The Cooper Point Journal, Volume 8, Issue 22 (May 22, 1980)

Item

Identifier
cpj0226
Title
The Cooper Point Journal, Volume 8, Issue 22 (May 22, 1980)
Date
22 May 1980
extracted text
l'l



Kaleidoscope
Grev

THE

The scoop on the orange sneakers
By Carrie Gevirtz

Show a little laithLher('·s magic in the night.
Bruce Spring3tein, "Thunder Road"

Kaleidoscope Grey, a student written,
produrf'd. directed and acted musical is
like a "Rock 'n Roll Pippin, a new age
vis1011,1r)·
production," remarked Steven
Stem, lhe sole writer•director. He continued, "I know there's a lot of things in
tht> w<1rld that need to be said. People
need a new hope. Everyone in the cast
has hope and we're trying to give that
ho1>eto the people who will see it."
There is a special energy among the
40 peopll· '40rking on Kaleidoscope Grey.
They ,tre for the most part new to
theater. dance and song. They are tak•
ing risks to create a new form of communication. "We're trying to take the
theater to people. We're using the
theater lo gel messages across in different ways. Instead of having a st.age and
putting a show on the stage. we have a
show and we're designing a st.age as we
dt'sign the show," explained Thomas
Barnes, producer.
Stein wanted to combine writing, philosophy and music on the stage. His ideas
wert> influenced by Bruce Springstein, "a
'-lrt'et corner musician with heavy
"'ords," he said. It is about crooners and

music and emotion connecting is what
makes the show exciting.
Music is the strongest element of the
show. Lew Brown composed the entire
show in two months. Stein exclaimed,
" .. he's really hot. He's not far from
being an Al Joel or a Bruce Springsteinl"
His band is a tight gathering of musicians. The music supplements the show
and sometimes carries it. The production
is mostly rock music with simple move•
ment. It is a conglomeration of poetry,
conversation and songs. The use of space
is interesting and different. This is not a
typical exhibition in the theater. It is ex•
citing and innovative but, more import.ant. the energy is penetrating. The ob-server is as much a part of it as the
performers.
The show will be performed outdoors,
behind the Communications Building.
Stein calls it "The Thunder
Road
Some of the Kaleidoscope Grey cast (I. to r.) Steve Smith, Lori Mink, Evalin 'l'heatre." Opening night, May 16, will
Lohmann, Kathy Scovel, Annie Dick.stein, Cindy Baudhuin, Peter Abrams, begin at 7 p.m. with a wine, pasta and
salad dinner and the show will begin at
Rachel Bleich, Lucy Auster, and Chris Bingham.
9, all for $5. The other night.a (Friday,
Coney Island fireworks were discontin•
their turf and what sort of control they
9 p.m., $1.50 and Sunday, 8:30 p.m.,
have over it. But it's all depicting a time
ued. In his play, he's reacting to individ- $1.50) will be a show with fresh bagels
ual change and changes in society. He sold on stage during intermission (the
and place: Bleeker Street., New York
has taken a period of growth and given
City and Coney Island.
Bleeker Street corner). Saturday night
Stein grew up across the street from
it a story line, a beginning and an end. wiJl begin at 8 p.m. with entertainment
the Coney Island boardwalk. One year
all tied together by rnusic and move-- before the show and conclude with a
ment. The energy of the acting, singing,
he returned home from school and the
dance featuring Lew Brown's band.

ARTS

FILMS ON CAMPUS

Thursday, May 15
More than 50 color and black.and-while
photographs by regular ana v1sI1Ing faculty
members In Tne Evergreen State College's up.
coming Summer Pholography
Ins1I1u1e m
Gallery Tw) through May 22
Ct11lelhooelS End Gallery IS lealuring the
1 ne• f
' Paul Lewi~
and prints by Cath
Carine Adam Grosowsky and Marcia LN
Corrigan-Duty
The Galler,- Is located at 222
w 41'· ):vmo,a ana Is open daily ,a 30-6
e~cepi S1 <1a.,.
Monday May 19
An <>d1,t·,1 !eatunng w,-,rk O)' lwo regional
1' .: ~r.:ir twrs Michael Lloyd and James
Sahlstrand
will be In Galler,- 4 lealuring
f>•a""
•"
• ,,noroIournal!sm
The Gallery ts
i <• ,., •..J,h IL 6 Wet>kends I S

Thuf'ldly, May 15
The Arts Resource Center presents Agee
(US.A., 1978, approx. 90 min.), dlreicted by
Ross Spears. A highly-acclalmed documenlary
on James Agee, one ol America's greatest
novelists,
poets. screenwrilers,
journalists,
and film critics Agee died. prematurely of a
hear1 seizure in 1955 and his talents were not
properly recognized during his tltetlme. Agee
wrote lhe Pulitzer prize-winning "stream-of•
consciousness" novel, A 0..lh In the Famlly
and lei Ua Now Praise Famous Men (which ls
equally famous lo, Walker Evans· photographs) As a film cntIc, Agee was one ot the
lIrst 1n the US to take films seriously as an
arllorm
Among !hose 111t8f'llewed about his
hte are Walker &ans. O.rector John Hus1on
(tor whom Agee wrote the screenptay ot The
Affican OuNn). poet Robert Fllzgerald, and
a certain peanut farmer who was noI yet
Pres1den1 when Iha lllm was being made
l H I, J, 7. ancl 9 JO Only a dollar
Frtday, May 18
Friday Nlte Films presen1s F W Murnau's
SunrtM (US.A,
1927 110 min) One ol the
greatest classics ol !he Silent Era In a bf'andnew, fully ·restored print wIlh lhe original
orchestra soundtrack A leasl tor the eyes and
senses (See the review elsewhere in this
issue ) Plus! Two shorts-Nursery
F"ortln.
a rare 1910 "tallue" by Thomas Edison and
Finding his Voice. a 1929 Max Fleischer
car1oon where Koko the clown talks for the
llrst lime l HI 3, 7. and 9 JO Still only a
dollar
Monday, May 19 •nd TUMdly, M•y 20
EPIC presents Basic Training, a IHm !hal
shows how human beings are IraIned to be
instruments ol war L H.I Monday at 7 JO,
Tuesday at 12 noon Freel
Tl..lftday, May 20
The Arts Resource Genier presents
an
eYenlno of classlc experimental and avant•
garde films with Prelude: Dog Star Man by
Stan Brakhage. Blond Cobra by Ken Jacobs,
A Movt. by Bruce Connor, Gull and lluoya by
Rob Breer, the Incredible MNhN In the Aftwnoon by Maya Deren, and the eye-opening Un
Chien Andalou by Luis Bunuel and Salvidor
Del! l H I 7 and 9 30 Only S.1.25.
Someone presents The WIiby Conaplracy
(U.S.A , 1975, 105 min.) s1arrlng Sidney
Polller, Michael Caine, Nicol Wlltiamaon, and
Prunella Gee. Directed by the flatuent Ralph
Nelson. Good guys and bad guys In South
Africa. Poitier escapes from prison. An antiapartheid thriller. The Recllet Hall, 7 and 9:30
Only Sl.25. (look fo, posters to make sure
this Into is correc1 )
The Academic FIim Serles p(Hentl
Lula
Bunuel'a El (also known u TN• Sl,ange
Pullon) (Mexico, 1952, 82 min.). A middle-aged, wealthy lendowner marries a t>Nulltul
young women and goes nut, with Jealousy.
Bunuel, the master of surreaUam, ha Mid
that !his lilm Is one of his pwaonal favorites.
ll's liih!Jd with black humor -and strw,g,e
lmagee See the ne.1Ie In the keyhole, UNCI
to pl•ce the eye of any potential 'IOyeur! See
the landowner's blz.arre walk! SN him try to
strangle a priest I LH.l 1 ·JO and 7 .30. FrN.
-T.J.S.

MUSIC
Thursday May IS through Sunday, May 18
o. • • u:: opera wrinen and directed by
Co,.., 1.., ~rir1 c;enIor S1eve Stein Kaleidoscope
Grey
Thursday with a dinner al 7 pm
,.,nd ..,. $~ Frodav c; ..now s1ans at 9 pm
"-• •

Ja'; s show time ,s 8 p m Sunday's
a "special surprise opening
•·n1<>rt,.;,r,.•,,o,nt
beginning at 8 JO lollowed by
d 1r
i.. dance -,.I1h Lou Browns
band
TP"r
' •MrPf' performances
cos, $1 50 and
11(J..P\S
ddVit
are now on sale m TESC
Boo•~• ,~
Friday May 16
TMP r,nu DeI1 presents Lew Jones
a Port
and r;:is., ' .,,,"g t,a,laoe,er making t11s O1ym•
01a rtH•u'
' ran" a1 9 pm and admission
SS2
FrK> ,,, Record5 presents Reilly & Maloney
...,q,-,spec.,al auest Tom Dundee m a return
"'"Qagemenl at 8 30 p m In the ballroom ot
tt1e Oi.,.mp1a Hotel T1ckeIs are $4 In advance,
available al Rainy Day Rocords and Budget
Tar,es anc, Recc.,rds and SS at the door
AT 8 JO pm
Paul Loper will appear m a
o concert aI the Wastitngton Hall Pertorm
aroce Gallery 153 14th Ave at Fir Street
Sf>atlle Admission
Is S4 general.
$3 50
">'udentsl seniors
Saturday, May 17
Squ ■ l'9danclng with a hve band and caller
w1tI begin at 8 p m at me Olympia Hotel Ballroom (Above the Herb and Onion) Adm1ssmn
Is S2·S1 !or lhe impoverished
Plano Forum IV at the Gnu Deh w1H !ea1ure
an oulslanding array ol local solo piano starting at 9 pm Adm1ss1on 1!1$2
Olympia's Center ol Fotk Music anci Arts
leatures Applejam's last concert p,-esenting
locat lalent on an open mike Adm1ss1on Is
SI II Is tn lhe YWCA, 220 E Union St
The Gnu Oeh present!I the Rainy Dly Band.
a tno speclaI1z1ng In the portrayal of PacI1ic
Northwest lolk music, s1arHng at 8 p m tor S.2
WednftCMy, Mey 21
The E'lefVrwn State College J&u EnternbM
contbines lalenta with ,au master Red Ke4ty,
Orymp1a saxophonist Chuck Stentz, and song•
stress Jan Sl&ntz tor a lree evening concen
!llartmo al 8 pm tn lhe Recital Hall
,.,, "'

,1df"S

Thursday. May 15
ACCESS !or Ae•entry Women's
Center
sponsors Marion Erickson presenting a workshop en11t1ed ·creatwe Impulse • Sign up at
the ACCESS Center tor the workshop wh1cn
will start al 1 pm tn lib 3510
Saturday, May 17
YvonM Wanrow Swan and Steq Robkteau
will talk on the NalIve Amencan's struggle to
save their land al St Josephs Hall, 18th Ave
& Aloha. Seattle There will also be a sllde
-;how made by the Black HIits Alllance ancl
enter1a111mentby lolks1nger Chartle Murphy II
'itarls al 7 JO p m and admission Is tree
The Indochinese Refugee Communlly
ot
Olympia will presenl SouthMtt
Aalan Spring
F"tlval from 11 a m to , p m at the United
MelhodlSI Church. 122, Legion Way Adm1ssIon Is Sl 50 tor adults and 50t tor children
und8f 10
An Introductory Training S.Uk,n
for Futu,.
Draft CounMlon
w1tl be meeting at The
UOl!arian Mee11nghouse, 2'19 B St , Tumwater,
tram 8 30 a m 10 5 pm
For more Info call
Glen Anderson at 491-9093
Thant WIii be a marcnln SM!lle, enlllled
The People's Pllgri,n-oe
tor Jobs, Bread,
Peace & Juallce," the Iheme being "inllatlon
1s 18-20 percenl,
minority youth employment

r-----------------------,
I
FREE
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

t

Is 50 percent and bombs have become more
Impor1ant than bread." Meet at noon in Freeway Park (6th and Seneca)

EVENTS

CREPE DESSERT
With thiJ ad and purchau of ont of our Entru
in tht Brittany Stylt 'Tradition.

