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Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 5, Issue 27 (July 14, 1977)
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8
and Events&rr~~
Ralph (Fritz the Cat) Bakshi. II has
to do w11htwo brothers, one a Quiel
padllsl and the olher a lechnoid
armaments freak. July 13 • 19 at
The Cinema. 943-5914
FILMS
ON CAMPUS
Friday, July 1
THE MAGIC CHRISTIAN (1970,
95 min ) A rich man sels ou1 to
make fun ol poor people Grea1 lun
Stars Pe1e,Sellers as Sir Guy Grand
and Ringo Starr as his h1pp1e accompltce From a novel by Terry
Southern. with music by Paul McCartney and Thunderclap Neuman,
among Others Also, THE STOLEN
JOOLS. which boasts a cast ol over
ldty top stars and character players
ot the '30s. including Buster Keaton. Edward G Robinson, Laurel
and Hardy, Our Gang, Joan Crawlord Gary Cooper and Ma1o1rlce
Chevalier LH One. 8 pm, 75 cents
Wednesday, July 6
REBECCA (1940) Second in lhe
Upward Bound, Allred Hitchcock
lilm ser+es A young newlywed
woman discovers that tier husband
Is s1dI dominated
by the spmt
of
THE BOATNIKS For the young
and foolish Until July 6, al leas,
Capl!ol Thealer, E 51h A Ye , 357 7161.
NETWORK A black comedy about
a TV station struggling lor ratings.
lt deals w1lh a news department
1urned cucus Delinltely not Mary
Tyler Moore Wilh a screenplay by
Paddy Chayefsky, It stars Faye
Dunaway. WIiiiam Holden, Peter
Finch, and Robert Duvall. Olympic
Theater, 357-3422
EXORCIST II: THE HERETIC This
one 1s so boring that you find yourself aching for someone, anyone,
to vomit split pea soup on a haptess puest
Starring Linda Blair,
Louise Fletcher, Richard Burton
and Max von Sydow Thro July 1,
IN SEATTLE
FANTASIA (1940) The Disney
classic In stereo. I still contend that
lhe "Sorcerer's
Apprenllce"
se•
quence IS the best. Guild 45th. 2115
N 45th (In the "U" district)
THE CLOCKMAKER A clockmaker's son Is a suspect In a P9lltlcal
murder The second mm Is "The
Glory ol French Cinema 77" festival at Seven Gables, 50th and
Roosevelt Way, 632·8820.
MUSIC
IN OLYMPIA and VICINITY
Sunday. July 3
UPEPO
with
special
guest
FEATHER STONE a1 1he Tyee Motor
Inn. Tickets are SJ.00 In advance,
SJ.50 at the door. For those 21 and
over. Tickets available at the Rainbow Dell, Rainy Day Records.
Music Bar (Lacey) and Music Menu
(Tacoma)
Applejam.
SEATTLE
Sunday, July 3
JOAN BAEZ - Paramoun1
Saturday, July 9
LEO SAYER and MELISSA MANCHESTER - Paramoun1
Tuesday. July 12
KEITH JARRET - Paramount
Friday, Julv 1~
CHUCK MANGIONE
Paramount
LEO ZEPPELIN - Kingdome
Tnursday, June 30
AIRBRUSH
LINDY REINMUTH
with ART
MESSAR - July 1
MAGGIE CLARK with JOHN
JOSEPH - Saturday, July 2. The
Other Side ol The Tracks, 106 W
Main, Auburn. Shows begin at 9
pm. $1.00.
FESTIVAL OF AMERICAN FIDDLE TUNES ANO OLD• TIMEY FIO•
OLE, BANJO, AND BAND CONTEST ANO CONCERT featuring
rw; dead first wife A ch1ll1ng moY1e,
complete with a sm1s1er housek.ee~e1 ano an eerie mansion Taken
'rom ine Daonne du Maur1er novel,
,t stars Laurence Ol1v1er Joan Fon•
1ame GE'orge Sanders and Judith
Andersen L H Five, 7 30 pm , 25
ents for Upward Board people, 75
:t"n,s !or everyone else
IN OLYMPIA
COUSIN. COUSINE (1976) A very
tiaopy t11m aboul very pretty oeople No. really It's an enjoyable
li!m tor those m tho mood 10 be
entenamecl Showing untll July 12
at The Cinerna 943-5314
WIZARDS An animated
tllm
Juty 3. The Empty Space Thea1er,
919 E. Pike, 325·4444. Call and see
what they are doing next. The
Empty Space can do no wrong.
UTOPIA A play by GIibert and
Sulllvan at the Seattle Center Play•
house. July 14. 15. 16, 20, 21, 22,
23. Call 363-2333 tor Information.
FESTIVALS, FAIRS,
FOURTH OF JULY
ANO THE
LAKEFAIR Olympla's big celebration, a treat lor carnl¥al tans and
anthropologlsls alike. Here's a few
ol the hlghtlghts:
Friday, July 8
12 Noon - Carnival, Local Concessions and Midway Open
7:30 p.m. The Coronation ol the
Lakefair Queen. A show not to be
missed Capitol Lake Swim Stadium
9 p.rn. Teen Dance - Featuring
CHINOOK. Legion Way between
Water and Columbia. It should be
the best rock and roll dance ol the
year, and it's free
Sunday, July 10
12 noon - 1st Annual Capital
Lakela1r Sk.ateboard Derby
10 pm G1gan1tc Fireworks Display The fairgrounds are al the loot
ol Wate, Street. 1n Capitol Lake
Park
FOURTH OF JULY
LACEY lirework.s at South Sound
Center
OAKVILLE Raft race, gun show,
dancing and fireworks
TACOMA (on July 3) The UPTOWN-LOWDOWN JAZ2 BAND will
give a free concert, followed by
fireworks at 7 30 p rn on the Old
Town Dock
ART
State Theater. 357-4010.
STAR WARS Zap! (see review In
this issue) Starts July 1. State Theater, 357-4010
FUN WITH DICK ANO JANE The
OICk and Jane grow up to be lyplcal
suburban bank robbers. Also NICKELODEON Admission to the pre•
m1ere showing ol this film was only
a nickel If they charge more. consider ii robbery. With Ryan and
Ta1um Sunset Drive-in. 357-8302
b\l
Friday. July 8
OPEN MIKE AND OPEN HOUSE
First an open mike, then sing-alongs, story telling. etc. Doors open
at 8 p.m Admission Is lree. AppleJam. 220 E Union Street
Saturday, July 9
LEROY HINTZ REVUE A performance !or lods and anyone else that
cares to come. The act includes a
ventriloquist,
a contorllonlst.
a
magician and acrobats. Doors o'pen
at 7 30 p,m Admission is $1 00
workshops
wllh muslCians and
dancers July 4 • 9, For1 Worden
Slate Park, Por1 Townsend. For Information, call 385-3102.
THEATER
SEATTLE
JESSE ANO THE BANDIT QUEEN
through July 2.
SEXUAL PERVERSITY IN CHICAGO and SQUIRRELS through
OLYMPIA
Memorabilia re1anng 10 American
ln1ependence.
The Washington
State Capitol Museum. 211 W. 21st
Ave .. July 4 • 15
SEATTLE
GROUNDSWELL Group showing
ot nine Seattle women
Through
July 10. 3603 S. McClellan, Wed•
nesday • Sunday, 12 • 5.
GUY ANDERSON Large scale
works on paper. Unlll September 11
Modern Art Pavilion. Seattle Genier
SPACE SETTINGS,
SETTING
SPACES Ceramic wor1c Through
July 7 - 13 Peach Tree Gallery,
4518 University Way NE
COMMUNITY BULLETIN BOARD
Construction work has begun on
1t1e proposed nuclear power plants
at Salsoo, near Elma. Washmgton
TM Crabs~!
Alliance is saying
No" lo nuclear power in the Pacific
Nor1hwes1.ano oe11evesma, mrougn
direct and democratic mass action.
nuclear power will be slopped Join
us at 11 am, July 16, 1977 1n a
festive ga1her1ng ot opposlllon
Featured even1s include workshops,
music. speakers and a lrfttl lo the
s1!e Child care provided For more
m!orma11on call 357-&'42 or 8663764
KAOS F-M 89.3 In Olympta Is a
listener- sponsored rad lo slatlon
serving the South Sound area. The
N.ws o.p.rtment needs people Interested 1n !earning radio techniques. such as studio producllon,
news writmg/edlflng,
lnvesliQallve
reoortmg, and on-the-air announc•
ing Arfyone interested please contac1 Mary Geraci at 866-NEWS or
866-KAOS
""Vol. 5 No. 27
Saturday, July 9
2·30 and 4·30 pm.
Perform•
ances by the ONE REEL VAUOE·
VILLE SHOW
5 pm iPRE·PARADE SHOW
6 pm
GRANO TWILIGHT PARADE on Capitol Way
~riday July 8
THE LONELINESS OF THE LONG
DISTANCE RUNNER (1962. 103
mm\ The story ol a rebellious borstal boy who, while training tor a
cross-country race recollecls his
oast e,oeriences The him has been
ctescr•bed as 'technically exc1t1ng,
aria tias been compared to !he films
, trie French New Wave
Tak.en
Tr 1m 'he short SIOry by Allan S1111 )t' who also wrote the screenplay
, stars Tom Cour1nay Alex McGoNan ano M1chae! Redgrave LH
One 8 o m 75 cents
Weanesday July 13
NOTORIOUS (1944) FBI agent:,
•rack Nazis 1n Rio de Jane1ro This
0011st1eo thriller
1s ranked with
H11chcock s best It slars Ingrid
Be,gman. Cary Grant. and Claude
Raines Also THE GREAT TRAIN
ROBBERY /1903) At th1neen minutes 11was the longesl !ilm of its
time Plus SOLO (1971) A spec•
tacular mountain
climbing
l1lm
wh•cti makes frequent appearances
a1 Eoergreen LH Five 7 30, 25
cents tor Upward Bounders. 75
r,ents !or everyone else
p 'in,
,, !.s.Lb
KAOS Advisory Committee
1s
currently accepting appl1cal1ons for
a vacanl pos111on The committee
mee1s at leas! once a monlh to
work on lormulat1ng operating pol1cy tor KAOS and lo assist the stal1on manager
The comm,11ee consists ol e1gh1
members. one broadcast protess1onaf, lwo community members,
three lacully 01 slalt at Evergreen,
and two Evergreen students
The
apphcant musl be an Evergreen
student who w1H be enrolled unlll
June, 1979
Apphcat1ons must be written and
should include a statement ol interest Send lhem to KAOS, CAB 305.
atren11on Toni Holm by July 20,
1977
The 5•11- Help Bicycle
Repair
Shop's summer hours are Wednesdays. from 12 - 5 p m. It is located
m the CAB basemen1, and costs 25
cents for a day's usage
TI-.. Femlnltl
Karate Union. an
organization
ol women teaching
women karate and sell-defense,
will have an eight-week session at
TESC this summer. Classes wlll be
on F.idays at 7 p.m. In the Campus
Recreation Center Multl•Purpose
Room, beginning July 8th. Additional beginners sessions and wont•
outs during the week wlll be arranged at the llrsl class. The cost
is $20. AH levels are welcome. Call
357-4078 lor more Information
Faculty member Marilyn Frasca
will conduct an Intensive Journal
won(shop during the month ol July
The workshop
will happen one
morning each week tor four weells
beginning WedneSday July 6, from
9 - 12 In lhe 3213 Lounge ol lab It
and will continue each Wed . same
time and place
This will be a lime for private
and personal writing guided by the
procedure tor keeping an ln1enslve
Journal as created by Ira Progoll.
