It<>know that by tpealung to potmtial
if they are utilized in euly Fall term. It is
too late now to affect next fall's·
curriculum.
However, student action can be talc.en
on specific program content. The middle
of winter tern is usually the time when
students can mttt with faculty to plan the
structure of next year's programs.
Student's also have a prime opportunity
to propose programs for this Spring.
There is a pool of faculty who have
begun planning for Spring Quarter, but
for whom firm assignments have not yet
been made. They may be available to
work with students on a well~nceived,
student-designed program.
Another vehicle for student voice is the
Evergreen Council. It is composed of
students, faculty and administrators. It is
not an elite group; everyone is invited.
Come on Evergreeners; get up off your
grain-fed haunches. Discussion on Red
Square is great but unless it turns to
active, some-times pushy, participation it
will have no effect.
1 have two suggestions to make in the
hope of facilitating student initJated
programs:
1) We should have an open forum at
the beginning of Fall term for students
with a common interest to meet and
organize their curriculum proposals.
2) the CPJ should
provide free
advertising for student or faculty program
proposals. This would also help people
with common academic intetttts to meet,
The key to the effectiveness of our
student community is _to stop talking
about doing something
and do it.
Planning must happen now. Don't wait
until spring break to complain about the
administration's deaf ear. The problmi. is
not that they do not hear but rather that
we, the students,
have not been
conveying ideas through the proper
channels.
students we would have • voice In what
happens to Evergreen, because we would
be showing that we want It to stay the
way it is and are willing to help keep it
that way even if it me.ans speaking in
front of a group ol younger people who
an, strangers and telling about ourM?lves,
our work, and our school. This is our
chance to speak for Ewrgrem and have •
hand in future decisions about it.
Enough students an crying about
E,,.,,._n's imminent clmlile and le,,I that
the school should be saved, that I'm sure
Evergreeners will be out In number at all
other Washington state schools telling
potential students of the wonders of
E,,.,_.,
However, becauw 10 many of these
concerned students will be jumping at the
chan<:eto have a voice in 1M outcome of
E,,.,,._n
and to tell others of their
experiencn at Eve,vttn, I think I'll just
,it back and bitch If they do it all wrong
or enjoy Evergreen as it is If they're
sucasaful.
Laurel Pen:h
COME TO THE
DESIGN FESTIVAL
To the Editor,
On Friday, Docember 8 there will be an
all day mtival ol m111ic, food, and
presentations In tho CampuJ Activities
Building. Thit I• the culmination of a
weel: long project by the Altematiw
Ene'llY Sy1h!l)u, Deantralization, Environmental Design and Housing Design
programs to tramform the CAB space
into a more dnlrable community center
for all our needs.
Some project, will be complettd this
week , bulletin boaf!Ire-detifln (including
a new rideboard), tettlng up the Eut end
DECEMBER 7, 1978
ol the CAB with furniture, murals, plants,
and warm lighting. and moving the
Cooper Point Journal office to f..., that
space for a community coffee house
(where there's a possibility
for a
AREPLACE sometime In the future!).
Other projects will be ongoing for some
time to come, a skills exchange bani:,
greater en"'l!Y efficiency for the CAB,
setting up ampus mailboxes as part of a
student information network.
We've got lots of ideas and are open to
all of yours. Come Friday and participate
in the Fint Ever Evergreen Homecoming
(even If you don't like the name). It'll
start at 9 a.m. and last until 6 p.m. Open
mike available to voice your ideas, share
youT music, anything you want to bring
to the Evergrttn community. Be there or
be square.
The Communications Group
for the Design Festival
IT BOTHERS
ME
To The Editor,
The only thing that really bothers me
about Evergreen students is the way they
always stare at you, instead of minding
their own business.
Your Avid Reader,
Julia H,
should contact the Black Prisoners Caucus
to insure a replacement.
6) You should encourag1' others to
participate
in worthwhile
prosrams,
which aid In the reform of prisoners. .
If you are interested In participating
and would like further information,
contact, The Black Prisoners Caucus,
P.O. Box 777, Monroe, WA 98272 or
phone 194--8077,ext. 308.
Bishop Collins
Chairman
Black Prisoners Caucus
Melvin Brim
ED. VOC. Committee
A LOT OF QUESTIONS
To the Editor,
In the November 20 issue of the CPJ,
Douglas R. Mclaughlin attributed the
lade of student participation
here at
Evergreen, to just general apathy and a
void of get up and go. Well, I would like
to tell this man where to go, to find the
root of the problem. To me, it is the
reluctance of the administration to allow,
we the students, a voice in campus
governance.
I admit that this campus is second to
few schools in the facilities that allow
academic freedom. We have some of the
loosest student codes that I have ever
encountered. And (as my teacher once
sta~)
can "take over'' any depart•
ment that our fancies choose. But, are we
free to thape our lives and ideals In the
ways we choosel
Mr. McLaughlin claimed that we "were
missing the mark" by our tendency to
throw the blame for inactivity onto such
external problems as conflicting time
schedules drawn up by others, or classes
built to another's design or even a lack of
~rpm.tffii.c.at1<m
...J1t.tw<:1:11r
a,!mllus,t(~\llfll
=
BLACK PRISONERS
NEED
CORRESPONDANCE
To the Editor,
We at the Washington State Reform••
tory are in des~rate
need of a
COl'tt$pondence program. This program
would be of the pen pal nature.
The pw:pose. of such a program Is to
c'll"~t,t,h~ "ll~.Y.~•:.~<le.wlli<;I,
exists within the Refol"matory:-These
attitudes have attribu~ a great deal to
the tensions found in a prison environment. Through extension of friendship
and concern, we beliew that this aort ol
attitude can be destroyed. That it why it
is very essential that you participate and
also encour&I" others to participate In this
very worthwhile project.
The requirements litted below are what
wish to follow, although most att
Aexiblec
1) It i1 suggested
that outside
participants write a minimum of two
lett~rs per month.
2) The letters should show an extension
ol friendship, also concern in the Inmates'
endeavors.
3) Penonal involvement resulting in
visitation are encouraged however, at tl)e
discretion of the outside participants.