CrtptJ

Saturday, May 17 and Sunday, May 11
Two children's dramallc classics. Winnie
the Pooh and Thie Dly II R.alned wilt be staged
by students al TESC. The plays will be perlormed al 2 and 4 p.m. ln lhe Experimental
Theeler and admlaalon is $1 tor children
under 12, $1 50 lor students/seniors,
and $2
lor o1hers
The 8th Annual Antique and Collectable
show at lhe Thurs1on Coun1y fairgrounds will
feature mime, juggling
and thealre
with
Tom Gofskl
Admission Is s1 general, 50t
students. Children under 12 lree. For more
Into, contact Tom Gorski, 866-7386.
Tuesday, May 20
ACCESS lor Re•enlry women sponsors
....,. tha F.a,lty,
a brown bag lunch Introducing Al Wiedemann and Betty Kut19f', both
lrom the Biology depar1men1, starling al noon
In Ub 3510.
WednNday, May 21
S&A final allocatlon meeting will be held a1
10 a.m Location wHI be announced
Call
Ellen at 866--6220
..
A her E"'9rNn:
lnM1tl9ltlng
the Futur11,
the laat workahO(I In the bpresalve Arts and
Humanities series wlll be held from 2-t p.m
tn CAB 110

I
I
I
I

ALL WAYS TIIAtlCL

u,nn,:c. 1111::

I
DINNER

MCJN.nruRS
FRI-SAT

l..lJN01

MON-Fill

SAT

5:00.10:00
5:00.U:00

11,lO-l,00
u,00-1,00

I

GJ\r~R~

W••Ts101:

01-YMPIA.

S"40,.,.,.,.0

CcNTUI

WASHINGTON

11.. 3.11701
11.. 3.11700

PO I NT J OU R NA I_.

COOPER

THE
May 22, 1980

Rapist attacks women on campus
SEX:mue;RACE:w~~
HEIGHT: Betwffn 5' 8" and 5' 10"
WEIGHT: lletwffn 130 and 150 Ibo,
HAIR: Brown, ear leagtb or poalibly
longer, thick and wavy.
GENERAL DESCRIPTION: Sunken
c.heeke and an overbltei "weuily" face;
wearing glu10• with oquarlob, poulbly
aviator atyle; aome freckles on the face
and body. CLOTHING: Tu cut.Ho,
yellow T-1hirl and red and white
bueball cap.
On Saturday afternoon tbi1 man
attacked two women ln the meadow
near the nature trail In oeparate In·
cidenta, wounding one with a lmHe ud
raping the other. U you NW a man ill
the area fillinc lllia deaaiptlon on
Saturday and tblak you can Identify
him, or if he approached you, contact
Security.
Bv David Innes
Saturday at about 11 a.m., a woman
was accosted by an armed man in the
meadow near the nature trail. She
started screaming and kicking. In the
procetUIof fending off his attack, she was
cut by his knife. She eocaped and ran to
Campus Security where a report was
taken. She was treated by a paramedic
from the fire hall and released.
At 7 p.m., another
woman was
attacked by the same man, also holding a
knife. She was raped. Both women were
Evergreen students. If their assailant is
caught both uy they are prepared to
prosecute.
Rumors abounded on campus Saturday
night and Sunday ... Someone else wu
attacked?" "Security hao ,topped answering their phones( "Security wants
to cover up any disturbances?" On Mon·
day, Security personnel, Mac Smith and
Ann Brown met with Marcy Robertson,
coordinator of the Womens Center, and a
CPJ repor~r to diacuas the event.a ol
the weekend, and to try to clear up the
confusion.
"We have never covered up any sta•
ti.st.ics ever," said Ann. Mac said that
while many women from Evergreen have
been raped coming to and from school,
hitching in town or from the malls and
Steamboat uland, only lour women have
reported being raped and only three
sexual assaults have been reported to
Security since 1972. Smith &&idhe has
tried to investigate sever&! attacks he
heard about, unofficiall1, in times put.
Saturday .. veru people spent time
trying to phone Security for more in·
formation but got no anawer. Ann said
that the phones have been malfunction·
ing for the last three weeks.

THE NATURE TRAIL AS IT MEETS THE MEADOW: Hali the women reported atucked on campus since 1971 have been jumped within 100 yards ol thia
spot.
As soon as the basic facts are straight
"There's something wrong with the
866 ~lephone exchange. You will dial and someone is on their way to the area
into Evergreen and the phones will ring of the crime, it becomes possible to com·
and ring and ring. In actuality, people fort the victim and call doctors, Rape
are picking up the phones in the offices Relief, additional police support, etc.
but there's never any answer. [Pacific As Ann pointed out. it majr not be as
Northwest Bell! is working on the prob- comforting in the ftrst five minutes, but
lem." Marcy said she had similar prob-- fast action may result in the capture of
lems both at her office and home. Ann the rapist.
The woman who was raped Saturday
usured us that, if no one is at the office.
was taken to the hospital, examined and
calls are switched to the Fire Department or somewhere else with a radio released. Washington State law entitles
victims who report the crimes to free
link to Stturity.
Many people on campus have heard medical treatment at Lht: Emergency
that when someone reported being raped Room under the Victim Compensation
she was met at Security by someone Act. Rape Relief ol Thurston County
who just started filling out forms. Ann points out that not aU injuries received
explained, "One ol the things you should from a rapist are immediately apparent
remember when taking a report when a (internal injuries, V.D. or pregnancy, for
person has been raped is (that) one ol example) and they advise aU rape victims
the most important things is to try and to seek medical attention. They add that
get as much information as you can right most hospitals report rape casf's to the
away." One big risk is that the victim police but the victim is not obligated to
will feel the impact ol what has just talk with them. Rape Relief provides
someone to go along with the victim to
happened to them and be overwhelmed
with emotional trauma. Research with the hospital, the police, and tbrough the
legal process of conviction.
victims of violent crimes shows that
Many women are concerned that by
after the initial shock, secondary shock
sets in and details become lost or reporting a rape the victim may be in·
blocked as the mind attempt.a to deal valving herself in a process more traumatic than the actual rape. This situation
with the shock.
..You need lo get as much information is not necessarily as bad as it has been
even though it may sound cold and it in the past. A 1979 law stat.es that
may sound cruel at the time," says Ann. "Evidence o( the victim's past sexual
behavior including ... marital history,
"IL's even more important if something
has just occurred. There is the possibil- divorce history, or general reputation for
noncbasLity,
or sexual
ity that the people who need that partic- promiscuity,
ular information can get it and go with mores contrary to community standards
ohall be lnadmloalble. This and other
it right then."

recent laws are helping to remove the
traditional ''burden of proor· in rape
cases from the victim's shoulders. In
fact, if someone reports a rape she is not
obligated to involvement in any further
legal procedures.
"Even in our office, if someone says, 'I
don't want to follow it through. I don't
want to go to court,' fine, but we need Lo
know these things are happening and we
need to know where," Ann said. "We
encourage the women to follow through;
it isn't as though we don't care, we do
We advise women that Rape Relier 1s
there and that it's an outlet for them.
We don't actively seek help or informa
tion from Rape Relief, but we make sure
that women who need Rape Relief or
want it are advised that service is
available."
Summer is coming and rapes increase
in warmer months. Mac mentioned that
when he gave his report to lhe police he
was told that four other women were
also raped or attacked in what appeared
to be unrelated incidents in Olympia
on Saturday.
There's a difference between having
read a book about self-defense and being
prepared. Be prepared, be careful. warns
Smith. He recommends
that people
travel in groups. and be aware of dangers. He says that as a rule of thumb, if
you are attacked you should follow your
very first instinct. If it says fight, fight.
U it says submit. submit. If it says run.
run. "God gave us something and it's
there to help us. Normally if you follow
the first (impression\
you can't ~o
wrong," he said.
"So many of the women here on cam
pus say t.hat we should be able to go
where we want," Ann said. "Well that's
true. but there are people out t.here who
don't care about a woman's individual
rights and her freedoms. That's very
evident in the way they act. So what are
you going to do'! Are you going to choose
between what's your right or what's
your safety? How concerned are you
over your personal safety? That should
t.ake precedence over what you should
be able to do."
People from Security, the Womens
Center, and Rape Relief will be meeting
to plan a course of action for Evergreen
community rape awareness, in Security
and in the student "hody. • The Womens
Center and Security are arranging additional escort services on and around
campus in the evenings. Anyone willing
to volunteer to be an escort person
should call the Womens Center at
866-6162. Security says they are now
providing what service they can.

Teachers and Administrators Interviewed

Opinions vary on Teachers Cert program
~ ud lntervlewiq for all •I
the UMldHr .-dllcatloa artklM III Ilda
laaae w..
.i..e eollectlnl1 h1 Mary
Y_,
lluli1 0.Yia, Mark P.weD ud
Ju Lefta-.

skov. Foote addo: "This seems to be the
leut painlesa way to do it."
Some faculty expresaed the belie! that
becauserepresentative Phyll1a Erikson,
a strong critic of Evergreen, ia in Bob
Hl!ltettl!~T 7liiU'la; UPS wu cliooen,
with the hope that Hoo~t~r would put
teachers claim
in the good word !or TESC. Sa1s Bill
program is political
Aldridge, "It boils down to pure politics,
having a non-TESC kind of ~acben cert
By Mary Young
at Evergreen."
..,.he main reaaon." aay1 Evergreen
Evergreen Education !acuity aay they
!acuity Margaret Gribakov, that teachen
would like to see a teachers certification
certification
at Evergreen
was uot
program that would reflect Evergreen'•
staffed by TESC lacult7, "ia that the
phlloooph1 and still aaU.l7 requirement.a
,ta~ of Wuhington doesn't want to
!or state certification. Gribskov hu pro- ,
eatabliah any new prosrama." "Progr&m1
pooed a program to Provoot Youta and
are uaderenrolled at other coU.gea,"
both Gribeltov and Foote are t.eaclllng
add1 Tom Foote, an""bther Evergreen
portions of the current program.
!acuity who bu an Education backAldridge reflected the feellngw of the
ground. "Politlcall1 it would be inezped.
faculty &&:,Ing, "I wouldn't want to lent for TESC to crank up a program TESC lacult1 forced into it. There are
unleu it wu so different" (from any• not numeroua faculty who would want to
thing else offered in the •ta~l
teach ii ... Isome would) only on a ro"We all had some apprehension about • tating baaia, not permanently. I would
teacher training programs," aay1 Grib- work with the ~achera, I see working

TESC

with teachers as a way to change the
society."
Rita Pougiales. who taught last fall in
Outdoor Education said she would rot.ate
also. "lt'1 actually an exciting area."
Aldridge adaed that he, among otners,
does not have the energy for the battles
he would have to fight to do a radical
education program.
Part of the problem of introducing a
radical education program to Evergreen,
Aldridge believeo, ia lack ol credibility
with the adminiltration. Outdoor Education, he says, hu always had an academ•
ically sound reading list and activities
but that because of "intellectual elitism"
here and the feeling that "people-related
thingw are disn,putable," Outdoor Ed is
looked at u "a l{foovinr,: in the grass
Ly~ ol program. I'm not willing to deal
••th th• disreapect."
Pougiales believes, "Cert programs that
involve a lot ot bu.sy work can be criti·
ci.zed. They are a socialization process
that tends to repeat the same aasump.:ontinued on page 6

