The Cooper Point Journal, Volume 8, Issue 19 (May 1, 1980)

Item

Identifier
cpj0223
Title
The Cooper Point Journal, Volume 8, Issue 19 (May 1, 1980)
Date
1 May 1980
extracted text
Students initiated
By Jan Loftnesa
It's a draft regislration center! An
army recruiting office! A bird cage!
Nahhh. it's just the new poet office
moved from it.9 old location on the
second floor, and just one of many
changes that the CAB Redesign Project
plans to complete by Super Saturday.
June 7.
One of the projt>ct's main objectives is
to open i.1µ the second floor mall, leaving
a larger area for dances and socializing.
Along with the bulky post office, the
standing bulletin boards have been
removed and the Information Center has
moved into the old Duck House location.
Clearly, the mall will have plenty of
room to movt>in. A new Current Events
Calendar will be put up along the wall
outside the bookstore that will provide
daily, weekly, and quarterly information
of events in an orderly, readable manner,
and won't t.ake up any space.
To make the CAB a technically easier
place to hold a dance, electrical tract
lighting and stage lighting are being
installed on the second floor. And, no,
those aren't huge speakers hanging below the railings on the third Door,
they're acoustical planter boxes to help
reduce the noise level of everyday traffic. There will also be acoustical planter
boxes and benches on the first floor, plus
planter barrels and, of course, plants.
Other changes in the CAB will be the
addition of 16 new bulletin boards at
various locations. new carpeting in the
area near the third floor deck, 24 new
butcher block tables, 70 new chairs
{some with no arms at the request of
students who wanted to sit two at a
time), and new art display boards on the
third floor for student art and photography.
The KAOS remodelinR project is also
a part of CAB redesign. KAOS has Ion~
been in need of major structural changes,
mainly because its location on the third
floor was not intended to house a radio
station. \In fact. it was originally meant
to b(• a lwauty parlor.) One major prob
h·m was that acn•ss Lo Lhe record library
t·ould onlv be had through the air studio.
Thl're w~•re problems with general lay
out. acoustics. lighting, work and storage
-..pare, and general comfort.
Work
sLartf'd on the station the first of the
yE'ar and is near completion. All that is
lc-ft is some rewiring and cabinet build·
mg. All the rooms have been rebuilt and
now K AOS has ·a new office, a new
record library, and new production and
air studios. all laid out efficiently and to
the satisfaction of the st.aff.
The history of the KAOS remodeling
plan g~s back as far as the whole CAB
Redesign Project, to spring 1977. Lee

Chambers, a staff person at KAOS
•pproached the S&A Board about fund·
ing a team to study the possibilities of
designing an addition t.o the CAB. At the
same time. student groups who were
working out of offices on the third floor
or the library were getting' pressure
from the administration t.o move out and
make room for more faculty and adminis-

MUSIC
Thursd•y. April 24
Leading members horn lhe band Knebken•
QIU99 will per1orm al 6 p m 1n the Rec11al
Hall T1ckels are $ I 50
Munu.zlk a concert ol new music leaturlng
lhe 1alen1s of tour Olympia musicians t>egln1
at 6 p m in the Rec,111 Hall The ttYening wlll
leature orig,nal and 1n1erprellve m•terlals by
the Quar1et Adm1ss1on 1s $1 50
Friday, April 25
Taped highly oanceable" music by women
compose1s and musicians wlll be f .. tured In
a womans t>enelll dance lrom 8 JO to mid•

trative office space. Food Service also
has problems with crowded eating areu
.and long lines. Plus, dorm residents
were asking for more social space.
In the fall of that year, the school
hired Jon Collier, an architect-consultant.
to work on CAB Phaae TI. He and a
design team of eight studenta propoeed
the addition of a student group office

EVENTS
Thursday, April 24
A workshop called COl'l'ltMnlng rnaauge ■nd
Polarity wilt teach Swedish massage techniQues It wlll st•r1 at 7 p.m Sign up at the
Counsellng Center
F-y.
April 25

ART
Thursday, April 24
Facully artist David 0•11-Vher open:s a oneman show c,I his tculpturw and drawings m
Gallery Four Gallery Two continues 10 display
photogr•phs
by University
of Wuhlnglon
student, •nd !acuity •rtllll
The Collectors G•llery proudly presents the
April Show NlclKHH Krt1ten The Enhanced
Momeni A Voyage into !he Mind of Ar1 and
Nature and H•rry Knlckitrboctt.."M1xec1
Media. New Images and New Vis,ons " The
Gat,ery 1s at 2JO.t Hamson and 1s open TuesSat 11 am -5 pm Thru lhe 30th
The Eve,green Ar1s Resource Centet" presents an evenmg of poetry with Candy Slrwt
& Wendy Scholl~
sta·t1ng at 7 30 In the
Boara Room Lib 3112
Friclly, April 25
An Art Auction 8.neflt
lor the YWCA.
Womans Shelter Program will be held at the
Vance Tyee Motor Inn Held in the Makah
Room. there will be a preview at 7 p m fol·
:oweo by the auction at 8 30
Wadnhd•y, April 30
The RlrM of the Ancient MartMr the poem
and its mean,ng featuring the TMrt ol Joy
Puppet ThNlr9 and Reyne Wynde Ellubethan
S.lledry En.-mble will be at SI Mar11n·s Col·
1egestarling al 8 pm No charge

nlQtll on the first flOOJ lobby ol the Library
Building Admission Is Sl 25
Saturday, April 2'8
An evening ot ofivlnal )au musk: when
former student JeffJ Mk:hetsen returns to lhe
E'l8f'green campus stage for a premle, performance
Michelsen ls an accompllshed
pianist, composer •nd producer
Tickets
a,e S3
8111Moeller returns to Applejam al Olym•
pl•'s Center of Folk Musk: ■nd Art In the
YWCA, 220 East Union, with his superb performance ol M•rt Twain Tickets are S2
Monday, April 28
Denny Ooodhew Quartet at the Gnus. Fine
sax worti. spearheads this e11cellent jazz unit
from Seatile. 11111artsat 8 p m and admlsalon

"SJ

THE

CAB changes

TUNday, Aprll 21
Membera ot the $MIiie
Opera stage an
Otympi1 performance, 8 p m In the Recllal
Hall, Communication BuildlnQ Tlcke1 price
to be announced

TKOma Psychk lnslltuta 11 now olterlni;j a
workshOp on Psvchlc HNllna 6 Medlt■ Uon in
Olympia It'• from 7 10 10 p.m. at 4728 Sleater
Kinney Rd For dlreclions call 4~2509
or
357-9470
The C.,_.. P1■Mlng I Placement Senior
Sen'Mnal"I on Graduate School Information,
noon to 1 :30 In lib 1213.
Friday I Saturday, April 25, 29
Df. Garbanzo'• Flylng Circus wlll perform
top-nolch 1heater. Juggling and jug band
Sheer entef'lalnmenl al the Gnu Dell starts at
9 p m. and tickets are $2
Saturday, Apf1121
Consldef th■ Sourc. a solar collec1or work·
shop will be sponsored by the Energy Systems PrQgram from 1 to 4:..30 a1 the--Ofyfflpia
Community Cen1er For more Into, contact
ProfesSOf' Jake Romero
Action Olly to, ERA will star1 at 1 p.m. In
room 200 •b-c at the U of Waahington There
w,11 be speakers and plannlng tor promollno
lhe ERA
Waler PH OemonatraUon at Bremerton. Part
ol a nationwide acllon for a No Nuke World.
Contac1 the ERC 10 arrange car pooling.
A cast ol 30 daneers and muslcl•ns will
stage an evening of Hawaiian,
Tahitian,
Samoan and NaOfla dances when Evergreen's
Asian Coalillon celebrates Asian WMk. The
performance wl11 begin al 7 30 p m atop the
fourth floor ol the Ev•n• Library Tk:kels are
SA general and S2 students
T-y,April21
John G. heuchamp wm talk on Computer
Graphics In Today'• WNlem Cultu,. ln lecture Hall 2 al 1 and 7 p.m
The Campus Ministries
are sponsoring
Manne and Quall: a dWoiou- In Chnsllan
ethk:s and • supper •1 5·30: Organic farm

wing, cafeteria remodeling, lounge ~mprovement, &nd second floor mall unprovement. Working within a budget ~f
$650,000, the school hired a firm of architects and interior designers to prepare
the final contract documents. But, due
to last year's slow enrollment growth,
S&A cut the budget to $182,000. More
cuta forced the plan to be scrapped completely, and the architects and interior
designers were terminat.ed.
In the fall of '78, CAB Phase II was
born again when lour programsAlternative Energy Systems, Student
Housing Design Group. Decentralization,
and Environmental Design-were
al.located $5,000 to remodel inside. Thia
project produced the street cafe on the
second noor, a new ride board on the
first floor, new banners and bulletin
boards, a mural in the east maU, and the
relocation of the CPJ office from the
third floor to the first, making way for a
new lounge, sometimes
called the
Coffee House.
After completion, the coordinating
faculty, Jon Collier, Rainer Hasenstab,
Stan Klyn and Russ Fox, asked the S&A
Board for $60,000 and received $40,000
with the understa.nding that a student
design team would be involved in the
further development of CAB Phase II.
Last spring, Max Knauss was hired to
coordinate the team of students, each of
whom worked under individual contracts.
The school put all the various projects,
including KAOS, in one bid package, but
received no takers. They tried a second
time. separating the KAOS project from
the rest and received one bid on KAOS,
$6.000 over budget, ar_d none on the
other. With no bidders, Lhe school
decided to let the Office of Facilities take
on all projects, with an estimated budget
of $66,000.
The Duck House has not been removed by some nasty designer who
wanted the space for something else.
Rather, it has been shut down due to
lack of interest. In the past year and a
half. ten different people have been a
part of a core group of three who run it.
and that has recently dwindled to one
and then to none. Before spring break.
three people promised to commit them•
selves to the project, but then rescinded.
Lynn Garner, S& A Program Manager.
set up an open meeting for anyone interested in running the Duck House t.o
come and talk about it. When no one
showed up, the Duck House was sent to
the basement and put to sleep. Garner
says il. could be resurrected if a group or
students would commit the time and
energy it requires. Until then, it will
remain in the basement.