4) It is required to contact the Black
Prisonen Caucus quarterly regarding the
development of the relationship, problems
encountered, etc.
S) If you should become dissatisfied
with the response of the lnmatn, • you
=
ud sllldanta,"Pm,apt _. 'If"' lllluln'I tM
awl<, l,y not talcing th,; point far enough.
We are a community here at Evergreen,
whether one lives In the dorms, mods,
Ash, or off campuJ; we are all living
under a government In which we are not
rep.-nttd,
We pay tuition and our
administrators tabt, yet we have no say
on sean:h and IICreffllngboards to pick
who our trustee,,
administrators
or
faculty will be.
We mWII live by this government's
polici.. , which traditionally have been to
control and circumvent any actions taken
by the 1tudents, u a group. We cannot be
recogniud H a group demanding our
rights, because this school ha, been
designed to promote the Individual. This
promotion it beautiful, but we an, mutes
when we try to communiat• with the
administration.
J111tbecause we can grow our hair to
any length, dttu u
will or smoke
weed with impunity; an,
so braw to
IOY that all is well and there are no
changes that we would like to ..., In our
==
More
letters...
Continued from paa:e 4
constructed way of life7 Or are we being
taught to be content with the luxuries
afforded us, and are we learning to
continue the American nightmare as it has
been looming toward 1984 7
If there was to be a nuclear reactor
built on campus, would we have a say in
the final decision to build7 And if
enrollment drops and Evergreen is turned
into a convention
center for state
legislators, where are we to go7 What are
we to do7
Wouldn't it be far saner and practical
to shape boards of administrators and
students
to equally decide on the
problems here at our school7 Should we
not set up a system ot checks and
balances or shall we continue the present
system of open futile forums monitored
and ignored by the administrationl
Granted,
that these are a lot of
questions, but W1! are still In the stage of
questfons; for we have no voice to
answer with, yet.
Walter Acuna
Here's the ERC
Evergreen being the sort of place with a
language unto its own, you may have
found yourself musing-What the hell is a
DTF, GRC, S.!tA, ERC... ERC7
Well, the Erce is the Environmental
Resource Center. We're a coalition of
community activist organizations
that
share an offlc,, (CAB 103) which serves as
our resource library, meeting place,
lounge and base of action. Presently, the
organizations involved are:
Alternatives for Community Acces ■,
Bladt Hilt.I Audobon Soci,ty, Crabshell
Alliance, Energy Northwest, Green Peace,
Institute for Raoarch and Undentandlng,
Live Without Trident, Nisqually Dolt•
Association, WUdem... Soci•ty, Alaska
Coalition, Environmental Activists Council and th, Sierra Oub.
We formed this office to create a
medium for a diverse coalition
of
environmental groups to reach and be
accessible to the Evergreen Community,
and in time to broaden our outreach to
the Olympia . community. This central
office enables us to consolidate
our
resources and to coordinate and integrate
our activities.
Our method of social change is to
explore alternatives to the technological
DTF disapproves
~l'!,t(~'
t'Ji(~,w,'.,-;.loili;r wu
....,.t 'lo th, 11:.,;,';;j
of Truotby tho
Strilt, Polley DTF following recent Board
action on tht Stlb Policy,
Dear Members of the Board ,
We are writing to express our concern
with respect to your recent action in the
cue of the propoted Strike Policy, and to
urge that you adopt the policy which this
group recommended. We believe it is a
just and vi,albJe policy which, far from
tying the hands ol the Trustee, provides
• large meuuP. of flexibiUty to all parties
in the case that • oerlou1 dispoute should
develop. What we tried to do was to
ensure that, In such a situation, both sides
would have • clear Interest In negotiation,
and that In the event ol breakdown, there
would be protection for everybody. Thus
our intent wu to encourage negotiation
and to discourage confrontation. Any cha
change In the pro_.t
policy would
seriously distort the balance which we
,trove to incorporate.
We also want to emphasize, as we have
done In the past, the representative nature
of the group, and the aeriousness with
Continued on page S
~hi<;h.WJ.~ppr~ch«! the task of aqiving
at =:acceptable proposal. 8uUcling on th•
work of the Stike • Policy Task Force
before it, the DTF spent th""' months in
developing the policy. Through imposi·
tion of a quorum rule (unusual for a
DTF), we ensured • demoncratic decision•ma.king process. The fi~ vote was
unanimous, with one person .acquiescing
(Cooper). When the proposed policy was
presented to the college community at a
public forum in the spring, it received an
overwhelmingly
favorable
response.
While we recognize that it is your
prerogative to adopt the policy of your
choosing, a rejection of community
opinion in this important matter. The
current Strike Policy, embodied _in
Resolution 77-3, is unacceptable to us,
and we believe to you and to President
Evans also. We fervently hope that
Evergreen'• commitment to the democratic
process will not be violated in this
instance. We ask that you adopt ourl
Strike Policy recommendation.
Sincerely yours,
Peta Hendeson,
and 10 other
members of the Strike Policy DTF
1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111•
Editor: Curt MIiton
Photography Editor: Sonya Suoll•
Production Manager: Sherry Buc:1111•
Business Manager: Elizabeth Ulsh
Staff for this issue:
Laurie Frankel, Ma.ti D,
Stumpf, Pam Dusenberry, Walter Carpenter, Ulsa
Eckenbera, T,J, Si!'lpson, I. Donne, Andy Keller,
Steve Strusen, Bob Duh,
Laird Bauer and
Mon,thru ...
10 toe
Steve
Artists:
Chez, Rob Fromm
Advertising: LN W.,.
Typesetting: PatriciaEarl
...............................
.............
11 .......
I
r
,.,,
C
¥.
,
Just some of the stA!fers at the ERC from
left, Fred Tuoo, Jim Felton, Ann• Schlecht
and Darrel T ollfrtt.
oppression ot the earth and its inhabitants, and to educate people as to the
viability of those alternatives. We do so
through teach-ins, conferencu, publishing
.affitdistribLiting literature, •working within
local government, and most of all being
available and eager to talk with people
about current issues.