2
...._1

-~l

,ETTERS--------1

place the least oppreasive place it can
be in the context of our society, we are
TOO POSITIVE
ulr.ing men to give up thia privilege for
a abort time.
The Co-op ia a con1umer owned buti•
To the editor:
n... , and, u always, every member bu
I was disappointed in the article on
a right to voice her/bi.I opinion. Tbla
the teaching certification program aa it
TO: The Cooper Point Journal
laaue wu dllcuaaed at the May 19
was inconsistently written and generally
FROM: The Bird World Coalition
General Memberabip Meeting. One
mediocre. The introduction wu atroYea, Bill Aldridge, there ia a aanctu- effective way to give input into co-op
cious. I thought that the purpose of the
ary. We, the A-Dorm Bird World Coali- polic7 I■ to attend tbeoe meetinga. (Third
article was to be to inform people about
tion. have taken action. A coup (coo? Monday of every month.)
the program. The article instead wu a
coop?) of sorta. We've fiocked together
Tom Flynn obviously did not intend to
mishmosh of complaint.a, some of which I
to fight Facllitie ■ crappy anti-pigeon
be effective in either changing or under•
would not have understood il I weren't
blitz. We've offered our feathered friend■ standing this policy.
in the program.
a home on our balconies. We throw them
Robin 01tfeld
I have very strong feelings about the
our breakfast tout and watch them
program. I've cried, complained, bitched,
peacefully gathering twiga for their neat.
y
sobbed, gotten drunk and gotten hysterAnd yea, their gentle cooing and bizarre
ical over it. It disgusts me that especially
vinyl fiapping noises are quite lovely.
the faculty and the student.a outside of
And the balconies? Well we look at the
the program at Evergreen don't know
white splatters as pooWaclr.aon Pollack Editor CPJ
what's going on and haven't made an
re: Sig Heil Mama
realism.
effort to learn. It worries me that over a
Tom Flynn
We atand pigeon-toed on thia iaaue.
hundred people want to be in the proEven though I expect a whole batch of
We're not ruffied by Facilities. We'll program next year and don't even know
tect the precious privacy of our pala, the scathing replies to your letter warning of
what they're getting into. It disgusts me
pigeons to the end. We're trying to aet impending female-dominated sexist totalthat throughout the year Barbara Smith
up a pigeon hotline (866-BIRD) and plan- itarianism from a fair number of those
has kept a low profile and has tried to
ning to have a fund-raising showing of aforementioned female sexist totalitarEditor:
keep the program '"looking good."
Hitchcock's ''The Birds" in the near ians, I feel that a reply to your letter
May I respond to a letter written to
It disgusts me that I've had to make
future-a movie that should be required from a member cl your gender would
so many compromises and feel like such you by an organization called A.F.
also be appropriate.
viewing for the Facilitiea crew.
a hypocrite for slaying in the program. I R.I.C.A.?
In your letter, Mr. Flynn, you bemoan
Sirs:
the fact that the ~p
(I understam thia
truly believe that the program, the way
If I were a sympathetic, liberal-minded
to be the Food Co-op) has becom, like
it stands, should not be at Evergreen. It
the cult of "Jim Jones, the BrownShirta,
is essentially non-Evergreen. The Ever- white person and I read your provoca- COOP REPLIES
tive, guilt-inspiring letter to the editor, I
Russian Government, and ol' MUS90lini."
green community needs to know about
would become disinterested
in Third
This comes u a surprise to me. I wu
thP program, z.bout what's going on in
not aware that the membera of the Co<>p
front or our noses. We jumped once World affairs. Perhaps being neutral or
were boycotting Jewish bu1ine11e1,
again when the CPE told us to. We in uninformed before, I might decide that
deporting their diasidenta to Siberia,
the progT&maren't the only ones jump- instead of desiring to create a new aocia.l To the Editor:
In response to Tom Flynn'• letter
order, in which ..freedom rings," ywr
stringing their leaden up by the beela,
ing through hoops.
deeming the ~p
"in the final proceaa and then committing suicide en -.
organization merely wiabed to dearoy
rd be delighted to diacuas this further
of cult decay" and calling the ataff"rul- However yob do accuse ibe "ruling claN
the old social order. I might condude
with anybody who so desires.
Lyn Malofaky that the old aociaJ order--oppreaaive aa ing class pyga" and "gyrla" to name a p1ga" of the Co-<,pof forcing you againat
few accusations: I wonder-who is the your will to wear a shirt.
it well may be-haa a place for me.
oppreaacr here?
My point? Woelld a rational fruitarian
Indulge me a moment, Mr. Flynn. u I
Tom got angry when he wu ulr.ed on lecture 7ou on aome elementary polilical
TOO NEGATIVE
sling hooey at a vegetarian? Would a·two different occaaiona to wear a ■hirt theory. The word ~p
lesbian feminiat call a homemaker "alut.•
ia a contnction
U you want support IMn you must while shopping in the Co-<,p.He found ol the word cooperative; wbleb I■ a va6
gather it vebemenUy, pooitively, atead- the request an affront to bla penonal
ation on the l'OClt word cooperate. (I
freffom (on a par with that he'd be aub- refer you to any tilandard·dlctlomry for
faatly and patleoUy--othenriN you ..,.
To the Editor:
courage backlash, faaci ■ m and con• jeet to under Muuolini and other die- I.be definition of' Ow.woril-1 uoione you
I find it hard to believe that the
tator ■ blp regimes). He proceeded
to can read, though judging b1 your leU.er,
writers of last week's article on the front.a.lion.
Some great leaden have said, "only verballyat,use the women who bad made your writing and reuoning pr< , , 1
Teacher Certifications program kept
their promise to " ... do the moot (they)
the o_ppreaaedcan free themaelv'ea.• 'Thia the requeat, and wu ulr.ed to leave the leave thla laaue open to q,-tioo.) Upon·
atore because of bla violent reapoDN.
makes
aeose: for it is they who 1tand to
could to present a balanced examinajoining a cooperative you agree to abide
Why I■ the ~p
■taff and board ulr.tions. " of the program. From my gain in liberation. By being liberated, the
by the rulea and regulation, ol. the
ing men to wear abirta in the atore? He organizaUon. U you find 1ouroelf in ci.
oppreaaed lna-eue the value of human
perspective, u a student in the program.
is not, u Tom aaya, because the "gyri■ " agreement with any of ththe article wu clearly weighted neg- life and create a new rtctwr .ol
rulea I.bu
on the ■taff are "too embarraaaedto take you 1bould b-}' to change them. Unlil 1ou
atively.
morality. The oppreaaed must natunlly
tbein off' and ao are "jealous."
In conveying my opinion of the pro- hold high the banner of new morality
do change them, you are oever-U..-.
We are ulr.ing it for aeveral reuooa.
gram to the reporters several days be- first. And 10 muat you A.F .R.I.C.A.
obliged to abide by them IO long u you
We want to apark people to \hinlr. about puticlpate in the organisation. U you
I preaume your letter wu written to
fore the article wu published, I continutbla laaue, u a ■ mall example of a very find th!■ too much effort you alway■
ally emphuized the pooitive upecta of encourage white ■upport of Third World
large problem. It ma1 -m lllr.ea trivial
the program along with my criticiama. affain. I proteat that such wu not the
have the option of taking your btllinNa
thing. It I■ also a part of our aociety that elaewbere. I am ■ure that Safe__, or
merely served to sharpen
The majority of theae pooitive remarlr.1 effect-it
ia. taken for granted, that many have Market Food■ would love to ethnic diatinction. U ,your organization
were either downplayed or not reflected
,.,.,,.
never que ■ tioned. But imagine, for wonderfully hairy cheat strutting up and
in the article at all. Other T.C. student& wanta to encourage wbitea to better
example, if people with balr7 toea down their alale■. And the "wi■" at the
have expressed aimilar concerna. One understand Third World affaln it must
student in particular~ld me that all be then poaitively act to encourage aeH- weren't allowed to go barefoot? Thi■ is Co-<,pwW no longer be troubled by the
education and participation in the liber- aomewbat comparable to tbe fact that
told the reportera wu buically pooitive
light of It (and you).
ation of humanity. Remember, miaiofcr- people with brea■ tl (women) aren't
and that nothing he a.id wu mentioned
A, far u the reuon for the "arlo" ol.
in the article.
mation, di■ buned by biued inatitutlona. allowed to go ■hlrtl-. Women have to the Co-op deo,tag 1ou your comd\ucover their breuta by (male) law, and to tlonal rigbta to "lr.eep and bare .,._.
A few of theae pooitive point& I feel may cauae people to ■upport lhinp
which may be to their long-term detri- protect themMlves from male ridlcule cheat, e\e., JOU ■--:uae them of baing
should be pulled out from being buried
ment. L.adw..._ wbieh make oppree- and barru1ment.
in the overall negative image the artide
"offended b:y the human male tono," I
It ia important for the co-op 1taff to might apeeulate tha\ it I■ not the human
conveys.
sion the ---..I state of affaln should be
have a 1upportive work environment.
Although student& have expreaaed dia- derided-not uninformed people. I you
male tcrao at which they are t6oded
are really looking for support, oon't For moet of us, a large element of that
sat.is(action with some of the program's
bu\ rather, it I■ youn. But u I.bat ta
wute your worda. You defeat your ia not to be cooatantl1 confronted b7 a rather too inaultlng an11I have oot -o
faculty this situation hu been improving.
blatant example of a privilege men have your tono or an7 other part of you I ,rill
purpooe.
There are tome quality faculty membera
Eric W. Longdon that women do not. To malr.eour worlr.- keep my auertioo
teaching in the program. I have experi•
in the realm of
apeculatioo.
Per ■ onal17, I am not offended by
public di■pla:,9 of I.be human tono-male
er female-but what I am offended by
CLASSES
enced faculty memben uking for suggestions and guidelinea for writing evaluations, meeting with student& before
their coune■ begin to exchange expectations and integrating opportunitiea for
student& to teach abort leuona.
In addition to the uaual atudent evaluations of faculty, atudenta were allo
asked by Barbara Smith to do a general
program evaluation.
An Evergreen faculty member, Margaret Gribakov, bas been integrated into
the program and bu integrated a more
"Evergreen" approach.
Theae few pointa are not meant to
shift the image of the T.C. program to a
fully pooitive image but are meant to
illuatrate tb11t the program I■ not stuck
in a stagnant hole of self-perpetuating
beliefs.
f4ary Ellen Fitzgerald

BIRDWORLD
COAUTION

SCA11iINGREPl.

ENCOURAGING
FASOSM?

EDITOR Larry StWwell
MANAGING EDITOR Aleuader
FEATURE EDITOR Mary YollllS
ART DIRECTOR David .....
ASSOCIATE EDITOR P- 0....,,1-Ty DESIGN CONSULTANT Budy Butlq
BUSINESS MANAGER Kea SUventeus PHOTOGRAPHER LliM F.ekenl>ffs
ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR T. J. Sim,PAINS IN THE ASH: Ella lllad,wood, J.,_e
J.....,_, Du1e1 !ltnua, Katlay
Davi■ , Ju
Lofta-,
Mark Powell, Dlue Wlaolow, c..nd
Drloeoll, Carrie
Ge"!!t-, Rohla Ne-u,
and S.., I[. Doe.

Pol;,, Joumol .. -_,.,tho
.. .-. ... 1-,lly, ""'"·-·and
•·1
o1 Tho Elta .. Col'-- ~ _.. nol -ly
ol Thoe-grw, Stoto Col'- o, ol tho~--•
-_,1o1ng
,._,_,
-.
no, lfflPI>•odo,••••t by IIIL :
OIi- _.. In tho Collogo ActhttlN "SO(CAIi) ICM."'°""' _,_
All~
to IIIO -•
a,,ao, w .....
and and •.,.., .. by,_
Tand all by,__.,
ro, -■ ...,._'.

Tho~
__.

Uon.



.,,.

FORMING IN
OLYMPIA
ROBERT GOODWIN
GUITAR

MAD AT WHO?

sive actiooa of a diatan~ government that
I have no reaponaibillty to or for, when
the government that I ■upport with my
taxes can be equally if le11 obvloualy

-~·::oRU~V.,...._~
--s

repreuive?

SCjUth Africa's diaadvantage ia that
their soda.I and economic repreuion me■
a purely racial diatinction \bat appean
quite diata ■ teful to an lotegrationconacioua American public. A person
born black in S. Africa can never become
white. In America, the aame Ir.Inda of
repreaaion exist but are harder to diatinguiab. Thi■ I■ the "land of opportunity"; in America a penon born poor cu
become rich. (The oppreued, when given
a chance, uaually adopt the methods
learned from their oppreuon). A. the
oppreaaed in S. Africa do not have the
opportunity to become one of the
oppreuon, the 1y1tem ia un-Amerieao.
But that'■ about all tbat'a on-American
about it. What if a group of white
Europeaoa with a lot of money went to
an undeveloped part of a third-world
counb-}'and aaid, "Hi, we're the colonist&
and we want to buy tbla place, inveat
Iota of money, build cltiea & factoriea,
etc., and we'll eveD let you native, work
here and make (relatively) Iota of money.
Of coune, you can't expect ua to malr.e
you citlzeoa, but we'll pua special laws
for you so that you can live here too."
On paper, it loolr.alllr.e a fair dea~ but a
few generationa later you have a repressive aociety where the producen qf the
wealth do not receive their fair ■ bare of
it. Compare that to when Weyerbaeuaer/
E:uon/ete., goea to an underdeveloped,
"depreaaed" part of our country and
aays: "Hi, we want to buy thia place and
build a aawmilVcoal mine/etc., and we'll
let :you local reaidenta worlr. here and
make (relatively) lots of money. Of
course, you can't expect WI to make you
atockholden ... "
WUIJamJobnaton

Dear Sir,
I am writing tbia In reaponae to your
article on re■ideney in the laat laaue.
Apparently there I■ a atudent who wu
granted reaidency status by having a
friend ■wear tbia student'• belonginga
bad remain.-! in storage within the state
for a year. Why then wu I not granted
re1ldency 1tatu1 upon entering Evergreen, even though I could prove I bad
owned my home for over a year, and
submitted a letter from my huaband'a
employer ■tating the date of our tranafer
to tbia area? The reuooa given for denying me residency 1tat111were: (1) I bad
not held a driver's IJcenae or car registration for a year, (2) I bad not been a
registered voter for a year.
Now, I did not even own a car for
several months after moving here, ao I
did not obtain a licenae until then. Regiatering to vote ia a matter I conaider of
penonal choice, and 1bould not be mandatory. In either cue, maintaining a
domicile for a year prior to attending
Evergreen (for purpoaea other than
attendance) ia obvioualy ..t the main
requirement for residency 1ta\ua. I wu
further aggravated to ■ee tbla wu not
spelled out in your artlcle. The registrar'• office I■ continuing to miainform
people u it miainformed me.
It wu with an angry aenae of illjuatice
that I began achoo! here, with aome foregone concluaioo■ about the competency
of the admioiatration. To -• almoot two
yean later, the aame mlsconceptiooa
To the Editor,
perpetuated in your article relr.lndled my
Bravo to Steve Stein and Kaleid11100pe
anger. Requirementa for reoldeocy atat111
Grey. The ■bow bad a lot of ro1iab
and
should be apelled out 1peclllcally and
pooled eitller' by or on the a_pplieationa. no lack of spontaneity. Good worlr.,Ir.ids.
!all Conway
This wiiiM dlifliiltelf "'crit" d!ore c!onmderation foi' be 'j,roapei!tlve 1tuclent and
leaa for the .tmigbty buclr.. '
Sincerel:y,
Ma.Kevin Forria-Haoaon

BRAVO KALEIDESCOPE
GREY!

