The Cooper Point Journal Volume 9, Issue 21 (March 12, 1981)

Item

Identifier
cpj0249
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 9, Issue 21 (March 12, 1981)
Date
12 March 1981
extracted text
,/

The Evergroon State Co11s,~~

Olympia, Waetungton~50~
The Evergreen State College
Olymoia, WA 98505

Arts & Events

COOPERPOINT

Music

AIRlS -------------1
"11leClowns"

Baroque& Classical Music

Mar h 5. The Clowns will be shown in
L. H. , al 3, 7 and 9:30. It was made In Italy
in 197, and was directed by Frederico Fellini.
Highly recommended. Admission is $1.25.

Vocal and instrumental musicians will combine talents to present an evening recital of
baroque and classical music March 4, beginning at 8 p.m. in the Recital Hall of the
Comm. Bldg. at TESC. The Wed. night concert, directed by faculty member Dr. William
Winden, presents students in the "Design in
Music" program performing pieces by such
composers as Handel, Mozart, Bach and
Beethoven. Free.

"My Brilliant CarQer"
""My Brilliant Career": The story is simple:

Sybyalla Melvyn is an exuberant young girl
growing up in the Australian outback during
the turn of the century. She admits to a solid
streak of egotistical independence that prevents her from engaging in the dusty struggle
of becoming the wife of a dirt farmer, or
anyone else. "A beautiful prOductlon distinguished by a vivid sense of the periOds,
locale, and characterization." Directed by Gill
Armstrong, 1980, Australia. Plus: Heckle and
Jackie in their first cartoon appearance.
""Talking Magpies." March 6. L.H. 1, 3, 7 and
9· 30. $1.25.

"OkanoganValley Swing Band"

Sat., March 7, Smoking in Bed and the
Westside Lockers will appear at the Gnu Deli
from 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Tickets are $2.50 in
advance, $3.50 al the door. Located on the
corner of Thurston Ave. & Capitol Way,
943-1371.


Wed . March 11, 7 and 9:30. the Arts
Resource Center presents Federico Fellini's
masterpiece '"8'1>'"(Italy. 1963. 138 min.)
starring Marcello Mastroianni, Anouk Aimee.
and Claudia Cardinale. This turning point In
Fellin,·s career ,s an autobiographical tour de
lorce about a him director who is creatively
bankrupt and hounded by his w,fe and
mistress He escapes into childhood memories and sexual fantasies In what is by far
the most glorious '"portrait of the artist as a
middle-aged man" on film. L.H. 1, $1.25.

"MaynardFerguson"
Jazz trumpeter Maynard Ferguson comes to
the Moore Theater for one concert on Sat.,
March 7 at 8 p. m. Tickets are on sale at the
Ticket Place at the Bon downtown and the
usual out lets.

"Toots & The Maytals"
Sun., March 8 at 8 p.m., Toots & The
Maytals will perform at the Showbox. Also
March 14, Harry Chapin at the Paramount
Theater and March 18, Pat Travers with Rainbow at the Seattle Arena.

, Lectures
"Franceby Bicycle''

ManhattanTransfer

Thurs. March 5. 7 p.m· The journey of 13
local cyclists toU1ing the Loire River Valley
and the coast of Brittany wdl be the subject
ot the slide ~h Jw Included will be informational oeta.is neede.:J lo plan a bike trip in
France R.E I. Co-op. 1::i25 11th Ave ..
Sea1tle Free

Tues., March 31, "Manhattan Transfer" will
be on slage in the Seattle Center Opera
House. For information call 344-7271.

Weekly Jazz Concertsin Olympia
Northwest singer Jan Stentz will perform
every Sun. and Mon. night in March at
Carnegie's in Olympia. Sunday night sessions
17 lo 11 p.m.) will Include such artists as Joni
Metcalf. Barney McClure and Art Lande. Monday nights (8 to 11 p.m.) Ms. Stentz will be
accompanied by Jazz great, Jack Percival on
piano. Carnegie's is located at Seventh and
Franklin in Olympia.

EnvironmentalPolitics

Photo by Edward Weston
Galleries

"Trekkingin Nepal"

''The Movementsof the '60sWhereAre They Today?"
""The Movements of the '60s-Where Are
They Today?" will be discussed by a panel of
social activists on Sat., March 14, 8 p.m. al
Freeway Hall, 3815-Sth Ave. NE, Seattle.
Donation is $2. For tickets, childcare, transportation, or more information, call 632-7449,
632-1851 or 122-3812.
I

1981 Governor's
InvitationalExhibition
The 1981 Governor's Invitational Exhibition
of painters will open in the Stale Capitol
Museum with a public review and reception
honoring the artists on Sun., March 8, from
1 :30 to 4:30 p.m. The show will include
works by 30 Washington artists invited to
participate In the event. An award of special
commentation will be presented by Governor
John Spellman to the artist who, over a period
of years. has brought recognition to the state,
and has maintained a high degree of artistic
excellence. The museum is open from
10 am -4:30 p.m .. Tues.-Fri. and 12-4 p.m ..
Sal. and Sun. Free.

Arts NW Student Gallery

Dance
EvergreenAlbum Benefit Dance
Sat , March 7. at 8 p.m., the 4th floor of
the TESC library, there will be a dance to
benefit the Evergreen Album Project #2 featuring Medusa and RMF. $2.75 in advance
(tickets available at TESC Bookstore) and
$3.50 at the door. Beer will be served so bring
your I.D.

During March the Arts NW Sludent Gallery
is featuring a diverse assortment of artwork
from art training programs throughout Washington state. The show, which continues
through March 31, is designed to display the
direction, focus and philosophy of each student"s work. A wide variety of styles and
media are spotlighted. The gallery iS open
Mon. thru Sun .. from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in
the Pike Place Markel at 1500 Western Ave.

WallflowerOrder
Sal., March 7, 8 p.m.: The Wallflower
Dance Troupe will perform in the second floor
Library lobby. Tickets are $3 and childcare
arrangements may be made in advance by
calling 866-6162.

Ballet Northwest
Ballet Northwest"s Spring show at TESC
will be performed March 27, 28, and 29 at
8 p.m., and 2 p.m. respectively, in the Experimental Theatre. The performance will include:
a pas de deux en pointe danced to the suite
from Handel's "The Water Music," scenes
from Stravinsky"s 1919 "Fire Bird," and dances
from the "Palm Court Concert."" Call 753-3365
or 352-0374 for information.

Miscellaneous

CommunityGardenPlots
If you are interested in growing your own
vegies and planning to be here over \he summer. there is a work party and potluck dinner
at the OrJanic Farm, Sat., March 7 10-6 p.m.
Wear boots, gloves. and work clothes. The fee
is $5 for the season. For informat;on call
866-6161.

Cherry BlossomFestival
The Sixth Annual Cherry Blossom and
Japanese Cultural Festival will be held April
17-19 at the Seattle Center Flag Pavilion and
Opera House. A variety of cultural exhibits
and entertainers from Japan will be featured.
Most events are free and open to the public.
Sponsors are the Japan-America Society of
the State of Washington, and other groups.
For more information, call 762-4023.

Washington State University Masters of
Business Administration program will have
a representative on campus to recruit students
for the program. People interested in learning
more about WSU's MABA program should see
Dr. Edward Perkins on Wed., March 11. 9-4 in
LIB 1406. For information call 866-6193.

GRE/lSAT PracticeTesting
Fri .. March 6 practice testing tor the GAE
will be in L.H. 5, 8 a.m.-12 noon: the LSAT is
1-5 p.m., L.H. 5.

SummerTeaching
Interested in teaching a group of students
this summer? North Thurston School District
is starting a Summer Enrichment Program
beginning June 29. Possible subjects for the
six-week program range from instrumental
music, art·cooking, chess, mind games, to
refresher courses in math and realling for
grades 2-12. Instructors will be paid for their
teaching. You can obtain an application from
the Office of College Relations, LIB 3114.

GreenpeaceSeal Benefit
The Olympia office of GREENPEACE is
sponsoring a "Save the Seals" benefit concert,
Saturday, March 7, at the Olympia ballroom in
the Olympian hotel. Fine acoustic music will
be provided by "Three Hands High and
Friends" and Pat Cole and Jim Cubbage. The
Bosco Boys will perform amazing feats of
juggling skill and there will be a slide presentation of the supertanker protest. Tickets are
$3.50, children under 1Oare free, and the
doors open at 7 :30 p.m. For more information
conlact Olympia GREENPEACE in the
E. R.C , 866-6784.

Theater

HeddaGabler
Thurs., March 5-7, 8 p.m.: Hedda Gabler is
on stage In the Comm. Bldg.'s Experimental
Theatre. Tickets are on sale at Yenney's Music
and the TESC Bookstore: $4 general and
$1 .50 for students and senior citizens. Reservations may be made by calling 866-6070.

WildernessTeachers
Want to learn and instruct with young
people this summer in the Olympic Mountains? Bridges Environmental Education
Project is forming its spring cluster contract
that will lead to summer backcountry experiences for youth. Spring academics include
learning theory, adolescent development.
teaching techniques and ethics. Summer practical two-week courses for teens: backpacking. camping, canoeing, climbing, environmental studies. For information contact
Barrett Burr by March 5, 866-2217.

WSU Mastersof BusinessAdmin.

Galleries-TESC
Gallery Two-"New
Metal Work" by graduate students from the University of Washington working with faculty members John
Marshall and Mary.Lee Hu.
Gallery Four-John
Hoover: Images In
Cedar: Recent work by a noted regional
ar1ist-Aleut sculptor.
Gallery Two Is open daily during library
hours. Gallery Four is open weekdays 12-6,
weekends 1-5.

Learning To Live

WestsideLockers

Black Orpheus

Thurs., March 12, 7 p.m., Steven Bizruchka.
author of "A Guide to Trekking in Nepal,"" will
discuss his book and show slides on trekking
routes. trek planning information, weather.
equipment and the natural history and culture
of th.s remote and-beautiful area. R.E.I.
Co-op, 1525 11 lh Ave .. Seattle. Free.

March 12, 1981

Sat., Feb. 7, Applejam presents an evening
of Western Swing music featuring the smooth
prairie harmonies of the Leon McBristow Trio.
Doors open at 8 p.m., 8:15 open mike, main
act follows. $2. YWCA, 220 East Union,
Olympia, WA.

Sat., March 7, the counseling center is .
sponsoring "Black Orpheus'" at 7 and 9: 30 In
L H. 1 $1 25.

'"Ervironmental Politics as a Class Issue.'"
Dr Mall~ew Sm,th will discuss ways in which
envtronmenlal degradation and environmental
policy affect people of varying socio/ economic
backgrounds He will also discuss the feasib1l1tv al sound environmental policy in the
context of a capitalist economy. Group discussion ,s encouraged. Mon .. March 9,
7 .30 p.m .. L.H. 1. Free.

Volume 9, • No. 21

CelebrateInternational
Women's Day
The celebration begins Sat., March 7, with
an lnternalional Cultural Celebration from
1-4 p.m. at the Community Center, 1314 E.
4th. Sunday, March 8, is a day filled with
workshops, discussions, music and food. For
free childcare, call 352-WOOD. For information, call 866-6162.

Bird and Manvnal Society
The spring meeting, March 7, of the Pacific
Northwest Bird and Mammal Society is being
held at TESC, L.H. 2, from 12:30-6:30 p.m.
An art show of wildlife paintings by Michelle
Lagory is featured.

''lhree Women"
Seattle Project in association with ADT Productions will present "Three Women'" by
author poet Sylvia Plath on March 5-8 at
8 p.m. In addition there will be two late
evening performances on March 6 and 7 at
10 p.m. The play is a dramatic portrait of the
transformation of three women as they experience pregnancy and childbirth. All performances are at the Washington Hall Performance
Gallery, 153 14th Ave.

Arts
Artists In School
The challenge of matching professional
artists to school-sponsored arts projects is in
progress in preparation for the 1981 Artists-inIn-Schools program. Until March 31, the
Washington State Arts Commission will
accept project proposals for AID funds and
artists applications for AIS employment.
Needed: Material for Literary Publication

The Arts Resource Center is soliciting
material for a literacy publication which will
be printed in May 1981. Essays, fiction,
prose. poetry, and any form of visual art
which can be reprOduced in black and white
are needed. The deadline is March 15; submissions can be turned into the Arts Resource
Center, LIB 3215, 866-6148.

Win a Free Massage
From March 2-13, The Women's Clinic Is
having a FoOd Drive for the needy Women's
Shelter. Please bring non-perishable foods to
the Women's Clinic and win a chance for a
free message.