Our common ground is community
activism with a strong emphasis on
environmental issues, though th.at does
not preclude our individual involvement
and support of other issues lilce g.;tiy
rights, women's issues, men's issues and
the countless other soCJal struggles that
affect our lives.
There is a diverse collection
of
environmental literature (i.e., newspapers.
pamphlets, documents, etc.( and contact
people from the various organizations to
seeJc. out in quest oLtqe
proverbial
'What's going on7" And there will always
be lots of room for people intettsted in
joining one of the organizations
or
staffing the office. So come on dowri: and
ch«k us out. (It's a great place to stretch
out a cup of coffee.(
-Anna Schlecht
For the ERC
business
manager
The Cooper Point Journal is looking for a new
Business Manager for Winter Quarter. The position
pays S3.00 per hour for a maximum of 15 hours per
week. This job is great for those of you who want
an independent
study contract involving you with
the activities of an active college newspaper. The
Business Manager's
activities mean handling the
business functions of the Cooper Point Journal ..
There are records and ledgers to maintain and
update as well as making sure that all expenditures
stay within the confines of a budget. This position
offers excellent
opportunity
to delve into the
operations and management, of the business aspects
of a college newspaper.
The Business Manager
works closely with the editor. All applications
should be turned in to President Evan's office by
5:00 p.m. January 5th.
Francia,
Tho Cooper Point Journol 1, pubtlbl-y
fo, tho Coopo, Point ..., Olympia
oommunltlN, and the 1tudent1, faculty, and atatt of The E..;reen State Co4'9, Olympia,
W-lngton 9!16C&.Vlewt oxp<NNd .. not -ly
of Tho Eltato Coflogo.
A<M<11tlng material p,wtod
-n
not -ly
Imply •"'°'••••t
by HIio
--·
Otforo locotod In tho Collogo ActMtlolllvlldlng (CAI) :IOI. -•
NM213. lA!tWI policy, All Iott.,. to tho odltot muot bO llgnod, Nd, _,., by
noon r.-.,
fo, that -·•
put,tlcatlon. Ult.,. muot bO -·
---·
one, bO 400
wordl or let.I. let, ... exCNdfng «JO wordl may bl edited for lenO'fh, NllmN wUI bl wltt'thetd
on requeet.
THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL
Iii
THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL
DECEMBER 7, 1978
DECEMBER 7, 1978
An Analysis
The CPE Report and Evergreen
CPE Report
Continued from page I
Surveys conducted for the report
support this idea of an image problem,
the report indicates. Students, graduatn
and their employers, and placement
records all agrtt "that the Evergrttn
program is effective and worthy of
preservation," says the report, " ..
unfortunately, thrM views are not readily
shared by high school stud•nts and th•ir
counselors."
R.. ults of th• survey of collog...bound
stud•nts in 15 aroa high schools spotlights
the image probl•m. About half indicated
they knew little or nothing about
Evergrttn," and the qualities in which
Evergreen scored lowest-that
graduates
get jobs in their areas of intettst," that
teaching is "the most important mission of
the school." that faculty "expe,ct students
to work," and stude-nts are "committe,d to
learning"-"are primarily those in which
the College believes it is most effective."
An expandrd public relations effort, the
report concludes, should be "one of the
college's highest priorities."
Evergreen now gets only 1.4 percent of
southwest Washington high school graduates, the reports says, and 9 .1 percent of
community college transfer students from
community colleges in the area. "High
school entrances and (college) transfers
alone could provide
up to 3,200
additional
students,
and additional
growth is possible in added local,
ofi-campus and graduate programs," says
the report.
Many of the recommendations stem
trom the career-centered orientation of
these potential students.
The report says that among the cul'ffnt,
prospective and former students surveyed,
as well as employers of graduates, and
high school teachers and counnlors
'strong support exists for Evergreen's
basic ;alternative approach to learning-to
applied/interdisciplinary
studies, close
student/faculty
contact, and students
sharing in the design and relponsibility
for their own education. But every group
quoried by th• staff bolieved th• oxisting
Evergreen system can be improved,
making it moro compatible with traditional educational structutts and a highly
competitive job market."
Though th• criticisms of the group
varied, the report says their views
converged
on several
suggestions:
Improved program continuity and structuro, and r,quired programs for entering
students; improved academic advising
and ovaluations: offering a B.S. deg1ft
and mastor's deglft; moro "social ..-.nts
and socially-oriented
facilities
for
students; "bottor control ovor Individual
contracts and internships; "review of the
administrative structure''; involvement in
What will Evergreen bo Uko In the 1980s1
Th• futu.-. of th• college Is once again
under consideration with releue of the
Council for Post,econduy
Education's
Evergrttn 5tudy.
somowhat as th• ttault of th• colieg•'•
own ttView efforts, the report notes.
Coordinated 1tudi.. programs accounted
for 93 percent of 1tudents in Fall Quutor
1971, for instanco, but only 41 percent in
1976. Comparing th• sam• y•an shows
group contract participation up from 1
percent to 18 percent of students.
Individual contracts accounted for 25
pora,nt in '76 compared with 6 percent In
'71, and modular co~
.,.. up from 0
porcent in '71 to 16 percent of 1tudonts in
'76.
Rocommendations of a 1972 roview
committ .. rosulted in division of coordi,
nated studies programs
into basic,
lntermediat• and advanced varietiH in
'73--'74. A 1974 roviow committ .. warned
against moving away from coordinated
studies and recommended tighter controls
over the quality of individual contracts
and limiting them to advanced 1tudents.
Internship
and individual
contract
i controls
were instituted in 1976, the
report says, and part-time offerings were
almost doubled that y•ar.
The "fint Jong-range, comprehensive
curriculum-planning
effort" in '75-'76
rosulted in changes last yHr that included
defining nine interdisciplinary specialty
areas, making advanced work in each
available every year. providing nine or 10
basic-cootdinated--studies programs yearly, and providing annual programs"special programs for particular student
groups and experim•ntal offorts." Beginning fut spring, tho roport says, mt•ring
students we.re:assigned academic advilors
for their fult•st~y•~t·~Evergreen isn't tho only nontraditional
collogo in the country nor tho only ono
suff•ring enrollment problem•. tho roport
found. Tw•nty-two coll_,
including
traditional,
nontraditional
and mixed
schools, were surveyed. Five of the six
reporting enrollment declines were· nontraditional. 'With some notable exceptions, in~titutions
that began with
unconvmtional curricula subsequently
experienced enrollment declinos. S.voral
of th... institutions hav• roorionted thoir
LOST SWORD
:::o efforts and encountered
enrollment
g. growth."