The workshop Is free and open to
all members of the communtly
Come prepared with a loose-lea!
bmder and dividers.
A drNm Nmlnar wlll be offered
this summer by Edward McOuarrle.
The introductory meeting IS Wed•
neSday, July 6, al 7 p.m. In Rm.
2207 Lab II There wlll be nine
weekly sessions and the tee Is $20.
August 26 is the anniversary of
the day women won 1he right to
vote In the U.S. Marches and rallies
are being planned nationwide on
Aug us I 26 and for 27 to support the
nghls ol all women today. A rally
1s an avenue for people to expre88
concern and connection with the
issues being marched for II Is also
a way for many people who are u•
sually totally unassocltted to walk
together It is done fro"' people's
free wUI It is an hone!lt statement
ol general concern and support
when people participate.
The P...-C. County WorMn'I Coalltlon, In Tacoma, Is planning a
march route and rally with short
speeches. skits and music. Four
points as yel are being emphasized,
though others can and should be
Included. The points are the ERA,
the right 10 abortion. child care.
and an end to forced sterilization.
A coalition In Olympia is planning
the logistics ol transportation and
child care tor peopte who wan, to
oar11c1pate. II is working on publlc1ty to reach as many people lrom
the Olympia area as possible
II
you would like to help In the plan•
nlng, lhese people can be con•
!acted Logistics.
Libby 943.
1372; Publlclty Commltlee
Caryn
- 943-8964, EYents Committee;
DeAnn - days, 357-5336, nights,
753-0159; Budget Commlt1ee. Marlyn - 352-5184
THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE BOOKSTORE
'•
"We have books, office supplies, sportswear, photographic film, special order
services ... , plus other articles of use."
OPEN DAILY MON - FRI 8 - 4:30
cARR01s?
mo..'j't>c.e ✓e..n
Daniel J. Evans is now on the
job as Evergreen's president. On
July 12th, he spoke with two
staff members of the COOPER
POINT JOURNAL on subjects
relating to his presidency. The
following insights and opinions
are excerpts from the Evans interview.
JOURNAL: We were wondering exactly what a college president does and what exactly you
have been doing.
EVANS: Of course I came to
the job from a somewhat different background than most of
those who have been in higher
education all their lives, and that
may bring some strength, and
also some weaknesses, but it certainly means a different style of
management.
During the last
month, I've been heavily involved, of course, in just plain
orientation, trying to find out
what we're doing in terms of current programs, where we are in
terms of potential enrollments
for the fall, the physical opera-
Evans -On The Job
tions of our Business Offices and
our Admissions Office. We have
gone through the process of hiring faculty for next fall.
The last week, or so, has been
a tough one, really related to
budget and the problems of seeing a budget from a different end
of the pipe than over the last
twelve years. It's such a gusher
when we put it in and it's a real
trickle when it comes out.
I've already had an opportunity to speak to two clubs, I've
got meetings which will come up
shortly with the school superintendents of the Thurston County
schools. I'll try to do just as much
of that as I can, including meetings with individual legislators in
their own home communities.
One problem which I really intend to spend a fairly substantial
amount of time on during at
least the next six months to a
year, is to try to translate the
Evergreen story to the outside
community.
JOURNAL: We have talked
about the external things you've
been doing, about public relations and also the budget, but
are there things internally that
you'd like to do here7
EVANS: To try to observe
how people are doing their jobs,
what kind of jobs they are doing,
to see if through any kind of
change in organization, we can
end up doing things better. I
think one of the ways to get a
better insight into the Evergreen
formula, the way in which education is carried out, I think
would be to teach. I'm meeting
with some of the academic deans
and the head of one of the programs, in the next week or so, to
really investigate further what
kind of time involvement there
would be and how I might fit it
in. If I could possibly do it, I'd
like to. I don't even know whether
I'd be any good at teaching, but
it would be fun to try, and it
would be fun to learn from that,
much more personally just how
the system works and how well
it works.
JOURNAL: Do it now, I'm
graduating soon. President McCann felt that student protests
should be regulated, what are
your feelings on campus demonstrations 7
EVANS: I think the measure
of a free society is really how
civilized a protest can be, l hate
to see us get to a point where we
have a whole book full of specific
rules and regulations. It seems to
me that that almost goes counter
to the original concepts of Evergreen. Unlike some other institutions who have very close control . . I guess parents can send
their children to these institutions
feeling that in reality they will
be substitute parents. I think we
ought to hear everyone, and that
includes students, faculty, and
staff. We've got to act in a way
that allows everyone to treat everyone as a civilized adult, and
that means a really very careful
view as to how protests are carried out when it's felt necessary
that lhe protest is used, and I
think that .
Good grief, if we
don't believe in protest at all, we
reject our own beginnings as a
nation. We started out of protest
of pretty substantial proportion.
But, I think that it requires some
common sense on both sides,
both from the administration's
point of view, in not trying to
anticipate and regulate before the
fact, and by those who protest.
They've just got to be good
enough to make an effective protest, but keep it in civilized terms
so that we don't end up, either
internally, or, forced upon us externally, with some unusual rules
that I think would help destroy us.
JOURNAL: You didn't seem
too well djsposed toward the
strike contingency plan that was
brought up at the last Board of
Trustees meeting. Do you see a
need for such a plan 7
EVANS: I think it was too
Continued on page 3
One Small Bite For Rasmussen,
A Gaping Hole For Evergreen
by Karrie Jacobs
After three days of d«ision•
making meetings, Evergreen's
1977 - 78 budget was presented
to the Budgetary Unit Heads on
Monday morning, July 11, by
President Evans, Vice-Presidents
Clabaugh and Konnondy. and
Bill Robinson of the Budget Office. The meeting was an unusually grim one. attended by those •
staff members who had submjtted
their budgetary requests the week
before, and were hoping that
their areas would be fully funded.
This, unfortunately, was not -to·
be the case. The funds allocated
to Evergreen by the legislature
for the 1977 - 79 biennium were
not sufficient to fund all of the
college's operations fully, and a
great deal of cutting, shifting,
and rearrangi.1g had to take place
before anything resembling a balanced budget could be devised.
BULGES AND HOLES
The main deficit in the 1977 78 budget stems from the administrative budget, which finances such things as the Board
of Trust ... , the offices of the
President and Vitt-Presidents,
the college's fiscal operations,
Penonnel, The Sounding Board,
and Equal Opportunity
programs. It is a "1rge budset and its
$1,~42,064 request pushed t~e
~nt~ budget· $195,000 over its
hm,t.
.
. .
.
Accordmg to Admm1strahve
Vice President De.an Clabaugh,
there are three main reasons for
the bulg~ i.n the ad~inistra.tive
budget. F1nt of all, m previous
years a~ut S.1~;000 a year could
be_o.~ta1ned 111 overhead recovenes from grants and contracts.
Th~ money .went to finance the
Business ~f1ce and the Development Office. Howev~r, these
funds are no lo~er available. ,
former Pre,1dent Mc<:omn s
pa:; for 1977 - 78, amounting to
••~
II eel
rou ghl y ;i,.;,v, 000 , was not a ow
• 1ature .m Everfor by t he Iegis
• b dg
d , .
bl"
~ s u e.t an it is an o tgation that will be met at the expense of the college's offices and
services.
The third factor which drove
the administrative budget beyond
its limits was simply inflation,
rising costs that were not accounted for in the legislature's
allocation.
The administrative budget is
not the only area that callled
problems in balancing the budset
for the coming yur. There is also
the problem with "non-comparable activities," which att items
that •PPHr nowhere in the legis-
lature's formulas for funding institutions. The legislature, eager
to go home after a long session,
decided that it would be easiest
not to provide for those troublesome non-comparable activities.
Evergreen being the unique institution lhat it is, had cornered
!he market on unusual and irregular budget items. For example,
under the heading of Student
Services we have the Third World
Coalition and an outgrowth of
the Coalition, the Educational
Opportunity Program, which is
appearing in the budget for the
first ear. Because these items
Y.
h
are unique to Evergreen, t e
.I
h
f
I I d
reg1s
as no ormu a orth e. . ature
h
c,dmg ow much money
ey
deserve. No formula, no funding.
SKIN GRAFTING
Clabaugh, Konnondy. Evans
and Robinson undertook the difficult task of making a $195,000
deficit disappear without eliminating any services. Two methods were arrived at as solutions
to the problem. first of all.
money will be borrowed from
the 1978 - 79 budget and placed
in the 77 - 78 budget (sometimes
known as the New York ·c;ty
technique). in hopes that more
funding will be avai"1ble during
1978-79. According to Clabaugh,
relatively little was shifted, in
comparison, that is, ~o the .t~tal
budget of well over eight m1ll1on
dollars. About $30,000 of lnstructional Funds were brought
forward, as well ,as $17,000 of
the library Groups budget. Another $45,000 was drawn into
this year's funds, from money
earmarked for unemployment insurance, which the legislatu~e
simply forgot to allocate. This
was done on the assumption that
the legislature will remember and
will correct their oversight in the
1978 session.
Many of the area's budgets
were trimmed and funds were
transferred out of some items to
support the administrative program, in a process somewhat
akin to skin grafting. The hardest
hit were Plant Operations and
Maintenance
and the Library
Croup, whose requests for new
positions 10 staff the Communications building were not funded.
This absence of funds presents a
considerable obstacle in the opening of the Communications
building. As Associate Dean of
Library Services Dave Carnahan
pointed out. "I don't see how we
can operate that building without a staff."
Health Services will be funded
this year, but not without some
type of cutback in service. It was
determined that $15,000 had to
be sliced from that budget but
the method has not yet been decided on. The possibility of setting
a fee of three dollars per visit
was discussed and it was hoped
that students' insurance would
cover the charge. However it
could not be assumed that all
students h'ave some form of insurance, and Evans asserted that
any additional fees on top of a
tuition hike and increased charges
for room and board would not
go over well.