S1 tor S1udents. S2 general.
F-y,
April 30
Cooperative Education and Career Planning
Workshop will be In CAB 110. 2-.r?, m. Learn
how 10 mulllply you, ca,_, options with an
lnt.mahlp.
The S&A Board and all the S&A groups will
have a meetinQ 10 discuss target allocation•
by cateoory The meeting will start at 9 a m.
1n Ub 1612
FILMS ON CAMPUS
F-y.
April 25
Friday NIie F11m1presenla OM Eyed J~•
(US A, 1961. 141 min In Color) S1arrlng
Marlon Brando, Karl Malden, Katy Jurado,
Ben Johnson, and SU,., Pickens Directed by
Marlon Brando. Brando pl•ys a baJ'\k, robber.
fresh out of prison, who ,eeks revenge upon
his ex-partner (Malden) who Is now • sheriff.
The mm has become aomewhat ol a "cu1r·
l•vorlle
In some Qu•rters.
Plual Richard
Nb:on-AR'lbl'IMCJ6r
61'~ifilP.
a TQ60
propaganda promo lor ol' Dicky L.H I, 3, 7,
and 9. 45 Stlll only a buck.
S.turday, April 2t and Sunday, April 27
The Reali1y Co and KAOS FM preaent FIim
FolllN.
consisting ol eplaodes from "The
Addams Famlly."
"The Avengers,"
·•Get
Smar1." "Mission lmpoulble,"
"Star Trek ...
bloopers, canoona, and more L H.I Saturday
al 8 pm .. Sunc:t•y al 2·30 p,m. Only Sl.25 .s,
tor KAOS subscrlberl.)
M...._y, April 2ll and T..-y.
April 21
EPIC presents Part Three of The Battle of
Chlla, the linal chapllN' In thla epic documen1ary about Allende's over1hrow and the
lucl11 coup. P1usl The Long Chain. L H I
Monday II 7·30. Tut,sdey at 12 noon. Free
Wod.-y,
April 30
The Academic FIim Serles preaente Kenjl
Mlzoguchl's Sansho, the hflltt. (Japan, 1954,
125 min.) Anothaf clualc by lhe director ol
Ugetau and The Crvcitled Lowrs (See Erich
Roe's revl8'# eleewhere In this lnue.) L H I
, 30 and 7 30 Free1

POINT

COOPER

JOURNAL
--

-

THE
May 1, 1980

Vol. 8 No. 19

1981-82 curriculum almost finalized
Part I of a series
By Mary Young, Pam Dusenberry
and Mark Powell
Student involvement in curriculum
diminishes every year. The last three
years, (acuity have been pushed to
solidify academic offerings nearly a year
in advance to get the catalog out. The
Deans told faculty in the 1979 planning
meetings to plan for five years into
the future.
For the last three years faculty have
met in combined retreat/curriculum
planning sesaions held away from campus. Studenta and staff have been left
out of the planning process. Curriculum
planning is falling int.o the hands o( a
few-none
of them students. As one
faculty said. "The Deans teU us what
they want the faculty to plan; we go off
and plan it like good kids. There ia a
decision-making hierarchy here but nobody will admit it."
The CPE directed specialty areas to
provide predictability
in Evergreen's
curriculum. In the put you could look
through the catalog and maybe recognize one or two repeated courses, but
now many of next year's programs have
been offered before. Experimentation
seems to have gone underground in the
specialty areas. Instead of fancy, !1ew
titles, we are getting revamped, updated.
and warmed-over rehuh.
The CPJ decided to go to lut week's
faculty retreat, albeit with trepidation,
beuuae Dean Barbara Smith and Pr~
vost Byron Youtz forewarned us that we
were not welcome. Youtz and Dan Evans
greeted us there, offering coffee and
politician-like 1tatements about h11w involved students could be in curricuJum

next an American program: The 1981-82
year is the one for European studies.
David Marr, convener for E&A studies
assumed the program should deal with
the nineteenth century because "most
people would agree that the nineteenth
century is the most complex and is in
exhaustibly rich" and because "that is
what students want. 1 ' "There's too much
concentration," Thad Curtz maintained.
"on the 19th century" (presumably because of the 1980-81 offeringsl. Argued
Powell, "We don't have the staff or
interest here to run 17th or 18th century
stuff. We have to come up with someth i r.g on Shakespeare
or the 20th
century." Alexander disagreed, ..We do
have the faculty to staff 17th and 18th
century programs. but we're not avail
able. We're locked into other !fixed
curri~uluml areas."
Although Mark Levensky said, ··This is
not the place to argue about how to fill
the blanks," (it should have been done
at the specialty area meetings held on
campus. York Wong and Charlie Teske
came up with two viable ideas: Making
America and Two Revolution~.
There is nothing original in this curricTo add more fuel to the names, Wong
ulum. Six programs,
all repeats or
emphatically reminded the faculty that
previous years, were already solidified at
the specialty area meetings held on they had promised to offer one program
campus. Said David Powell, "The only with a strong ethnic bent every few
recourse for an intelligent person is years. He was clearly angry. The argustyle. The real test is not what is being ment was confusing and contradictions
offered but how imaginatively it is being resulting in shouting, eruptions of anger
and finally degenerating to threats 0f a
done." The specialty area met at Fort
Worden to argue about what should fill fist fight.
Wong: By erasing the 19th century
the one slot left up for gTabs in 1981-82.
But the {acuity could not agree on a does thi.s mean there will be no program
with ethnic perspective?
continent or country much lesa a century.
Powell: Yes, because of a commitment
European and American studies Are
set up t.o alternate: one year a concen- to alternating.
trated European program is offered, the
continued on page 4

VERGREEN

planning and how welcome we were. But
nobody offered us any meal tickets or a
place to stay in the semi-vacant
bunkhouse.
Accounts of the specialty area meet•
ings held at Fort Worden will be offered
in two consecutive parts.
EUROPEAN AND AMERICAN
STUDIES

--

"We know damn well we've got the
talent and expertise to do a whole lot of
things tbat aren't up there. Why don't
we do it? We've got the people. Why do
we keep doing the same things over and
over?" asked Richard Alexander.

Fraser vs. SeattleQty Light

Seattle trial draws national attention
By Kathy Davia

partrnent concluded that City Light bad
Do First Amendment righta of free "knowingly and intentionally" violated
speech and political ideology extend into Fraser's political rights. Mayor Charles
the workplace? This is the controversial
Royer worked out a concilliatory settleissue being debated in a bearing room in ment in June of last year-agreed
upon
Seattle. In what feminiat Gloria Steinem by the Human Righta Dept .. the city
calls "a teal case of the 80's," Clara attorney, the mayor's office, City Light
Fraser vs. Seattle City Light will likely and Fraser-providing
Fraser
with
produce a precedent-setting decision to $30,000 in back pay and damages and a
affect the lives of workers a.U across the
new job with the Human Rights
country.
Department.
Clara Fruer, a 56-year-old radical femThe City CounciJ, however, rejected
iniat/socialist, ;s charging City Light the settlement by a vote of 6-2, the two
with discrimination based on sex and pol- minority members of the council being
itical ideology. She claims that she was the only supporters. lnatead, they apporharrassed and eventually ftred from her tioned $21,000 to salary a hearing examjob with the municipal power company iner and an attorney to represent Fraser
because of her sex, politieal beliefs, adv~ through the Department
of Human
cacy of civil rights, affl.J'mative action Rights.
and ullionism, and her criticiam of man•
Clara Fraser wu hired by Seattle Ctty
agement policy.
Light on June 4, 1973, u an education
City Light initially claimed that Fraaer coordinator. Three montha later, she was
was "laid otr' due to a 5% employee re- aaaigned to plan and implement the Elecduction. Later on, they added that ahe trical Trades Training (ETI') program
h.Ml..bttn "iocompet.ent." at he1 job llftf--f01' women. Tb11 pioneer lifitfflitlve
then, that ahe wu "abrasive" and hard action program traina women to become
to get along with.
electridau, eventually elevating them to
The hearing began on January 14, five journeymen atatua.
yeara alter the charges were fint filed.
Fruer, who deocribn benelf u "a
Due to lengthy recesaea and delay,, it radical. an a,ttatGr for important kleu. •
hu dragged on for four montha. Now in saya that her political pbn-pby
bu
reeeaa again, the bearing ls expected to never been a NCNtt. She saya. "I wu
wrap up aometlme in May.
very clear about wbere I wu coming
Thia ls the fint cue to teot Seattle'•
from. what 1117kleu were" when hired
Fair Employment Practicea Ordinaby the utility.
which forbids, among otbeT thinga, job ' When uted on the atand to define her
discrimination OD the hula of politleal political ideology F'raN, 1taled. "I ealJ
ideology. A city Hearing Examiner
lll)'Mlf a
femiaiot. I believe we
(choeen by the Mayor) and a beariag
live ID a corrupt and an qt,, and a vipanel of three women (ch-n
by the dow, and a doomed oociety a oociety
016~ of Wome~•• Right&) wW make a that C&DDOttut ID Ila p,-~t
form bedeclaion which will carry the weight of a caueo it will go up ID nuclear lloloea111t,
formal court ruling.
if not in annlbllatloa o( people through
An ironic aspect of tbia cue ls that the ~ other bornndoua form. And I becity b fighting itaelf. A two-year IDveot,. lleve tbd tho _,.,.
ot the dMll'Uction
igation by the city's Human Right& De- of the earth, of the deotruction of decent

