cpj0175.pdf

Media

Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 6, Issue 15 (February 23, 1978)

extracted text
Evans
Inauguration
Sunday

AndEventsM1t~Armcdiiliw@rm1t~ArtsAnd
fi:vents&rr1t~
BEYOND AND IACK Stories of
people who have experienced death
and have llved to tell about It.
(Olymplc, 357•3422.)

MUSIC

ON CAMPUS
OLD TIME co\JNTRY DANCING? It's
still happening every Wednesday at 8
p m wlth a llve band and caller on the
hrs1 floor ol the Library bulldlng.
"Allve and K1ckin' ". Donations appreciated

FANTASIA (HMO) Produced by Walt
Disney, with Leopold Stokowakl con-ducting the Phlledelphla Orcheltra, the
fllm features animated aequence•
based on "The Nutcracker
Suite"
(Tchaikovsky), "Toccata and Fugua In
0 Mino<"
(J. S. Boch), "Tho Soroo<er'e
Apprentice"
(KukH),
"The Rite or
Spring" (Stravinsky), "Symphony No. 6
In F Majo,, The Past<><al"
(Beet-,),
"Dance of the Houra" (Ponchlelll),
"Night on the Bare Mountain" (Muuo,gll<y), and "Ave Mana" (Shubert). A
commercial flMlure on lta ~--.
the
mm has gone on to become aomethlng
of a cull cluaic, recently parodied In
the tum ALLEGRO.NON
TROP'PO.
(Capitol, 357-7181, starts Friday 2117.)

MORTON SUBOTNICK, natlonally
known tor his elecironlc
musical
compositions.
wilt oller a public
lec1urelworkshop
and concert
on
Friday, February 17. The workshop will
be held lrom 2-5 p m. In Communica11ons Bulld1ng 110 The evening
concert will
oller a presentation
describing Subolnick's creallon of his
piece "FOUR BUTTERFLIES'" and wUI
culminate In a performance or his
music $1 50 tor the workshop, $3.50
!or the concert.
S-4.50 tor both.
Sponsored by TESC's EXPLORATIONS
IN TWENTIETH CENTURY MUSIC.
Further information; Or Greg Steinke,
Communications 301

IN SEATTLE
CITIZEN KANE 11~1) Directed by
the 2!>-year~d Oraon Wellea, and starring W.Wlea aa John Foat• Kane,
whole 11ft bore a great 1lmllarlty to
that of newspaper publlsher WIiiiam
Randolph Heral. One of the great
Amer1can fllma. With THE INFORMER
(1935) Directed by John Ford from a
scrtpt by Dudley Nk:hola, rrom the
novel by Liam O'Flaherty. A ator, ot
betrayal during the Irish Aabelllon
using minimal, lmpreaalonlsttc lets
and misty Ughtlng. Victor Mcl..aglen
won an Oacar for his portrayal of the
slow-brained stool pigeon, Gyp<> Nolan. So did Ford, Nichols and Max
Stainer for his muaic. (University
Cinema, 5510 University Way NE,
Seattle, 524-1010.)

On February 17, SALLY PIANO wlll
)1ay 1n concert
with GILA.I, an
acoustical la.u band comprised entirely
ol women. Advance ticket Into ..
866-6162 Tti,s is billed as a womenpreferred event on all promoOonal
material
The TESC DANCE CONTRACT will
sponsor a MA.ROI GRAS DANCE
tea1unng Evergreen's own EUPHORIA
on Saturday. February 18. Contemporary Laun, Funk, and Jazz. 8 p.m.,
lounti floor Library bulldlng, S1 50.
On February 18, YOUR FAVORITE
RADIO STATION ANO OURS (KAO$)
will tealure a taped concert from the
H. NEAR/W. WATKINS concert (TESCFall 1977) Ttiafs 89 3 Im on your dlal
lrom 4-7 pm

THAT OBSCURE OBJECT OF DESIRE

The most recent film by the n.ye,ar--old

featured at the Seattle Art Museum
through Februay 26. 447-4710.

Budget Tapes & Recon:ls.
1N OLYMPIA
GOOSPELL continues on the CAPITAL HIGH SCHOOL stage. February
16-18 A Prelude Production. Curtain at
8 p m . S3 adulls,
S2 sludents
Reserva1,ons/1nlo. 753--8880.
OLYMPtA HIGH SCHOOL will pr&sent their spnng musical. ONCE UPON
A MATTRESS by ROQerS & Barer,
February 23-25. and March 2-4. Curtain
at 8 p m Adults S3, students S1.50.

JAMES BROWN at the TROJAN
HORSE through February 20, 415
Lenora, 624--8848
AMERICA,
February
Paramount Northwest.

20 at

the

LECTURES AND READINGS
ART

THE APPLEJAM FOLK CENTER
tiosls lhe RUSSIAN BALALAIKA TRIO
on Friday, February 17, "for a good
1aste ol what's happening muslcally on
the other side of lhe world."
On
February 18. Applejam presents raglime guitar ptayer ERIC SCHOENBERG
(Rounder Records) The mana,gement
says. "'His playing Is intricate, dellca1e. and often hard to belleve "
localed al the YWCA. 220 E. Union
Main act 9 p.m., minors welcome.
CAPTAIN COYOTES highllghts MAGI
February 17, 18 Wet T-shirts every
Thursday nigtit at 11 pm. 2410 W
Hamson 357•419'1

ON CAMPUS
AFTER NINETY. a portrait ol Ille
beyond the age of ninety by the late
IMOOEN CUNNINGHAM, will remain
at The Evergreen State College library
Gallery through March 5. The e,chlblt
features over 60 phOtOQraphs. A~
panylng the Cunningham ahow Is a
series or oalntinas by Calilomla artist·
MICHAEL THORN BRADLEY
IN OLYMPIA
A coHectlon ol limited edition prints
ot Northwest coast natlv\ style art by
TOM SPEER, and carved wooden
masks and other objects by DICK
WILK wHI be exhibited at Chlldhood's
End Gallery lhrough February 28.

9"3-3724
GNU DELI presents two acts,
PEGGY KNAPP (not the one In
Norwalk
CT)
and
MICHAEL
McGALLIARD with comedy skits and
ttieater, and. JOHN JOSEPH on guitar
Friday, February 17, Saturday, February 18 E11cellentcheesecake Comer
ol Wesl Thurston Avenue and Capltol
Way 943-1371
GRAPEVINE lea1ures CHRIS I
PATTY The man&Qement describes the
duo as. "'Top 40 music, not real funky,
dancab1e '" 4500 Lacey Bv S E
491-1878
THE GREENWOOD INN spotlights
the THREE P.M. TRIO ll"s o k
to
Dalfon1ze. the fabulous '"O" e11pose
11,0111
page and everythlnoJ has put an
ena to the blackl1s11ngot rna101 hotels
S11111he besl rooms in Thurs1on
Coun1y. ask CENSORED 943--4000
RICHARD'S ROUNDHOUSE atlll haS
KID CHRYSLER No comment. 4110
Mar1'et Square. Lecey, 456-2222
IN SEATTLE
EARL SCRUOOS REVUE/VASSER
CLEMENTS. TuHday, February 21,
Opera House. Tickets In Otympla at

Evergreen Faculty Member DA.
BYRON YOUTZ wlll dellver a free
public lecture entllled, ENERGY FROM
THE OCEANS, Febfuary 21 at 8 p.m.
in TESC's lecture Hall One. •

DAYE BRUBECK, March 10 at the
Paramount Northwast.

DOES rnxY SING IN THE SHOWER?
753--6780(Governor's office)

TAVS GRANOLA JOINTS,
& MISC \In Olympia)

ON CAMPUS

conec1or's Gallery features THE
FORCES 11, line paintings and sculp1ures by RICHARD KIRSTEN, throuoh
March 4 352•4771
IN SEATTLE
TURN-OF•THE-CENTURY AMERICA:
PAINTINGS,
GRAPHICS,
PHOTOGRAPHS, 1890-1810 w!H run through
March 12 at the Seattle Art Mueeum,
Modem Art PavIlion, Seattle Center.
«7-4710
The GEORGE SEGAL: PASTELS
AND SCULPTURE e11hlbl1ioncontinues
through February 19 at the Seallle Art
Museum MOdem Art Pavllion. Seattle
Center 447-4710

pearance. The troupe will perform AVE
MARIS STELLA THEATER. Ticketa .,.,
available at the E'l\l!lf'VreenBook Store
and Yenney'• Music, and coat $2.75,
(S1.50 for students).

IN OLYMPIA
The Olympia Little Theater wlll
produce NO SEX PLEASE, WE'RE
BRfflSH at 8:15 p.m., Fnday, Febnr
ary 17 and Saturday the 18th. Tk:kets
are $3.50, S2 for atudenta under 18,
and available at the Yenney Muaic
Company.

IN OLYMPIA
The center For literature In PerfOffllance presents CODA: A TAPESTRY OF
POETRY ANO MUSIC, with music by
OIL.Al, and poe1ry """'Inga by JEAN-VI
LENTHE, MARIAN GONZALES and
SHARON RYALS at 8 p.m., Thursday,
February 1e, at the Gnu Dell. Thia
evenl Is a benefit tor the Center tor
literature. A $1 donation la requeated.
Poet cA.ii.oy STREET WIii read at
Cafe Intermezzo,
212 W. Fourth
Avenue In Olympia at 8 p.m., Friday,
February 17.

IN SEATTLE
WILLIAM KUNSTLER, attorney for
LEONARD PELTIER, ""ILUP DEERE,
American Indian Movement splrltual
advlSOf, and NILAK BUTLER, A.I.M.
activist. wUI apeak during a February
23 IOnJm entll,lod, THE AMERICAN
COURT SYSTEM: JUSTICE OR MAH•
IPULATION? THE
TRIALS
OF
LEONARD PELTIER. The forum, ~
IIOf8d by tho l-.,_.,
Peltlo< llolense
Commlllee, will begin at 7:30 In the
Daybreak Star C-enter. Dls,eoo,eryPark.
For further Information, call Mitchell
Germaine, 522.no,.

THEATER
ON CAMPI.JS

The Seattle Art Mueeum la dlaplay•
1ng a selection of 90 remarkable
Objects from Its Egyptian art coflectlon
"to prepere Northwest viewers tor next
aummer's exhibition
'Trea1ure1 ot
Tutankhamun' ". The ART OF AN•
CIENT EGYPT show wlll continue
through February 23. 447-4710.

The Telfflslon
and Orama Group
Contract of TESC will
produce
Tennessee Wllllams' THE NlOHT OF
THE IGUANA on tour evenings and one
afternoon from February 23 to 26.
Evening performances are scheduted
fOf 8 p.m., and the malhlee at 2 p.m.,
Friday, February 24. All performances
will take place In the Recital Hall ol
Evergreen'• Communications Building.
Admission la 11 .50 and $3 for lldults at
!he doof.