The most likely solution to the
problem of funding Health Services, at this time, is the formation of a combined Health Services and Human Growth and
Counseling
Center, either in
physical space or budset. There
is also a possibilit)' of running
the clinic on a four day week,
instead of five.
The skin tight budget will
make the college's operations difficult to say the least and in some
instances, as in the case of the
Communications
building, almost impossible. 'The budset."
said Evans, at the Monday me-eting, "was an opportunity for the
legislature to giv~ Slim Rasmussen one bite of the apple."
J
2
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Real
Power
To the Editor
Summer bnngs silence to this
campu.., Although 11 may seem
,:1., 11 th1<, campus
1s dormant
a
c.ll\<,er
h,t,h. reveals a d1Heren1
'>lllr\' The silence does not imply
that dec1s1on!>aren t being made,
m,r 1mp0rtant meetings taking
plan, the uutn.'me of which will
allcct tuture Evergreeners
for
,·ear., ftl c0me The silence 1s only
1n the i,urlace
Beneath thdt sur.illt'
the bureaucratic levers and
~t·ar-. ol th11;.inst1tut1on grin<l on
1 q•r~n•rn.., budxet meeting tor
ht· ur(timm~ year wht-'re the pie
.., ut dnJ J1shl'd nut was held
c1-.1 W<"el-. lt wt•nt unnoticed hy
11.,-.1 <11 tht' student
population
rh11ugh student'> hdve little s.ay
.il-it,ut Eveq,;reen .._operating budgl't therf' L'>.1 place where stuJcnt<, c.in do mure than buzz anund adm1n1stra1or'l- c.-irs Im
l'iernng to the Services and Act1v1tie.._Board. comprised of six
students, one Iacuity, and one
statt who allocate about $395.000
of student funds toward such or!(an1zations as the human rights
i,;roups on the third floor of the
library, the operation of the Rrcreat1on Center and Campus Act1v1t1es Building, and more than
20 other groups and activities on
campus.
Over the summer, the S&:A
Board will tackle issues such as
the design of Phase II of the
Campus Activities Building, the
funding of transcripts and portfolios. and the presentation of
next year's Services and Activ11lesbudget to the Board of Trustee-s for approval
Students are
nttded now to serve on the S&.A
Board for th.e.....ummer This is
one place wtfire students have
real. honest-to-goodness d«ision
making power. Though students
have tM power now, unless students show that they a~ interested in d«iding where the money
should be lpt'nt, unless studmt
interests att pttWnted and argued
for. thm we could los,e whatn'ff
dfrctive control that we do have.
At th1,;,moment there 1s no S&.A
Board II anyone 1s interested in
bet:<,ming a member or h.as ques11ons about 1t or 1ust wants to
1,111....
pleJse, plea!l.e, please come
1n to CAB JOSA My door and
my mind 1s always open Amen
Steve Francis,
Executive Secretary
tor Services and
Ac11v1ties Board
Ah, Evergreen
T0 the Editor
This morning I talke-d with my
in,;tructor al the University of
Washington
He teaches History
ot Chnst1an1ty (or History 307 as
it 1s call('d). To talk with him, I
had to make an appointment with
his secretary m advance I had
prrsented a wntten request, three
pages long. asking some specific
questions about statements he
mad(' in his lecture He doesn't
like his lecture disturbed by questions m class When we talked
the points in question were dis:
cussed at length. Exactly onehalf hour in length. "I am sorry
to cut this oH, I have another
student waiting."
You Stt, it is a hard thing leaving Evergreen. There is a bitter
taste to the method served up at
the University of Washington as
education. I may be over-sensit 1ve. True. Or, I may just love
the process of education, real education, so deeply that I resent it
like hell when it is taken away
and replaced with brand X.
I would like to include an excerpt of a letter I wrote during
that penod in Evergreen history
when the legislature cut the budget drastically and there was
some serious question
about
Evergrttn having a future:
"In his book, ~yond Freedom
and Dignity, Dr. B.F. Skinner
says, 'Traditional educational es·
tablishments
specify what the
student is to learn ""' what age
and administers tests to make
sure that the spKifiations
are
met.' The Eve~rttn
State Col•
~ is a major achievemfflt in
the movemmt towards a mean•
ingful, effective and progttS,Sive
education. There are no grades
at Ev('rgreen A system of evaluatmn ol wml... 1s used rather
than tests to make sun• tha1 thf'
'>Pl'(if1,atu.10~ue mf'l. There are
tew n~1d niur,e reqwrement-. or
ng1tl ,ch,w! poliC\f':, The c.tuJcnt, ldn have a ma1or rnle m
elll'ctin~ the course ol <;tudy and
the m<'lhod of study They ar(' a.,
n..·-.pons1blc for its succes-. or tc1ilure .:1,;,dny member ol th(' tarnlty
Clr administration
The Evergreen State College 1s
like Alices mirror. By passing
thwu~h to the other side, one
can untold e).penences. a wealth
nl k.nowledKe and begin 1he
ch,mgl' mtc, a mature, intelligent,
lle"blr human bemg The wisJ\,m gained at Evergreen 1s not a
gilt R.,the·r 11 •~ a precious tool
~,IJOL•Jthrough disciplined study,
h.u<.J worl-.. creative action, and
1<1n~. arduous
travels through
pnsonal changes .
The society we are livmg m
iaw us the opportunity
to uSt"
The Evergreen State College, and
to develop 11 mto an institution
0f change, dedicated to the ad•
vancement and enhancrment of
our culture. They have now cut
our funding and caused severe
injury to the well-being of what
they helped to create. This p«ul1ar behavior I do not understand.
Nor is ii necessary that ii be un·
derstood. Evergreen will survive.
It has tough people in its community who are not prone to
giving up when things are grim.
The student body of this college
would do well to consider carefu~~yth~ir role in the difficulty.
. If wisdom gained at Evergreen
,s ~at a gift, surely the opportunity to use Evergreen is. Yes,
we pay tuition, but i£ Evergrttn
didn't exist, your tuitton couldn't
buy you what Evergreen has to
offer "
I hope you understand the
bea.uty of Evergrttn. The purity
of its spirit, the energy it generates in your mind. The frttdom
of thought and the e-xp~sion of
that thought are beyond estima•
tion. I a~ here at the University
of Washington and I miss that
be.1uty terribly.
Steven Simpson
Sit Down,
Protest,
And Study
To the Editor:
The way the library hours are
set up this summer, one would
think the administration was attempllng to organize a conspiracy
to prevent students from studymg The library is open while
students are attendinK class and
can make little use of it. In turn,
the library do~
when students
arc just finishing classes for the
day, and need it the most! It is
obvious that the library hours
are de..,igned for the convenience
of the library staff, but what is
sometimes forgotten by the administration is that this school is
here because the students are
here, and if there were no students there would be no school or
admin1strat1on. In the past week
I have been talking to ditterent
administration
and staH mem•
bers in a quest to set up a study
hall on campus, yet there has
been resistance to the idea becau$(' the administration and staff
do not see a studn1t need for a
study hall. They hav• asked me
to show them that there is a nttd
before they will discuss the mat•
ter any further. So I am propos•
ing to a=mble a SIT IN STUDY
PROTEST at the library to acknowleda:e our nttd for • study
hall II So on July 19 from 4 ,00
until after library closing hours
th,re will b. a SIT IN STUDY
PROTEST at th• library loung•
in front of the circulation desk.
SHOW THERE 15 A NEED, pass
the word and be there on Tuesday, also a petition will be on
hand to sign to vocalize your
support I I111111111111111
Jim Herma.n
Recognition
To the Editor,
Upward Bound Program
appreciatn the publicity that it
Th,
receivf'<l in the June 30 issue of
the Cooper Point Journal In order to be clear in our process, we
realtr.e. l~al newspapers dlso give
recogn11ton to people, besides inform.ttion Therefore I would like
to recognize the lollowing people:
Sue Taylor
Bob Woolf
Don Robertson
Don Codfrf'y
Virginia Sainshurv
Jean-Vi Lenthe
Clif Yates
Anne Cypher
Zsa Zsa DeP ,101<)
Margie Ennie
Joe McCla<n
Bette M,tchdl
J.ine Sameth
Paul Fmk.
Nancy Connollv
Mary Bennett
Mary Millar
Linda Castillo
Louis Potts
Odell Matthews
Valerie Morgan
Randy Denham
Dorris Richardson
Donica Gribble
Terry Slaughter
Natalie Holmes
Ray White
Cheryl Jones
Marie McNa\ly
Debbie Long
Gerald Casterlow
Sid Murphy
Sam Daniels
Emma Ramsey
Robert Fox
Pam Sacks
Michell• Hadley
Charlene Wallin
Donna Jackson
Collttn McCloud
Rob.rt Jones
Sta«y Bird
Kathie Miller
Vanessa Cobb
David Quins
David Factory
Ricky Richardson
Jemerica Hadley
Carla Starr
Feliece Houston
Margie Youckton
Latonya Johnson
Simone Tate
Th•nk you.
Phill Brisco,, Dir<ctor
Upward Bound
Communications Building Daydreams
by Karrie Jacobs
lnsidt.• the off-white
wood~rained poured-concrete
shell,
there 1s a reC1tal hJII with a seatm~ capaoty of 250 Overl,)oking
the wood-paneled intcnor of the
hall 1s a ser1e.., of ..,mall glass enclo,;ed rl1om., which run the w1(hh
nl the hall The tw,t rnom contain-. an a~1du\ mixer tn be used
t•1lhN in u1n1unct1on with ren,r<lmy, equ1pment tt, dncument
an event, nr JU"'t hi ,ontrol the
quality l)I '-OunJ during a concert in the hall below. The next
rf\\,m contain~ an elaborate lightin~ board with 25 dimmers and a
memory which can retain settings
for a number of different scenes
during a performance.
Then.
there 1s a narration booth which
can be used by a person dubbing
in the voices for a movie. at the
same time that the film is being
shown on the screen at the front
of the hal:. Pretty nice. huh?
Well, that's not all. Downstairs
there are orchestra and chorus
rehearsal rooms, an eight-track
recording studio and a spacious
black box lab.led The Experimental Theater, which can serve
as either a free form theater, or a
television studio, or both at the
same time. It even has extra fl.at,
extra smooth floors to allow .a
TV camera on wheels to move
across the room without jiggling
the picture. In addition to all that
there are dance practice rooms
and lounges on the third floor of
the building that were designed,
according to a very proud tour
guide at Evergreen's Founder's
Day celebration, so that it would
be impossible for a faculty member to conduct a seminar in them,
designed specifically as student
k•unge areas. It sounds a little
like heaven for the media or perlorming arts student.