.,,
Among the latt<,ri• tho Stat• Univenity
cl of New York at Old Wetbury. Opened in
93 1966, it clos•d in '70 "bocau .. of
-.....uncertainties
over the concept."
It
~ reopened a year later in "a more
'g. tratlitional v•in. although many of th•
;;· programs if offen are 1till intordisdplinary."
Now, each program
has a
distribution r,quittment, and a collogo
roprosentatlv• sayo "tho 'design-your-ownHoward Nevitt is looking for a sword
program' conapt hu been abandoned,"
he lost in the men's room on the second
though "some independent
study is
floor of tho library. The 4 1/2 foot sword permitted."
is highly valued by its ownor. It can bo
"Enrollmmts at tho institution," tho
rotumed to Campus Security with no roport notH, "have been Increasing at the
questions asked.
rat• of approximatdy 400 FTEiy•ar."
intercollegiate athletics; and better public
relations.
Comparing with tho roport' s =om·
mendations is th• outlin• of th• Evorgtftn
curriculum
President
McCann
had
dev•loped by October, 1968, No deg1ft
titles or majon, awarding of unit, of
crodit rathoc than quartor crodit-houn,
constant change in tho curriculum (with
students involved· in the changa), no
intm:ollogiat• athlotia, oeminan r,quired
and independent study encouraged, and
no tenure, fraternities
or sororities.
McCaM included th• moro conventional
aspocts of th• "uso of quutu-length terms
and an emphasis on social studies and a
broad education".
Th• Enrgrttn curriculum hu changed
NANBARJN
ff
___
_
...
-Ctllllr
UniversityVillage Bldg.
4fl00 25th A-ue N.E.
SNttle, Wuhlngton 1111105
(20I) US-1117
ro, lltfOffllltktft ...... tOttltfClftlen
1ft Mljo, US OIUtl I Ab,oad
Outltdt ,n Stitt
UiU TIU PIH, ... ttl-1712
THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL
E
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
by Steve Francis
Th• Council for Postsecondary Educ•·
tion (CPE) last weok roleased a preliminary draft of the long-a..-aited
Evergreen study. The exhaustive report,
which spans 230 pages and contains
twenty recommendations,
represents a
year of study by CPE 1taff rosearch•rs Bill
Chance and D•nis Cw,-y. It will no doubt
pby a crucial role in the upcoming
legislative debate concerning Evergreen's
futuro. What does it all m•an1
Basically, the study calls for a four•y•ar
"breathing puiod" which would fr•e
Ev•rgreon from any extrrnal threats of
closuro. This would hopefully •liminate
what has been termed a self-fulfilling
prophocy, threats of closure which l•ad
to low enrollment which, in tum, lead to
lower enrollments
. . . During the'
broathing period, funding would .... ntially bo granted, pending yearly •valuations of progress toward increasing
enrollment.
It is significant that eighteen of the
twenty recommendations
are directed
toward Evergreen and the Board of
Trustees, not the Legislature. This assures
that initial changes will occur on a local
level and will not bo mandated by th•
Legislature. The report also emphasizes
the importance of an "institution-wide
effort" involving students, staff, and
faculty to institute changes in order to
boost enrollment. However, should the
College be unable to stem sagging
enrollment by 1983, realignments may
then bo made by I~ 1-4'&islitu~e,.,
.,
Target enrollment le"vt'Isare included in
the first recommendation and are designed
to bring the cost of education per student
at Evergreen in line with the Regional
Universities
(Eastern,
Central,
and
w.. 1.m). Th• roport establish.. that an
enrollment of 4250 students will achieve
this cost parity and should be accomplished by 1984--115.This is a crucial
target, as it means the College must
nearly double enrollment in the next six
yurs. Just a• critical are !argot figures of
2700 FTE by 1980-81 and 3500 FTE by
1983--84 (at the •nd of tho broathing
period).
An mrollmont of 2700 FTE by 1980
means Evergl'ftn must boost enrollment
by noarly 600 stud•nts from tho prosent
level of 2104. Consid..-ing tho problems of
the school, such as its poor image in
Southwest Washington, an increase of this
magnitude seems to be an unrealistic
targot. Image problems aro perhaps th•
hardest to tum around. It takn public
relation programs and outreach to change
peopl•' s misperceptions about th• school.
This takes time. Two years to change an
enrollment
decrease of almost 200
students last y•ar to an inc.-.... of 600 by
1980 doosn't seem .-..sonabl•. It is only
too clear that unrealistic expectations
contributod to Evergreon's prHenl predicament. Whon th• Collogo lint opened,
Evergree:n was expected to grow to 7000
students by 1977-78. This numbor novor
materialized
and, consequently,
the
campu• is ov•rbuilt and underonrolled. It
seems clangorous and .. tf--defuting to
once again make the same unrealistic
projections.
The care and hard work that wmt into
the report is reflected in the many
interviews with present Evergreenen,
graduate, high tchool 1tudent1, cou,-.
lora, and employers.
Most of the
recommendations stem dirKtly from the
interviews.
Interviews with pretent students and
Jazz and Modern Guitar
Instruction offered. New to
area, have studied 14 years
with various professlonals.
Theory-technique.
Reasonable rates. 866-5104 evenings.
,11
graduates stressed several needs: a
sustained academic advising program,
simplified
Evergreen
transcripts,
a
master's degree, a Bachelor of Science
d~.
more program continuity, and a
pla<,; fur socializing to foster foeling of
community.
All of these needs are
reflected in the recommendations, and as
the report points out, ''the graduates
expressed,,satisfaction
with the total
educational experience, directing their
remarks to modifications that could make
it still better."