CONT£11PORARY STA.OE DESIONU. S. A., an exhibition
of American
scene and coatume design, wlll be

Al 8 p.m .. March 1, In the Evergreen
Library the oetabratad BREAD AND
PUPPET THEATER wlll make an
unpr9Cedented Wuhlngton
State ap--

FILMS
ON CAMPUS
BEFORE THE REVOLtmON (111&<)
Written and directed by Bernardo Bertoluccl (1IOO)when ha wu twenty-two.
The a1ory lnYOIYN the 20-year~d Fab-rlzlo (Francuoo Barllll), who la caught
up In Marxist ideology, and his reJe,c.
tlon of the stagnant Parmealan mk;dle
claaa background he shine wtth hla
tlanoea, Ctetla. His gradual Political
dlslllualonment rouowa the end of a
secret love attlMr with hla young aunt,
Gina (Adriana Aatl). (Leciure Hall 1,
Frtday 2117 only, 3:00, 7:00 and 9:30,
S.75.)

L'ATAL.ANTE (1<1:M)Olroctod
by.,_,
Vigo, It Is the story of a young bar~
mast• and hla bride. Oatallsof llfa on
the berge are almpla and ,...i1atk:. The
exterlor1 were shot In the winter of
1933-34 around the canals northeaat of
Perla. The exceptlonaUy ...,.,.. weather
caused not only gl'Nt dlfflcultlN
In
shooting bu! the final btwkdown In
V\go's heaJth. The director died at the
age of 29 soon after the tllm'a short
run unda' Iha commercial !Ille of LE
CHALAHD QUI PASSE. It waa his third
lllm. (Lecture Hall 1, Wednesday 2122
only, 1 :30 & 7:30 p.m., tree.)

IN OLYMPIA
FANTASTIC ANIMATK>N FESTIVAL
A collection ot 16 animated short
films. (The Cinema, 943-5914: lhrouoh
•Tuesday 2121.)

THE GOODBYE GIRL Wrllten by Nell
~mon. lhla Is the kind of Slory lhat
would have been populer during the
early '&O's. The boy·meet&-glrl formula
wears a little thin when Director
Herbert Rou (THE TURNING POINT)
allows Iha actors to constantly become
hyaterlcal over the aUghtNt of things.
Starrlno Maraha Muon aa a teary--eyed
ex--dancer, Quinn Cummings u her
"loveabte" ten--yNf'--old daught•, and
Richard Oraytuaa aa a struggllng
young actor from Chicago. (State,
367.<1()10.)

director, Lula Bunuet. The story, wnt•
ten by Bunuel and Jeane-Oaude ear.
rlere, was adapted from Pierre Louys'
book NL.a Femme et Le Patin" (Joaeph
von Sternberg used the aame story In
1935 aa a basis tor THE DEVIL IS A
WOIIAN). The fllm stars Fernando
Ray. Carole Bouquet, and Angela
Molina. Shot In Spain. In French. (The
Moore Egyptian
Theater,
2nd &
Virginia, Seattle, 822-9352).
JULIA • atatk: adaptation of a story
taken from LIiiian Hellman's PENTI-MENTO (1973) that tails to penetfllte
the depth of the wrtter's fNUng.e fCM'a
deer childhood friend. So the acrtpt Is
beefed up with acenaa ahowlng
Hallman·, (Jana Fonda) frustrated
attempts at wrttlng THE. CHILDREN"I
HOUR and her ralallon1hlp
with
DHhlell Hammett (Jaaon Robards).
Director Fred Zlnnemann 1, akllttd at
recrMtlng the SUapertN of Hellman',
k)umey Into Nazi Oermany to dell'Mf' a
package for the real1tano1 fn(W9ffll,nt.
The pity le that Jane Fonda and
Vaneeaa Redgrave are not given the
opportunity
to fully develop their
charact..-. within Atvtn Sergent'• llmlt•
eel ICtwenplay. (Guild 45th, 2115 N.
"5th, SeatUa, &33-3353.l
DERSU UZAL.A (1975) U.S. promler9
OtrecJed by Aklra KurONW8
(SEVEN SAMURAI). G..nd Prize Wlr,.
ner at the Ninth Moacow FIim F•ttval
and 1975'1 Academy Award fCM' Beet
Foreign FIim. Engllstl 1ubtltlea. (Har·
vard Exit, Brdway. and Roy, Sea1tle,
362-4Mn.

showing.

THE TURNING POINT Hefbaft Roa
direct, Ar1hur Laurent's flatu~t
story
of two women'• ~tam,
h1endahlp
and rlYelry. Anne Bancroft ~ays an
aging ballerina who Is reaching the
point where 1ha can·t aucceaafully
compete for lead parta with the
compenv'a vounoer danoerl. Shlrtey
MacLalne la her friend who l1n't able
to reaolve the tact that she quit
dancing to marry and ralae a family. It
one can bear the women's obligatory
cat fight and a uppy r~
between
the
RuHlan
dancer
(Mikhail
Baryahnlkov) and Maclalne'a talented
baU8f'1nadaughter, the danoa aequenc:.
ea provide the t11m·• moat e,ccltlng
momenta. Beautiful and imPfNSl't'91y
filmed, they taature Baryahnlkov with
Suzanne Farrell, Pettr Martina, Martine
Yan Humel and others from the
American Ballet Theatre. (Yar11ty
Walk-In, 4329 University Way N.E.,
Seattle, 632·3131.)

MISCELLANEOUS
The National Commltt•
10 0¥ertum
The Bakke Decl1lon and Radical
Women are apc>nlOf'lng • publk: forum
Thur9day, February 23, 8 p.m., at
FrNWay Hall, 381!5-5th AYe., SNttle.
The forum le occurrtno u pen of the
National Week of Education and Action
Agelnat the B1kka Decision and
Racism.

~ TbeCooperPolnt

lsJJournal

~-n.&

•rmS...C:OU..-

' Vol. 6, No. 15 February 23, 1978

The Women's Center

Roberts Refuses To
Resign
by Nancy Ann Park ..
Chelle Robert,, Co-Coordinat or of The Evergreen State
College Women's Center was
asked to resign Tuesday at an
evaluation meeting concerning
her past performance in that
pool.
The call for resignation waa
issued by nine of the twenty-six
women who atten~
the mttting. Seven of the women who
asked that Roberts resign wm,
memben of the newly fanned
Labian Caucus. "Homophobic
tendencies and an authoritative
stance" we"' atated u the main
rusons for the resignation re-quest.
Coordinator Roberts mused
to resign at the cfose of
Tuesday's meeting amidat the
applauae of eupporters. The
raignation can not be legally
forced by Women's
Center
memben beause the position lo
Work Study qualified,
and

t.Mrefore Roberts' employment is
handled through the Office of
Financial Aid.
Tuesday's mttting had been
posted as a continuance
of
R~rts'
evaluation by Women's
Center memben, as she had not
yet had the chance to respond to
allegations
made at a prior
meeting.
Roberts, who began by readily
admitting a need to further
eliminate her own homophobic
tendenci,., st......ed that homophobia is an issue all individuala
must confront. "And I don't
know a lnbian who started out
as a heterosexual woman who
haan't had to face her own
homophobia," Roberts said to
memben of the Leobian Caucus.
She alao defended
her "grassroots" political ltance, citing that
her past work with women has
involved the fulflllme.'lt of immediate needs, ouch u food and
,helter, for women who had

been phyelcally and emotionally
battered. Roberts also made the
point that it was difficult for her
to make a transition from these
immediate needs to longer range
political objectives.
The main issue Roberts dis-puted during the meeting was in
reference to her right to "indivvidual politics," She felt that the
position of Coordinator necessitated making decisions on her
own, and that her actions could
not always be dictated by a
group consensus.
Th~ in conflict with Coor·
dinator Roberta, ouch as Lauren
Herbert, told her that she often
acted in response to penonal
rather than group nttda. Approximately one--third of those
present at the meeting confronted Roberts on th... grounds,
accusing her of being "authoritarian" instead of working by

The inauguration of Daniel J. Evans as President of Evergreen
will take place on Sunday. February 26, beginning at ~ 1p.m.
.. Commencement of the public ceremonies will be at The Evergreen
State College, in the Library Building. Ceremonies will ht followed by a reception and banquet at 6:30 p.m. at the Greenwood
Inn. Admission to the banquet is $9.00 per person; ceremonies on
campus are free.
Evans assumed the presidency at Evergreen on June 15, 1977
after serving three terms as the Governor of the State of Washington. He was precttded by Charles J. McCann, Evergreen's founding president, who served for ten years.
The inauguration ceremonies will include brief "greetings and
charge5" from student, staff, and faculty representatives, and
Evans' response to those charges. Also scheduled to deliver charges
are U.S. Congressman Joel Pritchard, State Fisheries Director
Gordon Sandison, and Chairman of Evergreen's Board of Trustees
Herbert D. Hadley.
Inauguration ceremonies will also include performances by the
Evergreen Jazz Ensemble and the Madrigal Singers.
Activities planned for the evening celebration are a talk given
by Or. John Rasner, a dean from an Australian university which
emphasizes interdisciplinary studies, a visual "History of Evergreen," performances by faculty and community vocalists, and a
brief speech by Evans.
Advance reservations are required for the banquet; tickets are
available through the Office of College Relations.