According to Dean of Library
Services Jovanna Brown, Ever-
I
fll'ctrician-.
be bo1h manaKer1al and produc
11nn, Media Service<, <;taff are re·
B0h Strecker and Associate Dean
tu•n onenlt.•d
lied on lo fill the gap., The .,,aff
of Library St'rv1ce.., Dave CarnaThl' Mt.'JLa Ma1ntt-nanH Techdot·sn
t
rl'ally
have'
thtt1ml'
to
han. nn tht' !->ub1cclCl! lhe Comn1C1.an
will havt· thr{'(' main re
t..:.t,h v1tlt•o to Jny t'xtenl and <,o
mun,catwns Bu1ltlm~. Althou~h
-.pon.,1htl1t1t•<,c11nne<.tt'd wtth tht'
tht·y
prdt.•r
lo
'>ervt•
d'-,
(rt'W
tor
Strecl-.er 1<;concerned with the
Commun1,.it10n'> BuildinK F1r-.1
wdl thought oul prnduct1on.,
problems that an ab~nce of '>ldff
ot Jll tht· w<,IPm" 1n<,IJllf'd m th1·
Th,.,
mt'.in..,
thJt
de-.p,te
tht.pre-.
wc1uld prewnt m making use of
budd1nK hv the· ,nntr,1ct11r, nlll-.1
thl' bu1ltlin¥,. h1, rt•al concern 1.., enu· ti! t \1l11r TV <...im('ra<.and
ht' eht·<..l...t·d
,111tldmunwnted bf'
olhl'r
v1dt•o
t>tJu1pmt>n\
very
lt·W
th,11 the om' year guar.in1ce lrom
lnrt·
tin.ii
.icu.·pt.inc
t' fht· -.t.'t
..,tudt'nh (.Jn Jllu.i!lv Kt'I hdnd..,
the n1ntraclL1r,;, on thl' butl<ltnK
(Ind r<:.,pon-.1bd11
v will bt· tn in
on
m<.,trutt1nn
tn
wor\..ing
LI
(h.i.,
bt· t,11...enadvJnlJge ot The tnlriDavit'.,, .i mt-mbt-r ol tht· Mt•d1,1 -.i.ill .,v..,ltm'> dn<.Jt""yu1pmt·nt n111
Late elcttron1( equipment tn the
indudt·d 1n tht• huilJ1nK ulnlra(I
l'roducl111n St~ilt u,nll•n<.J-. thJt
<,lrullurt' a, well a., more munThi:
th1rJ rt.'<,pon-.1b1litywill bt·
tht· n•J'>on th.lt ttwrt' L'> .,11 little
Jc1ne 1tL'lll".-.uch a<, th(' elevator".
t(l mcJmtJin tht• ..:qu1pment 11n<t1n
tht·
way
ol
v1dt•o
proc.lu<
I
10n
mu'>\ be 1n use tn order for any
1t gm_•<,
min operation
.il Evt•rgref'n dt•.,p1lt' tht' .1bunclelect<; 1n them tu -.how up U
Tht· third po..,.tH,n rC'yue<,tl'd
JJnl
..,upply
ol
cqu1pmt'nl,
1,
that
the bu1\d1ng 1<; not cpencd IM
the Mcd1a Tcchn1c1dn. wou\J
pt,tcnt1al perlormer., and 1c,hn1another year, the rnllege 1t..elt
take over the du11e'- at Med1a
c1anc;
1n
student
production,;
will have to pay for correcting
Loan currentlv a-.s1gned to (h,h
Jrt'
unwdlinK lo n,oper.:ite with
any faults in the hardware. rather
Davies and Eileen Meconi Th,.._
each
t1thn
enough
tn
makf.'
prnth.rn the contractor<;. Besidcs that,
would free Meconi tn do mvenducl1t1n., te.a..,ible Whether the
Strecker considers 11 a waste to
tnry on a lull time bas1!l. and
problem
lies
in
lack
nf
,;1afl
tn
heat a bu1ldin~ that 1s standing
Davie~ to go back In Audio and
provide accr~s. or in a laLk ol
1dk and the Commun1cat1ons
\'1dC'(l production
nmperat,on
am~10g
...
tudt'nts.
or
Building will have to be heated,
Under th1c, plan prc,duct1on a!l.d
combination
o•
the
two,
Davies
open or not. Cold and mc,isture
<,1stanc1:in the C0mmun1cat1on,;
dell">
n0l
lh1nk
that
there
will
be
could Jo substantial damage to
Build1n~ w0uld be,. prnv1ded by
much v1dt"t) dct1v1ty 1n the Comthe buddm>1,'s facil1t1es. adding to
tht> library prndu(l1lln 'lotalf whc,
mun1Cat10ns
Building
for
a
long
thf' cos! ol .id1ustmg L1ulty equ1pwould shuttle back and lorth on
11ml', a~sumin~ that the budding
ml'nt after the ~uarariee expires.
dl'mand
opens. 1n the near future.
Carnahan has other concerns.
Unfortunately,
the tinly pos1UNFULFILLED REQUESTS
Ht' has been involved with the
l1(1n of the three' runded in thi,;;
In
the
budget
request
presented
planning of the building and the
vear,; budget 1<;the Media Mainto the President and Vice-Presipurchasing of equipment £or it.
tenance Technician, leav1ng the
dents.
Library
Services
Deans
over the last few years, and 1s
present Library Staff to f,11 the
Brown and Carnahan requested
anxious to set> 1t opened and in
dut1l'S of the 01her pns1t1on.-.and
funding
tor
three
new
positions.
use. However, in his position
not allPwin~ 1hem much time to
a Chief c1fMedia Operatu,ns and
with Library Services. the area
cope with the extra demand,; of a
Pr0duct1on,
a
Media
Maintenance
that has control of all media
whole new budding
Technician and a Mcd,a Techni·
equipment on campus, he must
Prec;umably, 1n th£' not too d1,;,cian.
The
Chief
01
Media
Operaworry about the proper care of
tJnt
tuture. dec1s1nn'l. will bt'
tions and Pr0duct1on wc,u\J be
the equipment. "Can we open
made on whether the Commun1responsible
tor
the
c0orJinat1on
the building
in a responsible
cat1ons Bu1\dinK will open th,.,
and direction of the media areas
way1" responded Carnahan when
vear and what can and cJnnot bt•
,n
the
Library,
as
well
as
in
the
he was asked why he was unJcmt· with 1t 11 11 d0e, In the
the Cnmmun1cat1ono;; Budd1ng,
comfortable with the idea of
mt•.in11me. feel tree 10 fanta.-..1zl'
Graphics,
.ind
the
Lecture
Halls.
opening the building in the Fall,
abl,ut endlec;,; reno,•, ot dials and
This perstm would be re-sponsi··can we let it be used without
l..,m1l-i-.rehear~JI r00ms with betble
for
managing
tho<;t>
areas
on
adequate supervision1" The comtt.'r auiu-.tic.._ than the CAB lt1ada day to day bac;1s under the d1plicated pieces of equipment 1n
1n~ di,cl-. and loungE''> that cant
reclil1n
of
Carnahan,
who
woul<.J
the building can't operate theml',t· u<,t•d i(,r seminar areas Ddyserve as Coordinator
ot Media
selves.
dream, are chc,1p
Service..,
The
new
po<;1t1on
would
ACCESS
Access to media equipment 1s
a perennial problem at Evergreen.
m,t so much with portable and
semi-portable items available at
Media Loan. or with the recording and editing machines prnvidt'd by Mini Med1.i, but w1th
the stud10 telev1<;1onand recnrtlmg equ1pment found in the librarv
The Commun1c,1tH1n.._
Buildini reprl">l'nt, ,in aJd,11nn
of wu~hlv SSOO000 wt1rth <'I
ml•tli,1 t11t)I-.,hut m• m•w pr11dm
tum ,t.itl under 1h,· rn.',t·nt hudw--·t fh1, ..,11uatu1n< .1n onlv .,erve
111u,n,ppund tht• lruc,trat111n., of
..1ude•nh intt'rt·,tt·d m td1•v1..,111n
.,n<.J audu1 rrodut tn1n Rt•t.1u-.l'
the·re are no l,Huhy JI l·ver~rl"t·n
with the -.1...ill..,
llr t1nw nett•,.-..,,rv
I he rt>cnrdin~ -.1uJ10.
\11te,Kh v1det1 and ,wd111pn1du~
Building.
green's brand new Communications Bu1\d1ng is ··one of the mo<;t
l,1nta~tic buildings on the We,;t
Cl,a,1.'" Bmwn regards the buildin~
a.., c1 satisfattory
e•nd result
lrom Jn .ittempl to Jt>S1~n a
hudd1n~ 1hat could truly provide
.in 1ntrrelt-.c1plinary expt•nenn• in
tlw perlorm1n~ .Jrl'The building is !:>Cheduled to
<lpt'n fur the J077 - 78 school
year and 1n theory, the electrKal
LOntractors
and conc;truct1on
crew should be out ol there in
lime (or the carpets. drapes and
furniture to be moved in before
Fall quarter begins.
I'll bet you're anxious already
to get in there and really u~ that
gear. l bet you're just itching to
get your hot little hands on all
those knobs and dials, to let your
calloused feet bounce a little on
a spnngy dance room floor, to
have your first avante-garde jatz
band rehearsal in that virginal
white practice room. Just think.
in two, maybe three months
Just hold your horses. It isn't
that simple. Evergreen's media
playground could very well not
open this year because funds for
the staff to run the building were
squeezed out of this year's very
tight operating budget. Although
the Washington
legislature has
provided enough money over the
years to construct and equip the
Communications Building. it neglected to allow enough funds in
• the budget for the current biennium to staH it properly, if at
all. It be-came apparent at the
meeting that was held Monday.
July 11, where the budget breakdown was presented to the Bud·
getary Unit Heads, that opening
the building was going to present
some difficulties.
There now exists, not a conflict exactly, but disparate sets of
priorities
which influence the
viewpoints of Facilities Director
are <;till at work in the Communications
Evans: "When you retire undefeated, why not stay that way?"