CPJ Readers ...
The deadline for submissions for Arts and
Events, and Notes is by noon Friday for entry
into the nexl week's CPJ. Letters (typed
double spaced) must be In by nopn Monday
Thank you.

by Andrew Derby

guage proficiencies, they all share a
common respect for learning. "They have
Learning English is only part of the
a lot of discipline," noted Larry Norwood,
education received by 1000 Southeast
Capital High Principal. "They know they're
Asian immigrants who have settled in
not going to make it in America unless
Olympia during the past five years Living
they can speak English and get a high
in America entails learning a new lanschool diploma. This is most important to
guage, cultural values and adopting a
them. Some take home tape recorders to
foreign lifestyle. For most Asian children
practice their English. There is no problem
education about their new country is prowith motivation."
vided by the Olympia public school
system.
Richard Bird, director of the ESL proThe English as a Second Language
gram in Olympia public schools, agrees
Program-(ESL) was specifically designed
that Asian academic attitudes are very
for students with limited English s·peaking
positive. "Teachers really enjoy teaching
abilities. Over 99% of these students are
these kids,'' said Bird. "They give emofrom Asia. Participants in the ESL program
tional feedback and are extremely motiare voluntarily enrolled at the discretion
vated as a group."·
of their parents. Students are bused from
School officials agree that cultural
all parts of Olympia to the Westside
assimilation is a primary goal of ESL.
schools, Garfield Elementary, Jefferson
Without a proper understanding of English
Middle, and Capital High the only three
and American cultural values, Asian immischools to include ESL in their curriculum.
grants suffer many problems stemming
There are approximately 250 Asian
from alienation.
children enrolled in ESL. Their placement
depends upon their age rather than on
"My experience has been that people
their academic ability. Some Asian childfear what they don't understand," said
ren, particularly Vietnamese, have been
Norwood. "I don't think people from
educated in their own country and adapt
Southeast Asia can come to America and
to American schools very well. Others
expect to live like Asians, continuing their
. have never even seen a schoolhouse belanguage and traditional customs. It's imfore arriving in America.
portant that they don't lose their cultural
Though there are inequalities among
" .,heritage but they still have to accept the
the Asian students in scholastic and Ian"values which come with their new life."



1n

the U.S.A.

The mainstreaming process begins with
their education. Bird explained that the
~SL prograin has three components. The
first component places students with a
certified teacher for two hours each day
to learn English The second places bilingual aids into the classes to teach the
children basic math, science and study
skills in their native tongue and in English. The third component places the
children into integrated classrooms with
other students.
Bird is very enthusiastic about_ the third
component Garfield Elementary, where
Bird teaches, has nearly 1.10Asian students, six or seven per classroom. Certain
educational materials arC' modified when
dealing with specific subjects such ii,
reading.
"We found traditional reading material,
inappropriate for these children," ,aid
Bird "These material, were designed for
regular American stucients with six or
seven year, of c1native language behind
them. We have to u,., special materials
and have gone back to the sight-word
1
iooks. Sight-word is memori;:ation and it
works very w<:>IIEach teacher teaches
sight-word and when the child is ready,
we'll move on to phonetic~"
Bird pointed out various activities that
the Asian students were absorbed in
during a visit to the classrooms. One girl
was receiving math instruction from a
Cambodian aide. Eight other children
were sitting in a semi-circle with their
teacher flashing picture cards. As each
picture was shown, the students pronounced its English name.
Bird asked one girl to read aloud a
paragraph from her reading book. She did
,o flawlessly, received a proud word of

As part of their annual spring cleaning,
the ASH apartments will be spraying
herbicide to keep down weeds around the
buildings. Concern about the spraying was
raised by some ASH residents. According •
to Ray Miner, manager of the apartment
complex, the herbicide being used,
Aptrex, has been approved by tne Environmental Protection Agency. John
Rmene. Supervisor of Inspection and
Enforcement for the Olympia Air-Pollution
Control Authority, has also given his
approval to the use of Aptrex at the ASH
apartments.
Jim Carlin, pesticide investigator for the
State Department of Agriculture said,
Aptrex is a "Type 3 pesticide." State law
places pesticides in three categories.
Type 1 pesticides require a license to use
and must have a skull and cross-bones
and the word danger on the label. Type 2

pesticides must have a warning statement
on the label; they are riot as toxis a~
Type 1 pesticides but still must be used
with care. Type 3 pesticides are the least
toxic; they must have the words "caution"
and "keep out of reach of children" on
the label.
According to its label, Aptrex Is a nonselective week killer. That is, it is toxic to
all plants. It is best used in the spring.
Applications of the herbicide should be
followed by a thorough watering to help
the herbicide seep into the ground where
it will attack the·root systems of young
plants. When used according to the directions on the label, said Carlin, Aptrex is
"one of the safer pesticides " Application
of Aptrex does not require a license.
However, even if a chemical is approved by the E.P.A., if spraying of the
chemical results in injury or sickness, the
spraying is in violation of the law said
Rosene. Air Pollution Control Authority

Younger students adapt more easily to
the ESL program than their older brothers
and sisters. One reason is that languages
are more easily learned at a younger age.
.Another is the lack of outside pressures
c1ndeasier acceptance from their American school-mates.
Garfield is an older school than most,
lacking the brick and glass one story look
prevalent in most modern educational
111stitutions.The walls are covered with
children's art. flags and pictures of foreign
lands and words which conv v "good
morning" in different languagps
The children are bright and cht'erlul,
full of thC' boundless energy chilrartemt1L
oLlheir age group fhey are a totally intPgrated group-workmg,
playing. i111d
eating lunch together The A,,an, arP very
proud of their little ,\merican fm ..ncJ,
~arlier problems with rc1c1alpn'11Jd11..,
have subs1decl according to Bird • \"vhcit
.ve'vp tried to do here," he exrila1m·d. 1,
ry to e,tablish a respect for d1ftPrent
ulturC's, rat ial groups and V.d1,, of c/rnng
things amongst all of us WP tear h about
our heritage as Americans It', something
that everyone of us needs: to believe in
themselves. to like themselves, being
proud of where they are from what their
parents do; all of these thing,. We try to
convey the idea that all of us are IrnrnIgrants at least in some point of our ancestral heritage"
The same attitude of cultural pride and
acceptance is promoted at Jefferson Middle and Capital High schools: Jefferson
recently hosted the Seattle Repertory
I heat re Mobile Outreach Bunch. who performed a play entitled "Nt>wcomers " The
Continued on page 6

50,000 Students Miss the Boat
-on Col-lege Grants
La~t year, some 50,000 eligible student,
lost out on Basic Ed~cation Grants, according to the National Institute of
Independent Colleges and Universities.
Almost $60,000,000 could have been
awarded to these qualified students last
year, but the major reasons they missed
out included ( 1) applying too late, (2)
applying incorrectly, and (3) not applying
at all.
These Basic Education Grants are the
best-known, and probably the best publicized of the available money for college
It therefore seems surprising that so many
students overlooked them.
Obviously, if in just one year, 50,000
students neglected getting $60,000,000

ASH Spraying Legal Says Inspector
By Allen Levy

praise and then returned happily to her
seat.

regulations state that "No person shall
cause or allow the emission of an air contaminant if the air contaminant causes
detriment to the health, safety, or welfare
of any person, or causes damage to property or business." Rosene said that anyone
who becomes ill as a result of the spray111g and can document it with a signed
r,octor's statement can file a complaint
•vith the Olympic Air Pollution Control
'\uthority at 352-4881.
Dick Schwartz, Vice President for Rus1ness, said that the ASH apartmeng are a
private busine~s and as such the school
has no authority or responsibility for what
goes on there. The only thing that the
school can demand of the ASH apartments is that they lease only to students
or faculty.
Miner said that he and his staff are
carefully following the directions on the
label. "I wouldn't spray anything that was
harmful to children," he said.

from ,uch a well-known government program, thousands of other students cou Id
be losing out unneces,arily on even more
money that might be available to them
[xample million, of dollars are available from le,ser-known ,ources of funds
such as ··private" donors (non-government).
Parents and students should not overlook the thousands of scholarships and
grants that are available from a multitude
of "private" donors like foundations. philanth ropiSts, trust funds. corporations, religious groups, labor unions, social,
fraternal, professional and civic organizations and others.
Finding and keeping track of these
"private funds is a huge, complicated
task One nationw1se service organization,
The Student Assistance Council of America, has collected 250,000 donor award
sources of college money worth $500,000000 from all over the U.S
Since substantial amounts of "private"
funds are hidden behind certain el1gibtlitv
requirements, students can be matched
to money they need for college; money
which they are qualified to receive because of religion, ethnic heritage, residence, maIor, career, parent's mil1tarv
,ervice, unions, or clubs
l he Council matches student- through
incl1viduillized research by computer, and
provides up to 25 sources of fund, for
coliege to each applicant which they art•
eligible to receive.
Parents and students should never
automatically as,ume they are 1nelig1ble
The trick is to apply early, correctly, and
often. And, apply everywhere you can.
For information and an application
form, write Student Assistance Council,
Suite 628V, 1775 Broadway, New York, NY
10019, enclosing $1.00 for 1st Class
Postage, handling, etc

SewageTreatment Plants Wi 11
EasePollution Problems
by Jeff Radford
Two new waste treatment plants currently under construction in Olympia will
help to alleviate pollution problems in
Budd Inlet according to administrators for
those projects. One project, a ,econdary
sewage treatment plant being built by the
City's public works department, is •
,cheduled for completion in the Spring of
1982
The ,econd projecTh an ethanol production rlant being built by the Olympia
Brewery
The total cost of the new city sewage
treatment plant is $63 million, 75% of
which is financed by a grant from the
f'ederal Government. The State of
Washington is paying 15%, and the City
is picking up the remainder. The plant is
part of a regional treatment program
called "LOTT," a project where.-the cities
oi Lacey. Olympia and Tumwater are
combining efforts to provide facilities to
service all three cities.

According to Carrie Berry, Project Administrator for the Department of Ecology
which is funding th_eproject, construction
of the new sewage plar,t will take place in
three stages. The first stage deals with
facility planning of the plant, and improvements made on the existing sewer
system, including cleaning and inspection.
A cost-effective analysis will also be computed and made available to the public
during this stage. Phase two concerns itself with design plan specifications involving detailed architectural drawings of
the plant along with precise explanations
of these drawings. The final stage involves
construction of the plant itself.
When asked about the impact of President Reagan's budget cuts on the project,
Berry said the funds for the project have
already been obligated by the State and
Federal Government.
The second project, an ethanol production plant under construction by Olympia
Brewery will reduce the amount of gase-

JournalistGives
EvergreenWhiff
of Real.World

ous waste being processed by the Municiof sewage disposal deemed necessary by
pal sewage treatment plant. The plant will
the MSD, said Kilpatric. He also stated
produce 700,000 gallons of ethanol annuthat pollution leaving the Brewery is presally, most of which will be converted into
ently equivalent to 1,850 milliivams (mg)
gasahol for automobile use. Mike Kilpatric,
per liter of water. Once the etnahol plant.
a Brewery representative, stated that there
is completed, the amount ct solids enwill be a 70% reduction in wastes
tering the treatment plant will be reduced
pumred into the municipal sewage system
by between 350 and 400 mg per liter.
after completion of the ethanol plant.
The primary plant removes solids that
Brewery waste pumped into the municisettle and the secondary will remove the
pal system falls under two categories,
according to Ross Allen, senior operator
remaining solids. Allen pointed out the
of the treatment plant. Biochemical Oxydifference between these and a third kind
gen Demand Wastes (BOD) are organic
of plant described as one that removes
wastes-mostly carbohydrates and sugars,
chemical elements, called a tertiary plant.
which increase oxygen requirements for
The Olympia area does not need a tertiorganisms in Budd Inlet. The other wastes
ary plant because not enough chemical
are suspended (non-organic) solids.
pollution problems are present in this
The pollution standards the Brewery
area. The combined efficiency of the
must follow are set by the Municipal Sew- ethanol plant and the secondary treatage District (MSD) Those standards are
ment plant will retain 90% of both susbased on state ecology standards which
pended material and 80% of sedimentary
are based, in turn, on Federal regulations.
matter through the operation of the priThe Brewery intends to follow standards
. mary plant alone.

I

Famed journalist Richard Dudman inaugurated the Woodrow Wilson Visiting
Fellows program with a four.-day visit to
Evergreen last week. The purpose of his
visit, Dudman said, was to give a small,
isolated college such as Evergreen "a whiff
of the real world and to talk about what
reporting and Washington are like."
Richard Dudman is Washington Bureau
Chief for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. He
gained much recognition for his coverage
of the Vietnam war-a war he saw for the
first time during a visit to Laos in 1962.
I.F. Stone calls Dudman one of the best
reporters in Washington.

by Andy McCormick
"Washington seems unreal to me now,"
Dudman said of the way the nation's
capitol has changed since Reagan's victory. "I have to keep pinching myself to
accept the fact that politicians, reporters,
and administration officials are talking
about a naval blockade of Cuba or military intervention in El Salvador."
Although the mood of Washington has .
changed with Reagan, Dudman doesn't
think the role of the national press is any
different. The press has always been, and
will continue to be, a Fourth Estate, Dudman said. And the kind of investigative
reporting done in Watergate has not
altered that fact-except for the worse.
Watergate has been a bad influence on
the Washington press corps/ said Dudman, "The press thinks it destroyed Nixon
when it was the judicial system, people
like Scirica and Nixon himself that did
him in. The cockiness and idealization of
the press has really steered people away
from the nuts and bolts of reporting." He
added, "They're not interested in anything except destroying a President."
Dudman said he tells people they
should go into journalism if they're
interested in understanding the im-portant
issues of the day and explaining them to
the reader.