Perhaps the most interesting interviews
were conducted with 750 high school
students in Southwest Washington. In
response to the question as to what they
felt was important in choosing a college,
high school students rated many o( the
things Evergreen offers, such as planning
their own programs, internships, and
written evaluations
of their work.
Remarkably, the areas in which Evergreen
15"perceived to fall short are those very
areas in which the College believes it is
successful. The study concludes that these
interviews ''rather clearly reveal the
College's failure thus far to get its message
across."
Recommendation 15 addresses this
problem. It recommends that Evergreen
"mount an extraordinary and sustained
effort to inform students, counselors, and
others in high schools" about Evergreen to
counteract the bad image and misperceptions.
High school counselors are reluctant to
Farmhouse
(Continued from pagel)
completion could serve as a further
binding force in making Evergreeners
proud of their community. After all it will
be the only state. owned building with a
Clivis Multrum Composting Toilet. It is
also th• y•a.r that th• Sa.A Board has said
that it is one of its top priorities.
To the perceptive reader the problem is
slmj>1€;money. With the across the board
budget cuts this year it would appe,ar that
there is no solution. However, this is not
true. There is a solution.
As was stated above the money that
was first allocated in 1914 came from the
CAlll'ha .. II rnerv ... Pr...,ntly th•ro is
)95,000 dollars loft in tht.. .-...rv•. Th•
construction of CAB Phase II is not
until Evergtte:n reaches an enrollment
figuro of 3,500. That is probably a good
four yean away. The solution is to direct
a portion of this building fund for th•
completion
ot the Farmhouse.
The
decision ultimately rest with the Board of
Trustees. The decision is whether th,
Farmhouse will turn from a financial
liability to a community and financial
asset.
Chatterbos:
Q
UNIQJE YOCA INSlRUCilCN
. Practices
and total lifu tyle
within a rural setting. Practical
and mystical. Semester begins
I an. 1. Eames I students of
yoga. Box 547 Deming WA
98244
advise students to attend Evergreen
because they perceive the 'structure' to be
too 'loose' for most 18-year-olds. Consequently the Council recommends that the
Board of Trustees consider first-year and
graduation requirements which would
help students adjust to Evergreen and
provide more guidance.
Employ,rs cited Evergreen graduates as
being su~rior to graduates of traditional
schools in self-directedness
and their
ability to solve probl,ms.
Some employers were critical of the need for
students to design their own programs
from scratch, and questioned the "integrity of some individual learning contracts." A recommendation to reexamine
the ways students are awarded internships
or allowed to arrange independent studies
arose from this criticism.
Since the Legislature directed the
Council to study ways of reducing costs,
Recommendation 7 suggests that Evergreen look at possible ways to reduce
costs through inter-institutional re,source
sharing,
review of overhead
costs
(administrative and support) in a context
of zero real-dollar growth, and using large
class sections to help offset costs of
smaller classes. Though the first two of
these seem desirable the third, using large
class sections. does not. Although it is a
common practice at traditional schools to
do this on a huge scale it would not be
desirable at Evergreen. Seminars with
greater than twenty people often become
lectures and non-participatory, and the
use of student teachers reduce the amount
of faculty access time.
The Evergreen study is a sensitive and
well-documented report. The interviews
show clearly the areas the College needs
to study for possible change. Yet it allows
for this change to occur with the
participation of all who are affKted by
the change. It also dramatizes, but does
not exaggerate,
the extreme need to
communicate
what the College does
internally to those who are not associated
with it and who know little about the
school.
At this moment the study is in draft"
form. On Tuesday. Decembor 12 the
Council for Post5eeondary Education will
discuss the report in Seattle. Final action
will not occur until January 25, when the
CPE meets here at Evergreen. At that
time, the study will go to the Legislature
as an advisory
report
which the
Legislature can accept, change, or reject.
The question is not one of whether
Evergreen will change. Evergreen has
always been and hopefully will continue
to be a flexible alternative. The more
important questions a.re, how will the
College change and who will be involved
in the changing?
Steve Franci5 is an Evergreen student
who is currently chairperson of the
Student Advisory
Committee of the
Council for Postsecondary Education.
(.,
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK. 11 A.M.-2 AM
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arts and entertainment
THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL
DECEMBER7, 1178
Cult dreams of the midnight
by T.J. Simpeon
The "midnight'' movie and/or the "cult"
film has been 1racing (or plaguing)
thntrn acron the country for aome time
now. This is mostly a 10'1 phenomenon
and thi■ article ii an attempt to defineand
analyw the ■o-called "cult" film.
Accordln1 to the critics, there art
certain criterion which qualify a movie u
such. Flnt of all, a cult film pnrrally
doa not pt favorable ttViewt from moet
critics especially the. more rnpectablt
ones. It alao ii u■ually a finandal flop
when originally releutd. Only by word
of mouth dot■ the film pmu a faithful
audience and at fint usually become■
popular at midniaht showinp months or
yean after its reltue.
So, a "cult" can't be IOINthlng that pts
good ttviews, lib aome foreign art film
la CNbrol or a Godard let'■ ■ay) but
bombs at the box offkt. Nor can it be
something popular with a general
a~na,
whether it'■ a Ftllini, aomtthlna
like "Coming home'' or "Airport 19M". A
cult film must Nvt ■ome tpedal, ■t:ranp
appeal all Its own, and it mostly appeals
to white middle clua people in their late
teens or early twentin. npedaJly collqe
students. Most importantly, cult films
usually have the ■amt theme In
common-tNt insanity I■ wonderful and
next to godliness.
This is a very dangcrou■ notion besides
being a very middle clua and naive one.
Those in the lower income bracket■ know
that it's no holiday to be able to flip out,
survival comes fint. State mental institu-iions art mostly filled with thoet from the
lower classes, since thoee from tht upper
classes have caJT from ■hrinb, private
hospitals, and money to help them if
reality become■ unbalanced.