IOdaJiai

Oara Fraser, " ... a radical, an agitator for important new idea,.
human relatioQf among people, of racism,
of oexlsm, of wara, of poverty, of a general misery and despair among people,
regardle11 of clua or econonlic statua, ia
the nature of the sy1tem itaelf-wbicb ia
the production of goods and services not
for need and not for uae, but because
somebody atands to make a profit by
tbat..
Indeed, Clara Fraser bu a life-loag
biatoey of involvement with civil rigbta
and oocial isaue1. Both her parent& wen,
union organlzen. She joined a oodalllt
youth gToup in junior high achool She

bu held a variety of jobs, from acript
writ.er t.o cabdriver to electrician at
Boeing, and in each one bu been actively involved with the workers' right t.o
unionise. She h.aa been a vocal and viaible advocate of civil right& for women,
blatka, gays. children, pri1oners and
Natil'e American.a. She spoke at rallies
during the Vietnam anti-war movemenL
She helped found both Radieal Women
and the Freedom Socialist Party, u well
u some 20 other organisatlona. She baa
continued on page 3

T ✓ETTERS

I

SUf\ELY ~ W"!,j
CIIN (3€ FOUt/0 n:, SELL
E.Noo .. H llt>< n, """FOR

LEMMING-LII<E
PROTEST

TM( UPcorn,Nlir

Editor CPJ.
I was both amused and dismayed by
the righteous indignation exhibited by
the petition and its signers displayed in
the CAB lobby in opposition to the faculty retreat.
President Evans gave notice of the
then upcoming retreat during his presentation last quarter to the Evergreen
Council. The CPJ was represented at
that meeting; several petition-signers
were there also. Where were your voices
then? And. in fairness, where was further information concerning the retreat,
President Evans?
Incidentally. why is it that some students will sign or join ANY protest,
lemming-like, without much hesitation
and yet not ..muddy their heels" with
constructive efforts within the student
governanre framework? All year long,
the Evergreen Council and the Student
Information Network Committee have
needed your active support. as well as
other student organizations whose positions go begging; the S& A Board and
KAOS. to mention two. (And just so
staff and faculty won't feel too left out,
or that their pedestals are too high,
where has your support been for the
Council?}
So the faculty had a retreat. So what.
By and large, the majority of students on
this campus have their heads so fll'mly
tucked under their armpits that they
couldn't responsibly help plan a curriculum if they were asked. The way to facilitate planning and change is to GET
fNVOLVED and that doesn't include
the big challenge of signing your name to
some moot petition and then flaking
away again.
You don't like the way things are being done? Well, damn it, get off your apathetic posteriors and put a little effort
into im_proving them, or don't complain
when things don't fall just the way you
want them to.
Chrio Fitzgerald
Student

MOTIISWOULDBE
G-IEAPER
To the Editor:
It is good news to hear that Facilities
has halted the use of 2,4-D on the Evergreen campus and Diredor David Wallborn is to be congratulated on his decision. Concerned student.s and the EAC

SM/~

15111£1!

.._,

H£'r'! Who would b.-,-fl-epe,-l-'edi'at-ro" fu, 'i>-.e5at-ire Issue??
....

We have met the enemy, and he

W~\t

... ?

1::1us..

-Pogo
are also to be praised for their efforts to
eliminate this chemical.
Jefferson Allen's article is very timely,
as this is the time of year when weed
control agencies begin their campaign to
force landowners to use chemical sprays
to "eradicate". tansy ragwort. The force
is applied in the form of "spray is the
only acceptable method," a $500 fine for
noncompliance, and ~he spraying of your
land without your permission.
Some statements made in the article
should be expanded. For example, tbe
statement that tansy ragwort is poisonous to livestock is true. [f eaten in quantity and over a prolonged period of time,
toxicity accumulates in the same manner
that radiation can be accumulated. Even•
tually over a long period of time, de-pending on the amount eaten. the animal
may sicken and die. It was Nt pointed
out, however, that cattle and horses will
not eat tansy if there is even a moderate
amount of grass, plants or woodlot available. The death of an animal from eating
tansy is the fault of poor management on
the part of the owner, not the fault of
tansy. When cattle are grued on poorly
managed, overgrazed land. where absolutely nothing else is available, they will
eat tansy. Tansy cut with hay will~not be
eaten either. The cattle will pick up a
mouthfuJ, shake it vi&-orously until the
tansy and hay are separated, then leave
the tansy and eat the hay; however,
tansy in silage cannot be tolerated.
• Regarding the alternative use of the
Cinnabar moth larvae, the statement is
true that the Cinnabar only restrain and
maintain tansy, but don't get rid of it.

EDITOR Larry Stillwell
MANAGING EDITOR Ben Aleunder
FEATURE EDITOR Mary Y•""I'
ART DIRECTOR David lueo
ASSOCIATE EDITOR Pam Duaeaberry DESIGN CONSULTANT Rudy Baatlq
BUSINESS MANAGER Ken SDventetn PHOTOGRAPHER U1aa F.dlenbers
ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR T. J. Sim. MAYN!ACS: Kathy O.vio, Carrie Geviru, JeHeroon All•, Tim O'Connor, Kurt
Daviooa, Daniel Strum, Erldi Roe, Mark Powell, Midlael Diamond, Kea Stern•
berg, Jill Bacon, aad the U.S. Anny.

What is not mentioned is that the spray
does not get rid of it either. In fact,
little, if any, improvement is seen on a
year to year basis by spraying. Considerable improvement can be seen in the
second year of using Cinnabar moths. At
the end of five years results would be
similar to those observed in Oregon at
the end of a five-year test. The maint.ained tansy is scarce, short, sickly, and
being consumed as you watch, by the
Cinnabar larvae. It works this way: tbe
more tansy, the more Cinnabar will survive until a peak is reached, then there
is a decline of both tansy and Cinnabar
until a.n ecological balance ii reached.
I would take exception to the otatement that herbicideo, like 2,4-D, are the
cheapest and easiHt methods for control
of tansy. To spray a 184-acre ranch
(paature only) costa $500 and the weed
control supervisor is now recommending
another spray in the fall for a total of
$1000. Thia coat to the farmer year aft.er
year is exhorbitant (consider the average
farmer aged 30 who will farm for 30
more yeara: 30 years x $1000=$30,000
(not adjusted for inflation) for juot one
farmer alone. Multiply that by 1000
farmers and you have a figure of
$30,000,000 over a 30-year period.) In
addition, the county must provide the
spray, provide and maintain equipment,
special spray trucks, buy or rent a helicopter and hire a pilot and crews for the
trucks. Tax money pays expenses for the
weed control board and pays salary, expenses for a weed supervisor, and cost
sharing. Since spraying must be repeated
each year, these are permanent expenses.
Against this expense consider the cost
of planting 25,000 Cinnabar Moths to
each 134 acres. The cost for such a plot
is about $150 one time only, plus the
exe~ise you'll get by walking around
placing the colonies in the best locations.
In five years the tansy will be maintained and there will have been an
exponential growth of the Cinnabar
larvae population to about two and onehalf million in year six (based on minimum survival and Viability factors).
Lest you imagine two million Cinnabar
eating everything in sight, be assured
that they eat only tansy and one or two
other undesirable weeds. They are as
beautiful as butterflies with shiny black
coloring outlined with a gorgeous cinna•
bar red and are about the size of an

The Cooper Point Joomal la pubUehed ...,ly
lor the etudanta~ 'faculty, ltaff', rodent1, and ...
•--of The E•erw
Sta .. Coli.g. . .y.... a..p I f ..-flOt I
11, tlww of The EWF'
~ Ulte CotNOt or of the Cooper Point Joumal'I llllff. ~laing
material PfNl,'lled ,.,...,. 1
1m~ ~•••t
by 1h11oe!' r I • Oft'lcN .,. located In the CoUege ActtvlU• 8ulld-.
ng ......, 1 1..... .-,- .. : 11&4213. All tat{.,. ft) the editor, ln~tll,
and ert1 Ind ......
•~em• muat be .....-,
by noon TUNCllly and ... aructea by noon.
Monday for that WNk'a pubf6oa-j
"°",,,
-~11 eonlrtbutlone '"'--' be 9'0ned, typed, double ;
1 and ·of a ,,.. 10 rabll length. ,.__
w .- wlthh9kl on ,wqUNt. The ecllton ,...,... the right 10 ecNt lett_.. and arttct. for 6enath·j
content, and etyte.