Dealing with Sexual
Harassment
by Emily Brucker

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Sexual harassment exists at Evergreen,
but few people realize they can do anything about it. In interviews with Rebecca
. Wright, Affirmative Action Representative,
and Kathie McCarth1e, Co-coordinator of
the Women's Center, both stressed that
men and women are not taking advantage
of their rights as expressed in title IX and
VII of the Civil Rights Act.
According to Wright, title IX states that
a man or a woman has the right to equal
access to all educational opportunity, and
if a person feels he or she is being
discriminated against, or harassed by a
person in authority, he or she can take
legal action.

ANALYSIS

Tuition-You
Paythe Bill
by Jim Anest

The Washington State Legislature is
currently considering a number of proposals to increase the tuition students pay
to attend Evergreen or other State Public
Universities. Just how big an increase may
well depend on whether students can get
an effective message to the Legislature in
the next week or two.
Tuition now costs $618.00 per year to
attend Evergreen. Current proposals are
now before the Legislature to increase this
to $735.00 next fall and $774.00 by 1982
(or 25% of costs). That is the mildest
propo,al likely to be passed by a Legislature which is convinced that it cannot
rai,e taxes, and therefore must slash social
programs, including State support for •
higher education.
A bill sponsored by Senator Scott of
Seattle would increase tuition to over
$900.00 per year (or 33% of costs). At
least one Senator (Quigg from Grays Harbor) has seriously proposed that student
pay 100% of college costs for a resident
tuition level of over M,000.00 per year.
It is evident that· such proposals raise
,erious questions about this State's compage 2 Cooper Point Journal March 12, 1981

mitment to equal access to higher education. While Washington has had a longstanding "open door" policy that college
admission must not be based on one's
ability to pay-these recent proposals
threaten to close the college entrance on
many poor and even middle class students. Furthermore, most of these proposals contain provisions for an "automatic escalator" that would automatically
increase tuition as the costs of instruction
rise. This would allow the Legislators to
effectively duck their responsibility to set
tuition levels and thereby
avoid any
unpleasant political fallout.
All of this comes at a time of serious
cuts in State support to higher education
budgets and while President Reagan is
proposing substantial cuts in Federal financial aid programs. One of Reagan's
proposals would make students liable for
interest on their student loans even while
they were still in school. Major cuts are
also proposed for Guaranteed Student
Loans and Pell Loans (formerly known as
NDSL loans.)

college loans in today's unc.ertain job
market.
Students who wish to let their Legislatos know their opinions on the proposed
increases can do so by calling 1-800-5626000 and leaving a brief message, or
writing the Representatives below c/o
House or Senate, Olympia, Washington,
98504.
In the next week or two, the Senate
Higher Education Committee and party
leadership will be decidtng which increase
to recommend. While the similar House
committee has recommended the lower
25% of cost increase, there is strong
support for the 33% of cost proposal in
the Senate.
Key Legislators to contact would be:
Representatives: Chandler, Teutsch,
Prince, Polk, and King. Senators: Benitz,
Patterson, Shinpoch, Scott, Bottinger, and
Hayner.
Governor Spellman has yet to take a
stand on the size of the increase and
would surely like to hear your views.
You pay the bill, you ought to have a
voice in the decision!

Poor and minority students will be hurt
the most by these proposals because they
are less likely to want to take on large

Jim Anest is the Director of The Washington Association of University Students.

Title VI I defines sexual harassment as
unwelcome sexual advances or requests
for sexual favors when submission is
explicit or implicit; when submission or
rejection is used as a basis for employment decisions affecting the individual; or
when such advances interfer with the
individual's work performance.
Wright said that more cases are brought
against employers than schools for a
number of reasons. For one, federallyfunded institutions found in violation of
title IX, may be declared ineligible for
government funding. Another reason is
that, "There's more understanding of the
problems on the job. A lot of people in
this country still feel that education is a
luxury and that the girls are lucky to get
there in the first place," Wright continued.
At Evergreen there are two ways to file
a grievance concerning sexual harassment.
Either you file an informal one with
Rebecca Wright, or a formal written one
through the school, or with agencies in
Olympia
Although women on campus have legal
protection from sexual. harassment, "Women have no (legal) protection as far aspublic accomodations and eating places,"
said Wright. "People who are subjected to
that kind of treatment because of race
can complain. Right now, it's perfectly
legal in public places to harass women."
Kathie McCarthie feels that women
should confront men verbally and as soon
as possible when they feel they are being
harassed. "If no one complains, it's not
harassment" said McCarthie, "The problem is perceiving what's a bad thingsome women like being hooted at."
What may seem like sexual harassment
to one woman may be ignored or put up
with by another. McCarthie said that "It's
easier to let harassment pass." Wright
stressed that "Women that have put up
with sexual harassment for forty or fifty
years are angry at younger women for not
putting up with harassment."
The problem with confrontation, said
McCarthie is that "You get dubbed as
some bitter hard-ass person because you're
speaking out." "It seems like the people
who really do get the action done for
racial minorities and women, are the
people who maybe are the whiners, complainers and the trouble makers...on the
other hand, maybe they just get labeled,"
Wright said.
"Sexual harassment is only part of the
spectrum of sex discrimination" said
McCarthie. "The spectrum startswith not
treating women fairly in the classroom
and on the job-and ends in rape."

.,!

Concerning a major issue in the last
election-the emergence of the New
Right-Dudman said the pendulum is
swinging in a conservative direction more
than it has in a long time.
Besides the talk of a naval blockade in
Cuba and possible military intervention in
El Salvador, Dudman said he needed to
"pinch" himself back into reality when
reading of Reagan's proposed economic
policy. "It's a screwball plan to bring back
prosperity: cutting taxes and essential
services in hopes the benefits obtained by
the rich will trickle down to the poor."
Dudman also said part of the reason for
the present .unreality of Washington is the
"honeymoon" the press has granted to
Reagan. "When you have an amiable,
attractive President, there's a big tendency
for people to close their eyes and plunge
ahead."
El Salvador: Another Vietnam?
Dudman's Thursday night speech was
originally entitled "The Reagan Revolution
in Foreign Affairs," but, in a last minute
switch, that title was changed to "Can
El Salvador Become Another Vietnam?"
H'is decision to narrow his focus to just El
Salvador reflects the seriousness with
which Dudman views recent events in
that country.
One of the recurrent themes throughout
the Wilson Fellow's speech was his fear
that Reagan sees Vietnam as a war the
U.S. should have won. Reagan has started
referring to Vietnam as "a noble cause,"
and has told veterans groups that they
were "deprived of a victory" while serving
in S.E. Asis, Dudman said.
The consequence of Reagan's view of
Vietnam, he continued, is that El Salvador
becomes seen as a place for the U.S. to
revenge itself for its defeat in ,Southeast
Asia. The administration thinks that
America, by acting tough in El Salvador,
will show the Russians that, despite Vietnam, the country is still powerful.

Dudman denounced such views of El
Salvador and Vietnam. "Vietnam wi!s a
tragedy, a defeat, and a humiliation.
People hate to hear that American boys
died in vain and Reagan knows that," he
said. But by elevating a local struggle into
a confrontation between East and West,
we risk another Vietnam, Dudman

pointed out.
Dudman said he thought the American
media, at least larger papers like the New
York Times and the Washington Post, are
telling the truth about El Salvador.
"There's a lot of healthy skepticism,"
he said.
This scepticism on the part of the press
springs out of its coverage of Vietnam.
The fact that El Salvador is being compared to another Vietnam is the biggest
difference between American opinion
towards Southeast Asia in the early sixties
and towards Central America in 1981, said
Dudman. "Vietnam reporting for a long
time was like the Ernie Pyle stuff. But
individual heroism was not the main
story. Vietnam was a political story," said
Dudman.

Peace Activists
disease called porphyria. Partially parayzed, her·unaided walking range is limited
to about four miles. With a wheelchair
and some help being pushed, she can go
on all day She and her husband, Snow,
have adopted three children, all neglected
or brutalized as infants: Kai, 2; Akos, 3
and Ananda, 5. Snow, formerly "Joe"
Bradley, is a Vietnam veteran: Spirit
("Donna" Bradley), taught highschool in
Kenrucky. Last year, their home in
Boulder Creek, California served as a free
retreat center for emotional support and
public draft resister. This year, he is
counseling. Spirit, Snow, Kai, Akos and
walking to Moscow.
Ananda are walking to Moscow.
"Emma," the half-ton blue chevy fitted
CB (pronounced "Ceeb,"J is a journalist
with cedar siding and a tarpaper roof and
from Vermont with a silver tongue. Sarah
towing a one-wheeled trailer from the
is a Quaker from Eugene, Oregon. Jack
Smith farm in Chehalis slowly fills with
drives taxi in Seattle. Julia is an ex-Everpacks, books, leaflets, mimeo machine,
greener who loves to plant trees. Paul, 28,
and other gear. The trailer is named
worked in electronics in Colorado. He is
"Most," after Johann Most, the journalist
very quiet, very gentle.
who loved Emma Goldman-the pair's
These people are walking to Moscow,
enjoyment of good food and music, critiRussia. In the midst of deepening worldcized by compatriots, evoked Emma's
famous rejoinder: "If I can't dance, I don't wide tension, increased governmental
bellicosity and widespread fear of war,
want your revolution."
they are walking for peace. 6500 miles.
Peter built the camper on Emma. Last
Crazy? Of course. On such crazine,ss,~'ve
year, Peter built houses on the Catholic
Worker farm in California, houses to
begun to believe, our lives depend. On
shelter women and children fleeing homes such craziness the world hangs, like a
marble spinning on a thread.
brutalized by their husbands. This year,
Slowly more walker finish packing and
Peter is walking to Moscow.
filter towards the main gate from Ground
Thomas, a West-German citizen, stirs
Zero. By 9:30 the group, fifty in alleggs on the stove and pushes the filled
plates into the hands of walkers busy with about half long· distance walkers-circles
packing. Someone is missing a toothbrush. for silent prayer, singing, and some last
words before walking. Einstein's voice
By 8:30 Spirit, Snow and their three
rings in my ears: "If I had known they
children have begun the last shift of the
24 hour vigil kept that night at the Bangor were going to do this," he said of the
atomic bombing of Hiroshima, "I would
Main Gate. Spirit is 33 years old and
have become a shoemaker."
suffers from a rare, debilitating blood

,.;,Carry
Message
to Moscow

I
(

I

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t

Cause for optimism? Material for satire?
Soviet dupes? Two Sundays ago, on March
1, 1981, a group of about twenty persons
began a two year, 6500 mile pilgimage for
peace. Their destination: Moscow, Russia.
CPI sent a reporter to The Ground Zero
Center for Nonviolent Action at the
Bangor Trident base to discover what the
walk is all about.
-Editor
by Roger Stritmatter
Ground Zero, Bangor- The piercing
cries of the neighbor's rooster greet the
dawn like a warning. Slowly the sky floods
with morning light and blackness fades to
blue: firstlight on March 1, 1981, the
twenty-second anniversary of the "bravo"
hydrogen bomb test blast above the Bikini
atoll in the South Pacific. A crescent
moon glows in the northeast sky. On the
porch of the house backpacks, tents,
cooking gear, kerosene lanterns and a
roadwise wheelchair appear silhouetted
by the new light; inside, sleepers packed •
like sardines stir and stretch. "Good morning...good morning,,," David's gentle
shake rouses those still aslumber. David,
21, left Princeton last year to become a

Dudman said that Reagan, U.N. ambassador Jeanne Kirkpatrick, and others in
the new administration see El Salvador as
"good show biz." The hostages frust~ated
the public, and with many people out of
work, El Salvador is good show biz because it demonstrates to our allies, the
Russians, the whole world and the American people that we can win a victory,
Dudman said.
"We'll be in combat long before we
know we're in combat," said Dudman in
reference to how escalation begins. "Vietnam was not a quagmire: They knew they
were going to get into it and they had
only to pull one over on the American
people."