Continued on page 5

Faculty Handbook DTF Reports
The Faculty HandbookReview
DTF met with thirty-five me,nben of The Evttgreen State College faculty and staff yatorday,
February 22, to ditcwo the DTP',
proposed revision• of Faculty
Evaluation and Retention Polley.
The DTF WU fortMCI during
May and June of 1977 and
charged "to undertake a ieview
of the curttnt faculty handbook,
bringing forward ffl:<>mmendatlons for changes in any lltttion
thereof-hopefully
in time for
ieviow by the Provost and Prfti.
dent and presentation
to the
Boardof Trust- at ib Deamhff
(or January) fflffling."
A June 10 memo from the
deslt ol Acadmuc Dun Will

Humphttya mcapaulated the need
for the DTF: " ... ~tially,
we
need to find a atronger mechanism
for faculty self-sovemance in tttention matters-one which pull
less weight on administrative
evaluation ol teaching and more
weightonfacultyinvolvement .... "
According to a February 13
memo issued by the DTF to the
Faculty, it had tried "to ~affirm the College's commitmenl
to lnterdiaciplinary, collaborative
teaching"; to place "a pmnium
on the task of faculty development and to relocate this raponsibility back among the faculty
where It belongs''; "to provide
criteria for judging faculty performance"; to cwvise"a

for giving special help to thoee
faculty who are in some difficulty concuning reappointmenl";
and to ~tablish
"the Cetltral
role of the faculty seminar as an
instrument for coJlaboration,
scholarship, faculty development
and future program development."
Discussion at the faculty mttting Cffltered around problems
with "bureaucratic" and "fuzzy"
language within the propoaed
changes for the Faculty Handbook. Specifically, objection,
were raised over claute1 in the
proposal which atated that faculty memben who had been at
TESC for llix yun would be
responsible for couneeling newer

procae
--------------------"-----

faculty.
'1t's one thing for tho,,e who
have been here and new people
to engage in collaborative teaching, but there is a danger of
paternalism and matemalism in
institutionalizing aeniority ... " said
Faculty Member Kirk Thompson.
The most controversial of all
the DTF s proposals was one
stating that all faculty memben
"att expected to be continuously
involved in faculty sem.inan."
The proposal further stated that
exceptions to the provisions
would be possible "only upon
·submitting written reasons to
and receiving written acknowl~t
from a dean."
In response to this proposal
Peta Hmdenon remarked, "We
as faculty haw to be the best
judges of what our time is best
u...tfor."
Other faculty memben were
concerned that the proposal
might be interpmed as requiring
them to take on reading lists in
addition to those of their programs, contracts, or individual
research. In addition,
many
attending Wednesday'• meeting
did not fttJ they should have to
submit written reason to the
deans for straying from faculty
seminars.
Richard Jones addressed the
fact that faculty seminan of two
persons did not Sffl1l to work,
and that mttting in larger groups
would help faculty memben to
make better use of Kminar time.
In reaponse. Willie Unsoeld
ltold Jones he felt two-member
te~
were able to seminar well.
He said that he had 1ried adding
an additional faculty member to
•the team from outside his program but that "evm though the
flah .we chooe wu a flah of our

color and species, he w.u a fish
of a different pool."
• Faculty member. raised additional objKtions to the DTF s
proposals, one concerning a f'ft.
erence to "demonstration of aca~ic
professionalism and colleagueship", listed under reappointment decision guidelines.
One faculty member stressed
that the language was unclear,
and could be used "to get at
someone we don't like. We could
just say they're 'unprofessional'."
The majority of those present at
the mttting felt that reappointment guidelines should be spelled
out in much greater detail.
The committee will meet a~in
on Wednesday, Much 8, from 1
to 3 p.m. in CAB 108 to further
discuss proposals with the faculty. This meeting is open to students and sl.uf as well.
DTF member Chuck Pa;Ithorp
said that the final report of the
DTF which would be ,ubmitted
to the deans could not possibly
reflect a consensus of the entire
faculty. He did, however, encourage those who strongly disagreed with portions of the pro-posal to submit their grievances
in writing to both the committtt
and the deans.
The findings of 1he DTF are
only intended as recommencfai.
lions to the Academic Deans.
Final decisions on revisions of
the Faculty Handbook will be
made by The Evergreen State
College administration.
Faculty members who did not
attend the Wednesday meeting
are encouraged to review the
proposails and .1ttend the subsequent meeting 50 that apathy can
be replaced with a finner commitment towards collaborative
faculty efforl.

I-

2

~

Point JoulNI , ....... ,y :la,

1t7t

3

The Cooper Polnl Journal Febf'uary n. 1111

Lett
.Letters(Q)JP)llIID00IIDLetters~llIIDl1©1ID
'
umn. Th• ,tandtns joke In th•
program 11 to reaard such Incident, •• acts of misdirectell flattery. Though It tears I small
hole In tht emotional energy that
w• put into our work, 1nything
that includes an element of play
11never ruined. Thi, incident ha,
made it HIier for me to laugh at
my.. 11,but I still wish somt clue
to th• late of my piece, 111chH
"Lunatics Unite," had been left In
111place.
Chip Pruer

What This
School
Needs ...

Points Of
Clarification
To the Editor:
The article "Women's Center
m Transition" by Nancy Ann
Parkes ICPJ. Feb. 16) nffd1 a
few points of clarification. One
1s that the Women's Center has
had two coordinators for a sood
three years, not just since the
formation of the Lesbian Caucus.
Most uf Diane Winslow's
c.omments were innacurate and
misleaJin,s. The LNbian Caucus
does not ntima.tcr: thilt there is no
interest in the Women's Center,
but has (along with others)
observed that active participat 10n in meetings and project, has
been minimal. Also, the Lesbian
Caucus did not "settle into" the
Women's CentH like
some
plague or parasite, but rather as
1nd1viduals were/.ue reaaonably
active Women's Center members,
often "holding it together" as
Chelle and othen have noted.
:--.;astytrashing provoke-s excessive garbage, not the organic
~md from which fruitful growth
can be nurtured, but rathtr the
sludge which 1uffocates our urth
and spirits.
In Love ,1.ndRevolution,

Mork Smith', review of Elvia'
performance. I walked Into the
Paramount, determined not to
like him; alter the first lift.. n
minutes I Will a true believer.
Whoever u.id rock was dead has
obviously never 1ttn Elvis live.
After hearing his extraordinary
concert, I have only one thing to
say; His aim is true.
Sincerely,
Charles C. William10n

In Defense Of
Heterosexuality

To the Editor:
I am writing in response to
'Some remarks concerning heterosexuality made by the Lnbian
Caucus in their 1tatment published in the CPJ Feb. 16. In it
they state that they find th•
institution of heterosexuality to
be a ··manifestation
of male
supremacy." Heterosexuality is
then defined in a footnote as an
institution whereby "women in
this society are forced into male
dominated social relationships."
Although the fint statement
would be hard pr.,sed to find
supporters
among evcin the
Becca Todd
staunchest of sexist stalwarts,
who I'm sure would be forced to
admit, under prHsure, that men
did not create heterosexuality as
a showpiece for their own superiority, I believe I understand the
spirit in which it was written:
To the Editor
heterosexuality is for the most
Re: Friday's Concert/
part, an oppressive institution.
Tommy Trombone
It i• htre though that I take
To the Myn In the audience:
issue with the Lesbian Caucus
It 1s my hope that this Sauna
statement. By defining hetero(oncer( will allow us to 1weat it
sexuality a, tht be-all and end-all
out toge'l:her in a way only myn
caust of women's opprenlon
can do.
they blind them.. 1v.. to a very
To the Womyn in the audiimportant point. Nam-ely, heteroenct • That you w;iint to come to
sexual relation1hlp1 have not
th1~,oncer! show, th•t you have
evolved in isolation-they
are
d dttp concern for myn's l11ues.
subject 10 a political-economic
Pluse use that concern towardJ
structure that wishet to oppress
bettering your understanding of
us •Ii. This structure holds lt1
myn·s needs to separate. Bujdes,
power by virtue of the fact that
you re not allowed in the myn'1
it can operate through such basic
~un.1. so tough shit.
institutions II sex, religion, and
work, to perpetuate itt opprHSincerely,
sivenes1, It Is not heterosexuality
Tommy Trombone
which oppresset us any more
than It 11Anita Bryant's brand of
religion. It 11 the 1y1tem, which
demands of Its ln1tltutlon1 strict
method, of behavior, that keeps
u1 all, gay and straight, under lt1
To the Editor:
power.
I couldn't agree more with
Although I am an strong sup-

Tough Shit

Elvis's Aim

port of women'• and py rights,
and fully appreciate th• subjection this 1ociety'1 definition of
heteroaexualltyfoTCfl thne groups
to live under, I find it misleading
and dangerous for a lesbian
group to lff the cause of Its
oppre11ion in an Institution,
rather than inherent in the
system, This is exactly what the
system wants us to do. As long
.u we are divided. we can not
conquer.
Sincerely,
Fred Nollan

Our First Love
Letter
To th• Editor:
John Keogh', editorial (Feb.
16, 1978) concerning Crut
Esquivel', forced resignation was
excellent In pointing out the
respon1ibilitiH of th• paper.
In my opinion, Editor Keogh
and writen Nancy. Parkes and
Mandy Mcfarlan are putting out
an objective, concise paper and
writing about iHues pertinent to
the Evergreen community.
The paper it more professional
than I've seen in previous
quarten.
You're doing an excellent job
and I hope you continue the high
quality work.
Sincerely,
Maurffn Knuth

The Eternal
Digression
Of Life
To the Editor:
Womyn have accepted the
oppr..,lon that h11 happened to
them as a result of the mat~
dominated society. They realiu
that their only recount 11 to try
to find llrmgth In the resource
of their own hon.,ty. I wmt to
the first feminist preferred concert at this camp111.Th• power
there made m• 1.. 1 good. Th•
gtneral fuling there did not
allow 1'tuch for th• fact that
there Jere a few poulbly untrustworthy main thert. I am an
untrustworthy person. 1 have
been In charge of thl1 culturt for
thousands of yean. For at least
30,000 years we have been 1och1l

beinp. In th• large perant of
th• time (98%, 99.97%) the nonchild bearing parent has been th•
outward show of authority.

are 14!1 by hi, own opinion, and

not any worldly ,tandard which
many people ,..1,..
I have become aware in the
Wtll, how 1ho11ldwe know that
pas~ two weeks that the oplnlon1
we were all equal17 U we didn't
I stated are held by many othtrs
run out our Cruz. E,qulvel,, we
bnidn my,ell, There have been
1tudent1, community and faculty
might - the value of wholeilm.
Par too oftm at Evergreen the
members stating their support on
faculty or adminl1tratlon dictatt
the i11ue. At \hi, point I am very
programs, contract,, and trends,
much convinced it It not a
Don't forget a baby of O (ttro) 11 figment of our Imaginations but
a true problem. It seems I am
in a much better position to
told It 11 a lack of gratitude to
never make a mistake than you
are. Whoever you are. Scientists
,peak and ,..k the truth.
make the ftw.,t, but th• worst
I had com• from a "Traditionmi,takn. Artl1t1 make th• most.
al" musical institution before attending TESC. Within the 1trucbut never important onet (in
their work).
1c.ture of the Khool there were
Ruli,ticully
this kind of
classes and evtJ'l a major offered
knowledge 11only at Evergr.. n.
in composition. There was an
Ideali11ically it 11 -ping into
outward effort and philosophy
our society quickly enough to
held by th• faculty members In
allow the eternal digreulon of
relation to composition students
life to continue.
which stressed the importance of
the exploration of many different
8. "Real Ideal" Funky
styles of mu1lc. And much more
Bill Maier
Important than that, th• validity
of th• product of onn learning
wu baHd upon the quality,
sensitivity, and f.. ling of the
music ind not the style in which
it was written. I do not believe
this
hu been streued nearly
To th• Editor:
enough within the 1tructure of
I would like to ,.. th• real
compo1itlonal and musical pur,tory about Alaska printed, in1uit at TESC.
stead of just pap about do it
It is with these word, that l
right th• firot time.
would like to apologiu for the
What is alive but doesn't move
vagueness of my Hnt letter. I
-an egg; what came before the
truly meant not lo insult any of
egg]
the music faculty here for outwardly they have treated me
J. Hubben
well. Yet I moll definitely do
want to emphasize the necatity
of humanity, both In the arts
and In all life, to acknowleds•
the validity of th• dillerenc..
within our arts and the structure
of societies.
To the Editor:
I hope for our future and our
In Reaponte to the Response to
course of learning.
my letter:
Sincerely,
Upon reading last w.. k', CPJ.
I was very d!10ppolnted to ,..
Jim Stonecipher
the highly per10nal statement,
given by my prtstnt faculty
1pon10r, Greg Steinke, In reaction to my belief, regarding th•
orpni.utlonal structure of musical study at TESC. It WH moll
definitely not my Intention to
To the Editor:
point the spotlight at any particular person or penon1 but
Alu, yet another casualty to
rather the whole llructure of
add to the list of moluted
m111icalpursuit hert. It truly 11 Nature, Society and Duign,
''My1teri., of the HHrt" art prodi1heartmlng for me to - Gl'f8
Steinke llep directly Into the
jtcts. In this CAN my 1trln1
1potlight, and it truly appears to
1C11ipturo
vanished from the third
m• that th• prof..,ional ethical
floor of the librafy, betwffn th•
1tandard1 of which he 1peak1 of
stair railing and a cement col-