ACCESS is in jeopardy
ACCESS did have a propooal before
the board already. Thi■ propo■al,
Where I■ the older, woman returning
however, wu for two ■up port po■ itiona
to school in the priorities of Evergreen?
that were contingent on the formation
Indications are that abe doeao't rate of a conaort.ium of campus women'•
very high. There ia no money for the groupa.
continuance of the ACCESS for
It muat be noted that ACCESS bad
Re-entry Women Center-a
center
been told upon re<:eipt of ita fall pilot
•tarted tbla year b1 two women who funding from S&A that tbey should
from personal experience believed such "not come back" for their budget needa.
a place would encourage community The S&A board stated then, and rewomen u they face· challenge■ un- iterated at th.is year'• allocations meetknown to younger 1tudeota.
ing when they turned down the
Believing that there I■ a great need ACCESS propoaal. that they believed
for 1uch a center to continue at Ever• re-entry support waa too big a job to
green, Jaxie Farrell and Diane Winalow be totally bandied by a part-time,
have tried multiple approachea to aave temporary, undergraduate ataff. They
ACCESS but funding cannot be found. aaid that the school mut provide the
The Adminiatration bu given every program with a director in order for it
Ir.ind of support to the center except to be active on campus and in comfinancial Preaident Evaoa bu regu- munity outreach. Thia ia a viewpoint
larly mentioned the returning student
shared by J a,tie and Diane u well.
in hia enrollment proje<tiona for the
The leaderahip of ACCESS this
80'• and in the January I, 1980, Daily school year bu come u a bargain for
Olympian be wu quoted u aaying, the school For only an outlay of $300 a
"The desire of many older people to month in director salary, along with
return to school will create a new work/study support (all from S&A),
audience that coUegea will have to dedicated center personnel have main•
serve."
tained a drop-in center and have proWith that encouragement and the duced regular information, outreach
fact that the school baa used the
and entertainment offerings.
ACCESS Center in ita outreach effotta
The ACCESS Center bas a part in a
(- spring quarter "Evening News"), Consumer Education grant produced
the leadenhip of ACCESS prepared a collaboratively with four other Re•
propoaal for the fiacal year budget.
gion X colleges. If tbia grant I■ successThey uked for a Director position for ful it will bring a $43,000 program to
$12,800 for the year and a half-time the Olympia community, with ACCESS
Outreach Coordinator for nine months aa the local umbrella organization. It
at $5,400 and an operating budget of will not be known untU about August
$3,000.
whether or not tbia grant request ia
They received a letter dated April 90 succeasful. Meanwhile, ACCESS will
have to cloee down at the t!lld of June
from the Preaideot stating "I - little,
if any, chance for fulH!lng of ACCESS and ita leaden must find other employthrough state appropriations, in ■plte ment- It appears that tbe......_a great
of the value of ita service,,.• He went
need for the center's oervice1 and the
on to aay that ACCESS abould gather
acbool will eventually have to face ita
111pport and malr.e a strong case to responsibility to th!■ population. Many
S&A. Thia letter wu received after
people are diaappointed that it ia not
the S&A deadline for pro-11
but
one. of the achoora priorities now.
By Diane Winalow

Emplo.y,~s upset by Medi1 Loan move

OFFENSIVE
ADVERTISING

By Ella Blaclr.wood

The library management team bu decided to move Media Loan to the lint
fioor of the library. One Media Loan emTo A.F.R.I.C.A.:
ployee calla tbe move "bureaucratic bullWhile rm pedantically expounding on shit," but Pat Matheny-White, Coordinmy soapbox here, fd lllr.e to malr.ea few ator of Uaer Servi<ea, aaya the move ia
commenta tbou\. the cauae that'• moti- deaigned for the convenience of library
vating you. The oppressed tend to have uaen.
SOl)leIr.indof,dependent ;,1at1onalpp with
The management team plana to move
their oppreaaors. Wit~••• the fact that
Media Loan into t.btt apace now occupied
the black leaden in S. Africa oppooe. the by Media Repair .,.. the first fioor of the
U.S. boycott of S. African biiaioeaa, u
library In 1981. Media Repair will move
they know It is the blaclr.a,who will bear into extra apace near the Set and Model
moot of the burden that wjll ,.ult. Of Shop in the buemeot. $40,000 bas been
coune, a boycott could cauae tbinga to allotted for remodeling the Set and Modget bad enough so that the blaclr.1would el Shop and the management team bopea
revolt; whether or not the end reault of that aome of that money can be uaed to
such a chain of event& would be what
set up space for Media Repair. That
you have in mind ia que1tionable. In any move could take place u early u tbia
event, proceeding. with· aocb a plan in summer. It I■ uolr.nownhow much it will
opposition to the leaden ol the people coot to remodel the current Media Reyou are trying to help -m•
a bit lllr.e pair area to accomodate Media Loan.
playing God (or CIA). WbUe I too am
Diagruntled Media Loan employshocked, outraged, ete., at the revela- claim that they were not consulted la the
tiooa about the treatment of black• in S. deci■ ion making. Sue Randall, a Media
Africa, how can I justify devoting my Loan employee, aay■ that the people who
time and enerp: to ehen(Pnr tbe rapne
made iha deeiaiea ..ne uea wme hr here;

never walk in thooe doon ...we're. al
,gainst it.• Taman McCraclr.en,amtber
employee, agreed, adding that the decision to move Medif, Loan ia "bad for
workers, bad for people bringing in and
talr.ing out equipment- It's juat bad for
everyone.· They feel the relocation wiD
inconvenience many of their users.
Pat Matheny-White, who I■ a memb«
of the management team, diaagrees. Sbe
asaerta that the Media Loan employ-'
opinions were solicited and con■ idered.
"Moot Media Loan uaen are media awdenta, • and by having to run up and
down the stain between the Waahingtoo
State Film Library, Media Repair and
Media Service• on the f1rst fioor and
Media Loan on the aecond fioor, "they're
getting a runaround." Matheny-White
feels that the CODll)lidationof all media
services will be a great convenience to
users.
Media Loan employeeo claim that the
major reuon for the move ia to expand
the second fioor gallery but according to
Matheny-White, the ma~gement team'a
first conaideratlon is to develop a new
listening center in the space now occupied by Media Lam. TIie 2nd lloci' gal-

lery will expand somewhat because the
4th fioor gallery will clooe to' provide
more academic apace, but the majority of
the Media Loan IJ>llcewill be developed
into a new listening center.
There are several reasons why a D
tening center muat be developed, according to Matheny-White. Audio tapea will
no longer circulate becauae of recent
copyright laws restricting copying cl
tapes and because of significant theft
IOSBes.The tapes will be taken off the
shelves and a aeparate, closed co1lection
wijl be set up at the new listening
center.
The Evergreen library currently hu.a
listening center, the McIntosh Listening
Room on the third Door. Matheny-White
says numerous complaints have been received because the Melot.oohRoomI■ not
aoundproof. It also lacks facilities for
,group listening activities. It will be
phased out to provide more study space.
The Evergreen library philooopby I■
based on an integrated, multi-media concept. Books, tapes, games, and once a
bear akin rug (until it got fieu) are all
she I, ed togetl1e1. Some people fem thatthe library ta moving away from that
original concept. Matheny-White aays, "I
don't think we're moving away from that
concept, I thinlr. we're defining it."

ll;tE INSTITUTEFOR
MOVEMENTTHERAPY
PETERGEILER,DIR.

WILL ACKERMAN

Make 1980 the year you• Learn to pla)' Folk, Classic and
Flamenco style guitar
• Gain confidence to play your instrument in groups or individually
• Develop the ability to read music.

SOW GUITAR

On•-y•ar Movement Therllpy Troinins
Program boginning foll t,m., 1980
in ~attle

8 a.m. - 9 p.m. weekday,
Evergreen Credit Availabl•

FOR INFORMATION CALL
ANY TIME 752-9847
Preaented by Robert Goodwin Studio&
and Harp Shop, Inc.
4102 W. 15th
Tacoma, WA 118406

are public diaplaya of a Great Pudtered
Aaabole; and judging from your letter,
you certainly fit the bill
Your ·letter reelr.1 with ho■tility
towards women. I find tbla ennmely
deplorable. Need I remind you that
many notable people are women? Have
you forgotten that your mother wu a
woman? Doea your mother Ir.now that
you are writing trub lllr.ethat?
Politically correctly yours,
Allen Levy

10 a.m. - 7 p.m. Sundays

with special guest william limbach
SATURDAY. MAY 31, 8 O'CLOCK, KANE HALL, U OF W CAMPUS
AIIIIIICAN
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pramted b pacific: productio

Call (206) 367-0500
or Writ• 4265 NE 125th St,
S.. ttlo, WA 98125

open every day

WESTSIDE CENTER

The ·Fourth Horseman

Sam Doe now rules Liberia

By Jerome J ohnaon
"And I looked, and beheld a pale horse:
and bia name that aat on him wu Death.
and Hell followed with him. And power
wu given unto them over the fourth
part of the Earth, to kill with sword, and
with hunger, and with death, and with
•h• beaata of the Earth."
Revelation& 8:8