Complications
from Oral Herpes
by ~mi ly Brucker
Herpes of the brain, or herpes Encephalitis, is caused by oral herpes. An esti·
mated 100 million people in the United
States have oral herpes. It is a very
common disease that affects most everyone by the time they're 50. •
Unfortunately, most people don't know
that oral herpes is a transmittable disease,
spread by kissing, and that it carries two
possible complications: Encephalitis and
Kerititis, herpes of the eye.
Herpes Encephalitis is a· r.ion-reportable
disease; an estimated 100 to 400 people
yearly are killed or permanently brain
damaged by the virus. Encephalitis is
caused by neurogenic spread. When the
virus is dormant at the base of the neck,
instead of recurring on the lips: the virus
appears in the brain The symptoms are
fever, headaches, changes in personality,
speech problems, perceptual difficulties,
muscle aches and general weakness. At
the virus progresses, symptoms become
seizures and coma-like conditions.
A new drug, ara-A, is used to treat
herpes Encephalitis. But treatment has to
begin early. Partial or complete loss of
consciousness occurs about six days after
the first appearance of the symptoms.
Herpes Keratitis, or ocular herpes, is
also caused by oral herpes. It also spreads
neurogenically by recurring in the eye, or
by auto-inoculation, where a person
touches a lesion on the lips and then
touches the eye. Keratitis is the most frequent cause of infectious blindness in the
United States today. The virus affects an
estimated 300,000 people a year, with half
of the cases resulting in blindness.
Symptoms of Keratitis are irrit-ation,
sensitivity to light, pain and inflammation.
Stozil and Vira-A are drugs used to treat
Keratitis during a recurrance.
In the case of Keratitis, auto-inoculation
can be prevented by avoiding contact
with lesions. If a lesion is touched, the
hands should be washed immediately.
Both oral and genital herpes have
reached epidemic proportions. While the
virus affects a large number of people, the
complications affect only a few, but often
are fatal.

March 12, 1981 Cooper Point Journal page 3

\

'

Opinion

\
In order for your submission to run in
the CPJ the week you would like, it must
be turned in to us by the Friday previous
to the date of publication. Included are:
letters to the editor, letters for Forum,
news stories, poetry for Preface, Arts & •
Events and News & Notes. Classifieds are
accepted up to the Tuesday before publication. Whether or not your submission
will make it into the issue of your choice
is dependant upon the availability of
space. Get your article in as soon as possible to make sure it doesn't get bumped
to the following issue. Motate. OON'T
PROCRASTINATE!

El Salvador:
·A Rumor
of War
b, l:lrll MontJgue

lrnJgine illl the people in the stJte of
Wa<hington crowded rnto the Olympic
pvnnrnsu
Image frfty to sixty-five
p,·oplf' r ndo
, murdered each dity by
,snvNnmen
ed police forces. lmilgrne people ,hot rlow11 in park,, on ,tref'ts,
,,·omPn and chi ldrPn dragged out of their
hnmP,. ,tabbed. run over by police
,ehrrle, ·common' people terrorized by
the governmerll who labels them
lt'rrorr:.ts
Prl I..Ht-' a ndtion when 65% of the farm1,incl r< ownr•d bv 2% of the people,
"her" a IPL,clJI oligarchy of 14 major
1,11rnlre-hc1, absolute control over a sol ll't\ 1, rth c1 SU% urwmployment rate and
.i <)(J~o rllrter,:1cy rJte Imagine the majority
Ill pt->oplt'trying to ,ubsist on les, than
':-ll~I J ,,.,ir 1,1th today·, inflation 75%
ur thP t hrldren are malnourrshed, and tlw
1,1n1,lrP,havp no land to grow food on.
I hJt 11<1t1on
rs ~I Salv,idor. though it
, nulcl ll"t ,1, Pa,rl\ bP c1lmo·-tany nation
111(entr,11 ,\nwrrca Lr~c•rt< nt>rghbors, ~I
',,1l,,1dur h,is lwl'n tlw vrrtrm of decades
oi mrl1t,1n drc.tator,hrp,, a steady sun P,,r<>n01 rrght-wrrng 1unta, supported. enclc,r,l'd and. 111m,in\ case,. kept in power
,nlvl, h, thl· mrlit,lr\ might o( thP United
')tan·,
<\ loo~ rnto the hr,tory of the relation,hrp l)('twPl'n the US and Central Amerr<,rn cc,untrre, rPvPal, ,1 century of racism.
op1ir,·ssron and exploitation-imperialism
111rt, mmt blatent form U.S intervention
rn lhest' countries is not the exception,
rt r, thP rule
The prPsrdenl of the Unrted Frurl Co.
large>l American investor in Central
Amerrc a, once made a boast lo the effect
that he could make or break any government in the area. Corporate interests in

Central America have grown since then,
drawn more by the prospect of cheap,
non-unron labor than anything else. But
thC' tactics of American involvement have
1101changed. Popular insurrection against
oppression is labeled "Marxist aggression."
Support of brutal regimes goes under the
hPading "keeping the continent free of
SoviPt drnnmation."
Official lip snvice to "human rights"
mdy come and go. according to the
Machiavellian realities of American politics, but no mailer what brand of doublespeak i~ in fashion, -the end result, for the
peoplt• of CPnlral America, is what it has
always bet>n· poverty, violence and
oppression
fhe Rf'agan administration is preparing
to add its chapter to the long history of
American involvement in Central America.
1:1Salvador has become an acid test of
the nation', faltering prestige. Haunted by
the long shadows of the ViC'tnam War,
humiliated by the Iran hostage crisis, the
American military-political establishment
i, C'ilger to r,rove its tenacity by taking on
y(•t anothC'r ,mall, undeveloped nation.
We an' told that the current insurrection in ~I '.:,,ilvador is the work of the
\ov1Pt Union CIA documents arf' paraded
before the prC',,, proving that the U.S S.R
,rnd rh "proxie," havP supplied arms to
th,, rph,·1,. A remark by Phillip Agee, ex( IA agt•nt and an exrwrt on American
duplicity, thal the documents "bear all
thP mark, of a CIA fake," goe, by with
little notice
The true nature of the 1:1Salvadorian
Popular I runt receive, scant attention.
'The political infrastructure of the insurgents is weak,' we are told. 'their will to
frght is limited. We are out to win the
hearts and minds of the El Salvadorian
people. Just a few of our boys can do the
10b, just a few advisors and a couple
of million dollars in military aid and we

Klan Getting Closer to Home
by Phillip Everling

As an arr of reactionary conservatism
,weeps over this country, the white
supremacist elements of the Ku Klux Klan
have begun to rear their pointed little
heads m the Northwest. Klan-like harassment of minority groups is occuring with
a -teadrly increasing frequency in this part
ot tllP <;tate
In rl'c Pnt months, scattered incidents of
rarral rntrmrdiltron have been happening
111thP l0t al arf:'a There have been cros,
burnings 111Shelton. Pro-Klan leaflets have
h('l'll anonyrnou ly distributed in Tumv.,1ter Mrnorrtv homes in Aberdeen have
bt'f'll d,1rnaged by arson. Spray paint
gr,tffrtr, rs appedrrng more often in the
fmm of the '>wastika or the initials KKK.
In Olympia, resentment toward the
grow111gAsran community is beginning to
surface Many in the blue collar work
force vrew the Asian community as a
threat to their employment, whereas the
white collar types are afraid of plummetrng property values. Racist attitudes that
have been programmed into many people
page 4 Cooper Point Journal March 12, 1981

since childhood are being reenforced instead of being dissipated.
Citizens alarmed by this seemingly
backward trend can express their concern
to members of the state legislature. There
are currently two bills appearing before
the state House and Senate which, if enacted into law, would significantly stiffen
the penalties for acts of racial harassment.
Another concerned party involved in
this issue is the Anti-Klan Coalition. This
newly founded orgartization will offer an
informative presentation on Saturday,
April 4th at the First Christian Church on
Franklin Ave.
This presentation by the Anti-Klan Coalition is being co-sponsored by the
Thurston County Urban League and the
Olympia YWCA. At this event will be
representatives from the Third World Coalition, the Urban league, and the Seattle
chapter of the Anti-Klan Network. Among
the topics for investigation and discussion
will be Racism and White Responsibility,
Racism in the Community, and International Racism. Anyone who desires further
information concerning this upcoming
event should contact Dorothy Baloff at
352-7645 or Jean Reichert at 943-5077.

•El Salvador

can all be home by Christmas ..." And so
it goes
The true situation in El Salvador could
not be more at odds with the soothing
reassurances of Reagan, Haig and Co. U.S.
involvement in El Salvador has all the
making, of a quagmire. The Democratic
Revolutionary Front (FDR), a coalition of
both Marxist and non-Marxist groups, has
the support of at least four out of five El
Salvadorians, according to a team of
Dutch film makers who visited the country
la,t yf:'ar in order to make a documentary
on the war.
FDR supporters include leading members of 1:1Salvador's business and academic community. While the military
forces of the Duarte regime are corrupt,_
rnept and divided between those officers
who support the military-civilian junta
and those who favor a return to absolute
military rule. As in Vietnam, the U.S. may __
,oon find .itself arbitrating between rival
factions more interested in fighting each
other than in opposing the Popular Front.
The rest of the scenario is al I too fami liar. A U.S. commitment to win at any
cost reassures El Salvadorian officers
plotting a coup. Military junta succeedes
military junta. At home, debate is stifled,
newspapers and television are filled with
official lies. Tactical stalemate leads to
increased involvement. Military spending
skyrockets, benefiting
few major defense

a

Dear Editor,
On the evening of 4 March 1981 at a
church in Olympia over 20 people met
and officially formed a new group called
Olympians Against Intervention in El
Salvador. The group was formed after over
100 people, who attended a slide show in
Olympia on El Salvador, expressed a
strong interest in working on El Salvador
issues. The group's primary goals will be
to inform people in this country on issues
surrounding El Salvador and to oppose
U.S. military intervention in El Salvador.
The group's next meeting will be on
Wednesday, March 18 at 7:30 p.m. in The
Timberl1ne Library in Olympia. There will
also be a rally with speakers on March 2/1.
Look for flyers for the time and place. All
people interested in the group's meetings
or the rally should contact John at
943-7325.
The struggle of the people of El Salvador against _the repressive junta has gained
widespread support from broad coalitions
of people in this country and abroad. We
join· the other concerned people of the
U.S. in speaking out against our government's contribution of arms and advisors
to the junta that uses these arms to kill
over 8,000 of its own people last year. The
junta has virtually no popular support in
El Salvador.
We work to let the truth be known on
this issue because the people of this
country would oppose our government's
military role if they knew the truth.

contracters, but burdening the rest of the
nation with increased inflation and taxes.
Progress towards victory is demonstrated
by an ever higher weekly body count, and
military press conferences are once again
dubbed "the five o'clock follies."
As frightful as all this sounds, the possibility of an actual U.S. victory in El
Salvador is even worse. El Salvador is not
Vietnam. Indeed, the main attraction El
Salvador has for the Penta ~on may be the
notion 'here is a war we c ,n win!' The
prospect of an American military, revitalized by victory in El Salvador, again ready
to fight for the advancement of American
interests around the world, is more alarming than any Vietnam flashback could
ever be.
"Those who do not learn from the
past," said the philosopher and historian
George Santayana, "are doomed to repeat
it." The lesson of Vietnam was that the
era "of Americangunooat" diplomacy IS
gone for good. Whatever the outcome of
the conflict in El Salvador, that lesson
remains. One only hopes that it will not
have to be relearned, time and time
again, by a nation which prefers a nostalgia of by-gone supremacy to the complex
realities of the modern world.

Olympians Against Intervention
- in E"ISalvador

ASH SprayingAgain
To the editor:
I just overheard a conversation indicating that the ASH apartment management was conductin~ or about to conduct
a weed spraying program. One thing I
heard an ASH employee say was that the
chemical used gave kids the "poops"
really bad. It was my impression from the
conversation that the chemical spraying
was the subject of controversy in the CPJ
last year.
Questions: What was the evaluation of
this chemical? And, approved or not, what
are the transient affects of this chemical
on residents and their children? On the
workers who apply this poison? Finally,
what is being done to notify residents of
the spraying schedule so that they can
avoid the "poops"?
P.W. What is the responsibility of the
college toward students who are virtually
a captive audience of ASH, Inc.I If this
HUD project figures into the college's
housing·plan, should not the college
exercise some leadership in the health and
safety of their clients (the students)?

Bill Montague is a TESCstudent and a
free lance contributor to the CPJ.

Cooper Point Journal
Editor
Theresa Connor
Associate Editors
Kenneth Sternberg
Philip Watness
Roger Stritmatter
Phil Everling
Andy McCormick
Robin Willett
Production Manager
Susanne Lakin
Business Manager
Karen Berryman
Advertising Manager
Richard Ordos

Writers

Andrew Derby
Kenn Goldman
Dawn Collins
Bill Livingston
Elizabeth Johnson
James Lyon
Emily Brucker
Jeff Cochran
Denise Paulsen
Bill Montague

Production
Bill Livingston
Pamela Dales
Shirley Greene
Brendan Potash

..

Photographers
Nancy Butler
Jim Longley

lhe Cooper Point Journal is published -;,,eekly
for the students, faculty and staff of The Evergreen Stale College. Views expressed are not
necessarily those of the College or of the
Journal's staff. Advertising material contained
herein does not Imply endorsement by this
. newspaper. Offices are locate1i'ln the College
Activities Building, CAB 104. Phone: 866-6213.
All letters to the editor, announcements, and

arts and events Items must be received by noon·
Tuesday for that week's publication. All articles
are due by 5 p.m. Friday for publication the
following week. All contributions must . be
signed, typed, double-spaced and of reasonable
length. Names wlll be withheld on request.
The editors reserve the right to reject material
and to edit any contributions for length, content, and stvle.