What's An Egg

Re: Steinke's
Letter

Misdirected
•flattery

To the Editor:
Tho article In the Forum
reported that KING TV stated
that The Evergreen Stat• College
wu • ltlt-ovor from the 1ixtln
and that it lhould get with the
timn (they are 10 oqer to erue
that spirit).
The Spirit of the Sixtin was
like a breath of ll'flh air blowing
on • dylna penon, di1tractlna,
annoylna, but wont of all, it
threatened to wake him from hi,
sleep. Now we find them
wantlna to cl01e the door and
quiet the wind we loved blowing
In our facn, the wind of change
that carried away th• rigor
mortl1 of our selvn. The 1plrit
of tho lixtl., made good head•
linn then, but al■1I it ii now
l)Ollt, not marketable.
The old and the dead are well
entrenched In their tombo of bia
b111in-, but they know they
could not 1tand against u,, tvm
though they killed • few of u, ••
Kmt State; you don't appeue •
hungry lion by 11.apping111face,
you feed it until it 11 full, and
then it will wander away and
forget you. If you want to
pollon • penon you 11ip him
,mall d01e1 dally, bit-oiu ploces
of bureaucracy, red tape begins
to hardtn In tho veins, t,h•
1tudfflt1 become more "academ•
le" and .... r10111"and th• head
robo the hurt of itl motlvn and
10011.
Th• spirit hH bun
seduced, and they would bras of
It.
Th• underlying problem 11that
many of the faculty hired had all
th• credential, of th• "tHcher,"
and mouthed their int.,...t In the
"experiment,"
but knew not
whtre the wind w■1 blowing
from; ,om• who did were
poisoned, and 10mo dozed off.
What th• 1chool need, 11 •
reawakening, reevaluation. and
commitment.
Jan Carrtu
(film 1111dmt)

3333 For
Emetgencies
To th• Editor:
AJ some peoplt have already
found out, Security h■1 an automatic telephone an,worlng device
that 1110motlmH llltd durina tho
tvmlng and night ho1111.1bi1
device 11used when neporu and
other functions make it impo.t!bl1 to ltovo • staff ponon In
the office to answer tho ph~ne In
ponon. AJ the recorded m-..
uy,i, '1f you have an omorpncy
pl1■1e call camput txttntlon
3333, othtrw!N leave a -,.
and Socwity PfflOMtl WID be
aladto rtturn yout call."
Centrally this hoe bNn workIng out wry well. Ho-

have one problem that we
should point out and clarify. Th•
3333 n11mbeM1strictly anemer1mcy number. Security and the
Camp111 Fire Station jointly
monitor thi1 number but it ii
llltd primarily for lirt1 or medical emergmct... However, according to Plrt Station pononnel. people who call Security and
are unable to lmmtdlately reach
Security ptr10Mel art calling via
th• emorgmcy number at mldnight and after to Inquire about
thlnp like the bu, schedule and
the like.
Whm th• emera•ncy lint rinp
at the fire Station a Duty Officer
and his crew got up and prepare
to respond to what they can
only a1111m•ii • real emergency
call. Bnides tylna up th• omer•
gmcy lino, I'm sure you can the kind of problem, thla crtatn
whm the caller really donn't
have • bonaflde emergency.
I would therefore uk that
people plu,e have patience and
leave • meotage at th• Security
Office number If we ore temporarily 0111 and 11st the 3333
number only for lint, mtdlcal, or
law mforctmmt emergmcin.
Gary R1111ell
Security

Consciousness
Raising Vs.
Freedom Of
Thought
To the Editor:
Many women (and conH•
quently mm) would be 10ved
from • fatal mallanancy by •
1harp and c11ttin1 di1tlnction
bttweon the political rights of
women and a woman'• conldouaneu. To 11.1pportwomen'•
political and legal rt1ht1 •
colltctlv• 11ruule 11 j111tly1wnmoned. Howeve{, tht benumbIng colltctivization of womm'1
conscio111n.., 11 entlrtly another
matter. Some thinp m111t be
faced alone, 111ch H the con1Cio1.11
evaluation of one'• world.
Whm the leminl1t movement
tri.. to determine anything but
th• colTKlion of lepl lnequltin
it becomn itoelf an "oppreuor"
of incllvidual thousht, Attempt,
by womm'1 gro11p1to dl1tribute
what Mary Pltqerald (of the
lesbian Caucus) lovinaly call,
"hetahtened leminl1t conscioutn..," tvidmlH th• type of herd
momentum which mds In blind
(though patriotic) 1tampedu.
Behind th• oeemln,i co11rageo11tnHI of communal struggle,
behind tht lmpauioned battle
crin and maxim, of th• feminist
colltctiv• conlCiou,neu, a whimpering timidity 11 hidden which
betray• an unwillln,ntu on th•
part of th... women to understand unique incllvidual relation1hip1. They reduce tht entire
malt populace to a nominal
phantom, "The male 1upremacllt1." Indeed, becau,e of 10m•
women's aro11p1,what lhould be
an incllvidual study and under1tandin1 of on•'• pononal 11tuatlon ha, been deceptlvtly replaced by • vocabulary of lea.lty
1enenlization1 and lin911i1tlc
phantom,.
Titt Lnblan Ca11C111
(amona
other women'• ,ro11p1) provldeo
Ill with the Ir.indof phruooloSY
v....,. onouah to uy nothlna
courapou,ly and at the umt
time replace any individual
thouaht l "Stxllm," "malt tllppremacy', "our opp,won", "racl,..
teal IOClalchanp", "htighttntd

feminist conldo1.11nn1", "opprn-alon that 11 common to all
women." What are thne wordJ
but unmaMtd notions chanted
by th01e women -king rhetorical idmtity (or 10lvatlon from
boredom thtoush romantic revolutions). Thi, kind of l111111age
don not dncribe experience; it
lnvmtl an momy that can be
beaten by women confllltd and
fru1tnted In their 1urch for
idmtity and purpott. The attempt here i1 to replace a
woman', •trual•to describe and
understand her rtlationshlp to
men and the world with a
communal explanation like that
of rtli1lo111 ab1ol11tl1m (only
"revolutionary"). The rhetoric of
lomlnl,m, a, with moot politics,
, 11 111itable for po1t-lobotomy
c.un b1.1t not for women and
mm honntly dealing with their
own problem,.

There 11 • corrupondina
movement by some hmlnl1t1 to
purge our Ianguaae of -1,1 pla
termlnologlu.
They want to
chana• th• word "woman" (or ii
It "women"]) to "womyn" and
banish from our vocabulary
words like "girl", "chick", "babe"
which ,lander tho .. 'womyn1' of
heightened con1Ciou1n..,, Perhapo enough chana• occurs In
these nominal alteration, and
obliteration, to appeue timid
revolutionari., who don't want
to ,melt or 1wHt the dirty 1wHt
of penonnal enco1.1nter,who an
unwillina to lace th• brutality of
contradiction and divenlty
which eludn communal conclu1ivmeu; th• dlvenity which ii
by nature life and nl1t1 In all
human relationlhipo. Thert 11no
'u1' and 'them', no 'male 1upre.mltt society." It', not 10
simple; and 1ilencina tho lan8'1118•will not chana• th• color
of reality. You cannot cn,at• •
unity and uphold truth by
castrating divenity. Yet there are
feminill groupo that think otherwise.
In1tHd of talking about th•
problem, nperimced In unique
1ituatlon1, th ... femlni111Invent
nominal "opprt110rs" and dittribut• prefabricated politics to
womm herded Into an i10lation
whffl! non• of their experlmce
lin, and no man can be li1terted
to with honnt ,en1itlvity. Such
politics are not • lit measure of
hwnan rolation1hip1.
A candid and brave woman
would not call legal lnequitl.,
male oppraalon, or accute all
males of evil motivet b«.auae of
tho.. unjust laws. By rejecting
the thnee-dimtn1ional details of
experience, feminist,
Janore
thins, such H tho.. mm who
launchtcl off on a career - for a
woman - and now find themselvn stranded; or they forpt
the oppressive alimonies, and the
unnamHble pain of beina uncertain and alone, of want1n1 to 11k
and undentand
but having
nobody to listen-only femlni1t1
shouting "oppre&10r"I Men suffer. Women 1uller. Men and
women suffer-for rea10n1 that
political movement, and feminist
con1dou1nes1 will never know.
PoUlics ii not the 111bjtctof an
emotional nlalionlhlp between
two people, and lhouldn, bt
made to appou H th• mun, for
10lvtna their ptrtonal problam1.
Conjurina li11111t1ticmonllers

out of the dtpth1 of confualon
and despair will novu help •
woman in htr Identity •truul•·
Takt your lover, your mother,
your father, your dos-your
oppreuor-tak,
thtm ln1lda,
lhut all the doon, and talk with
••ch other, DESCRIBE.
Redttna

poUtlcalCl'Nd of "hqltt•
tntd femlnl1t COnsci®-"
ii
10mt

cowardice. It replaces the responsibility of awareneu with
political dogmatism.
Women
ought to ,coll at out ■ id•
attempt, to heighten their con1Ciou1n.., by blurring th• detail,
of real relation1hlp1.
To remove legal injustices
common
to all women, a
collective 1truul• (slogan, and
all) 11 mandated. Politic, involves groups of people and
common interests; Individual
consclou1nnt, I hope, Is not so
composed. Women and men
have a reopon1ibillty to understand their relation1hip to each
other, which no colltction of
vague ltminl1t generalitln ought
to replace. We need 10mt naked.
honesty; an honnt consideration
of the real uteru, and ball, of a
relation1hip. Anything et.. and
we're neutered.
Jamn Thomas