EVANS: Oh, there wa.-. ot
u1ur...e
dll the lracac; fr0m <;()me
Pn1.id without h.ivin~ ~my dememhcr, <)f the leg,slature in
t,ul It C'..,,cnt1.11ly
~aV('
thL' pres1t\l0Junc11on to the hiring
No
denl t111al.-,uthonlv to do almo..,l
ntit -.t, mu,h in fact it's qu1etmK
,1nvthin~. IP dt1 ,1\nw.-.t anything
dt,wn con<;1derably I hope thal
hr wantC'd lo do It ,u~pended
the t,n\v pre.-.s thal I gel from
nile,;, .ind Ctl\kge ~<1vernance
nc,w on 1'>related to what wl"·re
dncument<. .:1nJ .111,;,mtc;of thing,;
doini here al Evergr('en It takes
that repn•.,l'nt, I gue'>"' a., c.lose as
a l0ng time, I think, for some
you can come in a college atmosmembers of the press at least to
phere to mart1al law
I've
realize that I'm not in politic<;
asked for a committee to be put
anymore. I'm not likely to be in
together They are now me-ellng,
politics anymore. And they just
to come m with some draft alhave th<' attitude that I'm 1ust
1ernal1ves for a strike policy, and
waiting for the next office to
that includes faculty and staff.
come around so I can run for the
and other members. We think, at
Senate, or run for something like
least I hope that they'll come in
that. They just don't know me
with some better ideas. We are
very well. even after watching
not likely to have a finalized verme for twelve years. I'll always
sion for this meeting of the Board
have an interest in things political
of Trustees. but we'll have a
and governmental but, while you
progress report, I hope by, probcan't always predict the future, I
ably the first of September. We'll
would think it would be a very,
have something for the Board of
very unusual kind of thing that
Trustees that will represent a
would take me actively back into
well thought out, much more
the political scene. When you re•
specific and hopefully a generally
tire undefeated, why not stay
acceptable
strike contingency
that way1
plan
JOURNAL, With th• budget
JOURNAL, Are you getting
situation as tight as it is, would
more bad press, or fun poked at
you stt it as a good thing for the
you by the pre-ss these days than
Service-s and Activities Board to
you did while you Nere gover·
try and assume the ~ponsibility
nor?
I
lund1n~ I lec1hh Sl•rv,n·., Llr
(. (,un-.t•ltn~. <ff any1h1nj!, t·l,e th,11
ha-. tr.1d11111nallye<1me troni the
general or 1n,lltut1nnal fund.,1
EV ANS:
I ,fon't w,mt to
unil,1terally mdkc <leli.-..u1n, that
o;;ay we re KOin~ to depl'nd ()O
S&A funds to c.irry 0n this; esc.ential functic)n ol the college
Y(iu may not be making the preCt<;e dec1s1on as to how you spend
S&A lunds, but you're sure putting the S& A Board in a terrible
position, where they almost have
to make the decisions. otherwise
dose down essential facilitit"S I
think we ought to take a look at
how we handle health and counseling, and some of the other
very important. but student•oriented kinds of things. to stt
whether those are priorities that
ought lo come partially out of
S&.A funds, or out of the general
funds. I think if we all take a
look at it, we know how much
we've got in dollars essentially in
all of these pots. and we ought
to be able to figure out how we
can best utilize all these dollan
till we can get th, total job done.
JOURNAL, Why is Evergreen's physical plant growing so
quickly]
EVANS: Much of the physical
ol
pl.int ell 1:-vt•rgn·t•nw,1-. dL'-.1gnl'll
,ind t·vt•n uncle•, (\111-.1rult1on,11 ,1
t1mt' wht•n dwn' ~•.:en· e,pt·< 1.1
t1nn,;,th.11 1-·vergrec·n w11uld rt',ll h
:"i.000 -.1udcnt-.. bv t•-.-.ent1allv
IQ80 Pr t·.1rl1t•r eVl'n Then"' be
twt>t'n thJt dt•c1,111n ,lnd m•w.
there.-. l'l{'en a real .-..lowJ11
.....n c1II
11vt•r the country 1n number,; nl
,.,uc.lC'nl., And lh<'n thl' le>1,1<;latun'. over the last !:>t'Veralyear,
has put some stringent hm1tat1ons
on growth at Evergreen which I
thmk has not been all bad After
the first few years of very substant 1al growth.
very rapid
growth, it probably wasn't a bad
idea to sort o( assimtlatl' thal
growth. and ~o through the necessary kinds of experimentation
to find the best styles of operation, to succeed best. l think
we've gone through that assimilation penod. and I really think
that we could take more students.
We could embark on growth and
that's likely to be the only way
we're going to expand the number and the variety of background of the faculty and as a
result, expand a variety of programs at Evergreen . .
Being
small. we don't have whatever
economies there are in a little bit
I am not sttkinR
larger size ..
tP h.1, t l ,·t•r~rt'l·n
\--,l th1 l.1r).:1''-'
u,llt•).:t ,n ttw ,,,11\,1,l·-.1 I \l,,ri !
twlH'\t' th.it _..:r1•1,th 1u-.t lt•r
):1111,th..,-.,11...1
1-.. l"Lth,·r
,, )!••1•d
,,,
.1 1,1-.t' th1n ►:
bul 1n-.i,1,11,1-.. 1,t•
h,l\T
t,r-.t r.1tt· l,1tdtl1t.., ,lrhl II
wt• h,H·t· tht· m.inap·nwnt dh,lit,
tP 1.11...t·-.tudt•nl'- 11, u-.t· th11 '-t
t.1ulit1t?.., I thinl... ,,e· pwb,1Ph
llU\..\hlIt' u,t• tht•m
JOURNAL,
\Ae ht•.H th.>t
v1,u re livin¥, 1n tht' ~\\1d-. the"t'
Jav-. H0w J,, thl' t\1t,d-.. 1..nm
rare with tht· govl'rth'r.., mc1n·
/
EVANS, Well
m0re convenienl
in o;;ome rt•spects. You sure don t get k,<;t
Everythm~ we ve ~ot 1c;swred
I have a m1n1mum ,,t c00k1ng
utensil..,
I m prettv goo<.J at
breaktast t1mt' I kind of like to
cook. I'm ashamed t\, say that
co0k1n~ s0 far has been heavily
cmented !<"wards s0me of that
easy frozen o;;tuff. but tha1·-.
mostly becauc;e I 1ust don t have
any equipment
!i's really a very plea,;ant place
l<' get out and walk acro!.s th<'
campus This j<; a beautiful <;urrounding that we·ve got here and
it's kind 0f refreshing ,u.._tto walk
across the campus in thf' morn'"R
4
Feminists And Mormons Meet In Ellensburg
by Linda Lombard
Editor's Note: The Washington State Conference
for Women, sponsored by the Nation~ Commission
for lnternation.al Women's Year WilS held in fJlensburg
from July 8th lo July 10th.
It will take time for me to clarify all my thoughts
about the Women's Convention in Ellensburg, this
past we-ekend (July 8 • IO). The following can only be
d bnef report, by a feminist, personally involved.
The Mormon men won a few minor battles at this
nmvent1on, but the women of Washington State may
have won the major victories. Take 2,0CXJwomen who
have been isolated, told what to do, and how to do it.
l"'ut them in the midst of 2,(X)() feminists
and, no one
will ever be the same.
News reports relayed the technical results: "AntiERA Women Win," "All voting showed a decisive
~rlit • or "Pro-ERA slate of delegates chosen." But
what really happ<>ned and the total results may never
be fully 1-..nownor comprehended.
The purpose of the convention was "to identify barriers which prevent women of the State and Nation
from participating fully and equally in all aspects of
lite and "to develop a State Plan of Action with a
timetable tor removing those barriers." This wa.s done.
Over 30 pages of precise, clear-cut resolutions developed out of the 80 workshops on Saturday. Although most of these recommendations were not passed
as "resolution" (were not passed "officially" by the entire convention). they will be forwarded to the National Women's Conference and will be brought to the
attention ol the National IWY Commission.
These resolutions detailed specific actions needed to
remove barriers to women and minorities in the areas
of Arts &: Humanities, Child Care, Disabled Women,
Economic Independence, Education, Family Life, Female Offenders, Grant Writing, Health, International
Inter-dependence, Equal Rights Amendment, Media.
Older Women, Positions of Influence, Women &: Poverty Reproductive Decisions. Racial and Ethnic Minorities ( Asian Pacific, American Indian, Black and
Hispanic), Rural Women. Sexual Violence, Strategies
tor Change, and Volunteerism. (The TESC Women's
Center will have file copies of these resolutions,)
Women from various viewpoints met, discussed, argued, debated, share-d and compromised to resolve
each word and phrase in these recommendations,
Women in each workshop were overwhelmed with
stat15t1cs. and the realitie-s of discrimination. Facts
were presented about laws affecting women, what
must be changed, and why. Each aspect of discrimination was discussed by women who have been personally affected. Some women had been so affected, by
so many forms of discrimination, it became impossible
for them to relate their contributions in emotionless
terms. How do you ..unemotionally" state that discrimination has kept you in poverty. or broken up
your family, or denied you opportunities which you
know exist for others 7
There is no way a woman can be exposed to the realities of sexism and racism without being affected. By
Saturday afternoon, it became apparent that many
Mormon women were beginning to have their consciousness raised.
There's an old feminist saying, "Consciousness
raised. I can't go back." The Mormons had come to
the convention expecting to defend their families from
!he philosophies of the "hard core feminis,ts." Instead,
they found hard core feminists, middle-of-the-road
feminists, conservative feminists and new feminists.
They found women from diverse positions and diverse
concerns. Many of their stereotypes about feminists
were shattered. The displays, buttons and personal
comments expressed the feminist concerns of giving
women personal choices to provide for children, to
eliminate racism and sexual violence, to aid disabled
or older women, etc. Perhaps what they didn't find
was equally important. They did NOT find irrational.
insensitive feminists with green horns and combat
boots. Many of these women began to think their own
thoughts and acknowledge their own feelings. "Mormons were once a persecuted people in this country , . we've forgotten that."
"We are led by righteous men."
..I just didn't realize . "
Many feminists felt frustrated. resentful and saddened that pro-ERA efforts diverted them from their
main objectives. "We fought this battle five years ago!
I came here to get on with the work!" Much of the
effort and energy was used to stop anti-women's rights
resolutions. The pro-ERA resolution was not passed,
but. an anti-ERA resolution was not passed, either.
All women found ways to share. Every woman
seemed to experience many high points during the
convention. Here are a few which I experienced or
heard about:
- Walking with an 87-year-old
pro-ERA march,
- Seeing looks of disbelief ind
suffragist in the
horror
whenever
statistics were presented.
- Receiving living hislory lessons from older
women,
- Listening to women play women's music.
- Seeing the "automatic" priority-treatment
given
to older women, handicapped women, and women
with children.
- Watching parliamentary procedures being followed and explained, at the same time. (How "unpolitical" and democratic!)
- The Asian Women's button, "Lotus Blossom
doesn't live here anymore."
- The Farm Women's Booth with information and
free. fresh cherries.
- The bright cards in every women's restroom:
"Washington has had an Equal Rights Amendment for
five years. Do you see any men in your bathroom?"