CPJ Excellent

t

Editor, Cooper Point Journal
Your February 26, 1981 issue is superior.
Any journal combining excellent poetry,
serious commentary on issues of social
justice and cultural literacy and an in
depth interview with a member of the
faculty of the quality of Torn Rainey
deserves respect and gratitude. Can you
do it again?
Craig Carlson

Changesat Co-op
To the Editor:
In response to a good deal of interest,
changes are coming about at The Food
Co-Op. Some folks have translated the
input of the community and offered suggestions for change.
The Accountability Committee has met
four times to consider proposals to
improve the Food Co-Op. It suggested
that the responsibility for running the
store be shifted from the paid staff to the
volunteer members. Many members had
expressed an interest in working the store
in exchange for discount groceries. Part of
the shift in responsibility arises out of the
feelings among many people that there
exists hostility between the paid staff and
the volunteers. Paid positions cost the
Co-Op nearly three times as much per
hour than do the volunteer staff.
Other proposals suggested include:
creating new positions for working members, publicizing the fact that there are
some tasks performed outside the store
which also earn discount privileges, clarifying the responsibilities of workers, improving the training procedures and
broadening the scope of orientation to
help people discover the real joys of cooperation.
The process for change is an ongoing
thing. The overall atmosphere of co-operation helps people to recognize and
understand that the store belongs to its
members. That spirit of cooperation
guides the Co-Op in developing the proposals which will help it truly serve the
members.
Members and non-members are encouraged to involve themselves in the
process. For further information, call Jeff
Stewart at 866-2081. The Creative ideas
group may be contacted through Randy at
866-5134. The Outreach group can be
contacted by_calling Charly at 866-7052.
Jeffree R. Stewart

GI Bill
Dear CJ'-L
_ _
The article on Veterans Affal"rs was al- most accurate. As it was written, however,
it does as much disservice to veterans
interested in Evergreen as the original law
suit.
INTERNSHIPS ARE AND WILL CONTINUE TO BE AVAILABLE FOR FULL
TIME BENEFITSFOR STUDENTS ELIGIBLE
UNDER THE Cl BILL.
William L. Jackson
Veterans Administrative Coordinator

VA Benefits?
Dear Editor:
Re: "Veteran's Benefits Secure For Now''
(Cooper Point Journal, Vol. 9, #20, March
5, 1981)
Concerning the article, Mr. William
Jackson, Evergreen Veterans Coordinator,
discusses "bigger problems created by
students" failure to inquire of the VA 12
hour "seat time" ruling. Mr. Jackson cites
a specific case of a woman who dropped
out of school and later reapplies and
"Discovered that she had never lost her
eligibility in the first place."
It is my belief that I am that woman,
and I disagree with Mr. Jackson's implication that I created my own problem
because I could not pay my tuition without the veterans benefits and chose not to
create an overpayment. The process of
withdrawal consisted of three steps: 1) Informing my faculty person, and stating
the reason of withdraw!; 2) formal withdrawing at the registrar's office and
stating the reason why; and 3) filing VA
form #22-19993 with the Evergreen Veterans Affairs office (the office Mr. Jackson
coordinates) stating my withdraw! and the
reason why.

T~o quarters later I contacted Mr.
Jackson and asked for a letter stating why
I was ineligible for VA benefits at Evergreen (the 12 hour seat time ruling) so I
could seek other tuition funding that Mr.
Jackson informed me I was eligible for
and always had been so.
To have missed two quarters of school
unnecessarily is an injury. To be told in
the newspaper that I created the problem
is an insult. Mr. Jackson's office was fully
informed, and at the time of my withdrawr
neither he or any member of his staff
offered any support, information, or alternative, other than filing the VA form
with the VA regional office in Seattle.
Mr. Jackson suggests his office is part
of the solution for veterans. I contend Mr.
Mr. Jackson suggests his office is part
of the solution for veterans. I contend Mr.
Jackson's office is part of the problem.
Sincerely,
Lesley Suzanne-Douglas

FIST Encourages
To EPIC:
The formaJ of last night's Aspects of
Rape Culture was excellent. I want to
thank you for planning the evening with
obvious consideration for the emotional
impact of the information. Having sat
through a number of similar presentations
and having left most of them feeling furious and scared and too much like the
victim being discussed, it was a relief and
a total pleasure to leave last night feeling
invigorated and inspired.
By doing punches, kicks and holdbreaks with FIST (Feminists in self-defense
Training)-taught
to the women while the
m_enwere with representatives from Men
Combatting Sexual Violence-I
felt reassured of my ability to fight back against
the treatment and attitudes being discussed. By seeing the women in FIST
moving with solemn strength and beauty
- through their katas, I was reminded of the
potential power of individuals and of the
even greater power of unity
The tears welling up in my eyes made
it clear to me that this 'experience is a
new and vital one; one that needs to become far more familiar to all of us.

Herpes:
A DisablingDisease

To the Editor:
It is more than likely that by the time
this letter reaches your office, whatever
news, controversies or added information
prompted by the herpes article (CPI Jan.
29: Herpes Disease Gets Around) wrll have
come and gone.
Although the article was a good compendium on herpes (the genital facet of
herpes, that is) it must also be said that
herpes virus attacks other parts of the
anatomy with more vigor and with a
much more devastating effect than in the
genital regions. A bleak, poignant example
is my father, who at the age of 60,
suffered a sudden attack of herpes virus,
that twice nearly killed him, left him rn a
coma for three weeks, and left him virtually without a mind. My father was lucky;
he lived; most victims do not.
Before the herpes virus left him, rt
stripped my father's mind of its intellect
and its ability to think and rationalize and
this virus so effectively disabled those
parts of the brain it left intact, that my
father's mentality has been reductd to the
level of a pre-kindergarten child: in the
one year since he contracted the virus. he
has aged physically, 10 to 15 years. This
brand of herpes is stea"dily increasing and
few, very few, survive it, or ever fully recover, and the potential to develop it
is in all of us.
Walter Carpenter
Ne~ London, New Hampshire
5 March 1981

Hitchhiking

Dear Brothers and Sisters,
I am planning on asking the people of
Washington State to make hitchhiking
legal on the freeways. That is, sponsor an
initiative to change to present law. If anybody at Evergreen would. like to help me,
the path is something like this:
Kathie McCarthy
Within ten months before the Nov.
Co-coordinator of-the Women's Center generalefection (January). the initiative is
first filed. By four months before the
election (July) all the signed petitions
have to be in. That leaves a six month
slot, January to June, when a lot of work
needs to be done. This includes the circulation of petitions for most of the preTo Andy McCormick,
liminary work involves when and where
Aher spending the last few weeks
those petitions will be circulated. We'd
struggling to write a paper on Gustave
need about 160,000 signatures.
Flaubert and Madame Bovary, I was surSince the six month slot in this year is
prised and quite impressed to see your
half gone by, I think it would be a good
article in the CPJ. Boy, was I disappointed.
idea to wait until 1982 to start the proYes, Flaubert's letters can give important
cess,
meanwhile spending time this year
insights on the parallels between his prigetting
together. There are questions
vate life and his literature. But I think you
which need answering like: Why is the
missed the point. It seems to me that
law like it is? Careful reasoning or bureauthere is much more to be gotten from
cratic
whimsey? Is hitching really legal in
Flaubert's works than a bawdy leer taken
Oregon
or is it just unenforced/ Therefore.
out of the context of one of his correscan we use Oregon as a model? Will it be
pondences.
just a matter of getting signatures, or is
The letters you chose to quote are rithere some sleeping oppositionl
diculously irrelevant. Do you think the
I'm writing t_oEvergreen because I am
literary interests of the student community
from there and know that a lot of Evercan only be stimulated by citing examples
of a novelist's professed sexual escapades? greeners hitch-hike, and because Olympia
is in the 1-5/Puget strip where the only
They really don't matter all that much.
reasonable hitching routes exist between
Sadly, the book review did rio justice to
cities and freeway. Also the law library
the extraordinary brilliance of the, man.
and legislature are there as resources.
What he created in Madame Bo.v.wy is
Maybe somebody would like to be
near perfection-an
eloquent, meticulousinvolved in this as an individual contract
ly written and historically detailed work
or program project? The January-June slot
of art.
coincides conveniently with a winter and/
He was, and still is, acknowledged to
or spring quarter's work.
be one of the most important influences
If you call the Office of the Secretary
in the history of world literature. I think
of State, Department of Elections they'll
his writings deserve more respect and
send you the Initiative and Referendum
serious contemplation than you gave
Manual. Then you'll know as much as I
them. Perhaps you should have taken the
do about this. If anyone has worked on
time to do a bit more research on the
an initiative before and can give me
subject. If you needed other books to
advice, or knows where I can find out
research your article, you could have
more, I'd especially like_to hear from you.
recalled them from the library. It's been a
long, rough paper ... i"would have been
Rick Shory
glad to part with them.
805 Calhoun St.
Port Townsend, WA 98368
No hard feelings intended,
(2<X,)385-5625
Valarie Sloane
March 12, 1981 Cooper Point Journal page 5

FlaubertsLetters:
You Missed the Point

Notes

Learning to
Live in
the U.S.A.
-Continued

play concerned a Chinese girl newly arrived in an American school and the
attempts made by other ethnic-Americans
to welcome her. It was warm, witty, with 1
a clear message, and the student body
thoroughly enjoyed the show.
Tom Eisenmann, principal of Jefferson,
said acceptance of Asian students by their
Caucasian peers has been ambiguous.
"We·\'e had Asian students for some time
now," said Eisenmann. "When they first
came. there were one or two-a number
in which they were forced to interact with
the rest of the kids at school. But when we
started getting larger numbers, like twenty
at a time, they tended to group with each
other more, finding it more comfortable. I
think that's true of any persons who have
something in common and need to get
used to a new place."
Asian students do get involved in
school sports programs, notably basketball and soccer. Eisenmann pointed to a
,pecial feature at Jefferson: an Advisory
Program For 25 minutes each day, student, attend the program which emphas•,es mental attitudes towards oneself and
the community during the 25 minute clas,
studerits attend each day. "It's really
helped era,e tensions here," said
l:isenmann. "Not fust between students
but al,o between teachers and students."
L.:irry Norwood said relations between
Asians and Caucasians at Capital were
mild "Our kids pretty much ignore the
Asians," said Norwood. "I hate to say It
but that's pretty much how it's been."

Student'sDruthers

from page

Steps to taster better relations between
the two cultures have been initiated in all
three schools. The schools presented lndoChinese dance during assemblies to celebrate the Chinese New Year. At Garfield
the audience was particularly impressed.
"What we were trying to say to our regular students," said Bird, "is that these
new students have come here with some
very wonderful customs, festivals, language and dance, which enriches our own
culture. When the ESL students were up
on stage, you could have heard a pin
drop. And everybody afterwards ran up to
these girls and tolp them how beautiful
their dance was."
One measure taken in the high school
to improve relations is the "Leadership
Program" in which stude!'lt leaders interact with the Asian students at lunch and
in the classroom. Norwood said that students tutoring the ESL students foster
good feelings among everybody ..
There have been no outbreaks of hostility between ESL students and the rest of
the student body in any of the three
,chools. If there are any discipline problems concerning Asian students, they have
stayed within their own community.
"You have kids coming from different
parts of a country," said Norwood, "who
have·been traditionally at war with one
another. One may be a Chinese ethnic
who is hated by the others for reasons we
don't understand. Yet they feel the tribal
differences to be significant."

Norwood related a couple of incidents
of discipline problems. One involved a
Vietnamese boy who threatened to kill an
Asian girl because she accused him of
being "crazy," a terrible insult in Vietnamese culture. Another time, one boy
was chasing another boy from a different
part of lndo-China down the hall with a
piece of lead pipe, threatening to kill him.
When brought to the school office to explain his conduct, the boy said through
his interpreter, "I've been trained to kill.
I've killed before, and if I have to, I'll kill
again."

Norwood conceded that such incidents
are "scary" but also noted that they are
few and far between. "They realize that if
they get into trouble here they will not be
allowed to go to school," said Norwood.
"They've come from a life of war and
refugee camps and now are channeling
their energies into their studies."
School officials agree that the ESL program is working. Norwood has already
seen Asian students graduate and progress

into college. He said that the next ten
years should see Asian students
entering high school from lower grade ESL
programs with no academic difficulties.
Bird said funding for ESL was provided
by the local school district's general fund
and money from state and federal government. He hoped that the legislature would
realize the program's merits and accomplishments when it comes time to decide
future budgets. "We operate on the idea
that we're going to have so much money,"
said Bird. "But whether we get it is a different story. We hope·to see the budget
increase a little. Both the state and federal governments recognize the extra
expense."
Public education in Olympia is fulfilling
its role very well, providing learning skills
to all children, regardless of origln or disability. The proof of ESL's success can be
seen as the children speak English to each
other on the playground as well as in the
classroom.