Hermaphrodites
Unite
To the Editor:
Being a political leftist hermaphrodite, I lffi that my nffd■ art
not being met by either th•
myn's center or the womyn's
center. Hermaphrodit., Unite!
Socitty of and for the better
treatment of Hermaphrodit.,

I Smell A Rat
To the Editor:
I smell a rat in the Womyn's
Center! And It's padding it's nest
with SltA fund,. Are we, th•
Evergr,m community, going to
j111tdrop our auards and let the
lesbians caucta7 I move that we
brea.lt out th• rat ch..,.I
Jack Torpe

- HELP WANTED Two paid positions on the CPJ are
opening up for Spring Quarter (and
beyond). We need a new Features Editor
and a new Advertising Manager. The
Features Editor job pays $2.80 an hour for
fifteen hours a week, and requires strong
writing skills and a willingness to work
longer hours than the pay is worth. The
Ad Manager position is paid on the basis
of a twenty-five percent commission, and
involves selling ads, writing contracts,
and distributing papers to a few places in
downtown Olympia.
Both of these positions provide excellent practical working experience, and
students can earn academic credit for the
work involved if they arrange individual
contracts. Applications should be submitted to the CPJ office, CAB 306, and will
be accepted until 5:00 p.m., Wednesday,
March 29.
The CPJ has a constant need for
writers. In addition to the paid Features
Ed. position, we'd like to find some
unpaid staff writers who could work on a
regular basis for the paper, possibly
receiving academic credit through individual contracts. No formal application is
necessary, but anyone interested is hereby
invited to come by the CPJ office and talk
about it.

I I :00 • 8:00 Mon - Sat

NEW 6 USED RECORDS - CONCERT
TICKETS 6 LOTS OF OTHER GOODIESI

Westside

Center

387•47911

4

n.o ~ -

-

__,

a. ,m

ed. The Florida gay actlvl111
failed to organize their support
in the feminist and minority
communities. They alienated
leminists, including many lesuals are discriminated against
bians, with their aexilt tactics.
simply because there are no laws
An example lS anti-women slurs
prohibiting it. Homophobia, sexof Bryant. They wrote off the
ism, heter01eXi1m, and the interBlack and Cuban communities
ests served by these att deeply
with the ex"15e that these groups
rooted in our society. At th!J
are "anti-gay anyway." (What
time, however, it lS important to
about gay Cubans and Blacksl)
support civil rights actively,
Instead they should have been
~use
the opposition is active
working towards unity based on
and well-<irganized and because
the realization that the forces
we need jobs and homes while
we work on those larger social • and interests oppressing sexual
minorities are those that profit
problems.
from oppression of racial minorWe learned (again) from Dade
iti6. When one group's rights
County last summer that the gay
are threatened, everyone's are
rights struggle cannot be isolat-

On Gay Civil Rights
by Joyce Kilmer
"Now, sure, civil rights are a
dubious lot. They make us feel
good in a system that's not,
but they help us survive 'til
that system is shot."
-from Christopher Henhey's
"Citric Acid''

Homosexuals are of all ages,
racial and ethnic groups, socioeconomic classes, political view~
points, and occupations.
Our
only common point is the
capacity to love and relate
sexually to people of our own
sex. We share basic nttds. such
as the needs for food and shelter,
with all human beings, yet these
are not currently protKted as
rights for homosexuals.
Jim Gaylord was a Tacoma
School teacher for thirteen years.

FORUM
He was fired about two years
ago because, when asked by
school officials, he admitted
being homosexual. He was not
accused of any specific behavior,
nor was his teaching ability in
question. The State Supreme
Court upheld the school district's
ruling that homosexuals
are
• immoral" and thus can be fired
or denied teaching Cfftification.
The U.S. Supreme Court recmlly refused to hear his appeal.
Sandy Schuster and Madeline
Isaacson are lesbian mothers
living with their six children,
ages 8-14, in Seattle. They have
been to court thrtt tim6 in
seven years for the right to live
together and raise their children.

taken seriously. There an antigay rights re/,n,ndum drives in
St. Paul. Wichita, Eugene, and
most recently, Seattle, where
"sexual orientation"
has been
included in the Fair Employment
and Housing ordinances for five
years. Right now it is legal in
Washington, except in Pullman
and Seattle, to fire or refuse to
hire, to evict frqm a home, and
to deny credit or insurance to a
person because s/he is homosexual.
Heterosexual people can also
be victimized by misplaced discrimination: any two women or
men can be denied housing
together,
and have been in
Olympia, if they're suspected of
being homosexual. The preliminary report of the Or,gon Task
Force on Sexual Preference
includes several examples of
people losing jobs for unclear
reason&, then later finding out it
was because they fit a stereotype
of how gay people look or act.
In February 1977, a gay rights
bill was introduced
in the
Washington State legislature.
Known as House Bill 689 and
Senate Bill 2734, it would
strengthen
the current state
human rights law by protectiAA
freedom of •·sexual orientation".
It would outlaw discrimination
based on race, creed, color,
national origin, sex, sexual
orientation, or the presence of
any sensory, mental, or physical
handicap. This protection would
apply to obtaining and holding
jobs. using public accommodations, and obtaining professional
and business licenses. It does not
address discrimination
on the
grounds of sexual orientation in

Right now it is legal in
Washington, except in Pullman
and Seattle, to fire or refuse to
hire, to evict from a home, and
to deny credit or insurance to a
person because s/he is homosexual.
The State Supreme Court is now
deciding whether or not they can
continue as a family. At their
November 28 hearing, there was
no mention made of parenting
abilities-love,
honesty, understanding, responsibility. Clearly,
what was on trial was the
defendants' l~bianism.
In 1977, Save Our Child=
(Anita Bryant) and
Dade
County, Florida, made gay rights
an American dinner table discussion topic. As a result, some of
the myths about homosexuals
and the facts of discrimination
have come out in the open and
pro-gay rights people iltt pulling
themselves to~her.
The mention ol Anita Bryant
often provokes a giggle, but her
attack on civil rights must be

child custody awards.
That
would involve elaborating on a
different part of Wuhington
state law-Chapter
13 of the
Washington State Code, Family
Law. This bill also don not
specifically guarantee the civil
rights of transvestites or transgenita.ls.
At the end of Last year's
legislative session, the bill remained in the House Social and
Health Services Committee. Com
comittee members are now
gathering information on gay
rights faws and diocrimin.alion
cues across the country and will
probably hold public hearings
during the next year.
Ovil rights legislation will not
remedy the oppresalon ol 1...
bw,s and gay men. Homoeex-

Community Responds
To Incidents Of Violence
by Mandy McFarlan
In light of the recent incre,ase in
reported violence on and near
the Evergreen campus, individuals and groups on campus a.re
taking steps to prevent rape and
assault.
The Thun;ton County Sheriffs
Office is in charge of the cases
and is working in cooperation
with Campus Security.
A woman who was jogging
along Driftwood Road was raped
February 3 by a man who
followed her on foot. This was
the second on-campus
rape
reported in the history of the
college.
On January 29, a hitch-hiker
reported
an attempted
rape
which occured on Kaiser Road,
close to campus.
A man was assaulted
on
February 6 near the Mods by
t.hrtt men. He was taken to St.
Peter Hospital where he received
several stitches.
A woman who was jogging
sometime around noon on February 10 was chased by two
men; one appeared to be in his
twenties and the other. was
described as middle-aged. On
February 12, a woman was
assaulted by two men near
A.S.H., again by a man in his
fortie5 or fifties and a younger
man. She screamed and fought
to escape. The younger man had
curly, greasy hair. Further descriptions are filed confidentially
with Campus Security and the
Thurston
County
Sheriff's
Office.
Other incidents which do not
involve physical violenc-e, such
as sightings of a flasher, have
also been ~rted
recently. One
woman told Security that a man
in a 1963 brown Chevy Nova
expossed him..JI when she left
his car. The car had Washington
liCfflle plates, number BND-516.
In spite of the sttmingly
intolerable upsurge of violent
crime in this area, Security
officials Anne Brown and Mac
Smith both feel !Nit the amount
ol theoecrimes being committed
at Evergfft'n is not proportionately higher than in other parts

Another Food Meeting
The second open mffting in
two weeks to diacuu food ,ervice operations and the SAGA
contract was he.Id on February
22 in CAB 110. CoU,ge food
service adminiltraton Adminia-trative Via Praident Dean Clabaugh, Business MaNger Ken
Winkley, and Housing Director
Ken Jacob reiterated t~r support ol rmewing the SAGA Food
Service's contract.
A student proposal for an alternative operation ol the Dtlic.ateuon for next year hu been
tabled. Student, who do not
want to buy food on campus
from a corporation should start
working now on an ahernatiw

for fall ol 1979. Ken Winkley 1J
willing to answtt questioN to
aid in developing propooala.
The renewal contract which
administrators
are supporting
will renew SAGA'• cafeteria
rights for two yean and their
DeJi rights for OM yut.
'fhe
contract will apecify !Nit food
servica becom,, aell-auffident by
mid-1980. Ow,gea will be made
in the Deli to make prias and
food· olttrinp mon, n,oponoiw
to student needs, poMibly u
early aa Spring Quarter 1978.
Ken Jacob received a letter
from SAGA'• DIJtrict ~
Jim Wedge which aaid !Nit extended amount1 of produce,
dried fruits, juk'n, farm pro-

endangered. Their rac!Jm, -ism, and general 1hortaightedness
wu partially reaoonalble for the
n,peal ol their ~y ,!Jihts.!t~t'!l;e·
The TESC Gay Resource
Center is sponsoring a public
educational forum to encourage
discussion of the issues raised
here. There will be lour 1pealten1
who are active in the lesbian and
gay rights movement. Following
the speakers, there wlll be
opportunity
for small group
discussion. The forum on Civil
Rights for Lesbians and Gay
•Men will be Wednesday, March
1, at 7,30 p.m. at the OIY]npia
Community Center, 1314 Eut
4th.

ducta (milk, bulk cheeR, etc.),
nuts, puta, and oila would be
included in the Deli Improvement pw.. Wedge 1ua,eated the
removal ol hot dogs, Individual1y packaged cheeses, meats,
bag,ela and rolla, pickles, prewnpped sandwiches and hard
boiled-.
Moot 1tuden11 at the mttting
felt !Nit If thooe items wen, n,mowd from the ahelva at the
Dell, they should be at leut relocated downaWn. There wu
11011W concern expn,Med about
the Dell'1 becoming llrictly a
health food store. Anyone interested in making poottlw _.
dons to SAGA on food offfflnp
ahould contact Km Jacob.