- Laughing at the amazement from the Mannon
bloc when feminists didn't always vote as a bloc.
- The visitation, in spirit, of Elizabeth Cady Stanton to speak for women's rights during the ERA workshop.
- The ailing Mormon woman who was given aid
and support during the Gay Rights workshop, by a
lesbian.
- Hearing union women explain laws, contracts
and policies affecting working women. They knew it,
down to the last comma.
- Buttons expressing the other sides of the abortion
issue: "fight Abortions. Get a Vasectomy."
Work was done and much was accomplished. The
pro-ERA slate demanded a unity that has never been
experienced before by Washington women. The Washington delegation will have a majority of pro-women's
rights delegates, All women learned. The ripple effects
from this convention will lead to changes - in beliefs
and commitments.
I wish it could have been more "positive," but perhaps it was more constructive for women's rights this
way. Would the news media have given the convention as much coverage if there was no confrontation 7
Would women throughout the State even know what
happened? Will some women still be able to pretend
that the wide scope of the women's movement doesn't
concern them, or that women's problems are all resolved?
5
Notes~lfillllIDJPl1ill~N@i1:®~CampusNotes
:(iJ,ra;.;>
Women's Slowpitch
The Evergreen State College
Women's Slowpitch Team has
had a full schedule this year,
playing most Mondays and Wednesdays since May 16. Although
the team got off to a hesitant
start with many new members
and little experience in working
together, the last few games have
shown TESC to be a formidable
opponent.
The players are working as a
team now, easily fielding most of
the balls that come to them and
taking out runners smoothly and
surely. Their hitting is getting
better, and their spirits are up.
It's a different ball club from the
one that lumbered onto the Lacey
field last May. Team members
"talk it up" on the field, often led
and encouraged by catcher Leigh
Miller, who has been with the
team for two years. Katie Steele,
short stop, leads the team in
runs, hits, and runs-batted-in,
wilh a batting average of .571.
Adrienne Alexander, a relative
newcomer to the team, joining
almost half-way through the sea-
I think many women learned, or reinforced in their
own minds, what one Black woman stated in her plea
for the ERA, "Until we are all equal, none of us will
be equal."
..
-r--r;-:--:-:--""""'
Television,
Violence and Children
"Wonder Woman's teena9e sister is captured by Nazis determined to learn the secret of the
Amazon's bullet-deflecting brace-
son, sees a lot of action in leftfield. "She's got a good arm,"
says coach Kristi Robinson, "and
she always knows where the ball
goes." She was a welcome addition to the team, not only for
her fielding; she can hit too. Her
batting average of .474 is second
only to Steele's. Rhoda Fleischman did most of the pitching
during the first half of the season, but then she broke a finger
fielding a line drive (the only
serious injury of the year). Laura
May Abraham, a thrtt year veteran, is getting a chance at a little more time on the mound.
Chris Overmeyer, one of two
team coaches, sometimes plays
second base,
The TESC team is in the "A"
league which pits it against Evergreen Olympic,
South Sound
National Bank, The Olympia
Eagles, Tenino Eagles, and Capital Blind Vendors. Remaining
games in the schedule are July
18. b, 30. TESC vs. Capital Blind
Vendors, July 20, b,30 TESC vs.
Capital Blind Vendors, and July
27. 8 p.m .. TESC vs. South
Sound National Bank. All games
are played at Lacey Field at the
corner of Carpenter and Pacific.
Olympia's Farmers' Market
~=====~~------'----"'"
check out the facilities
at
Tht> fate of Thurston County
agricultural lands is an important
and complex subject. Questions
such a!:>who can own them, who
can pave them, who decides how
they're to be uSt'd and who pays
the back taxes on tax easements
are real sticklers, for they all
touch upon two thorny issues:
personal freedom and money.
Thurston County has oHicially
recognized,
in the Thurston
County Comprehensive
Plan,
that agriculture is an important
asset lo the county, and should
be preserved if possible. Agriculture ensures the existence of open
space, and it provides jobs. Not
only can Thurston County agriculture be defended somewhat on
an economic basis, but agriculture in general can be strongly
defended on histc;,rical, sociological, and aesthetic grounds. Who
would dare to argue that farms
are not an essential part of our
culture?
Between 1964 and 1974, the
number o( farms in the county
had decreased from 1,193 to 529.
During that same time span, the
amount of acreage for farm use
had decreased from 129,895 acres
lo 62,211 acres. The main reason
for the decline of farms has been
that the nsing cost of property
taxes is coupled with the pressures asserted by a growing number of people. An expanding
population continuously requres
more space for new houses. new
roads, and ironically, new grocery stores. It's hard for farmers
to hold onto their land as farmland and it's advantageous (and
often necessary) for them to sell
ii. In some cases. farmers also
face difficulties in finding a fair
market for their goods, particularly when the market is dominated by large corporations that
can afford to sell their goods at a
lower price than smaller growers.
There are no easy solutions for
What Did You Say
You Were Studying?
slowing the trend of disappearing
farmland in Thurston County.
However, within the county,
there is one way in which local
farmers can gel direct support
from county residents and this is
through the Thurston County
farmers' Market. Starting this
Friday and Saturday, and continuing every subsequent Friday
and Saturday
throughout
the
summer, growers from Thurston
County (and a few from Eastern
Washington) will be selling their
produce from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
alongside Capitol Lake, at the
corner of Seventh and Water.
For the third summer in a row,
fresh flowers, fruits and vegetables will go on sale by the people who planted them, plucked
them and packed them,
Although the Farmers' Market
receives no special funding, the
community
has already given
generously to the Market in time,
labor and support. The Senior
Center and local news agencies
have been especially supportive
and all of this has affirmed the
desire to have such a resource in
the county. A direct market of
this kind benefits the grower, fo,
regular marketing costs are no
longer subtracted from his/her
income. It also benefits the buyer,
who cannot only purchase produce at a fair price. but can talk
to the people who nurtured the
produce.
Yes, preserving agricultural
lands in Thurston County is a
complex and ticklish subject. so
much so, that one is inclined to
throw up one's hands and give
up hope and 'interest. On the
other hand, there are some
things, like the presence of a
lively and productive Farmers·
Market, which can make a difference in future plans and decisions controlling the fate of
farms in this county.
vision violence. Some project
ideas have already sprung up.
One student is going to look at
how TV violence affects alcohollet."
ics. Another student, who is a
"Hutch is captured by a mobcounselor at a ranch for juvenile
ster who plans to hook him on
offenders, will determine whether
heroin and then deny him a fix
or not there is any correlation
until the detective reveals the
between delinquent behavior and
whereabout, of the jealous hood's
the type of programming these
girl friend."
youths viewed as small children.
I always have to make a conA third person wants to examine
scious effort not to laugh when I
me~sages directed to children
see a person slip and fall, or when
through advertising. The projects
someone bumps his head on a
will be completed by August 3,
low beam. When trying to swaland the results promise to be inlow this type of laughter, I think
teresting.
back to the long hours of my
l attended an informal seminar
childhood
which were spent
and students were talking about
watching "The Three Stooges"
children's programs, "We check
hitting each other, poking fingers
out the children's shows," said
into eyeballs, and ripping out
one student.
.,The Saturday
clumps of hair. What is television
morning shows were so bad that
violence doing to us?
I looked forward to the commerFifteen Evergreen~rs are examcials."
ining violence, children, and tele"I saw this show called Ark II
vision in a group contr~cl called
where kids were throwing rocks
"Television Violence anij Its Efat people, .. added another. "It's
fect on Children," headed by Le
kiddie sci fi, with kids wandering
Roi Smith. They have been
around the San Fernando Valley
studying aggression to gain a
savinR the world in a Winnebago
basic understanding of vinlence.
in the year 2500."
and are watching TV portrayals
"I talked to a nine year old
of violence. Le Roi Smith exabout gross movies. He really
plains that by reading books by
got into it, talking about a movie
Freud. Lorentz, Montagu and
where a girl's tongue swelled up
Morse, one can distinguish three
and got huge and purple."
basic theories on aggression. The
Most kids spend a large porfirst is the "innate concept'' which
• tion of each day watching teleaffirms that human aggression
vision, According to a study
stems from the evolutionary
conducted by Wilbur Schramm,
process, and is genetically inherchildren in the early grades spend
ent. A conflicting theory is the
an average of two hours a day in
"social learning concepl" which
front of the television, but the
stresses environmental influences.
biggest watchers are in the sixth
Under this concept, television viand seventh grades; they watch
olence would be considered to be
an average of three to four hours
extremely detrimental. The third
daily.
theory is the "interactionist conIf you are a parent, or anyone
cept," a combination of the first
concerned about television vitwo ideas, which explains aggresolence, you may want to read
sion as a result of both genetic
some of the books Smith has seand environmental
influences.
lected for the program. Look in
The relationship between aggresthe Evergreen Bookstore under
sion and television is still largely
Television Violence and Its Effect
undocumented, and Smith feels
on Children. You must draw
that students' opinions,
when
backed up experimentally, are as
your own conclusions on the efvalid as those of other theorists.
fects of TV violence until more
information, similar to that being
Each student will design a projstudied in Evergreen's Television
ect, and is expected lo draw a
Violence program, is obtained.
conclusion on the effects of tele-
Woolrlch Clothing Sale
20% off thru July
117 N. Washington
943-1977
SENIOR EMPLOYMENT
SEMINAR
ITime:
July 20,
3:30 - 5:00 p.m.
Place: Library 1213
Topic: How to Complete a
Job Application
and Compile a Credential File
GRADUATE SCHOOL
EXPLORATION SEMINAR
Time: July 20th, 1 - 3 p.m.
Place: Library 1213
SENIOR EMPLOYMENT
SEMINAR
Time:
July 27th,
3:30 - 5:00 p.m.
Place: Library 1213
Topic:
How to Plan and
.Conduct a Job Search
0
The What Did You Say You Were Studying column
will spotlight the activities of a different program or
contract in ea~h issue of the JOURNAL. We invite
students to submit articles detailing the activities of
their program or contract, and describing projects undertaken by their group as a whole or by individuals
in that program.
Sunday
Sale
Come 1n and check out our
spec,al SUNDAY SALES
Karrie Jacobs
ADVERTISING MANAGER
John Bickelhaupt
MANAGING EDITOJl
PRODUCTION MANAGER
Alisa Newhouse
INVALUABLE ASSISTANCE
Nathaniel Koch
Annaliese Orleck
Mandy McFarlan
BUSINESS MANAGER
Annette Ri<;kles
Tbt COOPER POINT JOURNAL Is put,,lllhed .... ty lor IM students, fea,lty,
Mm 111ft of The ENig..an Stlte College, ()tymp41, W1ahlngton ll605. V-.
u.,...._. .,. not MONUrlly thoM of The e.......,.