'•

ordinary moth. The larvae are nearly as
attractive, being extremely tiny when
hatched and growing to approximately
an inch in length and perhaps a quarter
inch in girth at maturity. They are a
bright yellow with black stripes and
have a most engaging expression as they
gaze at you with solemn interest and
curiousity. A few years of county-wide
concentrated efforts to plagt the Cinnabar, perhaps in company with the flea
beetle, would result in an inexpensive,
permanent control of tansy, with the cost
declining each year as they spread to
neighboring land in search of more tansy.
Sprayed from helicopters and trucks,
2,4-D kills and contaminates blackberry
and other berry bushes, orchard trees
and fruit, any garden crops under the
fallout, wildlife, wildflowers, deciduous
trees, and contaminates
waterways,
springs, surface wells, natural plant
foods and other human and livestock
food and drinking sources, and endangers children playing outside during and
immediately after the spraying.
The information on 2,4-D in Jeffs
article such as its being a part of Agent
Orange, that a teaspoonful is lethal, and
its effect.s on human beings and livestock
make me more apprehensive than ever
about its use. I would prefer to take my
chances with tansy, which properly managed livestock won't eat, than subject
my animals to various illnesses, genetic
defects passed on to future generations,
defective offspring and perhaps other
hazards caused by 2,4-D. Even the nuke
plant wouldn't harm them nor kill me
any faster and 2,4-D is very present.
here and now. Finally, tansy isn't eaten
by humans but thanks to the wholeaale
spray program, 2,4·D is unavoidable in
our food and drinking water.
Pearl Vincent

DOESN'T lII<E COMMIE
ACTORS
Dear Editors,
I am dismayed and disgusted by the
Friday Night Film group's scheduling of
O.e Eyed Jacb, a film which features
the "talent&" of the overrated, unskilled
Mr. Brando. Here is a man with absolutely no talent of any kind; a preten•
tiolll hack who fancies himaelf a sup-porter of "Indian rights" so as to get it
on with beautiful tribal princesses;
whose "politics" are a weary bunch of
communist cliches. Brando has stolen
what minute bit of "style" be haa from
two actors, both now dead, who were
talented: Montgomery Clift and James
Dean. He has stolen the outward nuances
of their individual styles, dropped the
inner intellectual and spiritual depth of
their artistry (because he is too shallow
to perceive that true acting is a spiritual
process), oloppily fused these two separ•
ate styles together, and heaped on top of
them a whole gloppy heap of obscene
and irrelevant Marxist sludge.
I for one refuse to pay actual money to
watch this fat old jerk fart in my face,
and I cannot comprehend how we can
watch Henry Fonda or Fellini for free
and then be asked to PAY to see MARLO!, BRANDOII If this school is going to
show Westerns, why not. .. instead of
Jacko... oh, say. HlchPlain• Drift.er? I
mean, at least Eastwood can ACT.
Mark Chriatopherson

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Clara (cont.)
continued from page 1
been arrested twice for her activities, harrassment. Nine of the ten trainees,
yet she continues to work as "an edu- along with Fraaer, filed sex discriminacator, a dreamer, a speaker, a teacher ... tion charges through the city Office of
Mostly,"she says, "I see myself u an Womens' Righta on August 5. They reorganizer."
quested reinstatement of their originat
Antagonism between Fraser and City program and Fraser as their coordinator.
Light management began just a few
Following this action, Fraser'• job
assignments were downgraded. She was
months after she became ETT program
given what she calls "a lot of make-work
coordinator. When then-Superintendent
stuff." "They tried to quarantine me to
Gordon Vickery canceled slots reserved
for women and minorities in a manage- the building. They wanted me chained to
my desk."
ment training course, and then curtailed
Next came the incident of the memo,
a shorthand course developed by Fra"'r
to upgrade opportunities for low-paid supposedly written by a group of foremen and supervisors, denouncing the
clerical workers, she and her supervisor,
"militance'' of the ETT trainees and
Bill Rheubottom, proteoted. Rheubottom
was then reprimanded by Vickery and charging that Fraser had excessive "intold, in short, to keep Fraser under con· nuence" over them because of prior and
off-the-job "affiliation." Three of those
trol.
In April, 1974, a mass walk-out of City who signed the letter testified that they
had had no part in drafting it and had
Light employees resulted from frustra•
been induced by Carol Coe to sign it.
lion and dissatisfaction with Vickery's
Says Fraser of the letter, "It's strange
''concentration·camp management style."
Vickery was appointed to the ~ition by to see yourself red-baited on paper. Prior
former Mayor Wes Uhlman. He had for- affiliation-what business is it of theirs?
merly been superintendent of the city's As for my directing trainee militancy,
that was an insult; it made the trainees
fire department and had no background
in utilities. He was determined to shake sound like idiot.s."
In yet another attempt to defuse Clara
up the agency and make it more effiFraser, Vickery ordered the Civil Servcient.
ice Department to prepare a new exam•
Vickery's way of making sure that
ination for Education and Training Coemployees did not take more than their
ordinator, the position held by her. John
allotted break time was to hire Pinkerton
agents to watch over them. When two Moore, the Examinations Analyst asforemen were fingered by the agents and signed to the task, said that the rush to
suspended, their fellow foremen pro- prepare it and orders not to consult with
teoted. They appealed to the clerical and people in the position (i.e. Fraser) were
highly unusual procedures. He suspected
professional workers for support and the
mass walkout resulted. Fraser was a vis• it waa a hatchet job designed to eliminible spokesperson during the •trike, ar- ate Fraser. He protested. After being
ticulating the employees' grievances lo rebuked by his superviaor, Moore left
the media. She was also involved in the his job.
Finally, on Friday, July 11, 1975, withsubsequent recall campaign against thenmayor Uhlman.
out anv 1>rior notice, Clara Fraser was
The agreement which ended the wallt- informed that she was being "Laid off"
out included the creation of a commitee
because of a 5% reduction in force. No
to draw up a Bill of Rights and Responsi- other administrative or professional employees were terminated.
bilities. In a mass employee meeting,
Two months later, the ETT trainees
Fraser was elected to chair that commit•
were called into Vickery's office. He
tee. A year later they finished their
work, only to have their bill denounced "congratulated"
them on completing
and rejected by Vickery. He and Mayor their program and then announced that
Uhlman eventually announced their own they to::>we~~ ,\er~,P,a~_d. ~he,.._train~s,
however, won thelJ' sex d1Scrt.mination
BiU of Rights and Responsibilities. It was
never implemented.
case a year later. They were awarded
Fraser's involvement with the walk-out
$120,000 in back pay and damages, reinstatement and retroactive promotions.
and the bill committee brought scrutiny
..Our case proved Clara's case," says
from City Light management. especially
Gordon Vickery and Administrative Ser- Meg Cornish, one of the trainees. "I
don't know why they're having another
vices Director, Carol Coe. Witnesses
hearing."
have testified at the hearing that Fraser
City Light's charges that Fraser was
was discussed at management-level
"incompetent" in her work and"abrasive"
meetings, that she was referred to as a
in her relations with other workers have
"Communist and that allusions were
made to her being bomoeexual One wit,. been refuted by numerous witnesses.
ness stated that Vickery had said of her,
Typical of the comments concerning her
work performance: "When she wasn't
"Clara is a g~ old girl, a dynamic training person. If she was as loyal to me as
getting direction, she picked up the
to Karl Marx, I'd rehire her."
slack. I felt problems were resolved well.
Fraser claims that she was the subject
There wu good planning. She was meetof an intensive red·baiting campaign,
ing the deadlinea."
reminiscent of the McCarthyite hysteria
As for her abrasiveness, several witof the 1950s. Less than two months aft.er nesses stated that she had been very
the walk•out, an inflammatory hoax leaf- enjoyable to work with. Concerning this
let was widely circulated at City Light.
charge, Fraser exclaimed, "Who is it that
It invited employees to a "Trotskyite
couldn't get along with me? TREMi"
Communist" meeting at Freeway Hall,
Media coverage has picked up, to the
where Fraser was to be the key speaker.
point where City Light's attorney, Donna
None of it was true.
Cloud, is nervous. Recently, she raised
Although the origin of the leafiei has objections to copies of a special supplenot been proven, Fraser asserted in her
ment of the "Freedom Socialist." detailtestimony, "I'm accusing Vickery of having ing the first three weeks of testimony.
a great deal of knowledge about thlll teat• being allowed to circulate in the hearing
let and of being instrumental in its dis- room. Stating that it would "inject bw"
and "tend to influence" the hearing
semination. How else do you explain the
fact that this leaflet was posted over- examiner and panel, Cloud called for the
!othat members r-tM pane
l!tglrt 11171!e"Ciry Light buud10g when -g,irrule,
there are guards throughout the build- would be forbidden from watching any
newscast.s or reading any articles coning? And the guards work under the
authority of Carol Coe!"
cerning the case. Examiner Sally Pasette,
ruled that it would be up to the panel to
Also included in the leaflet was
decide what they read or watched.
Fraser's voting record for Socialist
Support for Clara Fraser has been
Worker P·\Tty presidential candidates,
streaming in. Several major labor organiinformation that could only have been
obtained through access to FBI files. In zations, including the King and Multfact, one witness testified to having been
nomah County Labor Councils have come
shown by Vickery what looked like a out in support. National figures like Dick
police file on Fraser, indicating that she Gregory. Gloria Steinem, Kate Millett
had been a member of the Communist
and Ti-Grace Atkinson, as well as organ•
Party.
izations such as Gray Panthers, Live
In July 1974, Fraser was removed from Without Trident. Seattle Tenant& Union
her position as ETT coordinator and re- and Seattle National Lawyers Guild have
placed by her former supervisor, Rheu- t.hrown their support to Fraser's fight.
bottom. The EIT trainees testified that,
City Light refused to comment on the
under the new coordinator, they were
case; they referred me to Ms. Cloud. She
sent out into the field without proper
informed me that it would be "'improper"
clothes, equipment or training, and that
for her to "comment on the merits of the
case at this time."
they were subjected to racial and sexual