the time of these incidents with
ol Thunton County.
license plate numbers (an identiMany students are taking
fication of the car owner)
precautions. Hitch-hikers and
because the person who is
joggen are staying mottly in
pairs or groups. Security's 24- accused could obtain an alibi
and sue the accusor. Smith feels
hour on-campus escort service is
that if information were posted
being used about five times each
anonymously, without the times,
night.
Becca Todd, a woman who is the system could be valuable.
The legalities involved with
affiliated with the Women's
posting
license plate numbers on
Center and the Lesbian Caucus,
a vehicle blacklist are being
called a meeting on February 21
checked out. Another meetit>g
to work for the prevention of
has been scheduled for Tuesday,
future assaults at Evergreen and
February 28, at noon in LIB
surrounding communities. Thtte
2118. Other ideas which are still
were about 18 men and women
being conside~ include a series
attending, some representing
ol self-defense workshops and a
groups such as the Recreation
transport system.
Center and A.S.H. apartments;
A major concern discussed at
others were interested indivithe prevention meeting was how
duals.
to convince
people to use
Carol Elwood from Rape
preautiona.ry
measures. There
Relief explained that there is
really is no way to convince
currently no systematic way to
everyone, and suggestions are all
shatt information and descripanyone can offer. Those a.re: If
tions on rapn and rape attempts
you have to hitch-hike, don't go
because of the Importance of
alone. If you get a bad ride,
confidentiality
in groups like
ttpc>rt it as soon as ~ible
to
Rape Relief. 'We need written
Security.
the
Olympia
Polia,
or
consent on n,leasing the informathe Thunton County Sheriff's
tion ... People wouldn't come .in
Offia.
Jot down the licen.. plate
for help If they couldn't auume
number ol any car you ~ into.
our confidence", aaid Elwood.
(It can't hurt to make the driver
ldeu wue d!Jcuu«I on preaware that you are noting details
vention and how to make people
about the car.) Don't joa. or walk
mott
aware ol the problems.
alone ln areas where you can not
Anne Brown from Security aaid
1ummon help, even during
!Nit many peopl• had called In
daylight houn. Use Security's
to voluntftr time and eKOrting
acort service on campus to ~
lel'Vlca, but oome ol the ideu
to parking lots, etc., when the
the volunteen had wue un.,..
population density ii low. Loclt
able. She aaid !Nit 1011\1! male
doors and report 1u1piciou1
students wanted to let up a
activities to RC\lrity. If you ~ a
bicycle patrolllng 1y1tem for
bad ride, or an aaaulted, and
unlighted and remote UUI, That
you wioh to share a deacriptlon
idea WU n,j«ted becauoe Securo1 the penon(1) n,oponoible, the
ity officials feel patrollen would
CPJ will print your deacriptlon
not be d!Jtinctlv• enough and
ao !NII others may avoid aimilar
!Nit joggen, walbn and hitchoccurra,cea,
hihn would be giv,,n a falae
After hearing that voluntftr
ol RCUrity.
eocortl would hav• to be checked
it. WU decided at the IRffling
out by Security, a student who
!Nit a "phone-tree n,lay ayotem"
attfflded Tueaday'1 IRffling ukwould be let up to bop updated
ed, "Don't wo haw to truat
11111 of tlmH, place1, and
people to a pointl" Carol Eldeocriptlona on bad rides, rapes,
wood answered. 'Truat is nioe
rape attempb, wrbal abu.. and
but not in term1 ol being 100
aaaults. nllats would be
percent amfrom being raped.·
posted In the REC Center. the
&:Utor'• note:
Rainbow Dell, the downtown
Co-op, the Women'• Center, the
Acconllnt to Qui, RwNU, a
Donna and Moclaand poMibly
xcu~ officn, a '""" toho i,
raporuibl. for ....,.,.., indMnu
the Campus lnlonnat19n Center.
of ind«mt _,.,..
on ,oul nHr
Mac Smith, Chief al Security,
aayaIt is not a good iclu to poll
canpus i, n010 in custod¥,

Roberts
standards of the group'• collective interests.
Caroline Lacey, Co-Coordinator of the Women's Center, said
that Roberts' "incon»istencies"
made her job extremely difficult.
Ao an ~mple
1he cited an
incident earlier in the day when
Roberti had voiced strenuous
objections to attending the eval~atlon unless an unbiased facilitator could be located prior to
1
the mttting.

Roberts responded that she
had been voicing "an emotional
and human" response to what
she had felt at the time was an
unfair situation.
Lacey also told Roberts !Nit
the core group of the Women's
Center had dissipated because of
Roberts' inability to work in
conjunction with them, and that
the same difficulties had occurred during the transition mttti.ng
between the Lesbian Caucus and
the Women's Center.
One woman at Tuesday's
evaluation conlettnce defended
Roberta' position by stating that
the formation of the Lesbian
Caucus within the Women's
Center was responsible for turmoil which was being attributed
to Roberts. She added, in
response to the Lesbian Caucus's
statement of purpose:
"The
Caucus owes students a statement (specifically) of what n-1,
have not been met (by the
Women's Center)."

Continued
LNbian womm present at the
meeting resented being called a
divisive element within the
Center in light ol the fact that
they had been "predominantly
active"
in Women's
Center
activities since its beginnings at
Evergrttn.
Roberts informed the dissenters present at the meeting that
they composed only a fraction of
the total number of women
involved in the Wome:n's Center.
She firmly stated her position as
Coordinator should be considered in re/,renc,, to the n-1, of all
women a11ociated with the
Center in the put and present,
and ol those who might join in
the fututt.
Other womm present at Tuesday's meeting adamantly supported Roberts' continuance as
Coordinator, praising her abilities to counsel on an individual
level and aid the Center in
general. They commended her
for facing the tremendous difficulties involved in coordinating
such a politically diverse group
of women.
Evaluation of the Coordinators
is a new process to the Women's
Center, and Roberts was noted
by one woman present for her
strength in assuming the responsi bi Ii ty of evaluation
by the
group. The woman added that
this in itself was indicative of a
commitment
to work on her

shortcomings.
The mttting did not center
itself, however, on positive criticism intended to help Roberts
better serve the Women's Center.
Rather, the focus was a compos,ite of varying political views
within the diverse group and
Roberts' seemed to be used as a
vent for strong emotions and
anger.
At one point during Tuesday's
meeting, Roberts asked the
group if anyone else present
were willing to endure the long
hours and pain it would take to
assume the role of Coordinator.
No hands were raised.

INTERNAL STRUGGLES
Many of the dilemmas raised
at Tuesday's mttting stemmed
from larger internal struggle ■
which Women's Center members
currently face. Goals, objectives,
and political stances are widely
diversified among women already active within the Center.
Presently, the exact purpose
and definition of the Evergreen
Women's Center are unclear, and
women have been meeting to
clarify them. This problem is not
only central to the TESC
Women's Center, but to the
Women's Movement on a national level. It is a difficult
experience for women who are
all oppressed. yet experience
these oppressions in different
ways in light of varied political

n.o~ "°"" -stances, to work together against
their common oppression.
The core group of Evergrttn's
Women's Center met on Wednesday, February 15, specificaJly
to discuss "projects, needs, organiz.ation, decision-making, responsibilities of members and
Coordinators, and the relationship of the Center to the Lesbian
Caucus." The meeting raised
significantly more questions than
it answered.
One issue which was discussed
was the "promotion of feminism
rather than a
pro-woman
stance." The group agrttd that
the definition
of "feminist"
needed further clarification.
Other items discussed at the
February 15 mttting concerned
what type of women's inter6ts
were being served by the Center
to date, and reasons why other

FATluESdAy

---------

Fn, 1m
5
women wtte "getting turned off
by the Women's Center."
No conclusions were drawn
from this meeting. How,ver,
members agreed that they would
resume the discussion at another
meeting on February 22.
The word from here to women
who have not been mvolved
with the Women's Center before
but want to be in the future:
Contact
the Center now in
Library 3214 and voic, your
individual needs and opinions.
so that the Women's Cent,r can
truly be for all women.

NOTE: A special meeting of
the Women's Center has been
called for this Saturday: pleas,
~e Announcement
Sl!Ction fo,more in[ormAtion.

IN SEATTLE

Asserting Oneself 101:
A Course By Newspaper
by John Foster
Paranoius teaches: "Be on
your guard every second. Otherwise, you'll end up kicking
yourself."
There was once a time when
religion venders were relatively
unsophisticated
and therefore
fairly harmless. Krishniacs were
bald and wore robes. They
handed out incense and were
ridiculed by street people for
giving out tons ol free food on
Sundays. They were not liked.
However, in the last few years
they have totally n,vamped their
approach.
A well-dressed, well-led young
man accosts you. He looks like
the son of a politician. "No",
you say bewilderedly. He has
cornered you. Next thing you
know you've been sold a book
you have no internt in by this
sneak. The way this came about
wu with the line, 'Td like to
give you a book." Anyone so
dishonest should be forced to
l!Jten to campaign lpftCha for
the rest ol his Ufe. "An you
from New Yorkr "Y.. ", you say
belligerently. ''Shake handa," he
says coyly. Don't do. It. If you
hHtitate he'll f•ign Innocence
and Ny, '11'1 clean." It's not. It's
a dirty buaineaa. You11 find your
hand tightly grasped (not firmly
duped) and he won't let go until
you buy a book or IIC1UJII for a
cop. Sina copo are never around
when you want one you might
want to kick hlmwhere It hurts.
If you aim for his balla you
might end up with a llubbed toe.
The moral, Don't ahake handa
with repulaive peopl•.
Don't humor him or try to be
nice. 'Td Ilk• to atop and tallt
but my train leave, in 28
teCOnda.• He11 try to keep you
from catching It. You11be forced
to wait around In supreme
boredom. What a wonderful
time to .. u you a worthle.
bookl 'Td like to help you, but I
don't haw any money." Thia IJ
shallow and he knows It. He has
just seen you ~ your change
from the tided aeller, or, If he
hun't, he knowt !Nit ewryone
1J U much ol a liar U he is. YOU
might say you already haw 11
cop1.. al the book. 'Why not an