Local Refugees Try To Adjust
Since 1975, Indochinese refugees have
been ,truggling to blend their own agrarian-based culture with the technological
and 1ndu,trial lifestyle of the United
States ror most, it has not been an easy
task
Luckily ior the many thousands of
retugees ,n America, there are people like
Sang I ran, Ho Tan, and Kim Song at work
to ea,e the symptoms of culture shock for
thp1r fellow refugees.
Sang Tran (pronounced "Shong Tron")
4(J, was born in North Vietnam, moved
,outh ,n 1955 to Saigon. Sang has a BA
cif·gree in education and is working on a
ll A in business administration. In Vietn.im hp taught English in high school and
, nllege Sang left Vietnam and arrived in
tlw U S rn 1977. He is a slight, handsome
man wrth slightly greying hair, an open •
"11i\e and quick intelligent wit. Sang
works about 50 hours a week as a social
outreach worker for The Urban League in
Olympia. He works exclusively with Asian
refugees helping to ease their transition
11110
American life.
Ha Ton, also Vietnamese, graduated
from college in 1%Uand taught high
,,hool for 10 years in Nha Trang City in
Vietnam. Ha has been in the U.S since
1<J7~He worked for a year developing
1ohs for refugees and now works as a
Community Service Officer for DSHS. Ha,
40 ,ome years old, is quiet, thoughtful
,111dwell spoken.
·Krm Song received a college education
111
Cambodia, her native country. She
gn•w up in a large urban area and emigrated to the States in 1977. Kim is in her
late twenties. She is expressive and easy
to tc1lk to. Kim presently is a caseworker

for DSHS. From discussions with Sang, Ha,
and Kim, one learns that there is considerable diversity among the various groups
of refugees in the Olympia area. Educational levels vary significantly among the
different nationalities living here.
According to Kim Song, the French language was studied routinely in Cambodian
grade schools as a result of the French
involvement in lndo-China. For the educated people of Cambodia who wanted to
flee the war-torn area, France was a
common destination.
France mandated that all immigrants
settling in that nation must speak French.
America became the next choice for those
Cambodians who did not speak French.
Cambodians who remained in their country were forced into re-education camps
or became one of the three million people
reportedly slaughtered by the Pol Pot
regime.
The majority of Laotian refugees were
farmers with little, or no, formal education and often illiterate in their own language.
Many Vietnamese immigrating to America have had some college education and
lived in urban areas. Ha Ton pointed out
that approximately <JO%of the earliest
Vietni.lmese refugees found immediate
employment in the U.S. compared to 10%
of the Cambodians.
When asked what Olympians can do to
help the refugees, the immediate answer
was jobs. Anyone with a job to offer
should contact Sang Tran at the Urban
League or the YWCA, which is working
with DSHS to help locate employment for
the lndo-Chinese.
Another way people who live near the
refugees can help is simply to go right up
and initiate a conversation. Even with all

page 6 Cooper Point Journal March 12, 1981

the schooling the refugees receive in the
ESL programs it is still important to practice speaking English with people who use
the language fluently
When a Cambodian, Laotian, or Vietnamese leaves the class and goes home
he practices speaking English with his
lndo-Chinese family and friends. The
refugee often feels that since he is the
newcomer he should wait for an American
to make the first move towards friendship,
though he is more than willing to make
American friends.
Asians have a much less formal approach to visiting than do Americans. It is
perfectly acceptable to walk over to a
neighbors house and make a friendly
acquaintance. This informality is what
Olympia's Asian community would like to
foster between themselves and their
American neighbors.
Kim, Sang, and Ha voiced the gratitude
of Indochinese refugees for the help given
them through· aid and programs, and by
those who have worked hard to ensure
that they receive the assistance they need.
Their desire to extend good community
relations, to show their greatfulness for
the help they are receiving and the language barrier lead them to overlook some
problems they meet in the community.
There has been some discussion in the
press about alleged discrimination against
the lndo-Chinese. None of the lndoChinese interviewed were keen on discussing the subject.
Sang Tran admitted that he has heard
of some incidents where the refugees
have experienced problems in housing,
but because of language barrier and the
importance of not appearing ungrateful, it
has been hard to document these
incidents.

Reluctance to criticize anyone or anything in their new homeland is common
sense to the refugees Sang Tran explained, "We have so many problems in
adjusting to· the American way of lifelanguage, jobs, values, for instance, that
it makes no sense to criticize what may
be a misunderstanding. And we want to
work very hard to try and avoid any future
misunderstandings."
Sang said that the refugee hopes narrow
the gaps between the different people, "to
bring us closer together, for the mutual
understanding of the people."

Spring students will have the opportunity to propose academic programs which
might be offered during the 1982-83
school year, or later.
In preparation for the Annual Spring
Faculty Retreat (at which the 1982-83
curriculum will be planned) two
"DRUTHERS BOARDS".will appear in the
second floor front hall of the Library. One
board will be for Faculty and the other for
students.
On these boards Evergreeners can post
their ideas and comments about possible
programs. On cards (which will be supplied) they can describe.the programs that
"if I had my druthers, I would like to
do .... " Cards for comments will also be
supplied.
The Deans will keep track of entries,
and matching and collating will be done
periodically. On the eve of the Retreat,
the contents of both boards will be
hauled off to Fort Worden.
• Much of the activity of the Faculty
Retreat will turn on the exciting and
creative ideas which have appeared on
these boards.
Students with strong proposals, and
strong ideas about other persons' proposals (especially ideas in favor of certain
proposals) should definitely make their
views known. We want student input, and
this is the most direct way to present it.
Students who will not be enrolled in
1982-83 should still participate. Their experience is important-many
younger
students don't have that experience.

Grantsfor Study in Paris
American college students admissible to
Junior Year or higher in September 1981
are eligible for grants to study in Paris
during the academic year ·1981-82, provided that they are adequately prepared
in French and will have completed a
dossier de pre-inscription which is received in Paris before April 1, 1981. These
grants will be paid in French Francs in
two installments each semester.
Additional grants of up to $1,000.00 for
the year will be awarded to qualified
students who elect A YA-arranged housing
in a French home.
For further information and an application, send a self-addressed #10 envelope
with 20 cents postage on it and the no-·
tation PARIS to Academic Year Abroao,
17 Jansen Road, New Paltz, NY 12561

Submit Now or Never
The Evergreen Literary Publication will
be out in May. We still need your essays,
poems, short stories and photographs before March 15. The deadline can possibly
be extended to April 1, but only if you
contact one of the editors first. A list of
editors is posted on the ARC door, Lib.
3215.

Fresh Nova Scotia
LOX
$3.95/¼ lb.
Lox, Bagel, Cream cheese
w/onion & tomato $2.95

Forumon Central
AmericanRevolution
"Revolution in Nicaragua and Civil War
in El Salvador" will be the topic of a
public forum to be held on Saturday, Mar.
21, at 8:00 p.m. at Freeway Hali', 3815 5th
Ave. N.E.
As the Sandinistas-led government in
Nicaragua moves toward socialist reconstruction in that country, the eruption of
civil war in neighboring El Salvador has
raised the possibility of socialist revolution throughout Central America.
Speakers Yolanda Alaniz, Chicana
'eminist and Chicano/Latino movement
xganizer, and Tamara Turner, a writer
3nd editor for the freedom Socialist, wil~assess the prospects for the Nicaraguan
and Salvadorean revolutions in the face of
Reagan's increasingly Vietnam-style military and economic support to the rightwing Salvadorean military government.
They will arso discuss the need for international support for the Salvadorean rebel
forces who represent peasants, workers
and the poor against the military-backed
junta.
The event is sponsored by the Freedom
Socialist, a quarterly socialist feminist
newspaper published in Seattle, and is the
second public forum in an eight-week
educational series ending May 2, 1981.
A light supper will be served at 6 30
p.m. and the program will begin at 8:00
p.m. Door donation is $2.00 and supper
donation is $3.50.
For tickets, childcare, transportation, or
more information, call 632-7449, 632-1815
or 722-3812.

352-8988

These are the library hours for Evaluation Week and spring quarter break: regular hours until March 11, March 12-13
8 a.m.-5 p.m., March 14-15 closed, March
16-20 8 a.m.-5 p.m., March 21-22 closed,
March 23-27 8 a.m.-5 p.m., March 28-29
closed. Media Loan and Media Services
will be closed March 19-29. Regular library
hours will resume March 30.

MadridStudy Grants
Once again, through the anonymous
gift of a Spanish donor, a number of
grants of fifteen thousand Pesetas each
are being made available to American and
Canadian sophomores, juniors, seniors and
graduates for study at the Facultad de
Filosofia y Letras of the Universidad de
Madrid in the Academic Year Abroad program. Students already in Europe should
contact the A YA office in the Facultad,
Edificio A, Madred. Students in the U.S.
should send a self-addressed #10 envelope
with 20 cents postage on it before May 15
to: Spanish Scholarship Committee, c/o
Academic Year Aborad, P.O. Box 9, New_
Paltz, NY 12561.

EBUIPMENT-

&.t:o 90
photo by Jim Longley

PoetryContest

Art Workshop

The 10th Annual Poetry Contest sponsored by Washington Poets Association
offers cash prizes for prize-winning poems.
Categories include: adult, high school,
and junior high. Deadline: April 1 for
adult co_mpetition; May 1 for high school
and junior high. Applicants must be
Washington State residents. Send a
stamped, self-addressed envelope to WPA
Contest, c/o N. Rekow, 8489 Fletcher Rd.,
Bainbridge Island WA 98110.
Poets On: is now accepting poetry on
the theme of 'Working.' Send ms. (SASE
and brief bio.) to Ruth Diagon, Poets On.·
Working, Box 255, Chaplin, CT 06235.
Deadline: May 15.
Registration for full and part-time
studies at The Evergreen State CollegeVancouver begins Tues., March 10, and
continues from CJa.m. to 4 p.m. March 11,
12, 17, 18, 19 and 30 at campus headquarters on 1002 East Evergreen Boulevard, Vancouver, WA. Open to new full
and half-time students spJing quarter are
study opportunities in both the EvergreenVancouver programs: Communication
Study and Management and the Public
Interest. Complete details on both study
programs-and on the part-time coursesare available from the Evergreen-Vancouver office. 696-3080 or 699--0269,open
weekday, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. All
Evergreen-Vancouver facilities will be
closed for spring break March 19-29.
Spring classes begin March 30 and continue through June 10.

StudentLoans
If you have received a NATIONAL
DEFENSE/DIRECTSTUDENT LOAN while
attending Evergreen and you plan to
graduate, withdraw, or go on-leave next
quarter, you are required to go through a
NDSL Exit Interview before leaving. Please
contact the Ac.counts Receivable Office at
866-{)448 to make an appointment for an
Exit Interview.

The Tacoma-Pierce County Civic Arts
Comirission is seeking professional artists
to conduct a five week summer workshop
tor youth. Artists in the areas of visual,
performing and literary arts will be considered. Priority will be given to those
with a background in instruction and
training and professional credenti.ils.
The workshop, Artburst, is open to
youth between the ages of nrne and 14
and is scheduled from June 22- July 23,
7981, Mondays through Thursdays. There
will be approximately twenty days of
instruction culminating in a presentation
of workshop activities. Instructor orientation will begin in May
Send a resume to: Civic Arts Commission, Room 409 Medical Arts Bldg., 740
St. Helens Ave., Tacoma, WA. CJ84Q~
ll'ltc>rs of interest and resumes must be
postmarked by April 3. For further ,nform,Hion call Victoria Hamilton at
S9 l-47'i4.

• Highest Quality
• Ultra-light
Tents

111 N. Washingto~

WILDERNESS
LEADERSHIP SCHOOL
Spring Quarter, 20 Units
April 20-July 3

Backpacking in the Sierra Nevada
TEACHING CREDENT/Al.

Financial Assistance Grants Available
Phone (408) 429-2822 or write:
SIERRA INSTITUTE
Cardiff House
U11iversity of California. Santa Cruz
Santa Cruz, CA 95064

17'''12

357-4812

NILY

Groceries
Fresh Produce
Fresh Meats
Imported Beer & Wines
Sundries
Magazines
·S(!]f Serve Gas

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HJIRDY
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Made

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943·9849

Two new dance classes have bC'en
announced for Spring Quarter at The
Evergreen State College.
Choreographer's Forum, says f culty
member Meg Hunt, "is an advan ed
course for students with some p, ,,vious
experience in choreography who want to·
work on a piece independently." Dance·
performance, also taught by Hun't, is
designed for students with some previous
dance experience "who will participate in
a dance work to be performed on campus
May 8-10," she says
Students may register for the four-credit
courses in the Registrar's Office through
April 3, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. by appointment or ·s:30-7 p.m. March 30-April 2.
Further information on rehearsal sc;hedules
and prerequisites is available from Meg
Hunt at 866-6077.
--"-I'

ELD

¾' ,-., ·'.'