NEWMORNINGAT TI-IE ORGANICFARM
By Tim O'Connor
and Kurt Danison
Organic Farm Caretakers
Since its creation in 1972, the Organic
Farm has been satisfying many needs.
Today the farm serves as an educational
center for research, teaching and exploration of ecological agriculture. It is here
that the 25 "As You Sow" program students work-digging and weeding through
the world of small-scale agricuJture.
The Organic Farm also provides community garden space. Many people from
both the campus and community use the
farm as a place to run their fingers
through the soil, producing healthy
amounts of fresh vegies in the process.
Furthermore the farm is an important
recreational area. Many students and
others wander down the path to the farm
intent upon enjoying the life away from
the concrete harshness of campus.
Yet the farm could be much more.
With the seasonal flux of students, few
remaining more than three quarters, the
continuity from year to year is lax. Plans
made one season have been forgotten
the next. Mistakes that could have been
avoided have often been repeated. The
1979 "Plan and Evaluation"
for the
Organic Farm," a document written by
(arm students and faculty, outlines many
ways the farm can expand and improve
its operations. '·
One suggestion is for a permanent
faculty position at the farm. The existing
position, filled by Fred Stone, is a temporary one running only through the
spring of 1981. Fred, at the recent faculty retreat, reiterated the need for
increased academic support in order to
firmly establish the farm as a respecte<I,
wel~rounded learning facility.
To understand other suggestions for
change it is first necessary to triefly
mention the present organization of the
farm. Fullding comes from three sources.
Academics provides for the As You ScM,
program, Facilities maintains the buid. ings (Farm house, greenhouses. barn,
et"<:.}and··p1lys for the taretakefS, while
S&A funds the general farm operatioll'i.
Fertilizers. seeds, tools and other farm
necessities are purchased with student
money as chanelled through the S&A
board.
Currently the three, half-time care
takers are responsible for carrying out
all of the duties at the farm; from janitorial work in the farm house, to ooordinating the community gardens, to
drawing up the S&A budget.
Besides the contradiction of having
Facilities employees coordinate the use
of S& A and other funds, confusion exists

Our plan, designed to provide for controlled farm growth, calls for the hiring
of a "Farm Coordinator." Funding for
tbis position, possibly a student intern,
has been requested through S&A. The
Farm Coordinator would be responsible
for those farm operations supported by
S&A (community gardens, outreach,
budget and revenue generation, etc.),
leaving the caretakers more time for the
development and maintenance of the
farm facilities.
The pivotal point of this reorganization
plan is the "Farm Board." Thia policysetting body will consist of students,
faculty, caretakers and the Farm Coordinator. The 1979 Plan and Evaluation
described the need for such a coordinating committee-the time is right for
its implementation. With more centralized policy making, the addition of faculty. and the existence of a Farm Coordinator, the potential for new developments
and the enhancement of existing operations at the farm are great. Besides
becoming a demonstration
center of
appropriate agriculture and energy technologies, the existing library could be
expanded to serve as a resource. center
on subjects from companion planting to
alcohol stills. Add some friendly advice
and we have an "organic extension
service:
With the developmen( of more land,
Lhe community garden space could be
expanded to meet the increasin1t demand
for food-growing plots. Modules could be
offered in subjects such as soil science,
organic gardening or aquaculture. The
farm could possibl)' experiment with
economic self-sufficiency. And, with
proper planning. the fann could supply
fresh produce to students year-round,
maybe even to SAGA. The directions of
this new growth are practically unlimit.ed.
But to create this Eden. a good amount
of work and student support is needed.
U you feel strongly about ideas for
changes and growth at the organic Farm,
let your S&A board members know, or
talk with current students, faculty or
caretakers.
'
Most importantly,
realize that the
Organic Farm is yours. Any and everyone is encouraged, rain or shi.ne, to visit
the farm; pull weeds for a crisp pea pod.
ask for a tour, com pare gardening tips,
bask in lhe greenhouses. or just hangout and enjoy the emerging life.
since there i& no central decision-making
body to set £arm policy. As caretakers
we are clearly aware that the present
system of farm management is faulty.
rendering the potential of the farm
unfulfilled.

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•Retreat Ccont.)
cover things that are unpleasant, but
necessary," implying that Bowerman or
Wong: What happened to the ethnic
Zuckerman should be required to teach
,program?
the MP! economics.
Management and the Public Interest is
Powell: That's now on 1982-83.
The responae from Nesbit and othera
Wong: I don't want ethnic studies to unique: unlike other Evergreen specialty was that MP! needs an economist who is
areas, MP! appeals primarily to the local committed to the program in order for it
disappear or be put off.
community. Faculty economist Irwin
Lovern King: Why is it so distasteful
to work well. "We need to hire an econto offer two American programs when Zuckerman s,1ccinctly described MPfs
difference earlier that morning in the omist," Nesbit emphasized.
there are so many European programs?
Academic Dean Barbara Smith said,
Political Economy meeting. Comparing
Rudy Martin: What was the agree...
An
economist is our number one hiring
MP! to PE, he said, "MP! student& want
ment for ethnic studies?
priority."

to succeed in business, they want to
Marr: I don't know. I think every
So the group decided not to assig:n any
learn
accounting,
they
want
to
learn
three or four years.
faculty member to the economist slot in
economics because they think it's im• MP! for 1981-82, in hopes that an econ•
Martin: So every three or £our years
portant-they
don't
want
to
read
there's an American Ethnic program.
omist will be hired between now and
Sweezy'• MoDGpoly Capital," a Marxist
Marr: That idea never got much
then. Someone made the point that the
critique of capitalism.
discussion.
area
had been talking of the need for
The MP! entry-level program is taught
Chuck Pailthorp: Why is this alternat•
by three faculty members. In 1981-82, another economist for years and that
ing such a problem?
leaving the slot empty would make the
Stephanie Coontz: We could live with Charlie McCann, Evergreen's illustrious
first president, will teach business ad- need more obvious.
going out of sequence once then start
At the end of that discussion, Nesbit
ministration. Organizational psychology reiterated that the economist be hired
over again.
will be taught by Ted Gerst!. The third
Wong jumped up, strode to the front
with MP! in mind. He said, "We've got
of the room and directed himself face-- faculty member must be an economist.
not to do this· interdisciplinary hiring
Who will teach the economics portion thing, ..we've got to zero in on specific
to-face with the group.
Wong: ls this group going to offer a of MP! was the subject of debate for the needs.
rest of the 40•minute meeting. Several
program in advanced American Studies
interesting points were made during the
with an ethnic emphasis? That program
Northwest Native
was scheduled for 82·83. If there's no ensuing discussion
Since MPI is also taught as a part-time
problem then, dammit, say it!
American Studies
program in the evenings over two years,
Wong sat down. His colleagues were
it is necessary for the economist who
There is no doubt that student demand
dumbfounded. Someone finally suggested
teaches in MP[ to make a tw~year com- exists for the new Life Modeling course
that Wong run his Making America
program. He crossed his arms over his mitment. The whole group agreed it's Northwest Native American Studies will
important for part-time students to have offer in 81-82. The problem, according to
chest before calmly replying.
the continuity that one faculty provides. coordinator Mary Hillaire, is the crossWong: My program is not a program
cultural conflict that arises over course
When that continuity was disrupted,
with ethnic emphasis.
equivalencies. "In the paat.." she said,
Coontz: Nobody said we shouldn't do "rhythms and policies were changed.it. We should have the 81-82 ethnic pro- there was trouble, to put it politely," one "we have been accused of being nonacademic ... Once we figure out the
faculty member empbaaized.
gram then and go out of sequence.
Martin: There's no proposal.
The problem is that none of Ever- equivalent [Indian) philosophies then we
green's four economics specialists seem can find [white) equivalencies to award
Marr: There's not even a proposal.
Wong: Here we do horsetrading.
willing to make the two-year commit- credit ... We will find out that we are
Making America and Revolutions would ment necessary to teach in MPI, at leaat indeed on parallel paths going in the
have an ethnic upect.
not for the 81-83 biennium. Chuck Nesbit. same direction." The iuue, she uys. is
Martin: We need a solid, sound pro- the convener of MP!, haa taught MP! finding that common ground for transeconomics in the past and will in 1980--81 lation.
gram in AmeriC&Dstudies with an ethnic
Hillaire wants to offer Life Modeling
emphasis.
again. Ruas Lidman will also be unavail•
as an advanced program, but according
Alexander: rll do it in 82-83 and it'll able for the 1981-83 MP! economics slot.
The conversation then zeroed in on to Hillaire, Dean Barbara Smith aays it
be one hellatious, shit-eating program
too. We'll study the Swedes, the Nor· Pris Bowerman and Irwin Zuckerman as is difficult to liat Life Modeling aa an
wegians, the Irish-everybody.
the only faculty qualified for teaching advanced courae because !n,sbmen could
MPI economics. Neither Bowerman or not be admitted. "No Indian 85 yean old
Strasser: The Jews ... I'll teach 82-83.
Finally Coontz said, "Let's say we'd Zuckerman attended the MP! meeting, is a freshman," said Hillaire, who plans
like an earlier program, pre-18th century.
which implied to tboee who were there to let !n,sbmen il\to the propam on
honors permits.
Then whoever gets bumped out of that neither was particularly enthusiastic
Hillaire think.s that the NWNAS probabout a two--ye,.r commitment to MPI.
annuals can come up with a prog-ram."
Someone aaid, "Faculty come here lem lies not only with making the proNothing waa resolved. As far as I
know, the slot is still open.
realizing they have responsibilities to gram believable to the adminiatration,