These films al■o promote an ab■urdist
individualism (I'm all for individualism,
but I'm not so hot on absurdity anymott)
that always shows the protagonist■ (or
anyone who is suppc>Rd to be crazy) as
the only good character■, no matter how
insane he is, and tNt everybody tlle Is
the real sicko. Just look at "King of
Hearts," "The Ruling 0..,"
"Harold and
Maude." ad nauseum. Not only are the■e
films for the most part badly directed, but
they'rt filled with the most ridiculous
caricatures that not tvm "Mad" mapzine
would tolerate. It also 1hoW1 the buic,
sheltered Immaturity of many colle1e
MUSIC
ON CAM,US
M utuel Open Mike.,.,.,
Monday
and Wedneeday at the CORNER.
Thef9 will 1110 be an oplWI mike
Friday, o.c.mt,er 1. In the c.,11 from
11 Lm. to 2 p.m. • pert of the
h<>lnKomlng oelebmlon. 8lon-up In
the CAB.
A CONCERT 0, MEDIEVAL AND
RENAISSANCE MUSIC, a Joint eftoft
of E~
and SI. Menln'a, will be
preeented on Fr1dey, D1cemb1r 7 at
8:30 p.m. In the Aec:li.1 Hell. TlcMt1
IA 12 gane,al and 11 ttudlnt.
TUESDAYSAT EIGHT, 0aoambar12,
wlll ~t
a IOlo perfonnence by
811a Siu, Unl-.lty
of wathlftglOn
oo,-i
planl1t. TlcMta 12.80 gane,al
and 11.eo atudlnta.
Thi NO TOY BOYS perform Fr1dey,
0ecemblr I, from 8 p.m. to 1 Lm. In
the FOUl'ttlFloor Ut,rwy. TicMla 12.00.
A benlflt for !tie OtyffipWI Wor!IM'I
Cent« for H.. 1111, Gay
c.nw, Women'• c.ma,, and Min'•
c.n• wtll ftlllhn IAON HOMI. Thi
~-•lp.m.
on IN Fourth
""°"'"
Floof al IN Ubrary
.., .. Tldllt1
M
Saurclll¥,~
11.80.
IN Ol.YWIA
IEIE-....ao,,_•.,••~
OWft OIFJI MTCHl80N
.,.,..,.
(who krlOWIIlie ,,...,,. -.
IPPM') al the CAR IN1'IMIIZZD
s.t~.
0aoambar... • p.lft. eo..
le 11.00.
ONU DILi p,eeenta • '1ANO
FOAUM 0aoambarI wltll al .._
nine
9010
perlonMnOM.
Oeoefflber I
,tudent■ in the 10'1. They p,bblt up this
junk, but Ignore or can't fathom more
inttlligent films (that may ffffl bt Nying
somt of the ■amf thinp the cult Ontl do).
Two cua in point are "King of Hartl"
and FedericoFelllnl.
''Kinaof Hurtl"' ii the granddaddy of
the cults. Rtleued in 1967 It floundered in
obtcurity for year■ until audience■ in
Boston and other cities btpn picking up
on It in the midnight cbadt. It ■oon
bec:amtIO popular that it ■tarted ■howing
everywhere, even in ■mall towns, at
reiuJar 7 and 9 o'clock lhowinp.
The movie ii about a lone ■ol& in
World War I who wanden Into a French
town that has bttn evacuated by
ewryone except the inmate of the. local
lmane asylum. T1- cute, lovable aazies
roam the ltrftts acting out their harmlt9I
fantasia u the film make■ t0me very
prttentiOld comment■ on war and sanity,
theme■ that have been handled much
better • in the cinema from Chaplin to
HCatch-22"•
Havina worked 2 year■ u a therapilt in
a llate mental hospital, I particularly
ramted the inmates u beinalhown as
beautiful, are-free, funny people. Mental
illneeeis not a myth, and mental patients
usually aft ecared, unhappy people who
are often prone to violmc;e and Rftd
aomeont to tab care of them. They an
rarely in inltitution■ becauaethe H■ystem"
NI fucked them over O U9ed to beUl'vt
they were, until I learned othawile the
hard way), which ii the popular belief.
It'■ an insult to the■e people, who need
better caft, to be bombardecl..with the
hip, pop peychology of "King ol Hans",
Yet "Kinaof Harts" ii the m.oetreque9leci
film for the Friday Night Film Selin.
Probably the teCOndmost requt1ted
film is Fellini'• "Satyricon". "Satyrlcqn"
doesn't qualify as a cult film due to It■
art-hou1e 1tatu1 and aeneral 1uccea1.
However, It does bring up ■ome
important question■ about the awarene■1
of college audiences.
Federico Felllnl is one of the gratt■t of
contemporary film artkt whoee film■ In
the 1950'1 brought a new 1tylt of
humanism and neo-rullnn to tht cinema.
Yet the■e film■, along with hi■ other
ma■terpltctt, are (with the po11lblt
exceptioN of "la StradaH and "8½")
ignored by the college audiences. They
want to revel in the freaklne11 of
"Satyricon", which ii undoubtedly his
wont, least hwnanl■t. and most artia--
MOOAUTY ST&V, a local and new
NorthwNt rwcontlng group COfflN In.
OBRADOR perform, the 11th and
CRAIG CAROTHERS and JOHN
BLOCKcomeIn Ille 15th and 11111.
APPLEJAM brlng1 In MAGICAL
STRINOS (no, II'• nothlno like Montlvanl) December8, MARK IAIDGEHAM
and fnendl the Ith, the DRAl<.Eaand
TWO HTBTS the 15th, and 8NAKE
OIL and IIEOOAAS RANT the 19th.
The 22nd tt.. wlll be a CHRISTMAS
PARTYAND JAM 8E88fON lhllfl fNe.
tically corrupt work.
Four yean qo, I attmded a festival of
his worb at the Unlvenity of Maim. HI■
films Weft ■hown in chronolopcal ordlr,
a different one each lhowtns for a period
of a few Wftb. Alm09t each lhowtng had
a very ■mall attendance, except for
"Satyricon", which pacbd the houae for
three lhows. I tried to talk people Into
■eeing tht better worb, but nope-they
only wanted to eee "SatyriconH (which Is
basically a freak lhow). "It's hip, it'■
cool, it'■ fraky, it'■ weird, It'■ popular!"