By Carrie Gevirtz

people in one place. It took an army to
The recent Liberian Coup d'Etat waa stop them. The (Liberian) army lw.
aimed at "taking power and trying to always had the option of exerci.sing
change the old beliefs; to give more
power if they wanted to. They (the
virtue to native Liberia," say a Leha.i Liberian,) are the kind of people who
Fahnbulleh, an Evergreen student from
have been so mole1ted; The Amel'ie<>
Liberia. M/Sgt. Samuel K. Doe and the
Liberians uaed them to establiah force.
Peoples Redemption Council (PRC) are But at the aame t.ime they dlacredit
the new leaders of Liberia.
them, tell them that they are worthleaa,
Lehai goes on to aay, "I peraonally that they .e a bunch of heathena."
don't know where Doe came from. He's a
"Un,y have the people that can
man whose rwne has been unheard of. manage everything, they can run the
But he must have been a man who had ~ government," explained Lehai. RecenUy
lot of influence on the officers to the
the army officers have been aending
point that he could change thei. minds their children to school Lebai calla it "a
because the coup wasn't only Doe'■ ef- new breed and generation of people."
fort. He must have masterminded the The military men that grow up in the
coup. He must have been working in the army are now interested in seeking an
system. He probably knew the ins and education. The universities create an
outs of it and where it could be taken
incentive for them to go to achoo! by
advantage of. Besides that. the name
offering them high poeitiona in the army,
Doe i..san ordinary Liberian name."
They have put together a lot of educated
Prior to the coup, Liberia was under
men to run the governmenL
the power ol The Tru Whig Party and
Doe's new military government hu
President William Tolbert. The Tru
raised all civil salaries from $100 to $200
Whig Party was founded by Americo- a month and is planning to give scholarLiberians who are deecendant.s of a ships to needy students. They railed the
group ol black Americans that lelt the curfew, but Liberia ia still under martial
States and went to Africa to establish a law. Martial law won't be rescinded until
country. They were looking for a nation
a civilian government is formed and free
"! their own and devised laws that wouJd elections can be held.
just benefit their kind. This elite behavThe PRC has also killed 13 former
ior had been going on for two centuries
officials, among them were Cecil Dennis
until the recent coup.
one o( Africa's most respected diplomats,
The motto ol The Tru Whig Party was . Frank Tolbert, and Charles King, and
"Liberty and freedom brought us here."
ex-member of The House of Representa•
That is a belief of Americo.Liberian.s.
lives. The execution was held on a beach
The love ol liberty brought them from and was witnessed by thousands of
America to Liberia. Liberty is their
civilians.
ideology.
About Doe and the PRC'1 changes,
Lehai wonders " ,l don't know
Lehai said, "We are seeing how it baa
whether they mean political liberty or
payed off now that there is a new gove<:onomic liberty or social liberty. It
ernment and a new country with people
depends on the context in which one will who are trying to bring about new
use the word. In Liberia only Americo- developments in the country. I sure
Liberians could reaUy t.alk about being wouldn't like to see it becauae I know
liberated or being free. When they came, what it is like. The Americo-Liberian
they came with a different system and kids always told you naaty tbinp on the
when they talk about liberty they talk in street and in school. They picked on you.
terms of themselves. They don't really
I mean it-they did it, everyday. Tbey
mean liberty for the rest of the country.
did it ao much that the citizens of the
They mean exploitation, subjugation, and country were getting tired of hearing
other atrocities that people usually
these bitter remarks from the Americocommit."
Liberians."
lt was diUicult to undermine the
"Now it is the oppoeite. I peraonally
Americo-Liberians because of the tight
know that they are going to 1uffer a lot
systems they had, except for the case of because tbey are used to playing a very
the bloody Monrovia riota in April 1979. solt role. Now they have to play the
It seemed like on that day (ironically one hard role. It's going to be very tough.
year before the coup). the whole country
They wm have to stop thinking ol themdecided to make the Ameri~Liberians
selves or people will be stepped on. It's
know they were fed up with the system.
going to take moat of their lives to
Lehai remarked. "I never saw so many accept the change."

ue1t.W
Ke111a COD
Soviet Unio
Third Worl
Africa in
Kenyatta',
means "Let

unch 1up
, and t
in keepin
e.r......

Angola ia gov
who came to
from Portugal in
a four•aided g
aasiated by the
volution, wbi

agent,

w

le opponent&

'

leader, Col. Mu
g to the State De
part of a worldwide network o
terroriltl aaelgned to harm or
certain lJbyan diaaidenta ualto face Quaddafl'1 juatlee
e oil, natural gaa and iron

e most part baa uoed ila
ita people. Quaddafi
highways, hospitala
but low-eoot bouaing.
the 3,000,000 Libyana
c and are Moslem-aa ia
11gliah and Italian are also
ugh a prosperous nation.
'ctly regulated under a code
lalamic laws-liquor ia forthe activities of women
ed. Quaddafi'a own brand
• pervaded Libya-a com•
n Ialamic dogma of caring
•·• people and a competitive buai•
nae to advance the level of the
'a Cll'e. A hawk in OPEC circle,,
a diadains superpower,
and the
they play, binding itself to the
World and eapecially the Arab


striving
country.
of tbia, '
that excl
doctrine
with i
fully
ene '
I

dafl'1 Libya waa inatrumen
('! power of Iran', Aya
' and the Colonel
U.h on man
A atron

.
ol Cit
toma£11N,

mot and
fall .. baff a" lnO

:llalliam.

Apartheid u we know it today came
into being In UM8, when South Africa'&
Afrikaner Nationalist Party rooe to pow•
er. An Afrikaner word meaning literally
"apartneu", Apartheid ia a brutal •Y•
tem of legal and enforced radal aepara•
lion and aegregation. The· principal social
code of South Africa, Apartheid per•
meate1 every facet of South African life
!or both the white minority and the
black majority, With the white& on top
u the ruling clau and the black, on the
bottom as a labor force to support the
whit.ea, Apartheid bu become not only a
code of behavior but a way, of life u
well.
The anomalies of the Apartbeid/clau
1y1tem in South Africa are a reault of
the circum1tance1 of Initial relation& between the two groupa of white settlenthe Dutch•origined Boera and the Britiah.
The early development of South African
capitaJUm-a combination of Afrikaner
political power and British economic
might--waa baaed on a cooperative effort
amongst tbe landowning class on the top,
the urban middle-clas1 In the center and
the urban workers on the bottom, To do
this, the Afrikaner politicians conceived
an ideology of "Nationaliam."
Under Nationalism, the British would
be at the top, the Afrikaners in the center and the blacks on the bottom, supporting both the Afrikaners and the Britiah. An euily-identified, cheap, numerically large pool of domestic labor was
needed. Having centered on the blacks
for tbia purpose, a set of policiea called
Apartheid was developed when the ANP
rooe to power. Apartheid:
I. Robbed the indigenous African ol
his land1, tribal society and cultural
heritage.
2. Created a system of reserves or
homelands, called "Bantuatana," in some
of South Africa'• most deaolate areu,
where the black, would be placed. This
would provide an easily-accessible pool of
labor and insure const.ant replenishment
ol that labor.
3. Enforced black labor migration
throughout the country, thus keeping
the Africans divided and disorganized
even to the family level.

4. Supported and reinforced economic
policies via political diafranchiaement and
suppression ol the blacks. This included
legialation such as the hated trespass
and passbook laws, punishable by torture and imprisonment without trial.
6. Created a virtual police state whicll
uses terror to control nonwhites a.ml provides an uneasy rea1 ■urance for the
white minority.
In the South African economic system
there ia litUe or no poealbility of upward
mobillty for blacka and no incentive to
work well Upward mobility is strictly
~rohibited by Apartheid, which main·
taina that blacks are tbe cogs in the
machine while the whites are the
machine operatora. Under Apartheid, the
black& are taught only what the whit.ea
decide they need to know to do .their job.
such aa welding or carpentry. They have
no access whatev.er. to ·management
training or expoeure to management
opportunities. Such. conditions clamp a
tight lid on incentive, lor the blacks see
little good-beyond survival-that their
work does them. I( does not. open doors
t.o promotion or be\te.r theit primitive
working conditiorts;· ft m~rely serves t.o
support the white regime and thus, un•
wittingly, their own domination.

The entire South African economy is
impeded by Apartheid. A main fault ol
any capitalistic system is that it must
continue to be dynamic, constantly
expanding, to survive. By limiting the
wages and mobility of the African population, Apartheid hurts the South African
economy. The potential risks are highalready South African inflation is a
severe problem-but
they could be
avoided if appropriate wages were paid
the blacks. With their higher wages the
blacks could buy more goods and
services, thus causing the South Arican
economy's continued expansion. But this
is forbidden by Apartheid and !eared by
the white minority.
As a result of their low wages. the
blacks live in abject poverty. They cannot afford decent housing even if it were
permitted by Apartheid. living in either
wood huts on the Bantustans or in giant
township ghettos near the cities. Neither
have in-house heat vstems or running
water. In the cities, the blacks live in
cramped dormitories on the edge of the
cities, with limited heat and running
water. They are always overcrowded.
Adequate food, medical care and electriCity are equally impossible. For the blacks
of South Africa, daily survival under
Apartheid
is in itself a notable
accomplishment.

The second liberation of Zimbabwe
By Daniel Strum
On April 18 the Union Jack wu
lowered in Zimbabwe (Rhodesia) for the
country's first internationally recognized
independence celebration. The south
African nation, plagued by seven yean
of guerilla war, is now starting to rebuild under the direction of Prime Minister Robert Mogabe'11 coalition government.
This smalJ country surprised the world
in its first lega.l election1 by an over•
whelmingly deciaive vote. Fifty-seven of
the 80 black seata in parliament were
won by Mogabe's Zimbabwean African
Nationaliat Union party, while only 20
went to Joshua Nkomo'a Zimbabwean
African People's Union. Twenly of the
100 seats were reserved for whites.

ALL WAQ

The Patriotic Front, a coalition between ZANV and ZAPU which waged
the war of liberation, wu diaaolved for
the election so that the people'a true
leadership choice would be evident.
Buhop Able Muzorewa. a black figurehead of white intere,ts, who wu illegally
elected Prime Minlater a year and a hall
ago, received almost no support. The
fraudulent
election ■ which in ■ tated
Muzorewa excluded the Patrio tie Front
and wu not reeognized by tbe U.N. or
any country except South Africa aa
genuine.
Thia ia not the f,nt time Zimbabwe
baa declared ita independence. Prior to
1963, Rhodesia wu a member of the
Central African Federation of the Britiah
Empire, which conaiated of Northern and
Southern Rhodeaia and Myualand. In

TIIAffCL fflttllC£,

that year Northern Rhodeaia and Myaaa•
land gained their lndependenee, ending
the federation. Theae are the preeentday countries of Zambia and Malawi.
The tides of African National11m
started aaaerting preaaure on Britain to
releaae Southern Rbode1la from it,
colonial bond. Britain wu preparing to
do thi1 in 1966, when the colonial
government, repruentaUve of the white
minority (under 3'11iof the population),
declared itaelf independent. Thia Uni•
lateral Declaration of Independence waa
an attempt by the white ■ettlera to
maintain their privilegea u a claaa.
Thue privil•I" Included political monopoly, ownerahip of the beat Janda and
pay averaging ten t.ime1that of blaeb.
That aame year, at Britain'& reque1t,
the U.N, uked ita members to im~

trade aanctiom on the rebel alate. lt wu
predicted that theae actiona wollkl bring
Rhodesia to ila kneea within weeka. A
year later Rhodesia wu ,till holdinir out
and Prime Minister Ian D. Smith publically pledged himHlf to continued white
minority rule. In reaponae to thia, the
U.N. ord_ered mandatory trade aanctiona.
The U.S., being hlgbly dependent on
RhodHian chrome, openly dioregarded
the aanctions to obtain tbia highly atrategie "mlneral for oil<year1. South Africa
dill'egarded theae aanctiona continuoualy
and became RhodNia'1 link to the out•
aide world. Through their porta Rhodeaian exportl were funneled Into the
world market. They alao aupplied most
of tbe anna Rhode1ia used to combat the
eacalatin&'
guerilla inaurgence.
Tbe nut decade wu one of political

i ■olatlon for the Smith regime. The
Rllodnian economy wu ■trained by the
sanetiona. Throughout tbia t.ime there
,.... a few attempla at Brltiab--1ponaoNld
negotiation, between dUferent black
lllldera and Smith, all to no avail.
In July 11177,Andrew Young, U.S.
amba11ador to the UN, and Brlti1h
F..,lgn Secretary David Owen launched
an "Anglo-American Plan" demirned to
bring all parties, Including Smith and
the Patriotic Front. into negotiation&.
The plan proposed the uae of tbe Front'•
army in the tranalUon to majority rule.
Smith would have none of tbia and
imtead went ahead with an "internal
•t.tlement plan" whieb ended In the
cleceptive election of Mu-.,wa u Prime
Miniater, Under tbia plan, majority rule
would
,..,._ have been poaalble within 15

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the peace. His broad·based cabinet con·
tains two prominent whites and he
tranaltion period. By the end of January,
there were at least 38 violations and retained Peter Wall, a British-born
158 deaths.
lieutenant
general. as head of the
>.. thinp settled, de1pite numerous armed forces.
Mogabe has also proclaimed that he
death threats, Mogabe and Komo returned to campaign. However, a house will not host South African guerilla
bases. He is not nationalizing any major
owned by relatives of Mogabe was
bombed, cauaing aome caaualtiea. Mo- part& of tbe economy or land but rather
using land which wu previously regabe wu lax in campaign efforts but
served for whites, but unused or de·
still won a c!ecisive victory.
Robert Mot111be'1
ZANU party wu by serted, to set up cooperative farms.
He is asking for aid from the western
far the most leftist of all the groupa and
n11 v,ctory 1boolt fear into moat of the
nations but it is very 1low in coming;
only $166.6 million from Britain and $45
weatern nations. This fear wu highly
unwarranted; Mogabe hu proven to be million from the U.S. ia pledged. It ia
extremely moderate in practice. He ii an estimated that $3 billion ia needed to pt
impresaive 1tate1man dealing with a the country back on its feet. Right now
nearly impoaaible ■ituation which in• •hia country ia buoy trying to feed ita
cludea aatlaf)'ing black upirationa while war-ridden country and settle the many
retaining white eonfidence and keeping homelesa displaced refugee,.

service!