Management and the
Public Interest

continued from page 1

but with Indian students'
attrition.
"When the whites come into the program, Indian students stop coming," she
said. Sixty percent of the current Community studies program is white, with a
25 percent non-white mixture. "With this
mixture we've loot half of the Indian
students ... they quit land they I did not
go to other parts of the school," Hillaire
said.
Whites "do not want to sit down and
understand what is the way to bring out
the human potential in Indian■ ... There
is still a very awkward kind of under11tanding between white and non-white
culture ... (Indians aeek) a human poten•·
tial quest for education rather than
(taking) a problem-solving approach,"
Hillaire expl,ined. One solution IS to
offer propooed modules on the Quinault,
Nisqually, or Squaxin reservations, thus
guaranteeing a majority of Indian enroll·
ment. Three group contracts now tentatively offered by Margaret Gribskov
and Maxine Mimms will have to strain,
says Hillaire, for understanding of Indian
culture rather than agreement on what
it is. As LeRoi Smith put it, "Most
whites confuse agreement with understanding. Too often the burden of understanding lies with the non-white people
who are always understanding.
The
luxury of ignorance is always with the
oppressor."
To help Indian students coming from
the reservations to Evergreen feel more
comfortable, Rainer Hasenstab propoaed
··a facility where your students really
have a home on campus-this cultural
expression need to find a home here."
Hillaire replied, "We have suggested a
longhouse, but our oral tradition provides a structure."
NWNAS faculty plan to push for ad•
junct Indian faculty and will propose
changes in Saga to include Indian foods.
They will alao demand a turnabout in
philosophy from housing that will encourage Indian 1tudents to live there.
They will ~ist that non•white faculty
hired in the future must have personal
commitments to preserve cultural ties
and that in the future a heavy multicultural core be developed at Evergreen
for the purpose of understanding.
Some compromise is reflected in the
81-82 Native American offerings' but
Hillaire is optimistic, "As we break down
the fences of the academic sacred cows,
we can integrate." •

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Anne Waldman
Allen Ginsberg
W1l\1,1mBurroughs

Science
Humb£'rlo M,1turdn,1
Rober! Ornst£'m
The.at re
Kite T.iil Mime
The T ,/kin~ Band
Yoshi
Body Awueness
Mushf.' FeldenkrJ1s
R 1chud Heckler
Irene Dowd
Psychology
Robert Hall
Els.t First

CIArU:o.widg,
Ted Berrigan

For Most 6 Volt Can

Buddhist Studies
Chogy•m Trungpa. Rinpoch<'
Jamg0n Kongtrul. Rinpoche
His HOiiness, Gy.ilw,1rtg Kdrmap,1
T,11z,rnMaezum1, Rosh,
J.tek Kornfield
M.arti•I Arts
Maggie Nt>wman

~

3'YEAR
-GUARANT&

And aloe. we're the beet In mopeds. 24 other
moped maken UM the SACHS engine.
So why settle tor }ust the SACHS engine
when you can own the rellatrie SACHS engine
together with the alurdySACHS frame.

12 VOLT

Come m and ...

how much tun
ISOMPGconb■•

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Do1nce

--

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Nancy Stark Smith
B.ub.tra Dilley
T~os Snmpc1
D

Wr,tr for" catalog: N.aropa Institute Dept. CC

I II I Pearl Street, Boulder, CO 80302

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SACHS·
1

TRI-CflY

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MOPEDS

• ft. OUUANTII-UMIIID
m; M.

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"'·"


11.11.•···'····························'ll.tl

·~::~~~~~

............
Mon.-F".

~ 459.3933

... L--------~-

We atlll have• tew 1979 model•

I

!
I
II

Tim Barron, living on wheels.
By Jefferson Allen
Tim Barron, a student at Evergreen,
faces a possible suspension from school
because he skates inside campus buildings. Mack Smith, Chief of Security, told
the CPJ the next time .he sees Barron
skating in a campus building he will send
a letter to Ken Jacob, Director of Housing and Campus Adjudicator, recommending Barron's suSpenaion.
On June 13, 1979, Smith wrote a
memo to the faculty, students, and stiff
of Evergreen restricting
the use of
skateboards or roUerskates in campus
buildings and areas of " ... heavy human
traffic congestion." Smith's memo was in


with suspension

buildings for about six months. Smith
and Barron agree that they were on
friendly terms before this point of con•
tention came up. "Tim is a good
skater ... l like him," said Smith, "but I
can't allow him t.o skate in the buildings."
After telling Bsrron not to skate in the
buildings on five separate occasions,
Smith wrote a letter to Jacob asking him
to resolve the dispute. When they conferred, Barron told Jacob the same thing
that he had told Smith: the restriction
the Security Chief was trying to apply
was an infringement on his rights. The
matter is still unresolved.
"I'm not too worried •&bout being suspended," Bsrron told the CPJ, "since I'm
graduating in June. I've been skating for
five years ...even in the most crowded
conditions I can keep control. Also, Ever·
green is just not that congested. I'm not
saying skating isn't dangerous-it is and
I recommend that people who are start·
ing to skate wear pads."
response to complaints Security had
Barron wondered where specific complaints about his skating were coming
reeeived.
from. ''I've never even come close to run•
According to Ann Brown of Security,
complaints have now reached about 15-20 ning into anyone," he said.
"The problem with skates in the build·
in number. "Most are from students.
ings is that it is preferable not to take
either writing or caUing in a complaint,"
them off. With a skateboard you can just
she told the CPJ.
hop otf and walk," Barron explained.
Smith had not heard of any serious
When asked about his problems with
accidents occurring from reckless skateboarding or rollerskating but he ex- Mack Smith, Barron responded, ..Smith
pressed concern over the possibility of a was not willing to see my point of view.
I'm not harmful to other people. When
skating-related collision. "It is in direct
violation of safety rules," he said, refer• you are on skates, you are very con•
scious of your movements."
ring to skating in the buildings.
Barron has been in conflict with Smith
Barron agreed that Smith's restricover the issue of skating in or near the tions on skating and skateboarding were

5

blocking a new form of transportation.
Other skaters and skateboarders also
think it is wrong to restrict this gliding
form of transportation. On the other
hand, some do not roll in the buildings.
Greener Peter Olive has been '"boarding" for two years and has never run into anybody. "I use it as transportation,
to and from school, but I don't ride in
the buildings." he said.

Another skateboarder. Denis MerriJI
says, "It's crazy to ride inside a building.
I've never run into anybody. except dur•
ing a race last year when somebody
stepped out onto the track." In Merrill's
opinion skateboarding does not cause a
problem on the Evergreen campus.
Jorge Montoya, an outspoken skateboarder. told the CPJ. "Boarding is a
way of life. I've never run into anybody
and I ride all the time in the buildings. I
would like to see as little rules as
possible.·•
Tracy Taylor has been rollerskating
for ten years. "I go slow through Lhe
buildings ... stairs are no problem for me
and I have never run into anybody," she
said. When asked how she felt about the
no skating in the buildings rule, Taylor
replied, "I think it sucks."
One person who misses life on wheels
is Dana Fram. Fram used to use skates
for transportation, but she has two more
quarters of school left before graduating
and does not want to get suspended.
Tim Barron will continue to use skat•
ing to get around. "I think it could be a
major future form of transportation," he
told the CPJ. ··Why not put Security on
skates, instead of wasting gas by cruis•
ing around the campus in cars?"

Initiative38.5

Voters want control over WPPSS bonds
~

Carrie GevirtJ:
and Kevin Bell

An initiative that aims to give Wash•
ington voters control of financing fot
construction of publically-owned nuclear
and coal-fin,d power plants baa been
circulating around campus and the
Olympia community for the last four

MAN HAS &ffN LIVING WITH NUCLEAR
REACTOR& FOR QUITE A FEW YEA'lS tCf¥.
~0 T'WERE
HASN'T MEN A SINGLE OEJI.TH
OQ rNJl,l,tY F~
RADIATION IN A CO'M\ER •
C"4. NUCLIAR FIC)NERPLANT. THIS AlSO
IS TR\JE FOR THE PE0PLE LIVtNG ON
ATQWC SU55 /¥0 .A~IC.
~HIPS.

weeks.