1.2.0n.peau
olc)'mpia,c.oa

"To Live Is To Dance"

This Thursday evening, March 12, at 7
o'clock members of The Committee for
Solida_rity with the Nicaraguan People
presents a lecture and film on the crisis
in El Salvador. The film, a documentary
made by a Dutch filmcrew, gives the
people's point of view. Filmed in El Salvador, it contains actual footage of the brutalities committed by the government
upon the people as well as interviews
with the leaders of the revolutionary
party. It is very shocking, very bloody,
and very eye-opening The films needs to
be seen by everyone who has any sense of
justice and respect for life. In this nuclear
age we live in, we can't afford to regard
wnat's taking place in a small country
thousands of miles from here as insignificant. We can't afford to sit back and let
the U.S. government continue to escalate
our involv,ement in El Salvador.

Registration

.The Real Story

• Custom
CAPITAL
VILLAGE

In El Salvador

7 a.m .-12 p.m.
365 days a year

IDIO Division N.W.
' Handy Pantry

Olympia, WA

March 1'2, 1981 Cooper Point Journal page 7

\

Raging Bu-11
: Brutal but Bri'IIiant
by Phillip Everling

The fight sequences are mesmerizing in
their influence and yet stunning in their
overall impact. The slow motion camera
records the flowing, aniroal grace of the
fighters in one instant and then snaps
back to the explosive reality of rapip fire
blows raining down upon bruised, swollen
flesh with an unleashed ferocity. The
sound effects are overpowering, as if the
soundtrack had been recorded in Sense-surround. You can almost hear the cartilege snap,·crackle, and pop as leather
connects with facial tissue.
This is not the kind of flashy, stylized
violence which is so prevalent within the
recent glut of axe murder epics. There are
no eye gougings, decapitations, disembowelments, or eruptive spewings of rosy
red R~ sauce. Raging Bull is filmed in a
grainy black and white and for some inexplicable reason the blood seems to be a
lot mcre real when it is not colored a
gaudy, bright crimson. The camera lingers
on each thunderous blow and zooms in
on every gaping cut. The lens pans the
ringside fcK:es,recording the wild eyed
frenzy. Images of Roman gladiators and
toga clad spectators with their thumbs
turnea dONn come to mind. This is
authorized mayhem, fully sanctioned
human destruction masquerading as sport.
It is a very disturbing tableau.
Director Martin Scorsese and DeNiro
have pooled their considerable talents
twice before in Mean Streets ( 1973) and
Taxi Driver ( 1975), but have reached the
pinnacle of their collaborative experience
with Raging Bull. Always the scene is the
sleazier side of New York City. Always
DeNiro is the brooding, psychotic antihero, a short fuse waiting to be lit. Always the dialogue is realistic, street tough
and unabashedly vulgar. Raging Bull is
t~ latest and greatest of these three fine
films but pa-haps Scorsese and DeNiro
should allON a lengthy interval to fall between Raging Bull and their next film together. It would be a shame to squeeze
out all ci the vitality from this successful
formula by rehashing it endlessly. What
would be next? DeNiro as David
Berkowitz in /v\3rtin Scorsese's Son of
Sam?

By Jeff Cochran
For many people the thought of baking
yeasted breads inspires images of door
stops or kiln brick. But this fear of yeast,
like a writing block, can be conquered. I
have written a little guide to eliminating
this fear. If this guide looks like a recipe
to you, that is only because it is. This
recipe, however, will guide you to that
wonderful smell of baking bread. And if
followed exactly, it will not fail you.
Th€Ie are several tools you need to
make bread. The first is a bowl large
enough to mix, and also rise vour dough.
Figure a quart bowl per loaf of bread.
and you'll be okay. Stoneware or glass
bowls have excellent surfaces for bread
mixing, and they retain heat well (important for rising). They are also heavy,
and they break. Stainless steel will not
break, has an adequate interior, and is
cheap. It doesn't hold heat at all Forget
wood bowls, as dough sticks to wood and
they are impossible to clean. You'll need
a wire whisk and a wood spoon for
mixing. A two-cup ~easure is best for
bread making, and if you have two-one
for wet ingredients and one for dry-so
much the better. And last, a tablespoon.
Now that you have all of the above
neatly arranged in front of you, get the
following:
2 Tbl yeast
1 Tbl. salt
1 cup vegetable oil
¼ cup molasse,
¼ cup honey
6 cups warm water
1 cup dried milk powder
3 eggs
1 cup soy flour
whole wheat flour
Yield· 6 loaves
The yeast should he the dry, granulaed
type-Fleishman's works well, but the Coop has bulk yeast for cheap (not Brewe's
yeast). The molasses should be the
darkest, grossest you can find for the best

flavor and most iron. Always include
honey in your bread because it has a
natural preservative in it.
I use milk powder because it is easier
than using milk. Milk has bacteria in it
that inhibits yeast growth, but you can
use milk if you wish by scalding it first
(heating it to the boiling point). This
means that you must wait till the milk is
cool before you add it to the yeast-I've
killed more yeast by not waiting long
enough than I care to relate.
Soy flour will complement the prctein •
In wheat breads, so that this bread is a
,ource for all your protein needs-I do
not suggest that yOJ eat only this bread
Wheat flours are ground either with stone
wheel, or steel grinders. If you can find
stone-ground whole wheat flour use it
because fewer B vitamins are lost through
the lower heat grinding process.

J\~

\,--

. y of Catilorma.

Santa

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the Cooper Point Journal into
your home every week ·1or
.one year; keep in touch with
Evergreen from the students'
perspective. Order your subscription today! Send your
name, address, phone number, and $4.00 to Cooper
Point Journal, CAB 305, The
Evergreen State College,
Olympia, WA 98505."

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in the Sierra Nevada backcountry
• natural history
• wildlife studies
• nature photography
• winter ecology
phone. 408 429-2822 or write
SIERRA INSTITUTE
Cardiff House
University of California, Santa Cruz
Santa Cruz, CA 95064

When you need some notes at3:00a.m.,
you find out who your friends are.

Forget that you do not know how to
make bread; it is time to start and you are
following the recipe. First put the yeast
and salt in your bowl. Measure the oil,
and, with the oil still in the cup, measure
the molassesand honey This makes it a
lot easier to get the sweet and sticky stuff
out of the cup. Add this to the bowl.
Now comes the most crucial point in
making bread-adding the water. Yeast
needs warm water to activate it. Warm,
not hot. Technically the water should be
110°. If the water feels warm on the inside of ',OUT wrist, then it is the right
temp. Sincewater that is too hot will ki II
the yeast, if in doubt use water that feels
a little cold rather than risking it. All the
water sn::iuldbe the same temperaturedon't add cold and then make-up by
adding hot and especially not vice versa.
Now wiit five minutes for the yeast to
dissolve, stirring with the whisk once or
twice.
It is tine to add the first dry ingredients. Ad::lthe powdered milk, the soy
flour, aro one cup of whole wheat flour.
The egg; need something in the bcml to
cling toand this process will ensure thi;it.
Beat with the wisk, add the eggs and
beat agan. Keep adding the wheat flour,
two CUJJ5at a·time. After two additions
you will need to switch to the wooden
spoon for mixing. Afte~ about eight cups
ot tlour are in the dough, you will notice
that you can hardly move the spoon, and
this will signal that it is time to begin
kneadirg
Before we start kneading there are a
few basics you should know. Wheat contains gluten. Gluten resembles a glue and
is what holds the wheat particles together
to trap CO2 gas given off by yeast as it
rises.
White flour breads do not require much
kneading because the gluten is contained
in the heart of the wheat. But since we
are concerned with whole wheat flour,
and because there is so much extra roughage in whole wheat, you will have to
knead until you think it's all done and
then just a little more in order to produce
a sufficient amount of freed gluten.
To make kneading easier, I usually
kneel on a tall chair or stool. This puts

my weight above the bread and reduces
the strain on my arms.
So get two cups of flour and dump
them onto your kneading surface, turn the
dough out of the bowl and into the flour.
Pull up your chair and flour your hands.
Now push with the heel of your hands on
the certer o{ the pile of dough. Pick up
the edge of the dough furthest from you,
bring it to the center of the dough, and
push again.
Continue above, turning the pile of
dough when necessary, till all of the flour
is worked in. Add a little more flour to
your board and continue kneading for
about fifteen minutes. When the lower
surface of the dough is covered with tiny
wrinkles, you are done kneading. Another
good test is that when you pull on a prece
of dough, it should stretch a,good ten
inches before ripping off.
The bread is now ready for its first rise.
Put some oil in the as yet uncleaned
bowl. Put the dough into the bowl and
roll it around until the surface is covered
with oil. Get a towel and wet thoroughly
with very hot water. Wring out as much
of the water as you can, and cover the
bowl with this towel. Put the bread in a
warm, draft-free place to rise until
doubled in bulk. This will take from 45
minutes to 1 1/2 hours depending on the
temperature of the place where the bowl
is set. A good way to test the rise is to
poke a finger into the dough one inch
from the rim of the bowl. If the depression made starts filling itself up within
twenty seconds, then the bread needs to
rise more.
The bread has passed the finger test
and is ready to be punched down. Make a
fist and hit the dough squarely in the
center. It will collapse under the sheer
weight of your brutal actions, but it, like
certain fables, will rise again.
Dump the bread onto a floured surface
and knead lightly but firmly for about
one half minute to break up large air
pockets. Do not knead longer, as this will
make the bread very tough. Cut the bread
into five large or four large and two small
loaves. Shape into loaf shape and drop
into already oiled bread pans. Arrange the
dough so that creases are not showing.
Put the pans back into the warm place,
and cover with the same cloth (rewetting
it only if it is totally dry). When thirty
minutes have gone by, set your oven to
350°. After 45 minutes, put the bread into
the oven and bake for 40-45 minutes.
The smell of baking bread is now filling
your kitchen, driving you and everyone
else in your house into rabid fits of
munchies. But is the bread really done?
Take out one loaf and flip out of the pan.
Insert a sharp and very clean knife into
the bottom of the loaf. Wiggle the knife
around and remove it. If it comes out
clean, the bread is done. If not, then put
the loaf back into the pan and back into
the oven. Turn the oven off, and let the
bread stay in the oven for an additional
ten minutes.
.
This is a basic recipe for bread. There
are of course countless variations. For
example, I like to make four loaves of
regular bread and two of cinnamon and
raisin. And once you get good enough
you'll learn how to·make ten loaves in the
time it takes to make two. Happy eating.

friendly

Raging Bull is undoubtedly the best
fight film ever made. It makes Rocky, the
1976Academy Award winner for Best
Picture, look like puerile, made-for-1V
schlock in comparison. It is stark and uncompromising in its style, exposing the
primordial savagery of civilized man's
most brutal sport without ~ shred of
romanticism.
Robert DeNiro portrays the title character, former middleweight champ Jake
La Motta, known throughout his career as
"the Bronx Bull" and "the Raging Bull."
To say that La Motta wasn't a very likeable guy would be a gross understatement. La Motta's lifestyle directly paralleled his boxing style: pure, unadulterated
agression.DeNiro is flawless in the role.
The supporting cast turns in an array of
fine performances, but this picture belongs entirely to Robert DeNiro.
A lot of print has already been devoted
to the extreme weight fluctuation of
DeNiro during the filming of Raging Bull
and it certainly warrants another measure
of amazed commentary. To fit the image
of the highly trained young boxer, DeNiro
put in countless hours of road work, did
• thousand of sit-ups, lived for weeks on
tuna and ween vegetables and lost twenty
pounds to achieve a rock-hard muscularity. Then he did a complete about-face,
gorging himself with carbohydrates and
casesof stout ale to gain a protuberant
paunch for the portrayal of the aging,
hopelesslyout of shape LaMotta. Such a
total transformation, accomplished without the aid of make up or padding must
be unparalleled in film history.
To cop a corny cliche, this film is deli nitely not for the squeamish or the faint
of heart. Almost every frame of film oozes
with violence, at once understated and
subdued and then suddenly, shockingly
overt. La lv'otta seems to throw as many
punches at home as he does in the ring.
In one'!'nemorable scene, he goads his
younger brother into hitting him repeatedly in the face, taking each shot with a
demented smile, secure in his macho
tOJchness

[~E

Electronicn
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EL SALVADOR:

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The viewpoint from the people of
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media & government fail to provide
FILM & LECTUREPRESENTATION
by membersof the Committee fo,
Solidarity with the NicaraguanPeople

3.5Z-fi304

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There will be an opening on the
Cooper Point Journal spring quarter
for an advertising·manager. The job
consists of selling advertiSing space,
the coordination
of salespeople,
keeping clear communication between the CPJ and advertisers, and
the upkeep of advertising contracts.
Applicants should be self motivated.
call 866-6213.

service!