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Contrary to white Rboduian aapira•
tiona, the world reeognized tbe fallacy of
th- elections and the U.N, did not lift
aanctiono. Finally the white Rhodeaiana.
led by Ian Smith, had their baclta :.0 the
wail. The PatrioUc Front controlled hall
ol the country and half of the n,1t waa
raging in war.
Thia time when Britain arranged an
·all-partiea negotiating conference in
London, Smith aceepted the invitation.
After many days of negotiation, a workable plan for tranaition to majority rule
wu aceepted by th• conferente. !ta centerpiece wa ■ the recolonization
of
Rhodeaia by the Brltiah and the use of
Commonwealth troops to enforce a
-fire.
The ceue-fire took effect on December 21, 11179,under the coordination of

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wntinued from page 1
tions about teaching. You don't have to
be trained in busy work, but you need to
know enough about it not to throw up
your hands and aay, I quit. You need to
know enough so that if you want to work
!or a change you will have the political
awareneu to do that. ..
"Teaching should be co-learning, •
term you don't hear uaed much anymore," uys Aldridge, "The thinga that
get locuaed on in cert programs are
what I call 'fringe things.' It is important
to know metboda but ... we [t.eac&en)
a.re human engineers and we must be
our moet expert at dealing with human
beings. Anything that leads to selluaurance, awareness of culture, greater
skills at working with groupa. greater
skills in subject areu and a strong senae
of personal psychology and an understanding of variables about themaelvea"
should be included in teacher certification.
Education !acuity agreed that "educ&·
tion never has to be dull. It's so exciting"
and that ..it's ironic that teacher training
is considered one of the worst educational fields.'' Aldridge says there has
never been a methodology for evaluating
teacher education in this country. "But,..
he says, "all studies that have been done
say that personal variables and interpersonal skills are the main factor in
making a good t.eacher. The atate regulations are real reasonable; they're not
a strait-jacket. They've never impeded
my teaching a teacher. State requirements don't keep us from doing anything
we want to do. That idea is a myth;
a dodge."
While there "is no alternative place for
Evergreen to hook up with in Washing·
ton," Aldridge says the UPS program is
as appropriate as any other. He added,
"I want people who are going to be
strong and healthy to be the teachers
in the world."

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"There wu no problem to get the
TESC otudenta talking," oaya Edith
Richardo, UPS !acuity membet for reading. "Evergreen atudenta talked right
llv Kathy Davis
away. I wu happy about that. UnW I
"I'm c1oee to burn-out beeauae rm in get the atudenta- to talk, I !eel like rm
between two prognms,"
aays Ray •~It~•
whole time and I don't~•
Roussin. UPS (acuity teaching language if rm glVtDgthem what they need.· It I a
arta, writing reading and Context in
lot euier to leach if the atudenta are
Teaching, "I have to haul a lot of atuff. J questioning ~ban.if they are just titting
!eel like l cuatodlal per90n. It's a ,traa.
there abt<lrbmg,
rm ruenting that.• Bob Steiner, acience
"Evergreen
1tudents were much
and math teuher (who we encountered warmer than I expected them to be. In a
lugging two hea~ boxea ol geometry way, more savvy in a political seDN,"
aida up the ,lain ol the library) uys he says Steve Kerr, who taught Secondary
enjoya teaching at Evergreen for the Curriculum Developm_ent a.n~ Sp_ecial
m.. t part. but "There are bualea; haul- Methods. "They were mqulaitlve, mt.er·
ing stuff, time spent on the road, trying ested in questioning aoun,ea and ldeu. I
to utlaly two group■ ol student& and try to encourage that In my claaae&at
being on a rigid schedule." Ramona UPS. Sometimes I find that difficult to
Hannes, who t.eac1111musle and art, uys
do at UPS, but I found it very euy to do
she doeon't mind the drive, eapedally at Evergreen.•
.
now that the weather la nice. Bringing
Steiner 1tated that there were differher music equipment from Tawma (or encea In the student bodleo of TESC and
each clus wu lawnvenient, 1he aaya. UPS. Evergreen student& are "gen,rally
but now that she la teaching the art see- older with a greater variety of eaperition. she has a cupboard here on campus e~." he uya.
.
where she can store her things.
. Evergreen. atudents are uaed to givWhen UPS wu considering wntractmg feedback._ aay1 Hannes. "Th_•Yhave
ing with Evergreen they put thia qu...
the opportumty to share what IS bemg
tion to the facul_ty,"U we participate In ~~t in class, what is being aaid and
the program, will yo,, participate?" The
Writing evaluations of student& for
fac"!ty voted yes. They receive 16 cent& work in one specific wune wu a new
a_mile or about $11.50 a day C<?mpenaa- experience !or the !acuity. "UPS !acuity
lion !or the drive here, Othel'WIN, they is uaed to writing evaluations for placeget exactly the same ~ u ,they ment !ilea," uys Hannea. According to
would if they were teachmg exclusively Steiner, thoee evaluations are ol a more
on"Ithe
.
however, smce

d"dUPS
't campus.
d
h
. d'ced.
general nature,
t hey are
• n co~e own ere preJu J •
hued on having worked with a atudent
aays Hannes. _Ihad heard of some ol the over a long period of time rather than
Ev~rgreen phil~phy an~ I hadn't ex- !or merely one quarter.
~nenced any.thtng negative. I wu ex•
Faculty and staff at Evergreen have
cited
to
come.

Ro . I d that E
t
given littl •• if any, uaefu1 ad-~-•= or gw'd•
USS~
oun
vergreen .~ U· ance to the new teachen in how to predents differed from UPS student& ~• pare TESC-style evaluations. "We were
lightlully ao. They are more confronli~• shown the lonna. • uyo Richards. "A
than UPS students. I marvel at the ,mt,. sample wu given to 118 to show what
mg power. What goes on hen,? The
....... It'
h lit
'tin
'ti · SO good!"
WU wan.....
I SO muc
e ,m
g
wn ng lS
referencea."
oontinued on page 7

Greeners inipress UPS
teachers

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ia an inatructor rin and preoenta
something, then have some interaction.
do aome Hee~
and warlt Jn the
field. But ti!!, EVl{8J'MD awdeilta aaid
view from the top
that they wuted to seminar more, talk
about their feellnp, and aome of our
By Jan Loltn.. ~ Barbara Smith of TESC and Dr. profNAOl'I didn't kn- how to handle
»on H.. tet'8r 9'. UPS are the adminia- that. So I made the laculty that were
~ for the '1',-adler
~tion
-pro- coming down winter and 1prin1 quart.era
lP'&I\>-Smith deala with the da7-to-day aware of thla.
"The amount ol work IOllle prolo uked
~tion
of the program and the application and admiulon pro
II Hootet,. (wu too much for 1tudenta), Some really
poured it on.&Jld may have lleft eomld·
ter la in charge of Cll'(&Dlslng ---.
deciding who will teach the claUN and ered bua:,work by aome. Some uaign·
"trying to put out bruahfirea. • Inter- menta uaed all a penon'1 ener117 with no
viewed aeparately, both reaponded to time for other cluework. So we decided
limllar q,-tioaa.
that we want all' lacult7 to know
8aaidi waa ......
w•y a Tue .. r what'• going on in every clus. Because,
('~CIC UM .....,_
,..
.. ao,pt t4t when It wmes down to a atudent who
bu to put it all together and it doesn't
Ev•p-:
"There'• been a wntinuing demand on make seDN, either it"• too demanding or
the part of the atudenta to be able to be wntradictlng, we want to ltnow about
that..
-ufled teacben In the State of Wuhington aince the eollep.,opened. Our area
at.ems all the way from Portland to IOU$h
llo ■t.U• .........
1,,ew Ev.....all the wa7 weot to the Padfle ... -~-p.....
ta pt ..... ,
0-0, and eut to the Cueaci- It II a
"There
bu
been
wnfliet,
not anger or
very large territory and a Jot of the
h
..
tillt:r.
but
wnflict
in
eapectatlou.
leaehera that
in the school&in these
dimleta are p-adaatee of CWU. Part of Evergreen atudenta wanted thia (Nmi•
nara), and the new non-Eve,-n
atuthe continuing edueatlon ...of being denta were aalllfled (with no aeminara),
teachera ii that they ban to keep taking There wen, aome in-dau deb&lel that
more eredlta ...,..king toward.a the equiv- ended up (with some aaying) "abut up, I
alent of a muter', degree. Commuting wanna learn thia way," and (othen aay•
to Ellensburg II quite inconvenient. But
ing) "no, we gotta do it our wa7." I thinlt
the 1tudy of TESC by the leglalature II It's been resolved. I thinlt there'• been
the immediate Impetus. They recommended that we loolt into the poaalblll- some give and take involving the three
different group■ (TESC and non-TESC
tiea of offering teacher certlllcation
atudenta,
and !acuity). i don't selllO any
through a contract from a eollege In
of the fruatration that there had been
our region."
before about MW to do it."
HHtett,r
uplal■ed ••w UPS get
8-kll..Wtl1MtheUP8r.e.aty
...
lllwlnd:
a 111e• die Ewapwa .,.._
el ..,,...
"Laat spring, TESCaent out a notice
lh<e • ...,...._
..... will, -•
el
throughout the state Indicating their
Nt B... a few -·
Interest in developing a teacher certifi. gndeo,
p!ellle, olie t that·
~am,411viting
all-eollepo-who
"We didn't get any guidelines on how
had an intereat to 1ubmit a propoul We
(UPS) had dealt with a number ol Evergreen 1tudents helore who wanted
Teacher'• Certification and came to UPS
after an Evergreen degree. We had been
intereated in work in Olympia echoola,
and we helped them atudent I.each here,
while they could still be a part of the
Evergreen community u graduste 1tudenta at UPS.
At the ..........
ef wlater .-,
a
• USED LP'S •
.. a theneft
.....
th ,........
waa
"USED,
BUT NOT ABUSED"
......
Mt t4t die atwleata. s.w, td,a
AN
EVER,CHANGING,
....
the...ata;
EVER-GROWING
"One of the bigpat adj.,.tmenta wu
SELECTION!
to aoclal moree that aecompany a part,.
time procnm. Thia wu Npeclall7 true
214 Welt 4th Avenue
of the Evel'gl'een atudenta who bad been
Nl-11181
bore for a number of yeara. They found
It wu an adjuatment to nddellly be bl a
it revealed egg on our collective -facea.
Some ol us need to get In there and bite
the bullet."

11te

SACHS

-:=)

Gn INCIUSIDGASMllU&IWITII
l NEW
01 IIIUILTw1u1n01

CHICK OUR STOCK
OF OVIR 1,000 FOR
$$$ SAVING PRICISf

90 DAYWARUNTY

:: REBUILT
CARIURRORS

REGGAEIN

AT SAGA

IN F-LOf

lHEMEADOW

In celebration of Indian Awarenesa
Week, May 27-1!0,Saga will be offering l10llie new menu items on Toe.
day, May 27. These are aalmon. corn
on the cob, fry bread.

According- to Ga;:: Ru11ell of
Secu~ity, ..t1r0. juveh
I were i.Jlprehelllied''li~iii'F.Jot aijlf
,._
iuoed mlademeanor .cit.atloil!.
RUNOUstl'ongly recommend& the uae
ol loeting 8"' capa.