At a recent meeting of Support A Vote
on Energy Spending (SAVES), Jim La,.ar
said, "We vote on 1<:hoolboard problems
every year. we vote on sewer bonds. we
vote on bonds to preserve farmlands, but
for some reuon we don't get to vote on
$15 billion worth of WPPSS bonds."
SAVE$ ia sponaoring the initiative aa
a direct responae to the continuing do,.
lays and maasive eoet overruns that have
Cartoon panels from a Trojan nuclear plant visitor pamphlet
plagued the Wubington Public Power
Supply S,.t.em (WPPSS). WPPSS Is
currently attempting to construct live
large nuclear plants in what bu been
funding for the plants. If WPPSS tried
As a joint operating agency, (a public
deacribed u one of tht moot ambitious
to assig:n the plant to another utility, like
utility corporation) WPPSS Is not oblinuclear programs ever undertaken in
Puget Power, voters· wouJd have the
gated to explain its actions to anyone.
this country.
q,tion to pn,vent tbe transfer.
Many people feel that WPPSS bu been
A total of 160,000 signatures are
The initiative takes no stand for or
allowed to pt away with a series of
needed to get the initiative on the
againat nuclear power. While a "NO" blunders in its nuclear power program
November ballot. 10,000 of tbeae must be
vote would vfrtuall,y guaranwe that the
that would be considered inexcusible if
from Thurston County alone.
plant, would not be built. a "YES" voie WPPSS waa • private corporation or
Since the construction of the nuclear
would strengthen the financial pooitlon of der stricter voter control.
plants began. coots have nearly quad- ' WPPSS on the national bond market.
There are indications of an emergin1 ~
rupled: rising from $4.1 billion in 1974 to
giving the plant& a better chance of consensus against further nuclear power
the moot recent estimate of $16.6 billion
being completed.
development in the state. Skagit and
(or about $3900 from every perlOD in the '
Deeplte the enonnous boost that lniti•
Lewis county residents have voted aWaahingtoo State). The project, an, run•
alive 385 could conceivably give to nu- gainst the building of nuclear plant&In
ning as much as five years behind
clear power development in the. Norththeir area. Reaidents of Grays Harbor
ochedule and WPPSS officials have indiwest. WPPSS and the nuclear .lnd111tr, County, once considered a center of supcated that further cost increases and
are preparing a maaaive campaign oppoo- port for nuclear power are increasingly
delays are inevitable.
ing the measun,. The reuona for their opposed to continued construction of proUnder the tenna of Initiative 385,
oppooition are clear to the coalltion of ject, 3 and 5 in their county. Seattle City
WPPSS ia required to bold a referendum
anti-nuclear and consumer utility -groups Light baa refused to invest in two of the
for voter approval of new bond ialues for
supporting the initiative: WPPSS lathe
WPPSS projects and is seriously considgenerating plants larger than 250 megaonly public agency in Waahington State
watta. Voten will be able to vote on the
that Is all,2wed ~iuue_bonds
without
liiiincing or e c plant oepiiitelyc-.--r-~an~y"s-ort of voter control
•·NO" vote would effectively cut off

LIFE DRAWING
CLASSES
Every Wednesday 6-9 p.m.
Special Rate• for Students
Waabington Academy of Art
Corner of Martin Way & Hensley

8 a.m. - 9 p.m. weekdays
IO a.m. - 7 p.m. Sundays

open euery day

Sat. 10-5

456-0783
at 191'1l)f1oN_J

threatened

WESTSIDE CENTER

ering withdrawing from the other three
as well. Several PUD's are quietly ex•
pl,oring alternatives to the projects. A
recent report by the General Account.a•
bility office has indicated that halting
construction on projects 4 and 5 (one at
Hanford, one in Grays Harbor) and com•
mitment of the $4 billion ear!IIU'Mll for
the projects to conservation and"
Nnewable resources would purchue or save
an equivalent amount of power sooner
and save over SI billion u well. Anti•
nuclear and consumer groups and appar·
ently WPPSS as well, believe 1ha ,if the
voters of Washington are giv~
oiee
they will vote against financing new
thermal electrical generating plants.

CLASSES
NOW

FORMING IN
OLYMPIA
ROBERT GOODWIN
GUITAR
Make 1980 the year you• Learn to play Folk. Classic and
Flamenco style guitar
• Gain confidence to play your instru•
mf!:ntin groups or individually
• Develop the ability to read music .

FOR INFORMATION CALL
ANY TIME 752-9847
Presented by Robert Goodwin Studios
and Harp Shop, Inc.
4102 W. 15th
Tacoma, WA 98406

e

7

"Madame

de ... "

1s superficially

By Erich Roe
wing. fluttering determinedly toward her
doom &a'08S a world indifferent to her
Next Wednesday's Academic film is so
suffering, past people who unknowingly
discreet and charming you could bring
your grandmother-who
has read only contribute to her romr.ntic illusions ... "
Peter Ustinov wrote that Ophuls was
Harlequin Romances and watched re-runs or Myrna Loy movies for the last "like a watchmaker intent on making the
smallest watch in the world and lhen,
20 years-and she would find it "lovely,
with a sodden flash o( perversity, putsad but lovely." There have been-and
ting it up on a cathedral."
will continue to be-plenty of viewers
Whatever is said about a work of art
and reviewers who dismiss Max Ophuls'
reveals at least as much about the critic
Mada.me De ... as a banal, overly stylized
as about the work. But that's part or the
soap opera set among the Parisian turnfun, "to hold, as 'twere. the mirror up to
of-the-century upper class.
nature." Ustinov was mostly wrong but
A general's pretty wife has a romance
perversely right in a way he probably
with a dashing Italian baron. The husnever recognized. {He was equally misband kills his rival in a duel and the wife
understanding in his role as ringmaster
dies of a broken heart. Earrings are
and Ophuls' alter ego in Lola Montee.)
passed around. symbolic of her love. The
Consider this scene which, in miniacamera-('ye ever so gently glides along
ture, mirrors the movement of the entire
beside the characters, sympathetic but
film from light to dark. from airy social
never indulging in purely subjective
comedy to somber, personal tragedy: In
sentiment, distant but never satirizing.
one continuous sequence the camera
Madame De ... doesn't try to hit us
moves synchronized with Madame de
over the head with profundity as some
and Baron Donati as they waltz round
films by directors like Herzog or Bergand round from one ball to another.
man do. But with graceful, subtle. unAt nm they're in crowded company
insistent and superbly economic determiand snatches of irreverent dialogue are
nation, every frame. movement and
heard: I hear there's trouble in Monphrase suggests significance and meantenegro and They'll soon straighten it
ing. "Our man-iage" ("happiness" in one
OUL
version) ..is like ourselves," says the
The melody stays the same but
generi.I. ..It is only superficially superficial...
modulates to higher keys. "Four days
without seeing you," Donati exclaims.
A fortunate few critics have taken
"Two days without
seeing you ...
heed-arxi care to point out the film's
Twenty-four hours without seeing you."'
depth and richness. Andrew Sarris,
A sense of elegant vertigo accompanies
Molly Haskell and Peter Harcourt have
the couple as they hold each other ever
listed it as their "favorite movie."
tighter and more af!ectionat.ely, literally
Harcourt compared it to Tolstoy's
Anna Ka-.nlna. Haskell wrote, "Madam<> spinning out of control and together becoming ever more isolated.
de. . . represents the romantic incarnaAfter a dissolve they are revealed as
tion of the liberated woman."
the only dancers. The remaining mu.,iSarris referred to a "character on the

UNCLASSIFIED

ADS
ACTIVISTS NEEDED for the
Survival Summer project, a nationwide grassroots mobilization on the
arms race and related issues. Free
training provided at regional centers during May-June. For more
information,
contact:
Survival
Summer, Mobilization for Survival,
3601 Locust Walk, Philadelphia,
PA 19104. Phone 1215)386-4875.
Studio 403 looking for sub-lessor for
bedroom w/loft and view o( red
bricks. Communal cooking available.
Reasonable. Campus x5152.
Ret5ponsible couple will house sit for
the months o( June or July, do garldening and caretaking of plants and
IJ>ets.Call Katie, 352-1298.

A weekend DREAM SEMINAR on
Orcas Island
Facilitator Wendy Schofield
16th through 18th of May
-.pon\orrd by thr Amrncan
Tht'o'it1ph1cal Soc1rty
tor lurther mlormat,on

call 8ob-4bo6

superficial

clans are preparing to leave, a aervant
extinguishes candle after candle, then
the screen is filled with a dark cloak
which is put over a harp and fades oot
to black..
rve only managed a very rough description o( an exquisitely controlled
s.equence. Ophuls seems to have worked
it out to the smallest detail For instance,
"Montenegro" in a few {my guess) years
was to provide the spark which began
the First W<rld War, the end ol this
excessively refined world of aristocratic
Europe.
OphWS' reconstruction of time is not
"the smallest watch" but, a.s embodied in
the camera movement and imagery, is an
all-pervasive cyclical force which sweeps
the dancers along. Ophuls simultaneously
places it at a "superficially superficial"
distance, which is not the product of a
"sudden flash of perversity" but is for
him the necessity of life. It is the
"romantic illusions" his characters pile
between themselves and the encroaching
darkness. which both hasten their defeat
and provide the definition o( their folly
and triumph-the meaning of their lives.
Madame de is firs~ shown as a gloved
hand which carelessly roams between
lavish jewelry, gowns and furs while a
voice chatters frivolously to itself. She
choses the earrings, her husband's wedding present, to seU to pay off oome unimportant debt. The film enda when a
slow t.radcing shot through a dim, empty
church comes lo rest before her tombstone. On it are the same earrings, now
glowing with a somber quality a,quired
during Madame de'1 pa■ sage from vain.
capricious society darling lo romantically
infatuated, tragic heroine.
Ophuls' visual language finally sug-

------n~~--OTE

.

COG IV D.T.F.

UlTLE BUSINESS

A free day-long small business
workshop will be offered Friday,
May 9, by the Small Business Administration and Evergreen's Office of
Career Planning and Placement. Call
866-6193 to register.