even dozen7" would be the
obvious reply ... Now, however,
there is PART 2. How convenient! Let's say he asks you if you
have ahy money (not unlikely).
You say, "Yes, but l won't give
you any." This may ~ effective,
but it puts you in a bad-buy
position. Likewise with, "Get
lost." Sensitive people like me
find themselv6 trying to rationalize their nastin6s and end up
despising the poor fucker. But
there is still hope. You hear the
set-up: "Are you from New
York7" Do not speak. Don't
pretend
lo be deaf. Don't
pretend to be a wino. Don't
pretend to be from a rival
religious order. Don't even look.
Shoo him away with the back ol
your hand. This gives you the
mystique of a per!on who
cannot be swayed. It is one step
away from cold-blooded murder.
Other religious groups, The
Moonie ■. The Moonie1 utablished themselva in the U.S.
with huge public rallln and loud
spuche1 in ma.for cities ala
Hitler. I hear th.at at one time
they preyed on ttrangen and
invited them to join their "youth
organization."
Now there appean to be little oM-<>n-<>ne
coercion. They put out a daily
paper in New York (The News
World) !Nit IJ sold by sheeplJh
corner vendon. No one buys it
at any price and It IJ often given
away in frustration.
The black guys with black
suits, black Ila, black shoes,
short hair, and white 1tard,ed
shirts. I don't know If theoeguya
are for rul. I pt the leeling !Nit
they cl,the way they think
honkla want their nlsgen to
loolr.. They often mumble and It
IJ euy to aay no. The strange
part i1 they pop up In the moot
unlikely placa.
Black men in turbans and
white robes.
Some of the
bnt-loolr.Ing and articulate men
In the dty are of thla group.
They don't aeelr.out whites, but I
onoe wltnea.d one aifenoe an
entltt subway car, stand with
perf•ct balance aa It lurched
along. and clellwra rap worthy
ol Stokely Cannichael.If his
speed, had been about revolu-

tion instead of needy children, l
wouldn't be here today. lf I were
approached, l'd have no idea
how to refuse them.
Scientoligists: John Denver,
Stanley Clarke, John Travolta,
Chick Corea, etc. These guys
used to be out like mosquitos.
They often offered frtt concerts,
but once inside the hall you'd be
under their thumb. Now, the
"dianetics"
books are being
advertised on TV without mentioning that these are the books
of scientology.
Once on a
scientology mailing list one can
count on a steady stream of mail
well into the hereafter.
Guru Mahara )i's hordes ol
followers are general1y too
blissed-out to do any streetcomer conversions. For this we
can be sad and thankful.
Jehovah's Witnesses are oldtimen at selling religion. They
come right into homes and
almost always meet with success.
They relish in the vulnerable
position one ia put in by their
visits and the guilt one IJ stupid
enough to fttl about turning
someone away from one's door.
They also know that middl~
aged Jr,d middle-class people att
as usy a mark as anyone elte.
Smart cookies.
Jesus freaks come in all shapes
and sius and often don't want
your money. Don't argue with
them. Although they are unenlightened enough to think one
can take the Bible llterally. their
bulc teneta are uaually not too
t..rd to agree with In aomi-good
conaclence. Remember that they
iltt
mostly acid cuualtln and
family rejecta. One ol the moot
d!Jturbing thlngl to ""' is that
they usume right away that you
are a ainner. It IJ poMibl• to
humor them without conlealng.
Tell them you have found Jesus.
It will pleue them. You probably haw, in some manifatatlon, and anyway it's none ol
their goddamn bu,in...
With
any ol theoe groups it w!II do
you no good to argue ol the
validity ol all spiritual -rch.
No other group IJ even c1- to
being valid. They are alwaya
right. There la no arguing with

auchdenaity.

Kids ran around screaming
with their faces painted; entrepreneurs hawked balloons and
greasy sandwiches; bands played
under a huge tent, and people
crowded into Pioneer Square
bars day and night, Seattle
celebrated it• 11econdFat Tuesday
this P"SI week, proving beyond
any doubt that all they need to
throw a party is a good excuse.

Seattle is too young a city to
have a predominant
ethnic
Identity, such as Boston's Irish or
New Orleana' Roman Catholic
French characten. It's a postmelting pot city: a typical
Seattlite'1 ethnic constitution
would n,ad somewhat like a roll
call at the U.N. General Aaembly. Because it hu no pervasive
adherence to any ethnic tradition. Seattle lacks (or lacked.
until last year) a mu& enthusiasm for ethnic holidays like
New Orluna' Mardi Graa. But
Seattlites learn quickly. Just one
yur after they borrowed the
Idea ol celebrating the day
befott Lent (and the lint few
daya of it beaidea) from New
Orleans, SeattlitH seem quite
comfortablewlth the holiday.
Seattle'• Fat Tuesday 1J different, though, from Mardi Gru in
New Orleans. The original event
grew out ol a French tniditlon ol
aelf.indulga,ct on the day preceedlng Ash WednHday. the
besinning ol Lent. Paoed with

da

"'

... faot

the

French would take a final fling
with the pleasures of the f1esh,
and presumably drag themselves
to church the following morning
to have their forehu.ds smeared
with symbolic ashes.
Although New Orleans' Mardi
Gras has undoubtedly drifted a
ways from its religious roots, it
still takes place in ai very
Catholic city. Seattle. on the
other hand, has imported the
party and just the party. 'What
the hell is Lentl" IJ not an
uncommon remark in Pionttr
Squan, during Fat Tuesday. No
one cam. The holiday's meaning
hu been lost In panage. sort ol
like the way coinl, when they
stayed in circulation longtt, used
to become illegible from pasting
through too many handa. Fat
Tuesday still has purchasing
power, but its symbolic inscri~
tions a.re obliterated.
At thla point one should bear
in mind that while few of
Seattle's Fat Tuesday alebrants
an, likely to now be adhering to
the rigors of Catholic Lent, they
do have their own rigon not
ihared with their counterparts in
New Orleans. The moNOOn, for
irutance. It's quite pouible that
Seattlltes would prefer filh on
Fridays to r.iln every day of the
week. Who knowal One thing.
though. is obvious: everyone
has a reason to have fun, and
Seattle spent its new tradition
this yur making a damned good
effort at Ult !Nit.

..

nw Cooplf

f,

Point Joumal ,abNlry

n. 1171

Fairhaven: TESC's
EntertainmentJEIIBi@rricIDflIIDITI111®IIDiNorthern Cousin
Renaldo And Clara
by R.J. Sawatzki
"R•n•ldo And Clara"

11 a

failed '"attempt to create a ntyth
•bout myth,. It's a d,mandlna
movie. At four houn In lenath
it's more than Just demanding,

it's obsess!ve. lt remind, mt of a
lot of rides I've gotten with truck
drlvoro. I don't know If all truck
drivers art crazy, but the ontt
who pick up hltchhlk,ro almost
always have a few stripped
gun. I'm sure lt comn from tht
endless houn of tolltude in a
noily littl• box. Th,y rully
aren't much better off than
h•m•t•n as th•lr minds kHP
jumping through th• sam• hoops
and 1plnntna the same wheel,.
You can rid• with thne people
all day acr01t IO'Veral,tat• llnn
and all they have to talk about 11
themaelves.
The aame tenM of intenae aelfab,orbtlon l1 communicated In
Bob Dylan'• new movie. Thi,
may or may not be the rnult of
his .. If-enforced l,olatlon necnsita ted by the never-11tlated
demands of the American Star
Sy,tem. Th• Intent of the movie
con best be underotood by going
to the dictionary and looking up
all th• words from Mylllasoau•
(one who lnitlatet pnona Into,
or interprets my1terln. Hpedally
rollalou1 my,terlu), to Mythot,
(a pattern of belief, exprnalng
often symbolically the charac-

M US JC

-GR~JS~February l3

MICHAEL MtCHALETTI, JIM
DONEY, PAUL TYSON Conlmt•
porary jau on pi.ano, baN, and
drums,

Ftbnu1ry 24 , t 25

BETSYWELLINGSFolkoonp.
Buutlful vol«. lncludln■
meidc.n folk balladt.

tomf

March 2
SID BROWN Solo aultar and
vocal• on original mal•rial from
this member of Pean, 8rfad, •

Land Band

GNU DELI it loc•ted In
downtown

Olympia on the

corner of Weat Thunton

Avenue and Capitol Way.

Performances berin at nine p.m.
A one dollar cover will be uked
to 11upport the performen.

terittlc or prevalent atthuda In a
group or culture.) Thi• lncludn
Mysterious, My,t•ry, My,tery
Plan, My,tlc, My1tlcal, My,ticl,m, Myttlflcatlon,
My,tlfy.
My,tiqu•-, Myth (1e1end, saga, a
traditional ttory of o,ten,lbly
hl1torlcal content whoH origin
hu been loot), Mythical, Mythldze, Mythmaker, Mythography,
Mythological.
Mythologize,
Mytholo1Y, Mythomanla (an exCfltlve or abnormal propentlty
for lying and exaperatlng). and
finally Mythopoel•. (a creating.
of myth.)
After studying theu definition, It'• necH10ry to re•d the
Interview with Bob Dylan In
Rolllna Stone MalJUlnt, January
26, 1978. Here'• the HHntlal
quote Bob Dylan: Th• Maeked Tortilla
I• mlltaken for Bob Dylan.
Bob Dy Ian I• mlttaken for
Renaldo. And ... Bob Dylan II
tho one with the hat on. That'•
who Bob Dylan I• - h•'• the
on• with the hat on.
Jonathan Cott: Almott every
man In the film hu a hat on.
Bob Dylan: Right.
Conceptually It'• a maanlflcent
movie. That't what'• ao great
about ,ymboli1m, It let', your
own mind make thlna1 dance.
The film concern• lttelf with
only th• dHput
and mo,t
universal qutttlons of human
exlltence. An Infinity of examples could be uted, but for my
purpo,n here th• bett 'l'ample
of a ,uccutful
work of hi,
nature l1 the mormoua canvu
by Paul Gau1uln
entltlod,
''Wh1re Do We Com• froml
What Are Wel Where Are We
Golngl" Thi, I• the plane on
which Dylan uplrn to communicate. Thi, I• the peropectlve
from which hit film mu,t be
judaed.
Imagine youroelf u Bob Dylan
wanting to make a l'T}ovleabout
th... question,. Your flrot clue It
that your name ltn't Dylan at
all. It'• Zimmerman. Dylan It a
mask you a11umtd for protection
and for the powero It gave. The
muk helps you to ... thlna, at
they roally are both within you
and without you. It work,
beyond your wildHt dreamt.
The whol• nation I• rocked by
the songs your matk creatn. All
the world comes to recognize
your ma1k but you know you

art mon than just a mask.
You're not ju,t Zimmerman
either, the ma,k hu helped you
to ... that. Who are youl
During the op•nln1 credit
sequence Bob Dylan I• on,tage
wearing a clear plattlc muk and
singing "When I Paint My
Matterplece." What II he trylna
to communicate with that maak
and a ,ona with that portent,
Ironic title l You can •t•Y up all
night trying to flaure It out or
you can ao on to the next para•
gr•ph.
"Renaldo And Clara" I• a !Um
of wildly uneven quality. The
mott obvious complaint lo that It
,houl._! not be ntceNUy to hav1
the Intent of the film explained
In an Interview. I mean that',
ba,lc. Either the thin& ,peaka for
lttoU or lt'o dead or tick or
aomtthlng. (Of couroe on the
other hand, I can't ,top my
memory from tlnalng " ... there',
no 1uccu1 llkt failure and
failure', no tuCCHI at all.") Here
I• a partial ll1t of thlnp that are
wrona with thl, movie: It', too
long. It', redundant. It'• noi
clurly conceived. It', clum,y,
not at all graceful. It'• oelf-lndulgent. It'• lmportunat1, It'• hair I•
too long and It has no rHpecl
for It', eldero. In other wordt It'•
,ufferlna from acute adolncence.
Perhaps lhe predpltatlna fault of
thl, film about ldentltln I• just
that It'• too .. lf-coruclou,. It',
only the teeond film Dylan hat
worked on. Expectatlona ,hould
not be Inordinately high. The

cNja{?_,

DENNY'S AUTOMOTIVE
2643 martin way 357-5175
ELECTRONIC TUNE UP

S34 95 most 4 cylinders
with this coupon
we install new non-resistor pluas. points, condenser,
'& rotor we set dwell & timing & adjust carburetor
to factory specifications