Forpt about the D\U\ whoha■ done a lot
better and ha■ much more to AY in his
other worb.
The ■ame ■ort of thlnJdnacan be
applied to the newest midnight cult rap■,
"Rocky-Honor Picture Show'' and the
ne,ct rap, "Erwrhtad". "Rocky Horror",
a kinky ldddy show, ii beneath contempt,
andthe best that can bt aid of it ii that
most of thekid■ that wonhip it are still in
high tchool, althoqh it does have a
college age followin1. f>eoplt in the
audience lhow up draaed in costwnel
that make them look like variou■
charactenin the film and recite and ■1ng
the line.s along with the imagin on the
screen. This make■ the audience more
entertaining than the movie. It', lib
young folk in the 10'1 no longer want to
look ahead or behind. Everything ii just
for tht moment. Strange to think that
bade in the 6'11 It wu a Bergman or
Godard that young people were discovering, not this crap. Now It'• either
punk or dlKo.
Speaking of punk, the punb have their
flr■t cult pa11ion with "Eraserhtad",
which nu been 'becoming mldnfaht
favorite back ea■t. If the audience at the
recent Lakewood 1creenlng was any
lndic.ation, thouah, the film may have a
hard time in Washington, linc:e a lot of
people were thoroughly repu1ad by It. (I
must NY ho1ftYff, that probably an equal
number thought it w• great.) Tom Allen
of the VW.. Voice 1t.1tedit bat when he
wrote of the film, '1f Ralph Babh1 and
Michelan1elo Antonlonl were to lock
themlelva in an attice for five yean in
order to create a cinematic daydream for
cretins, 1,ttoo mipt come out like David
Lynch's garret film for the American Film
Institute."
This ■urreallst claptrap, which even
look■ like a student film, NI a bushyheaded dolt taking catt of his "baby", an
animated head of a cow fetu■ (or
a
An exhibit or clblac:hrome color
photographa by JANE O'NEAL, IAIAN
HAOIWAAA,and KENNETH MoOOWN,
with nude drawlnga by GAYLE
PAVOLA .. on ¥1ew In the Fourth
l"loor utwa,y 8111.-y until the Ith.
IN Ol.YIIN
COLLECTOR'S
GAU.EAY at 23CMW.
Harrlaon la allowlng
an 'OLD
MASTER'S' PRINT SHOW and an
axtllblt of worb by PAUL HOA1UCH1
and ANNE MclLAATH thtougt, the 30th
of l:>acambs.
INIIATTLI
DacM1oer7, TOTOat the paramount
for $2.
Oaotmbs I, KENNY LOOGINIAND
F1A£FAU. al the lellltle Centw Ara'9,
gane,al ~ ..
QUEEN al tlle Colealum the 12111.
TicMla17.80.
JEAN•LUC PONTY and LARRY
CAAL.TOH..,,_. It the P1rwnountIN
15th. nc.. _..•. 00, '7.90, S1.00.
J\1111
In cieaa you ..onduN IMICI
IPNNOSTUN la aold out for hie
DICIMN 210oonoartll h ~
HEART a,>peer'I at the Colwtum
Qac ,w 30 and S1. Tell OOIIOlfton
ltla31al ·~-.
but .....
ltltl
tkN1a fo, tlle 30tll for ... 00.
MT
ON~
•NAC£lfAl"!SP.,,T""ION8,._
ona of tllle
yer1
P"9lffll
.. lflClwtno
artWOftlof lta
1tlldenta tllrouoll the 11111In the
Ulnty Oalltry.
THIATIJI
ONCAIIIPUS
AN EVENING AT THE THEATER a
p,Mantallon
of ltne on.eat 1111¥1,
playa 0aoambarI, I, and 10 at I p.m.
In the ~ Theater. Tidf.att
.. 12 gar..i and 11 atudanta.
l¥INTI
1llrouQIIthe 10th KA01 ~ Ila
IMIMMUIII MARATHON.L11i11n
In for
of good """ 111dpledge by
.,,
'°"'
calltng11M2117.
.
THE FIRST EVEfl lVEflOREEN
HOMIECOMINO through the 1111.
'T'llawNbe Ill klftdl of """"
10 get
IIWOMdwtttt; fflUflllpelfltlng, elftOlng,
cllnafftg,and 9lfWW_. .......
All In
....
the CM bulldlnt, -
audience
you u...
Oto. I and 10 - Friday Nita F11ma
pl'INnt8 •Jotln hnl NIW', a tftbuta to
one
of
Hollywood'1flneet
■omething
similar), that c:ria, rolls It■
pathetic eyes around, and pt■ ■iclc with
all thae uafy warts all over it■ face and
tongue. We're then boringly tnated with
deca~tatlon■, nauMatlng
dream ■t·
quences, fetu1 1tomplng1, fetu■ 1platterin11, blood flowlna, and lot■ of
■ometh.lng tNt loob lib either pub OT
bile when the protagonist ripl the baby',
gut, apart. Enough gro11ne11 for a
hundred Polan■ld flbrw.
If this ii an example of pop culture in
the 10'1, then I can't wait until the 80'1
when people can look bade at that
atrocititt the way we now look back at
what we thought were IOdally relevant
films of the6'11. h "Rocky Honor Picture
Show'' and the ''BeachBlanketBingo" of
the 1'117 I think time will anawu, "ye■".
In cue you're wondalna why I went
throuahall this length just to bitch like
this, it'1 became I aerioualy care about
film a■ an art. I don't lib to tee it
bastardizad by people who think they're
~•ting
or appreciating art. (I know not
everybody cara about whether It'■ art or
not, but just try to argue about the
validity of "Harold and Maude" with a
fan of tNt film.) In the 6'1s, there were
movie■ tNt opened our awumas,
an
awart.na1
of both the world around us
and the ponibilities and beauties of the
art form. College student■ went to these
films in drove■. Yet the ■upposedly
inttllipnt yowtg people of today refuse to
queation tht reuons for their attraction to
the cult films. h thi■ a new middle class
h~
or just ignorant bliss7
~ fQffllare not all }>ad.
good ona, like "Morgan"
~it~x,
Thett are ■ome
and "The Harder They Come", which
work becautt of their political and artistic
qualitia. Even "Outrapous" and "Harold
and Maude" have their moments. But
why promote pop pap over trying to
undentand or discover the better things in
the medium7 If these films were pure
t1Capi■m, It would be fine. But they'tt
not. People really get into the pseudo-hip
"mesaqes" of the■e movie■. Pretentious-MN is not ac:aplsm. At lust you know
wNt to expect when you go to see
aomtthlna lib "Smokey and tht Bandit".