CPJEDITORWINS
Blonde and vivacious Pamela Dusenberry, Associate Editor or the
Cooper Point Journal.
has been
awarded a fellowship grant to attend
a 5-week intensive workshop entitled
Media Evaluations
Conference on
Commercial Activity at the University
of Denver this summer. Dusenberry,
whose interests in both journalism
and economics have propeUed her
through work in last year's Decentralization program and intensive study
of economics all this year. has worked
five quarters as one of the editors o(
the CPJ. Last summer she worked on
Seattle's radical Northwest Passage
and studied journalism at the UW.
A !though the Denver conference
seems to be business oriented, Dusenberry is radically critical o( the collusion between government and big
business. "It pisses me off," she says,
"that the press lets the corporate
biggees get away with so much. I'm
interested in journalism because 1
want people to know what's really
going on in this country and whose
making the decisions that affect their
lives." Dusenberry eats meat, smokes
cigarettes, drinks beer, and is 4' 11".

gests a nostalgic sympathy for the confining and beautiful illusions which lacilitated such a passage.

I.F. STONE WEEK
Two rare chances to see and hear
America's greatest radical journalist
and political critic on film and radiol!
Monday, May 5, in Lecture HaU One,
at 4 p.m. See the film I. F. Stone'•
Weekly {see description in Arts and
Events calendar)! Tuesday, May 6, at
noon on KAOS radio (89.3 FM) hear
the "studio-quality"
recording
of
Stone's recent Seattle lecture! Stone,
whose brilliance and articulate wisdom awed the 20 Evergreen students
who attended the Seattle lecture, is
72 years old.

NATIONALAWARD
David Neill, an Evergreen graduate has been awarded a Danforth
Graduate Fellowship and becomes the
third Evergreen alum to be so honored within the past five years. Neill
is among 100 fellowship winners from
throughout the United States. One of
the (ew Danforth winners in natural
sciences, Neill says he plans to complete the majority of his doctoral
work in South America.

ROWYOURBOAT
The flTsl annual Squaxim Island
Rowing Regatta and Square Dance
will take place on May 10 on Squaxin
Island. Tickets are $2 for the race and
the dance and $1 for transportation to
the island for those who do not have a
boat and need a ride. For information
call Allen Levy at 866-8347.

Now is the time for all good men to
come to the aid of their coUege governance system. This is your last
chance to volunteer to serve on the
DTF which will reyjew and revi!e
Evergreen's governing documents-,.._
the COG IV DTF. Volunteer now and
influence the future of Evergreen! Be
prepared to meet weekly Spring and
FaU quarters. Contact the President's
Office.


ARTSEXHIBITSNEEDED
The Evergreen Senior Exhibit is
scheduled for May 24-June 13. Deadline for entering work is 9 a.m., Tuesday, May 20. Entry and selection pr~
cedures wilJ be announced shortly.
Marilyn Frasca, Jean Mandeberg
and Ford Gilbreath will serve as
jurors.

GRC BENEHTSHOW
Chris Tanner, a San Francisco
singer/songwriter, headlines a benefit
concert Saturday, May 10 at 8 p.m. in
the Recital HaU of Evergreen'• Communications Building. The Lyle Cruse
Trio, an Olympia women's band, will
also perform. A former member o(
Portland's Family Circus Theater,
Tanner writes and sings his own
creations, accompanying himself on
piano. His concert is sponsored by the
Gay Resources Center as a benefit for
the Sexual Minorities
Prisoners'
Caucus at the Washington
State
Reformatory in Monroe.

9

Drop your guard for a
minute. Even though you're
in college right now, there
are many aspects of the
Army that you might find
very anractive.
Maybe even irresistible.
See for yourself.

MED
SCHOOL.
01 US



Army Nursing offers educational opportunities that arc second to none. As an Army
Nurse, you could be selected for graduate
degree programs at civilian universities.

O,u•-1,'1'ur

I'ro~ram

Olympia Food
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fall term
"' Seattle

beg1m1mg

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Call (206) 367-0500

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O\nnp1a \i\'cstsidc
754-766(:,
Mon-Fri i 30 TESC evening bus
Stops at 1hc Co-op
Mon-Sa1 6 35 leaves co-op for TESC

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Sunday noon-5

A101111FOR
PART-TIME
WORK

You can get a $1,500 bonus just for enlisIYou read it right.
ing in some Army Reserve units. Or up to
The Army's Health Professions Scholar$2,000 in educational benefits.
ship Program provides necessary tuition,
books, lab fees, even microscope rental durADVAICED
IURlll8 COURIE, You also get paid for your Reserve duty.
It comes out to about $1,000a year for about 16
ing medical school.
hours
a month and two weeks annual training.
Plus a tax-free monthly stipend that
You get tuition, pay and living allowances.
And
now we have a special program to
works out to about $6,450 a year. (After
You can also take Nurse Practitioner
help
you
fit the Army Reserve around your
July l, 1980, it'll be even more.)
courses and courses in many clinical specialschool
schedule.
It's worth a look.
After you're accepted into medical
ties. All on the Army.
school, you can beacceptedintoourprogram.
While these programs do not cost you
AIECOIID
CHAICE
ATCOU.EGE
Then you're commissioned and you go
any money, most of them do ineur an addiSome may find college to be the right
through school as a Second Lieutenant in the tional service obligation.
place at 1hewrong time for a variety of reasons.
Army Reserve.
can help them, 100.
The hitch? Very simple. After your resiACHANCE
TOPRACTICE
LAW TheAArmy
few
years
in the Army can help them
If you're about to get your law degree
dency, you give the Army a year as a doctor
get
money
for
tuition
and the maturity to use ii
and be admitted to the bar, you should confor every year the Army gave you as a med
wisely.
sider a commission in the Judge Advocate
student, and under some conditions, with a
The Army has a program in which money
General Corps. Because in the Army you gel
minimum scholarship obligation being two
saved for college is matched two-for-one by the
years' service.
to practice law righ, from the start.
government. Then, if one qualifies, a generous
While your classmates are still doing
bonus is added to that.
111ERdltll!iRESIDENCY other lawyers' research and other lawyers'
So 3 years of service can get you up to
briefs, you could have your own cases, your
& CASH
aOIUSEI
$12,100 and 4 years up to $14,100. In addition,
own clients, in effect, your own practice.
Besides scholarships to medical school,
bonuses up to $3,000 are available for certain
Plus you'll have the pay, prestige and
the Army also offers AMA-approved first·
4-year
enlistments in selected skills.
privileges of being an Officer in the United
year post-graduate and residency training
Add
in the experience and maturity gained,
States
Army.
With
a
chance
10
travel
and
programs.
and
Ihe
Armycansendanindividual
backtocolmake
the
most
of
what
you've
worked
so
Such training adds no further obligation
lege
a
richer
person
in
more
ways
than
one.
hard
to
become.
A
real,
practicing
lawyer.
to the student in the scholarship program.
We
hope
these
Army
opportunities
have
inBe
an
Army
Lawyer.
But any Civilian Graduate Medical Educatrigued you as well as surprised you. Because
tion sponsored by the Army gives you a oneROTC
ICHOlARIHIPI
there is indeed a lot the Armycanoffer a brigh1
year obligation for evc;_ry
year of sponsorship.
Though you're too late for a 4-year
person like you.
But you get a $9,000 annual bonus every scholarship, there are 3-, 2-, and even I-year
For more informal ion, send the coupon.
year you're paying back medical school or
scholarships available.
post-graduate training.
They include tuition, books,
So you not only get your medical educaand lab fees. Plus $100 a month
tion paid for, you get extra pay while you're
living allowance. Naturally
paying it back.
Mcdicme. 0 (AN) the A1111y
Nurse Corps. 0 (Al.) A1111y
I.aw,
they're very competitive. Because
Not a bad deal.
O
fFR)
ROTC
Schola"'h,ps,
0
(SSl
Army
Rc-.crvc
Bonuses.
besides helping you towards your
□ (PC) Arm) 1:Jucatumal Benefit"
degree,
an ROTC scholarship
AGREAT
PLACE
TO
- help-syou towards lne goldbars
Tne rich tradition of Army Nursing is
of an Army Officer.
NAMF
one of excellence, dedication, even heroism.
Stop by the ROTC office on
And it's a challenge to live up to.
campus and ask about details.
Today, an Army Nurse is the epitome
,
,,,.
of professionalism, regarded as a critical
UPTO
l170 AMONTH :::t:••-"
member of the Army Medical Team.
You can combine service in
S< 11001.A ITF.NDJN(i
"" I "' HIR "'
A BSN degree is required. And the clinical the Army Reserve or National
Send to: BRIGHT OPPORTUNITIES, P.O. BOX 1776
spectrum is almost impossible to match
Guard with Army ROTC and
MT. VERNON,N.Y. 10550
in civilian practice.
get up to $6,500 while you're still
And, since you'll be an Army Officer,
in school.
you'll enjoy more respect and authority than
It's called the Simultaneous
most of your civilian counterparts. You'll
Membership Program. You get
also enjoy travel opportunities, officer's pay
$100 a month as an Advanced
and officer's privileges.
Army ROTC Cadet and an addi-

TUITIOll·FREE

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IIA.IIIRIE_

THE INSTITUTE FOR
MOVEMENT THERAPY
PETER GEILER. DIR.

ional $70 a month (sergeant's pay) as an Army
Reservist.
When you graduate,
you'll be commissioned as a
Second Lieutenant, but not
necessarily assigned to active duty. Find out about it.

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11HISIS1HEARMY

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Media
cpj0223.pdf