The meadow north ol Driftwood
Rd. will be the site of a Reggae Pienic and Evergreen Unity dance,
May 30, from 2 p.m. unW midnight. f-----------------i
The event is fashioned aftec. a
CONTRA.CfSIN ART
Jamaican Sound System Sea1io~.,
'
'
African and Latin dance music wW
Cluster or Grou~ Contract' forming
also be broadcast. People are en!or fall in "Art u a Tool !or Social
couraged to bring percussion instruChange." Meeting in CAB wlfeehouse
.ments and join with rhythm eKperts
Friday, May 23, at 12 noon. Call Anne
for a drumming session. A Rut.a din•
at 943-1372.
ner will contribute to this Jamaican
experience. Persons wishing to help f----------------~
can. call 754-9663 and come to the
LIBRARY
HOURS
work-party at 2 J.l.m. this Sunday in
the meadow. Look !or red, green and
The Library now clooing at 10:46
gold signs oll Driftwood Road. Free.
p.m. Monday through Thursday because library employees have ei:perienced transportation diflieultiea.
CPJ'S LAST ISSUE
Although the change is temporary,
To aU candidates for edit.or and
consideration for a permanent change
business manager of the Cooper Point
will be .given attention when 1980-81
Journal: the Publications Board will
academic year hours !or the Library
meet May 29 at 8:30 a.m. in Lib. 1505,
are discussed.
not May 30 as previously announced.
Deadline !or applicatioM is Thursday,
ANTIOCH GRAD.
May 22: they •hould be handed in at
the PreSident's office.
PROCRAMS
fhe last CPJ isoue ol this spring
Would you like to fmd out about
quarter will come out on May 29.
a
graduate program (M.S.) in EcoAnnouncemenl.s and letters for this
system Management and Appropriate
issue must be submitted by 12 noon,
Technology? Brent Ingram, an EverTuesday, May 27.
green alum and representative from
Antioch West in San Fnnclsco will be
COUNOL on campus on May 29; 1-3 p.m. in
EVERGREEN
The members of the Executive
CAB 110. For more information caU
Committee decided unanimously lut
Career Planning & Placement ~193.
.wHIHM6)'--141-M>-eaMel this Wffk'11 1-===-----------=c.l
meeting ol the Evergreen Council BE PUBLISHED
because old business bu been resolved, and no new bu1ineH bu
The Art& Reaource Center ia still
presented itaell !or our inquiry." They
looking !or poetry, photography, short
will not hold further meetinga !or the
proee, and vilual art for publieation to
remainder .ol thia academic year un- be produced after spring quarter.
less an emerrency iaaue is brought to
Bring aubm'111lons or 1'd eas to Li•
the attention .ol the Executive Com- brary 3216 or call ~148,
mittee member_s.

E.R.C. MOVIES
The Environmental Reaource Center is presenting free weekly moviea
every Thunday, 12:15, in Lecture
HaU 6. This week, May 22, Garret
Hardin's, Trapdy el the C--1;
next week,, May 29, F..-•l•g
h
F--,:
s-all Farm bl AIMrlca.

raeVYY

ONCE TIIE'( 5££
-nlEIR. Owl\/ w'oAPS
!N P~1folT...

150MPGcan be.

459-3933

~'ii'

l

Come N'Iand SN how much tun

Mon -Fri 9-6

"I uked people in the lali, UPS laculty
structure where you have little claue1
and studenta in the program. I uked
and part-time 1tudenta weren't intere,t,.
everybody I wuld find to uk: What ia ed in aoclal We, potluclts, and retreat&. It
the purpose? What is the wntent?" aaid wu a aoclal vacuum in a way that you
Kerr, who couldn't find any information. don't realize unW you're removed from
"I included information from the coune
your traditional program ■tructure. That
description. something about the 1tudent. wu a real difficult thing !or aome ol the
and grades. Kerr added he spent a lot ol student& to adjuat to. And It wu dlffieult
time "trying to find out what would be !or the non-Evergreen 1tudenta to even
appropriate."

aee that there wu an appropriate eapec"lt's a strange animal,• aaya Rouaain tation becauae they're not uaed to that.
ol the Teacher Certification program, He - Bload~ t. say al1Ht the
aays he sensed some biu in Part I of 1111
! rtheneire;
this article, which appeared lut week,
"People wanted more interaction with
"but that'• good, that's O.K. It begin&to the proleaaora. We didn't know what to
shake some chordt-'Hey, some people expect. our !acuity thought we were goaren't as aatlafied with the program u ing to wme down and t.eacll our course,
they should be.' People are chattinlf now. (u they uauaUy do). The general lormat

GREENERT .V.
Cable Evergreen State College
(C.E.S.C.-T.V.) will be broadcuting
Tueaday, Wednesday, and Thunday
eveninga !or the mt of the quarter
on cable channel 6, Help II needed
with the broadcasting. U intereated,
wntaet Mike Zwerin at 8116-tl48 or
Jim Murch at ·l,beDeli, evenlnp.

NEEDAN ESCORT?
Hey, women. did 7ou know Securi17
offen an aerviee? flans are
underway to e:a:pand thi1 1erviee.
Volunteers are needed to be on call.in
the evenlnga to provide additional
oervice and support. Don't hesitate, to
call security if you need .an escort.
Pleue help your siaten by volunteer-ing time. Call the Women's Center fwmore information "6162.
.

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PARENTS
Interested in contracting for sum•
mer daycare at Driftwood? Program
now being lormed !or childran
2 1/2 to 6 year1. Call Diane Dunnington at 866-5054.




ENERGYSYSTFMS
AND PHOENIX
On May 30 a large portion of the
Energy Systems program will be
leaving !or Phoenix, Arizona. the 1i.te
!or the 25th Solar Jubilee wnferenee
of the Ameriean branch of the International Solar Ener117 Society. Tba
wnferenee will Jut five clan (June
-U,and
ww rover a mwutucie of
solar lopiea,
The program had $360 in academic
lunda !or trave~ too little to get ua
there and back, After a great deal of
work the program bu raiaed over
SUJOOtowards the trip. AU ol the
money wa ■ earned through thrill
pro...+•
,.,-- related to alternative ener-....,
The lint project wu a atudy doae
by oeveral 1tudenta for the Evergreen
Dairy in Little Rock on the feasibility
of inatalling a methane dlpater at
the dairy. The aeeond project wu a
community worklhop offered thia
spring ODftat plate aoiar colleetora,
The thinl project wu Ute eonstruction ol a 80'x16' ..,ta, greenhouse
addition to a houae owned by John
Aikin.

I

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7
well
suited.
to
college•
such
M
Ever•
to write evaluations. We were given the
lorm and they aald, "Here, you need to green. McCann'1 anawer: "Thert are no
write a narrative." No question but you colleges and universities such u Everare really acrapping to write the evalua· green ... To Donohue's statement that
tion. How can you write an intelligent. more than 10% of Evergreen student.a
statement about poople who don't aay wanted to graduate as certified teachers,
three words in class? Bob Steiner had ·to McCann replied that "doeon't say much
write ~ evaluationa. It's tough to !or the reading comprehenaion ol 10% (?)
think ol creative, specific thing. about of our student enrollment." Apparently
each penon. But people aaid, "We are McCann waa referring to the fact that
greener■; we want written evaluations."
the 1971 Evergreen catalog made no
mention of a teacher certification
And B01tetter e•••• ■ted •• la1t
.....
article:
program.
"I am very aad to aee the extent ol the
McCann recently talked with the CPJ.
He support& the current UPS teacher
negative leelinga."
"There wu 46 minute• class time total certifiC&tion at Evergreen. ..The notion
1pent fall quarter on huUet.inboard• and of doing, ,·ometbing ~n concert with
penmanship. This does get ldeM· acroea anothe·r school If there are student.a here
to children. For ao little time 1pent, they who want it. I think that's a neat
(student&) made it into a big deal."
compromise."
•rd be glad to talk with the woman
Wily did McCann oppose an Evergreen
who aaid she had to light !or her sur- teacher certification pr.ogram in 1972
viv~ anytime. She can call me. leave a ·when he admito h~ can "ced.ainly recall
meaaage, eome see me, we can work a lot of interest in getting one started"?
something out."
He offers two. exJ}lan~tions,.'one "pragmatic." the other "philoaoplucal." PragEvergreen Teacher Cert matically, McCann viewed Evergreen as
a uniJlut educational learning center;
missed the boat
thus, it was "expected to run educational
By Mark Powell
programs that were diffei-ent from the
existing ones in the state." PhilosophiEvergreen began examining the feas- cally, McCann did not support a teacher
ibility of starting a teacher certification certification program in 1972 because he
program during the first months of 1972. opposed the idea that an Evergreen
A report issued by the Superintendent
graduate would be labelled a teacher. He
ol Public Instruction (SP!) in 1971 had states: ''Colleges and universities have
encouraged novel approaches for begingotten themselves into a false position in
rung new t.eacher certification programs.
fashioning degree programs with job
Faculty members Bill Aldridge, Richard
names on them. We should stop labelling
Alexander. a student Dave Siemens, and programs, which is kind of labelling a
former director of Cooperative Education student."
Ken Donohue, were motivated by the
McCann thinks the UPS teacher certi1971 guidelines to initiate an ellort to fication program at Evergreen is a "neat
have a teacher certification program at compromise'.'; however, he would not
Evergreen. Certain faculty and adminis- approve of a teacher certification protrative
members (Dean Clabaugh,
gram al Evergreen :ncorporating the
Charles Teske, Les Eldridge, Richard school's philosophy be<ause, "We'd be in
Jones, Don Humphrey, and othenl be- the same busineas as other college's who
came interested in the idea.
put the stamp on people's foreheads.''
The 1971 guidelines have been phued
The 1971 SP! report sounds like Everout. Teacher Certification programa now
green
rhetoric: " ... each candidate par!oUow guidelines iaaued in 1978. While
adoption of the 1971 1tandards wu ¥ 11 ticipates in the de■ ign of his own prooption !or 1tate echools, preoent guidtl gram and the procedures which enable
lines••
be implemented by June 11183. the candidate to achieve certification at
Dr. Lillian Cady, representative ol the his own rate;" and. the teacher certificaOffice ol the BPI, aaid the 1971 guide- tion program must, " ... provide positive,
lines were "very, very open." In con- growth-producing feedback to the canditrast, the 1978 SP! guideline• have date.''
Former Evergreen student JJave
''much more precision and 1tructure ...
The 1971 report 1tate1 that the new Siemens recaU., ..A lot of paranoia about
-guideline•" ... create a more open 1y1te1J1 that topic (starting a teacher certificaand encourage innovation; .. they "reprea- tion program) stopped them lrom
sent a new approach (that) provide(s) a , creating a program that would have
process, a rational and open 1y1tem far been really good, I think." Richard
1.imes
conat.ant recognition of new knowledge;• Alexander says, "We met le'9'el"&l
and that they are in "respoDN to the with representatives ol School Adminchanging educational need• of society istrations from Olympia and North
Thurston districts. They were very
and lndividuala,"
'Training is to be indlvidualiud," the eager to work with us (and) begin
report aays, "and offer alternate routeto serious negotiations. The negotiations
from which the trainee may select those collap ■ ed, not because they weren't
m.. t wmpaiible with his learning style. interested but becauae Evergreen didn't
New standards allow for shortening or want to work with them."
Dr. Cady from SP! 91ys Evergreen
lengthening training in terma ol the
individual's needa and ahiliti... " it ad<il: "could've (had a teacher certification pro"More llnt.-hand experience with chi!· gram) had they wanted." She aay, the
dren -ms
essential if actual training abaence of an educational department at
Evergreen would not have been a probperformance ia to be improved."
Donohue, 1erv1ng a ■ aam1n11trat1ve lem with the State Board ol Education.
Now that the 1971 SP! guidelines are
representative for Evergreen. wrote a
no longer in force and the present guide-letter to Evergreen'• president Chari..
McCann. dated January 18, 1972. recom- lines have reverted to a more conservamending couideration of teachen certi- tive approach to training teachers, it
would aeem Evergreen missed its chance
fication at Evergreen.
in 1972 to e1tabli1h an innovative
Neither the recommendationa Donohue teacher certification program.
preoented nor the 1971 SP! report encouraging t.eacher certification program&
to "create a more open 111tem and en•
courage innovation" were adequate
incentive for McCann to approve a
teacher certification program to eerve
beginning Wed. A:prll23
the Southwest Wuhlngton area. McCann
wrote: -1'011 11 exactly a corner-out1et-lffltt fundi P.istries,_
ol-Standard-Oil-approach that Evergreen
-is -.:lam-etf!Wly op~lionohue
made in our kitchen,
replied that the new guideline• were

Breakfast

LIFE DRAWING
CLASSES

and Coffees
7:45am until 10:30am

Luncheon

11:30--130
M-F

Now bci~ serval on
Every Wednesday 6-9 p.m.
Special Rates !or Student&
Wuhington Academy of Art
Corner of Martin Way & Hensley

456-0783

our porch garden

New academic dean cl1osen
Provoet Byron Yout.l hu announced
the appointment fl Dr. John Perkins u
Evergreen'• new Senior Academic o.n.
Perk.in, ia a graduate of Amherst (a
lege (1914) and hold• a Ph.D. from
Harvard (1988). He ia a bJoJopt whme
lntere1ta indude environ.mental biatory,
lcience, technoloa and public policy,
biatory of lcience and technology, and
world food problema.
Perkinl hu worked (or the. American
Friencb Servioe Committee. wu a P08t,
doctoral Reaeareh Fellow lD the Hitt«y
ol Sdence Department at Harvard, wu
a Principal Staff Officer for tu Envirulmental Studiea Board of the National
Academy of Sclencea. and this year ii a
Vl1iting Re1earcb A11oclate in the
Division of Biological Control at U.C.
Berkeley. He ii currently on the lacuhy