Stlte College. Adwertlllng fflll~ ~..,_.n doN not neoNUr11y Imply erndo,w,w.11 by this ••• p1p1 .
Off.,. '-,_,
In lho ColleveActlYIU.. Bulldlng(CAB) 3tll. -:
--1213,
IM-121 ◄. _,lolng
__
, --1010.
!AtpoUc:y, All lot._. to the eclllor mu,t be rNehecl by noon Tu.day to, that -..k'•
pubfk:eUon.
Letleni rnuet be typed, double-..-.,
and 400 WOld9 Of ..... The ldltON ....,..,
the right to edit tor content .,,ii 1tyle. NamN wtll be wtthhtld on l'lql,Nt.
what ever you hear bemg
played when you walk 1n
the s1ore you can buy at a
super price
Whal you
hear ,s what you gel 1
Budge!
budget'
won I
bust
Open: 10-7:00 Daily
10-6:00 Saturday
1-6:00 Sunday
214W.41h
943-9181
your
7
I
.,.,
0
a.
g)
CT
~
;.
No, It Is Not The Fourth of July
It, ,1 !11tlt' runlin~ 10 wander
thr.,l1i-:h dl,\,nt.,wn Olympia cm
lf,l, h'urth l,t lulv Its odd l,,el,l\l'l' n11th1n~ 1s ~oin~ on The
.;.,i:d'1'
in ~\·Ivester P.:1rJ...
1s. barr, n Jnll ine l,nl}' sign ot lite at
I.. q 1t..il t dl-.e Park. LS a few little
;..1,l, ,rl,1,h1ng. around 1n the
r11ped-1•1t wading area. and then
11 nlv 1t it 1~nt raining. Oh 0c<.1'1l1 n..1lh .1 1.acJ...ed-urcar lull of
tn·n,i~e
b1\\, \\ ii! ZlK1m by and
1,,......l1n•cr,Hkt'r" out the window
.it , l'U .rnJ trnm time to time a
;'int-..,1/l·J
-.k.vrnck.et will shoot
·ut trl,n, 1he neighbor's front
, ..irll ,1, t'\"1dt>nce0t the numerous
t1rl'\\l 1 rl.., '-t,1nJ'.->
whKh appeared
,1 \\t't'I-. ,l~l' 1n c1ll 0f the super..•,.irl..et p.Hl..1n~ lots ar<iund
l•u: ...l1meh1'\' it., all wrong.
\\ ht'!\'
l'
tht> hr.N, hand playing
-.,,,u..,,1 m.ircht'.., and the agmg
:11,1\ ,,r ..,re,11-.m~
l'n ··what bemg
,H'. .-\m1•r,l.in means t0 me.
and
!lw h1i-:h'lhn1,I ~iris LO red. wh11e
,rnd Plut' ~ditlC'rVnutfits lw1rlmi
r,.i:1,n, and n111~tot all, where 1,;;
•i~l' i.:i.int t1rt•\,1)rks display with
'Pl l1;.:h1up ltl..ene<.sesof George
~\.1 ....h1n;.:t,,n· ]u..,t what 1he hell
....,.:inn~ 11!·, • \l..1vbt~\'(IU nver..,hPt
.,•ur
tn1·\,,l\
t'"\lt .l l111le and
., '1.1·d
11
.r l,1nadc1: ;\Jp th,:11
r.r'
fht' rl',l"lln wh\'
~ \-, "1f'1,I
"1'1 I'll!
t;>n 01.]<.,t'(el
1 h:,1! nL
·! i r n.1111,n..,
101..,t h1rth:.1
·- b, .1 .;,1• 1 he, .trt' .it htinw
:,; .,I' tht·11 c<11n1v.,ller
' f ] ,l", !,l!r
Pn the '-t"C<,nd
1
weekend m July. crowds pour
1ntLlOlympia from near and far,
lwm the tip of Cooper Point. to
beytind the East Olympia train
<;tc1l1<1n
tr0m Shelton (the proud
hl,mt' llt the Forest Festival), to
Yelm. pe0ple congregate m Capit.11Lal-.eParl.. to celebrate nothing
1n particular. They come with
\'l)f,H 10us appetites, and con-,u,rn: va3t quantities of burgers.
Fn·nch fries. tacos, hot buttered
n,rn on the cob, and the staff of
cMn1val life, the corn dog. They
tome to overload their senses
with spectacles. s0 they watch
hydr0plane races and skydivers.
high schut)I princesses and parades. Tht'y seek thrills so they
.,hell out their dimE's, n1Ckles and
quarters to r,de the Jet Pilot. the
Rt\und-Up. the Sky DivE' and
lHhl'r device,;; that g0 round and
rl1und ,,r upside down
Once o year. the city of Olympia m;ikec; a c0ncerled effort to
pwnde ~omething for everyone,
rather than for those who have
tht.- money tt, be mtluential For
Olvmp1.1 s youth they sponsor
the T l't'n Dc1nce. a Fnday mght
b11ui-:1t·m l.e~1t1n \.r\'ay starring
Jn em1nt-ntlv danceahle Canadian
hand callt'J Ch1nool-.. Chino0I,,.
h,1 ... bt't'n plJ}'ing Lal..eta1r
... for .i
numbt•r 1,f Vt'.tr, and they·rt'
nl·ver a d1o;apiw1ntment Thev
pl,n a lnmbm,1l1t1n ,it 1he1Town
<1101pt•<;1tn1n..,
,ind
r1•pular hard
r,•tl.. At lint· pP1nt the crowd
h',1" ..,t,rnewhdt tal-.l·n ,1hack wh('n
the bJn<l.., ll'Jd ..,1n~er dedicated
a song to Ted Bundy. Behind me
a young woman in a Farrah Fawcell ha1rd0 ac;ked her boyfriend.
..Who did he dedicate the song
to?'
Hr replied. "Ted Bundy ..
·•who's that7"
..He"s the guy that kidnapped
all those girls and killed ·em...
'"Jesus Christ!"
Then the band broke into thE'
Thin Lizzy song, lailbreak. "Tonight there's going to be a jail·
break. somewhere in this town
, • and everyone
in the
crowd murmured, ..Jailbreak
Ted Bundy
. oh. I get it."
Lakefairs don't change much
from year to year. but every so
often something new is added.
This year's addition was the first
annual Capital lakefair Skateboard Derby. which was held on
the top level of the Union Street
enclosed parking lot. I attended
this event out of curiosity, expecting to find a few disorganized
local kids zooming down the
parking lot ramps. skinning elbows right and left and whining
d lot Whal I discovered when I
reached the top of the garage,
atler narrowly escaping oncom ♦
in~ ,;kateboards
several times
Jurin~ my upward Journey, was
a highly evolved sports event
taking rlace. Boys and girls came
1n lt•,1m... with matching T-shirts
ln•m all liver the Northwest. The
lcirgec;I<;1nglegroup appeared to
ht· the RiJe-On Skateboard Team
tr0m Portland,
who kept on
whizzing by on the asphalt in
their mustard-colored team shirts
and their knee pads, elbow pads
and helmets. Before the competilion officially began there were
kids practicing handstands
on
one skateboard and two skateboards. and kids furiously removing the wheels from one
board and putting them on an•
other, taking the board for a test
spin. and repeating the process
until they found a satisfactory
combination of wheel and board.
The ,.kids" that took part in the
event ranged in age from six to
at least twenty-six and all of
them were mounted on the fanciest skateboards I've ever laid
eyes on. I was amazed al the in·
vestmE"nt that those boards represent, both in time and money.
I was amazed that skateboarding
has developed into a highly competitive sport. even in Olympia.
Maybe skateboarding is the energy crunch's answer to car lust.
the eye and onto the laps of the
Olympia public and says, "Look
at us. we're a community radio
station, and we want you to like
us, honest we do." During the
course of the weekend KAOS
did live broadcasts of music from
Sylvester Park, and an on the
spot coverage of the Lakefair parade, in addition to programming
from the trailer. Station Manager
Toni Holm played announcer for
the parade from an impromptu
reviewing stand. the roof of a
German sausagE' concession and,
at one point,
inadvertently
doused a spectator with a glass
of Pepsi. The incident caused a
great deal of anguish on the part
of the victim, and a certain
amount of embarrassment on the
part of the butter-fingered an•
nouncer. Other than that. KAOS
and laketair seemed to get along
spendidly,
even though they
couldn't provide anything tangible. like dam strips. to fair goers.
Olympia"s non-profit organizations all had booths set up and
were industriously cooking up
and selling anything that can be
deep fat friE'd or greasily grilled.
Also in the non•profit organization category,
was our own
KAOS•FM, pumping out music
from a trailer borrowed from
someone's brother-in-law.
and
dis1rjbutmg the latest edition of
the KAOS Program
Guide.
KAOS"c; presence at Lakefair was
basically a public relations venture where the station pops into
Now, on Sunday evening, as I
write this article. Lakefair is coming to a close with its "Gigantic
Fireworks Display," which. oddly
enDugh. is being covered by
KAOS radio, live. Considering
the ab!:>urdity of the situation. I
would say that the two ann(luncers are d<Hng an admirable
106 L1c;ten:
"Oh. look at that one! Each
l11lle st<lf leav('<; a trail behind.
and they are ladmg, Oh an
t,range one,
. oh my Cod 1
"Oh. oh my God!"
Entertainmentrarrn'lt@i-rit@llMmID~
The No Toy Boys Are Sold On Not Selling Out
by Lynda Barry
Coyote's who deal almosl exclu!:>ivelywith agent-sent, slick comI had heard of them. When a
mercial bands.
band has a name like The No
Whitney: It's easier for agents
Toy Boys, one tends to remember
to book the commercial rock
it. I knew they were Olympians.
than it is for them to book inI thought. a local bondage band.
between stuff like us. We'd like
Wet lips and leather. I mean The
to play in Olymp1..i, being local
No Toy Boys, right? It leads the
we would draw a big crowd.
imagination on loud rock. Loud
Alvord: There are probably
roll. But bad. Safety pins in the
ten or twelve places in Wes1ern
ear lobes. Naughty Oly boys with
Washington we would like to
electric guitars. Then I heard
play out oL If we could get
they were playing in Shelton.
bookings going on a weekly basis
Now I havE' never known Shel•
11would keep us clothed, fed. a
ton to be a bondage-type town,
roof over our heads and some•
so this led mt> to wonder.
wh<1thappy .
On a late Thursday night at
Harl: It's hard. Really hard.
the Mill Creek Inn, I saw what
You have to have someone pushthis band was about. and it
mg for you which we don't. You
wasn't leather. Later, in a smoky
hdve 111 have someone who unnightclub situation. William Cubderstands what you are doing.
bon, a local painter ("But from
We're just trying to work and
near Detroit") pours the beer and
play the kind of mus1C we think
tells me about The Boys:
..is good music.