Capitol ·SCHWINN®
You lcfl the notes for
d1apter 6 m the libr~ry. A sure
sign 1h..1ttomormw's le::stwill
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chapter 6. Someone you know
Is about to ~l't a phone call.
HeS not ~omg to like 1t. but he's
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. March 12, 1981 Cooper Point Journal page 9

\

EvergreenAlbum Project
Needs Your Support

Gallery IV
Exhibit: Graceful
Yet Powerful

··o.O.A. and Los Radicos
Popularos To Perform
On Saturday, March 14 at 9:00 p.m., in
the 4th floor of the TESC library building,
the Gig Commission is presenting a dancP
with D.OA and Los Radicos Popularos
Both bands are from Vancouver, B.C,
Canada.
I The first band that will be playing is a
• very danceable pop band, called Los
Radicos Popularos. This band features Bill
Shirt, Art Bergmann (formerly thf' lead
-i11gerof the Young Canadians), Buck
Cherry (formerly the lead singer of the
Modernettes), Zippy Pinht>ad (formerly
the drummer of the dils) and Tonv (form-

the drummer of the Dils) and Tony _(formerly the bass player of the Pointed Sticks)
The second band playing is a great
punk band railed D.OA They were said
to have out classPd the Clash when they
played before them at The Commodore
Ballroom in Vancouver, B.C D.O.A.
fec1turesJoey Shithead, Randy Rampage,
DdVP Gregg, and Chuck Biscuits (who is
known for being the best drummer in
Van, ouver).
rhi, will be c1fun dance and we hope
evPryone will come and dance.

'--------------------------------

--

--

classified·s
LOST: Old copy of "Wind in the
Willows." It has sentimental value
Misplaced in CAB. Call Drew at 3529452.

FOR SALE Four Harness 30-inch Jacktype loom can be used as floor or table
loom. $300 Call Susan at 866-0605.

OUR FAMILY seeks house near busline
by beginning of April. 86&-0970..
STUDY ABROAD THIS SUMMER Kenya,
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China 1 15 credits. Shoreline Community
College, 76701 Greenwood, N. Seattle
98133; 54&-4101

Typing Setvice Fast, accurate, reasonable. Technical & scientific material
a specialty. Colleen, 943-3542 (evenings)·

by Jan Teague
There is power in John Hoover's cedar
sculptures now on exhibit in Evergreen's
Callery 'IV.
Hoover's work of carved wood faces are
graceful yet powerful images of nature's
harmony .. Each piece is aptly named for
the image beautifully portrayed: "I show
strength of heart," "I am agility of mind,"
and "I stand guard as protector from evil."
Hoover concentrated his scholastic experiences at Leon Dergyshire School of
Fine Arts in Seattle, The Institute of
American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, and as
artist-in-residence to the Department of
Defense Air School Systems in the Philippines, Taiwan, and Japan, studying art.
Hoover has been developing his artistic
interests since 1950. His initial medium
was painting but by 1958 he became intrigued with wood sculpting. In that year,
he and a friend built an Alaska Limit
Seiner (fishing boat) His career was
launched into the new challenge through
the art of wood sculpting.
The Collector's Gallery in Bellevue displa~-!d Huover's first sculpture in 1965.
The entire exhibit was purchased by a
representative of the Bureau of Indian
Affairs. Three of the pieces were presented
by President Lyndon B. Johnson as gifts to
visiting dignitaries.
Hoover has received major awards since
7972 for his nationally acclaimed work in
sculpture. His work is exhibited in permanent collections in the H~ard Museum in
Phoenix, the King County Courthouse and
Daybreak Star Arts Center in Seattle, as
well as in the Washington, D.C and
regional offices of the Bureau of Indian
Affairs.
Hoover's two sons, Tony and Mark, are
also artists whose work gives voice to
their Aleutian heritage and the Aleut's
message of peace and harmony. Tony,
John's oldest son, has exhibited his paintings in a father-and-son show at the
Haines Callery in Seattle. Mark, the
youngest son, is a musician and photographer. He composed and played the
music for a five part series called Images
of Indians, released last year on PBS
television.
Mark explained a special gift his father
had given him, "My father took me commercial fishing every summer for years.

by Julie Young
The Evergreen Album Project is once
again struggling to become_a reality. A
continuation of last years project,
COLABORATIONS, the students involved
are attempting to release a double album
this May. This year's project, which directly involves approximately 200 students,
is an effort to show those students involved the various aspects of record production. At the same time, the album
documents the high level of change and
creative energy in music at the Evergreen
State College in 1981.
Last year's album was a milestone, but
showed the realities and problems involved with making a record. Though
COLLABORATIONS was finally released
last September, it has not yet paid back
the various loans obtained from the
college that were required to complete
that album. COLLABORATIONS, which
started with a list price of $6.00, rising to $7.50, was priced too low and will
not make back its costs.
With the production process at Evergreen nearly completed, the next stage is
about to begin. In two weeks, a master
tape and the album cover artwork will be
shipped to Los Angeles. One month later,
the finished album will return to the
campus. Though this sounds like a happy
ending, the Evergreen Album Project is in

TESCSwim Tearn Ends Season
All those summers we fished, nature ruled
my life. A storm could easily have taken
me. It was then that I realized my place
and felt my part in life. My father pointed
me inside myself to help me see my own
inner strength, to jump into life and go
on, no matter what."
Hoover's next projects will take him to
Ph0enix in mid-March where he will work
on three commissioned sculpture pieces
for private homes. April will see his work
in Anchorage. But, as in every year, May
is set aside for salmon fishing in Bristol
Bay
Go see Hoover's message in Gallery IV
this week before Spring break. His exhibit
will be on display at Evergreen for only
one more week. Take your lunch hour
and eat a sandwich with the spirits of
Hoover's world.

The Evergreen State College Swim Team
ended its season with two positive
"strokes." Eric Berg and Rex Fletcher represented the team at the highly competitive NOR-PAC championships in Eugene
and swam their way into the finals in both

the butterfly and freestyle. After returning
to Olympia, Fletcher and Berg added
clout to the men's team which swam its
way to victory in the Northwest Small
College Invitational hosted by the Geoducks on Saturday, Feb. 28. The Evergreen
men placed first with 135 points swimming against Portland Community College
(117 points), Highline Community College·
(47 points) and Centralia College (31
points).
The women·s team performed well but
was defeated by Portland 136 to 101.
Coach Don Martin predicts that the
geoducks, who won only four meets this
season, will continue to strengthen. "We
have a young team that has already grown
tremendously," said Martin. "Next year we
will be even stronger and soon we will be
surprising everyone."

lnte~nships
Media Technician/Research AssistantSpring 1981
Olympia
Develop a traveling display featuring women
who have served in the Washington State Legislature: and research historical photographs
of the early capitol and parts of Washington
State.
Student
should have a background
in
media. photography or art and some background in women's studies.
1 quarter. 40 hrs/wk.
Volunteer position.
Travel and supplies reimbursed.
i------------------...j
Residence Hall Director-Summer 1981
TESC
Provide for the security of the ·residence
hall: handle all room assignments;
supervise
the living environment; be accessible to staff
and students at all times: resolve conflicts
and crisis situations as they occur; provide
written reports on all counseling and/or disciplinary actions: and act as the liaison to the
Housing and Security offices. NOTE: This is
for the Upward Sound's 1981 summer session.
Student must be in his/ her junior year and
have leadership experience. Some counseling
experience is also desirable.
1 quarter. 40 hrs/ wk. $900/ month, plus room
and board. DEADLINE: March 20, 1981.
NOTE: Position contingent upon funding.

Gallery Manager Trainee-Spring 1981
TESC
Work as an assistant to the Gallery Director
and perform the following duties: maintain
gallery facilities,
equipment and supplies,
insurance, inventory and accounting records;
frame works for College ·Permanent Collection; coordinate gallery attendant schedules;
and assist Gallery Director in facilitating
exhibit installation process.
Student must have a combination of manI agement and tool using skills, i.e., planning
• and expediting. glass cutting, matting, framing, etc. Student must have an abilily to work
with people 1n the area of instruction and
supervision.
1 quarter. 20 hrs/wk. $3.85/hr. for 15 hrs.
week.
Exhibit Curator-Designer Trainee-Spring 1981
TESC
Student intern would work as an assistant
to the Gallery Director in planning, designing
and installing campus and off-campus exhibils. curating the College Permanent Collection: and circulating traveling exhibits. Student would also assume responsibilities
for
publicity
and other exhibits
management
tasks.
Student must have background in management, design and/or visual arts.
1 quarter, 20 hrs/wk.
Volunteer position,
unless student work-study qualified.

Tutor/Counselors-Summer 1981
TESC
Assist in the classroom during the day:
coordinate a study hall during the evening:
and assist with other duties as required.
Tutor/counselors
must be willing to fill in
where required. NOTE: This 1s for the Upward
Sound's 1981 summer session.
Student must have a minimum of two years
successful college study and strong reading,
language and math skills. Students must also
have the ability to work with disadvantaged
youth in stressful situalions.
5 weeks, 40 hrs/wk. NOTE: The session will
begin June 22 and will end July 31. 1981.
$500 per month plus room and board. NOTE:
This position
contingent
upon funding.
DEADLINE: March 20, 1981.

Graphic Design,r/lllustrator-Sprfng
1981
Olympia
Design, illustrate and produce. within the
context of the defined institutional
graphic
standards, a variety of visual materials for
printed publications,
classroom instructional
use. special projects, audio-visual presentalions and displays.
Prefer student with a backgroun in graphics.
1 quarter, 19 hrs/wk. $6.14/hr for work-study
qualified student.
_qesearchAide-Spring/Summer 1981
Jlympia
Studen1 intern would be involved in the
lollow1ng: Conduct literature search for current methods
of petroleum
hydrocarbon
af1alysis techniques: learn to operale and calibrate the Flame Ionization Gas chromatograph. begin experimenting
with complete
sample preparation extraction. separation and
analytic methods: and conduct analysis for
all residues in organisms of Olympia National
Pafk cpastl1ne.
Prefer student with a background in chemistry. biology and/ or environmental sciences.
S1udent mus1 have the ability to work independently and have an interest m developing
research skills.
2 quar1ers. hrs.' negotiable. Volunteer oos1t1on.

Student Counselor-Summer 1981
Ft. Lewis
Conduct screening
interviews:
provide__
counseling for those in need; assist clients in
resolving personal conflicts and help clients
with procedures required to •obtain material
support: maintain and facilitate rapport and
cooperation between agency and olher social
agencies and military
supervisors;
write
required reports and maintain lites: and other
duties as assigned by the tield supervisor.
Preler student with a good background in
human services. Students who have had military experience will be considered first.
3 quarters. hrs. negotiable Volun1eer posilion.

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serious danger of never reaching that final
stage.

In an effort to overcome the technical
and financial problems of COLLABORATIONS, the producers this year have
created a budget which will- make the
album self-sufficient and allow the album
to be professionally mastered and pressed
in LA. The production costs for this year's
album are relatively the same as last
year's. However, because of last year's
debts to the college, The Evergreen Album
Project is not receiving any money from
the school this year. To realistically complete the album within its budget, it will
cost $9.49 plus tax for the double record
set.
The Evergreen Album Project has been
attempting to raise money for the last two
months through private donations, presales of the album, and the benefit dance
held last Saturday. These efforts have
been able to raise 1/ 3 of the $4,000
Budget. The next two weeks are crucial to
the survival of the project. If you are
curious and interested in helping the
album live, stop by the Evergreen Album
Project's presale stand in the CAB and·
listen to the hard work and enthusiasm
that Evergreen musicians put into the
music. Your support would be deeply
appreciated by all those students involved
with the album.

M% OIIIA 1U COIINlalNO ,own,
K

■%

Also special Discountsto
anywherein EasternWashington

AMERICAN • VEGETARIAN DISHES

MONDAY

Depart Olympia
Flight 191-6:45 A.M.
Flight 193-1 :15 P.M.
Flight 195-8:20 P.M.
Depart Seattle
Flight 192-7:40 A.M,
Flight 194-2:15 P.M.
Flight 196-7:40 P.M.

THROUGH

FRIDAY

TOLL FREE RESERVATIONS
1-800-732-9268

Olympia Food
Coop
921 N. Rogers
Olympia

Westside

754-7666
TESC Bus stops at Division & Bowman
Walk two blocks east to Co-op
Mon-Sat 6:35 bus leaves Co-op for TESC

CalI your local Travel Agent
Olympia Airport Terminal phone 943-6272

POLVESTERGLASSBELTED
. RADIAL HIGHWAY 2 + 2

....

AR78-t3
BR78-13
DR78-14
ER78-t4
FR78-14
GR78-14
HR78-14
GR78-15
HR78-15
JR78-1 5
LR78-t5

......

51.N

53.N

11.N
511.N
11.N
IZ.N
17.N

"·"
M.N

71.N
Jl.N

.
.•.

,.

1 84
2 00
2 27
2.41
2 54
2 69
2.88
2. 79
2.96
3 13
3.28

Follow Capitol Way south
through Tumwater, veer left
onto the Olympia Tenino
Highway to the Olympia
Airport and Pearson Airways.

AIR FREIGHT
We have our own
pick-up and
delivery service.

PHONE 943-6272

. New Hours Mon-Sun 10-7
Whole Foods
Great ·Prices

CIIAIGlffl
MA1111CIIAIGI I VISAWELCOME

WEMOUNT
ALLNEWTIIESFREEi
(except for Mag. and Alum. Wheela)

page 10 Cooper Point Journal /v1arch 12, 1981

WE'LL FLY YOU HOME"'Connection

ANYWHEREin the us
/v1arch 12, 1981 Cooper Point Journal page 11

Media
cpj0249.pdf