R

A

of lntercUsdplinary Studlu at Miami
Univeraity ln Oxford, Ohio. Bia appomt..
ment i1 effective approximately Au•
guat 1, 1980.
I

008T OPTBE SENIOR DEAN 8EARal

The aearcb for a new Sentor Academic
Dean to repJ.ace Barbara Smith hu been
very extenaive, involving over 100 appn.
canta from all over' the United Stat-.
Accordi~g to a high adminl1trative
aouree, the need to aeek out minority
and women candidate. wu the cauae ol
the 1eareb'1 conaiderableexpenae.Out of
the over 100 applicant.a,there wu one
minority candidateand leu than half a
dozen women candidate.. Three fl the
original candidateswere from Evergreen.
The aeareh ii over now. Dr. John

s

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ARTS

MU9C

Thureday, May 22
Co-Motion: An -ntng
or reportory dance
wlll start at 8 p.m. In the Experimental
Theatre. Tickets are $4 general, $2.50
atudenta / eenlora.
An exhibit laeturlng wOltl by two regional
ohotographer,
lllctlHI lloyd and Jamea
Sahlalnlnd, wll 1be In Gallery 4 INlurlng ex•
amplu of pnotojoumallam. Tha Gaiter, ta
open weekdays 12~: weekends 1-5.
Chlldhood'a End Gallery ,. laeturing Iha
potter) of '"91,1 IAwtng and prints by Caltl
cartne, AdMI G-.ky
and Marcia LN
Conigan•Duty. The Gaiter, la IOOlltad at 222
W. 4th, Olympia, and 11 oP9l'I dally 10:SCM
except ll!nday.
Thunday and Fltdey, Illy 22 end 23
The l'Nntom Fun Houle, an -ironmental
thMtre plby Jim Garonerwlll be ~led
at the Washington Hall PerlormanoeGall«y,
153 14th Ave. Entry tlrMS .,. In 16-mlnute
Intervals 1ta11tng at 7 p.m ANl!vatlona .,..
Htentlal and admlulon 11 S3.50. For ~•
tlonacall~9.
IMulldey and 6,nclly. May 2A and .21
Two chlldran'1 clanlcs, W1Mle fw Podl
and The Dey It Rained WIii be SlliGad by
1tudent1 at 2 and 4 p "" In the Experimental
Theatre Admlulon ,a s1 for clllldr91'1 under
12, $1 50 IOI' lludenl• and aenkn, and S2
general.
Tueaday and W~y.Mey27111d
211
One duo and ffvt solo perlonnauc.. of
danceraMeg Hunt and~I Kin,.,. aet for
8 p.m ,n Iha Recital Hall. For -lions
call 866-6070 Tlckat, $2 and WIii be on
Nie II the door.
WedNeday. May 2'
lmagel In Motion, a multi-media production
faeturlng live music and dance wlll be P«·
formed In The Experimental ThNtra 1tanlng
at 9 p.m Admlnlon la $1.60.

llluradlly, Illy 22

:

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COrMr

OINN£R

MQN..THUaS
Fal-SAT

LUNCH

MON-BJ

Thuraclay, May 22
The Olympia Nicaragua S>lldanty Commltt• wlll pramler • ,_
fllm to the NorthWMI
-entitled....._
VM (Sandino 1"'91) portraylnQ the ravolutlon In Nicaragua and Ila llffact•
In thal Cent,al Amer1can country. Showtlmae
are ThUl'ldly, May 22 at 12 noon In L.:tura
Hall 2 on on Fr1day, Mey 23 at 7:30 p.m. In
Meeting Room 3 of the Olympia Community
Cent•, 1314 But ◄th AV911ue.A donation of
S2 la auggeeted. All ptOCaada wtll ba ~
trtbul«I to aupport the 111-.oy cam~n
In
Nicaragua.
The EvergrMn Society of Amalgamated
Quut,.F,-udlana ~ta
........
FNUd'I
Dofa (U.S.A., 11II01 ◄O min.), a fllm by Anthony McCall, Clalr PoJackowekl, Andrew
Tyndall, and Jana Welnatock. An "anti•
Fraudlan Fraudlan" '1Mllll-gardllh flllJI that
daflea a elmpla dllctlptlon.
It'• beNd on
Fl9Ud'a 1801 cata ltudy, , .......
of •
....,...
of a Calaof ..,.._..
and aatlftzel
1"19Ud'e"emutty Imagination." Sound• Int.•
•ting, but might be off-Iva
to pur1tana.
8 p.m. CAI 101. Freel
Flld91, May 21
Fr1day Nita Fllme ~ti
lntNdar In ltl9
o.t (U.S.A., 1t48, 88 min.) beNd on the
novel by Wllllam Faulkner. Dlrectad by Clar·
enc, Brown, ,tarring
Juano Hernandaz,
ClaudeJannln, Jr., and WIii Gaar. FIimed In
FIUlknal'I "°"'9town o( Oxford, Mlulallppl,

Tbunday,llay22
Atnc:aUlelallon Day C.e.twaltofl wtn begin
at 12 noon with music and aoeakMa In Rad
Squer9 Of the CAB bulldlng; then fflCW9 to
CAB 110 for muralllt i--,
Slllmaud-Dln'e
WOfQhop and allde lhoW which ltal'ta at
3 p.m. From .... a fllm "Ttla White LMgar"
wtll be al'lown In Llctura Hall 5 followed by a
SpalMf. From 7~ p,m. "The Nuclea, FIie," a
ftlm on tha trann of nukN to South Afra
and • apaekar wlll be In Lecture Hall 1. The
night will culmlnate with a dance In the fourth
floor of tha library featuring
Tropical
• Rainstonn.
An &argrean etudant wlll lhow alldee and
dllCUSI har etudi.. In Cuba at 7 p.m. In
Laehn Hall ...
l.aglll .___
Waak'a free lunch hOur
WOltlshop wtll be on the topic of fooct.tampa
and wlll fflNI In CAB 110.
Atdey,lllly21
l.aglll AWNll'a free lunch hour

1
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S:Ol).10:00
5:0l).U:00

11:l0,2:00

SAT
of Thunton Avt • Capitol Way

U:CIO-l:00

~ I

G1VU

. __!
~

Tranaportation for the
final five candidatu
(8 air fare. one car fare)•
Hotel accommodations
(4 candidates for one
night each)•

1,200

V

125

Edacadon
Other

1,200

FILMS ON CAMPUS

EVENTS

(Good until June 1)

E

Olrellide •• lllper

100

wornhop wlll ba on the topic of collectlvN
and cooperatl- and WIii fflNI In CAB 1()8.
Third World Night at the New LIia Baptlat
Church. a continuation of Africa Liberation
Celabratlon wlll !Miura the fllm lb Deya In
Soweto, spaekere Dr. Dan Naclyana, Bruce
Johanson and Roberto MaNtu,
and the
Korean Communlt; Choir of Oly. Adml11lon
111free.

A concert of orlglnal wot111 composed by
Dave Marcuswill start at 8 p.m. In the Aec:ltal
Hall. Admission 1, free.
Alday: Mey 23
The Gnu Dell p~t•
delicate renditions of
Celtic mus~ with CINBNch, a duo f•turlng
tha Irish harp. The show 1tar11 at 9 p.m. and
adml11lon la $2.
Satuldlly,May 24
Singer/songwriter Craig Carothers bring•
his guitar and humor to the Gnu Dell. ewtlng
at 9 p.m. Admlulon 11$2.
A NASA benefit concert wlll •tart at 8 p.m.
In the CAB Building fMturlng muaic by Winter
Hawti. Ticket• are now on Mia for 12.50 at
aee-5297. Ticket• at the-door coat $3.50.

With this ad and purchau of ont of our Entrtt Crtpts
an tht Brittan~ Stylt Tradition.

I
I
I

Malling coata (catalog■
to most candidates)
Adverti.ling CQtta
(260-word Position
Available Notice):
New YorkTlaee (1 ad)

D

r-----~-----------------,
1
FREE CREPE DESSERT
I

Perkin• (a white male) from Miami
University In Ohio j.l Evergreen'• new
Senior Dean. To illuatrate the magnitude
of the HarCh conducted Uirougb the
Provost'• Office, here is a brief rundown
of cost e1timates:
1 part-time employee
S 462
1pecifitally hired to
handle correspondence
and filing for the Nareh:
(2 monthl, 110 hours
at $4.20/bour)

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-

,.

104

TOTAL
$8,817
~No transportation or
accommodation cost. for
Russ Lidman
Thi.a figure does not. of coune, include
regular 1taff time or time contributed by
the Senior Dean Screening DTF.

N

E

T

·S

this le by far the belt fllm adaptation of a
Faulkner novel. Hamendez playa Lucaa a....
champ, a proud and etubbom black man who
11 falaely accueed of murder. A small whlla
boy trlea to help prove LUCM'I lnnocanca
before tha lynch mob can catch him. Thia also the flrat Important antl-ruclet fllm and
and many of Oxford'• Inhabitant• play the bit
.-ti and In Iha Cl'OWd--Bacauaaof Ila
"neo,.raeltet" etyla, the lllm well-racalvad
In Europa, wher9 It Mined • number of
awwd1, but WU vlrtually lgllOl'lld In the U.S.
untll Iha 80'1. Pluat A 1944 Gandy GooN
cartoon. L.H.I. 3, 7, and 9:30. S1111only a
doll•.
llondlly, Illy a end T...i.ty, Mey ff
E.P.I.C. sw-te
1'91• Oma and Ban
Schnalder"e HMr1a end Mindi (U.S.A., 1974,
112 min.). Ona of the moat Important ~
mantanea of the put decade, tha fllm ax•
p10191the effect of the Vlalnam w.- on tha
Vietand the Amartcanpeycha. Whan
Ihle fllm ehowad at EvergrNn In 1978, Iha
CPJ ,.,, I front l)IIQa atory on It with Iha
hemline, "You Muat Sea i-ta.te and Mlndll"
Well, anybody who 1-\'t It lhould 11111
IN It any,dy. LH.I. Monday at 7:30. Tueaday at 12 noon. FINI
T...i.ty, Illy 'ZI
The Alpine Club ~ta
Iha documantlry
F- Clfflb, the ato,y of the flm fra-cllrnblng
aacent of tha 2000-foot World-ct111 Hall
Dome In '1baamlle Valley, C..,lfomla. The fllm
11 narrated by Robert Radford. Watch for
poet.. for ahowtl~
and location.
Coffllng UP
Jon■fl wtll ba 25 In Iha YNr 2000 wlll be
lhowlng In L.H.1. on Thul'lday, May 29. MOl9
details nex1 week. By Iha way, lntNdaf In Iha
Duet II really about an ~lctl•
from New
England who travel• to Ylklma, Washington,
to find wont. To ht1 eurprlae, he find• Iha
whole town cO¥er9d In volcanlc uh. (I Just
couldn't raetat that one.)
• -T.J.S.

SUMMIB
SJOltAQSPECIAL
FQI-SJVPENIS
Shu,sardMini-Storage
1620BlaclcLake Boulevard
c:a11
351.1100
1 Montb'•
F,n Beat
on 3-month's rental
of a 3x5 mini 5x5 mini or Sx5 unit

°'

Energy Auditors
......,•--•

200
1.625
1,126

Begin June 15, 1980, and run for 8-U wks.
The Student Conaervatlon Aseodation Is offering posi·
tions nationwide u e-Mrgy auditon for the National Park
Sttvlc:e.
Partldpanta will be part of a team, aurveying and record•
iQI data.fGr 8'"ff
IUfwe,1 In Pmk 9t1vkfhdlltlff
.
Oeaitt 1ldll1 in math, surveying, ttatistia, carpentry,
plumbing, or buildina maintenance.
Academic b&dtgrounda u.ttfulare physia, dvil, structural
and mechanical enginemng, environmerttal ttudia. math,
. accounting, or archltec:turt to name a kw .
Weekly atlpends, in addition to an honorarium at the end
of the tour of duty, Is provided.
Trawl grant, housing, on-the-job tranaportati.on, and
uniform allowance provided.
Junior, Senior or igraduatestandiJ1apreferred.
Contact the Student Coneervatlon Anoclatlon at
1--4U-36U or the Career Planning and Pbarnent Offlce at
The Evugreen State College. Application deadline la
May 30. EOE.

Media
cpj0226.pdf