"No, The No Toy Boys have
AJvord: We're trying to be an
never bt'en known for their hard
exception to the commercial rule.
rock image or their hard rock
Not that we've bttn totally suc.,ound. The No Toy Boys are into
cessful al it. I'm sure if we ~anted
playing the music, they're not
to play commercially we would
mto dancing around on the stage.
The Boys at home: Bob Hart, Joe Cason, Bruce Whitney, Tom Alvord, and "Tike" Khulman (in
be making a lot of money. But
So they play the music and they
spirit only).
the way the five of us feel aboul
play it effectively. They do it
what we are playing, I don't
well and they do it melodically.
think we could do it and stay toThey play with a tension and a
!hey normally are. For the most
"TANTALIZE YOUR SENSES WITH OUR EXOTIC HERBS.
ge th er. Our main intention right
~at that is not overpowering,
part
they were in their normal
now is to get an agency that will
but certainly driving and danceTEAS, & SPICES"
garb. you know, just wearing the
book us into a place where we
able always. They don't play the
clothes. They wear blue jean
will go over.
top one hundred and that's good.
stuff and this is not to be de•
Hart: We want to make a livThey don't even play Truckin'
meaning. They don't have to
ing doing something we enjoy.
and everyone plays Truckin'."
wear ties. The thing that was imWe don't want to have to deal
"Yeah, we get a lot of people
portant
is that they were wearing
with the business end of it to the
SC"reaming for 'Smoke on the
shades. Slick shades. We had
point where- we have to alter the
Water' or 'Proud Muy'." Bruce
Wrap Arounds, Mod. Bod. Big,
music we play just to get the job.
Whitney sits back in his living
R,m. Green. Bright, Dark Shades.
Cason: The thing that is frusroom chair. The No Toy Boys
We
had Cranny Glasses. It was
trating
to
me,
is
that
I've
always
are at home Tom Alvord (guishade night at the Mill Creek and
sensed the market exists for what
tar. pedal steel l. Joe Cason (pithey didn't tell me so I was like
we do. We go over well. People
ano, lead vocals) and Bob Hart
naked. They looked like chea~
like us. It's frustrating that that
(guitar) lean or sit around on
shades. I'll admit that. but they
basic perceplion isn't shared by
couches or the floor. Lee "Tike"
looked good. you know They
the people who hire music in this
Khulman (drums) is out somelooked
like they were getting
area.
1
where
tough The bass player. normally
CPJ: It's all money, right]
PHONEj57·'.7470
Whitney: No matter how you
a rather conservative
dresser.
Cason: Yeah. and I wish it
characterize the music that we
came out after the second set in
were here.
play. you always have to include
shorts and tried to get some sort
CPJ: Maybe if you got some
Grateful Dead. because we do a
of juke box dance together. The
tight red suits ..
lot of Grateful Dead. But we do
rhythm guitar player was wearCason:
Or
if
we
get
dressed
other things. We do sixties rock.
ing a suit and a good hat. as
up like scientists with big cone
especially R&B. we do soul, we
well
and he looked like the main
heads.
Were
you
at
the
Mill
do some Jackson Bn,wn, some
guy not to toy around with. At
Creek on Saturday night? Oh it
Allman Brothers. some Flying
first I thought he was having a
was great. See. it was our last
Burrito Brothers bad LSD trip. when he jumped
night and we didn·t owe the Mill
Cason. We play grinders
from
the stage and onto the floor.
Creek
any
favors
at
that
point
...
Hart: We do a lot of jamming.
I thought maybe he had freaked
Hart: We went to Bailey Drugs
More than most bands will do.
out, you know, but it soon be ♦
and bought ten pairs of sunglasses
We don't have many three mincame apparent that thE'y were
tor three dollars and twenty
ute son~s.
under a certain amount of concents.
trol. See. he was doing the Gator
Alvord: We get a lot of energy
Cason: It was really bizarre.
which basically looks like you're
from jamming. When we play
We just impugned the audience
fucking the floor. like a free
places it's a good part of just beall night. They loved it more
form flying fuck from a distance,
ing able to get the energy on
than anything.
reputedly. Like a cross between
stage and the people excited. In
Alvord: And the tavern owner
a Marine push up, where you
most places, when the people can
loved it too because he had a caclap your hands in the air and
gel over not hearing all the recpacity crowd by the second set.
then you ram it into the ground.
ognizable tunes. they really enjoy
That would be the poetry of it.
what we do. Especially in terms
William Cubbon was there. In
11 ·00 • 8·00 Mon . Sat
A girl did it right after he did it
of being able to dance. which
the same smoky bar he pours the
and she looked good. She Sttmed
seems to be the important thing.
last of the bttr and tells me the
to have the stuff down. Only one
Peoplf' want to be able to dance
NEW & USED RECORDS - TAPES
story of that night:
man had on the Big Flash. That
and drink beer.
& LOTS OF OTHER GOODIES>
"Yeah. Saturday night was a
was Tom. He was wearing tht"
Hart: All our material is calbig night for Th, No Toy Boys.
Green ones. The Wildest Shades,
culated to get that response, you
I was stealing beers that night,
man. And in my opinion, he
know, dancing and drinking. It's
Westside
Center 357·4755
and I don't normally do that. It's
looked good. He looked like a
just that peoplt" aren"t as ready
sort of a rowdy thing to do, so
flower, man.
to do that with music they haven't
they must hav, bttn getting me
"The dance Ooor was crowded.
heard before. The typical Mill
rowdy. Th• No Toy Boys play
The place was making money.
Crttk crowd, because Shelton
music you can dance to. I want
The bartt"nders were happy, I
doesn't have a large population
that known. The crowd dug it
was happy. the No Toy Boys
to draw on, is a big cross section
that night. Thf'y get the dance
were happy. Shelton was happy,
of people rath,r than a crowd
floor hot, so to speak, because
that wants a specific type of muOlympia was happy. We were all
they've got the rhythms down,
swinging real good to The No
sic. And this is why "Proud
they've got thf' beats down,
Toy Boys."
Mary" and "11• • Y.Uow Rlbth,y've got the guitar riffs and
bon" bands go over big the~.
Whitney: Saturday night was
they did loui• loui•. They wtn,
The No Toy Boys are having a
sort of spoofing what we won't
hard tim• finding jobs. Th• Mill
starting to Louie it out and The
do. In most cases we comt" off as
open every day
' subdued on stag,.
.,..,.......,.,,_,,,_
Creek lnn had hi~
them for
No Toy Boys finally look.cl lik•
IO • 7 Su "(lay
T-,.,Af....,___.._,
three months this summer, then
you shouldn't toy around with
C".uon: We did it just becau5"
........... ,\.....,._
9 • 9 daily
,_
__ _
axed it down to six wttk.s and
thtm. They normally look lik•
the situation was som~hat
insane.
finally to two wttks bec.,,u.., of
farmers, except for the piano
playtt. H• doesn't care. They
Alvord: Anyway . . it was
rNnagemmt changn ~ finanWESTSIDE CENTER
cial problmu. They'•• had no
w•n, all wuring oh.odes, so they
fun. And lik• I s;iy, that might
be the key to succns.
luck with places lik, Captain
were in a better position than
Rm
HERBS
lf MASSAGt
'Dedlcateu
ToYourf'-ild.i.ant
Health'
218:i W4fuSt.Olympia
V\/a.
<Mm
t:'Fri..
1oamipm;Sat1oam·1J111
RKDRDCO.
Trident Comes To Washington
Thi,; is lhe first article in a two
part <,erif",;;_
The second article,
\Vtll appear in the next is sue of
th, JOURNAl. 1
1
bv lohn Bickelhaupt
l::tt1>rt<;
to stop the Trident have
l,,1.·t·ngo1n~ on almost since the
rl~rnnin~ c;tages of the weapon.
Rrw,t.rnce 1s being enacted on
mJnv different fronts. all over
tht· United States, by a multitude
\>t r11ht1cal. religious and citizens·
~rl,upc; The strongest. most v1sil,,lr re,;1stance 1s going on m the
Nl1rthw~t. since 11 1s here that
tht· main baSE' will be located.
Sm.ill }!f\\Ups like Olympia's own
I 1\'t' w1th<1ut Trident"' are m, ,,1Vt·d l--ut !ht largt"r coordinat•
1n~ l'th1rt t'- handlt>d by such or-
ganizations as The Pacific Life
Community (PLC), The War Resisters league (WRU, The Fellowship of Reconciliation (FOR),
and Concerned About Trident.
Concerned About Trident is
working in the courts, fighting a
legal battle against the weapon.
The FOR and WRL use education and civil disobedience as
tools in their operations. Since
the concerns of these two organizations encompass far more than
Trident, their efforts regarding it
are funnelled largely into support
for the PLC. The FOR and WRL
both have long histories of war
resistance. FOR was founded just
prior lo WWI, when two ministers. ont" an Englishman and one
a German,
swore that they
wouldn"t allow the war to dt"·
The Movement
stroy their friendship. WRL was
started nine years later in 1923.
Both are international peace organizations that presently span
the globe. PLC, in contrast. was
founded in 1975 and is geographically limited to the West coast
of the United States. and the
Southwest portion of Canada.
Of the organizations resisting
Trident, the PLC is the most visible. They have drawn public at•
tention to it many times in the
last few years. In summer 1976,
about 30 PLC people were ar•
rested for cutting fences at the
base. and "invading" it so that
they could plant a gard,n. This
year has seen an intensification
of their efforts beginning with
Trident Concern Week last May
and the declaration of '"Bangor
Summer." culminating in three
demonstrations at the bast'.
On July 4th. the first of these
began early in the afternoon.
About 200 people attended, in~
eluding members of the PLC and
FOR people who had come from
a regional conference they Wf're
having nearby. All the protesters
had taken workshops in nonviolence. The police and the
Navy were informed of what to
expect, so everything proceeded
peaceably.
While the main body of the
demonstration conve~ed at lhf'
primary entrance of~ the bast",
two smaller groups amounting to
37 people and including eight
children, entered the base. one
group using boats to reach the
beach while the other climbed
over a fence at the northwest
corner of the base. Their plans
WE'reto have a picnic on one of
the Polaris submarines docked
there. Neither party reache<I its
objective. Those on the beach
were picked up right away. The
fence-climbers were stopped after
they had walked a mile and a
half onto the base. It is a tribute
to the restraint ol thf' guards that
the members of this expedition
were allowed to sit down and
have their picnic before they
were arrested. The eight children
were released.
continued on page
8
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