Everythina has its place, and it's going to
be interesting to ■ee wNt place the cult
film shows up in a few years.
Don't pt me wrong now. I'm not
negative-I'm angry.
dll9Ct(Q.
(Ford gaveua 1uch claaalct • "Onipea
of Wrath", "How Green Wu My
Valley", "The Informer", and "She
Wen A Yellow Ribbon•.)Tllla lhow la
a ~I-in
of two of Illa beat
wcne, "The Man Who Shot Ubarty
Valance" and "The Long VoyaaHome" ("The Informer" which wu
originally acheduled, had to be
«-IOllled dua to flnanclal ,-one).
"The Man Who Shot Ubarty V.,,._ ..,
(11112)one al Fonl'1 moet popular and
entllftalnln.g wutern1,
11 1110 a
c:omrn.it on the fadlno out o1 tt1a old
...
and how hietOfY .. falalfled to
,,..
W'/ for mytht. " ...
JemN
Stewart, Jolln Wayne, LM Manin,
Edmond 0'9rten, v.. Mllet, Atwty
Dlwll, John ClrTadlne,LN VanCleat,
sbvtllar Martin, WoodVStrode, and
Danver~ Nead more be llld? "The
Lang Voyage Home" (19q la beaad on
4 ahort playa by ~ O'Nlltl, and
,... alao O'Nattr, fMoftll film ...,..
lion al any of hie WOfb. H 11ao ,_
Ill~
clnematograptiy by Grego
Tolafld ("Cltlal
Kana")and a wonder•
tut aocn mtxlna
daNloll and o,tglnll
mualo wttll ~(Thia ftlm
...
what '9111 Och'a baNd 1111
.,.._,,_
al the Hartlol"on, for ltlOII
tllet ca,e.) TIie fflOYII •• a luety,
brwltng 8IMntyl'II alofy of aome lrtefl
Merchant Matin.. and at•• Jolln
Wilyna, ward Bond,lany ,_._,
and Mllcnd Nlltwlck. Aleo a lhon:
laltJ 9oop In "Minnie the Moodw'
with mualo by Ca Ceillowy. Friday,
Dao. I, LactureHall One.. Two 1t10W1
only, 3 and 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Die.
10, at 7:30 only. Only a Dotlw'.
Dae. 15 - LMI FrldllyNI.. FIim of the
Jean Alnolf1 "Boudu 8a¥ed
From Drowntno" (1132). Defined .. a
"lllloGY
nw,• ltOfY, 11111
la one of the
moat end"'1nQoomadlea by the ar-t
Alnolr ("Grand lllualon", "Rulea of the
Game").An upper-elall ~pte .... a
bum Into their home atw laYlno him
from hie 1111clda
attempt (hla dog left
him IO ha ,~
Into the Slenal.
NeedlNI to NY, tha bum Boudu
(MlctlMt Simon) _,_.
llll¥OCamongat
the boutgaolale. An anen:htltlc ... .,.
on French motllle, mannaraand claN
poeltlon. Aleo: Tw clallc cartoonaWlnaor Mo01y'1 "The Or9MI" (1119)
and "Impatient Patient", a Warner
tto.. flffl. Ffldey, Dae. 15 at 3, 7, and
1:30 p.m. Lacture Hall Ona, only •
quarter -
dolw.
INOI.Ylff'IA
TIie CIIWl'!I le playlno o.tct laal't
1112 .......
"UWNnOI of Anlbla",
wnld\ ..... 0'TooW1 flf'lt fllm.
Ther9'1pn,batllynot,..-loenaay
about ltll• fllm ttllt you don't alraly
know fo, IIIOW tlma and other Info,
dlalk3-8tl4.
A New CP.J
On Thursday, December 7 (which also happens to b~ the anniversary of
the bombing of Pearl Harbor), the Publications
Board met to select a new
editor for the trouble-plagued
Cooper Point Journal.
Instead of a single
editor, they chose us, seven students proposir.g that the CPJ be run collectively.
We are really excited about this change in the operation of
the CPJ. Having seven peorle (and we are hoping for more) ultimately
resronsible for each issue rather than just one person opens the door to
diverse interests
and id~as.
We intend to drastically
decrease (and hopefully erase) the feeling of isolation
and disconnection
that has caused
so many ~otentially
involved people to not get involved.
We are committed
to making this raper a coll'fllunity newspaper like it has never b~en before.
How do we intend to do thie?
We plan on openir.g up all aepects of the
rroduction of the paper to the Evergreen community. This means copy-editing, proofreading,
layout, graphice, photography, typing, and, or course,
writing.
We are hoping that many reople will contribute
reviews of music,
rlays and booke, pieces of investigative
reporting,
regular columns, articles on important news events, arte and events items, etc.
(We also hope
to offer intermittent
skille workshor,e for people who want to learn some
of these skills.)
But mor~ than this, we want the community to be involved
in running the CPJ. There will be regular weekly meetings (announced in
advance) where you can take part in planning future issues, assigning
articlee,
and discussing
the paper's progress and direction.
Thia paper exists for the benefit of all of ue. We in the collective
just happen to be the present car~takers.
There is no reason for anyone
to feel left out. We hope you will not give a second thought to walking
in when you haTe a span hour and some cr~ative energy to lend to the
effort,
because producing a paper takes a lot of tjme and energy.
It will
only grow healthier
the more we are all involTed.
We are now in CABlOL,
and we are having our second open meeting on Monday, January 8, at noon.
Come on down and visit us.
Alexis Jetter (liaisen)
Pam Dusenberry
Paul Fink
Rob Fremm
Pearl Knight
Deug Riddele
Robin Willett