A Nellon of Cauawn'• 'Whence
Whither Go_Wel"
Blue, playing pinball and talklna
way everybody I• dumplna on
with 100d humor about the
him you'd think h• cold-bloodmythical Greenwich VIiiage Beatedly ,hot Art right In the back
nik Poetry day,. for my money
or oomethlna.
the ltlandt of cl1ar, energttlc
Thero are I lot of good thlnga
lntelllatnce that Blue croatto are
In the film. The almoot two
the bett thlnp In the movie. Hlo
houn of concerl footap from
acenn ,teal the film the way Jack
the Rolling Thunder Review
Nlchol,on'• 1ffervucent oplrlt
provide aome lnten" new renditook over "Baty Rider." HI, fond
tion, of old and famlllar aonp. I
recollectlono and oatlrlc dartt
alto like the tcl!nt where Allen
oerve at a klna of Greek Choru,
Glntberg and Dylan vltlt Jack
of the abturd. HI, moot telllna
Kerouack't grave. (Typical of
comment It saved for very near
thl, film; It'•. the concept that
th• end of the movie. "Dylan I•
reachn out, while the actual
jutt a myth" he say,, "and you
footage of the cemetary It a,
know what a myth II." The fact
tedious u your relatlvn' home
1, that we do and we don't.
movlH.) I'm 1ure then It
That', why ltt called a myth. A
aomethlng In thl, overgrown film
myth I• what you make of It.
for almoot everyone to like and
Thi, ever tlu,lve paradox forms
to crltlclu.
the hurt and ooul of the whole
lntenperHd throughout the
over-ambltiou, movie.
film are acenn of a man, David

Ver~t

Company To Perform

The Broad and Puppet Theater,
a Vermont-based troupe that
oometlmn practlcn the medieval
cuttom of dl,trlbutlng bnad to
their audience durtna a performance, will pre11nt a mixed
media venlon of Jo,qun du
Prt1' Avo Marla Stella 11 Evergreen Wednnday, March 1.
Th• troupe will perform a
theatrical verolon of dn Pm'
400-yur-old
mau u,tn1 live
actoro, larpr-than-llfe puppet,,
dancero, and mutlcal accompaniment by th• Word of Mouth
thoru,. Directed by Peter Schumann, who founded the Bread
and Puppet Thealtr In 1962, the
production hat been traveling
around the country, and waa
recently pralted In a New York
Tlmn review by Mil Guuow:
"Peter Schumann, founder of
the Bread and Puppet Theattr, 1,
a 11CUlptorand hie play, have
11CUlpturalfeellna-of mat1lvena1 and alto of magnificence.
Puppet, become towerlng Icon,
and, 11 counterpoint, the tiniat
doll, glide on ,tag•. Th• Bread
and Puppet Theattr play, with
our tenH
of proportion and
perspective.
'The company', current performance piece l1 "Ave Marlo
Stella," drawn-H
I• much of
the work of the company-from
a religious 10urce ...
"Principal charact•rs appear : a

I

BUDGETThpes& RecordsSTOREWIDESALE.
698 list LPs 4.19.. or 3 for $12.
798 listLPs/Thpes5.19.. or 3 for$15.
50~ off higher prices. Sale ends this Sunday.

~

1111
W..I tlh

N:1·9111

Open •••'

dll'fl a week.

by Steve .franct,
In th• wood, just
out1lde of B,lllngham retU a
verltabl• glngerbn,ad houoe of
educational delicacy. Over 350
soul,, with dedicated vltlon and
d,termlned ,plrlt, Inhabit th•
clutter colleg• of Fairhaven. Ju,t
u
the gingerbread houH of
Han .. l and Gn,tel fame ,himmered and dt.. ppeared, ,o I•
Fairhaven a, It 11 known today,
on the verge of vanl,hing. You
ttt, Fairhaven it not an autono•
mou, alternative like Evergreen,
but e>cl•t• ,ymblotlcally In relation to th• much larpr Wntern
Wuhlngton Regional Unlverolty.
Now the parent ochool h1t taken
the fledgeling alternative out
from undtr It, wing to give It a
good looklna-over to determine
If It can llv• up to the goal, of
coat-effective and qu,llty education.
Over the lut
ten yean
Fairhaven ha, underaone eleven
evaluation, by varlou, accreditIna bodln and evaluation committu. The latut, completed
early thl• quarter, ha, been forwarded to Western Unlverolty
Academic Vice Pruldent Dr.
Talbot and Prnldent Oldocamp.
The majority report of th•
committee ll,u eleven recommend,d changu to be mad,
concerning Fairhaven, ranalng
from broad curriculum ratructurlng to a reduction of the cott
of a 1tudent'1 education.
A minority report recommended changn that the College
be clo.. d by Jun• 30, 1979, to be
followed by the formation of an
alternative
program with a
nontraditional structure within
tho laraer Unlvonlty.
The threat to the exlttence of
the College ha, ,parked a 'tave
Fairhaven' campalgrl which .. nt
three 1tudent1 down to Evergreen
to alert people here of the
problem.
Patrick Thomson,
Scott Regan, and H•alher Hanna
vlolted Evorgr.. n on February 16
and 1pok• of the ongoing effort,
"to kHp the Fairhaven tplrlt
alive." Task forces have been Ht
up to evaluate and respond ln
depth to th• majority'• recommendation, to contact alternative
high ochool, In ordtr to rat.. the
•nrollment, and to dlttrlbute lnforma tion about Fairhaven to
Ne ■ tled

mllltant angel, a donkey with a
•l1n around Ito nick reading
The Word' and a large ,unlike
god-a,
&littering u a gold
coin-which
tlowly climb, a
,tepladder to heaven.
'What follow, an a Mrln of
tableaux, tcl!nn from the Bible,
compotod u If In a ohadow box
or on a pnt puppet ttap-and
poted u If for poeterlty, Llftolre

Puppet Theater accept payment
In kind-room and board provided by membtn
of the
community they're vllltlna-a•
wasu. The company don every•
thin& potalble to. hold down the
price of tlcltett to their performancu, btcaUM Ito mtmbffo beUtvt payment vlolatn the ...
omct of communal rttualo.
Tlcbtt for the Evtrgrten per-

other 1tudent1 at Western and
people around th• State.
Heather dncrlbed the path a
1tud,nt u,ually follow, while
att,ndlng Fairhaven. It aound,
much like the metamorpho,t, of
a, caterpillar, with a ,tudent
progres,lng through three ,tages
before graduating. A ,tudent
doea not move on to the next
stage until ,he/he ha, demon1trat•d a completion of the
previous stagn and preparation
for the forthcomlna one.
Stage I I, an exploratory ,tag•,
a time for a penon to tearch and
seek out new area, of study and
tHt• a variety of different
"leavn." Once the ,tudent ha,
broken Into th• Fairhaven experience. uoually after three to five
quarter,, he(she 11elect1teveral
faculty members to work with
and five areaa to focus their
learning on. The student muat
al,o demon,trat• an ablllty to
write competently. Once th!, hat
been done, the tran1ltlon to ttage

111•made.
Stage II It a tlm• for
concentration, when a student
either 1) choosn a major at
w.. 1,rn unlverolty or 2) construct, a Fairhaven lnterdltclpllnary Concentration. The concentration may be more tpeclallzed and technical than •tas• I
but still retain, an lnterdltclplinary flavor. After approval of th•
completion of the concentrated
studies, stage three bealn•.
Breaking th• wall, of the
"student cocoon", stage three 11a
time for th• ttudent to bring
what h,1,he hH !urned back
into Fairhaven. Thia may come
in th• form of pr ... ntatlono,
lectures, lead.int);lffl'linan, and/
or actually teaching entire clat1•
"· In addition, the student
participatet Jn advanced seminars, prnumably In their concentrated area, of intereat. Of
coune the next stage, but
certain!y not th• final one, l1
flying fr•• of the Fairhaven
branch.

Th• study by the Evaluation
Committee recommends that the
faculty of Fairhaven should
develop program, preparing 1tudents for self-directed learning.
For the flrtt y•ar ,tudent, would
•l,e required to take "an lnterdi1-

ciplinary, common core curriculum of 45 credltt". Wh,ther thl,
will alter th• exl,tlng three ,tag•
concept remains to be teen.
Another recommendation ttlpulates that the faculty 1tafflna
formula (the direct co,t -of
instruction) be reduced to within
10% of the averap 1tafflng l,vel
for th• Univerolty. Thlt mutt
occur by the end of Spring
Quarter, 1978.
In fact, all of the recommendation• have time requirement,
which result In final lmpl•m•ntatlon by the ,prlng of 1981. An
ovel'Offlng Probationary Board
would check to ... that changes
were made on time. Recommen•
datlon eleven ,tat .. , "In the event
that Fairhaven doe, not mttt th•
deadline, th•n th• College ,hould
be doted."
A l•t• report Wedn01day
mornlna on !<ZAM radio mentioned that Prnld,nt Old,camp
said the Unlv,ralty would not
close Fairhaven. He alto exprn►
ed hi, and Wntern'• tupport of
an alternative choice for tho ..
,tudent• who are ready and
,ufflclently "lf-dlnected for ,uch
a college. Prt1ldent Oldocamp
added that changes would have
to be made In the exlttlng
structurH and curriculum, to
1tren1then ,om• of th• w,aknesfH pecelved by the Evaluation CommlttH.
While the Immediate crlol, at
Fairhaven may have ,ub•lded,
there itlll ul,t, a lonaer 1.. t1ng
threat to Fairhaven and to
alternative education in the State
of Wuhlngton.
Evergreen It
pr... ntly bein11.,tudled by the
Council for Post .. condary Education, wh0te report In October
may have 1ubatantt1l repercut•
1lon1 on the curriculum and
budget here at Evergreen.
Whll1 Heather, Patrick, and
Scott were vltltlna, th1y ,poke
excitedly with Evergreen 1tudent,
about a "uniting of the alternative". Plant are already under•
way to bring 60 to 70 students to
Evergreen in March for a huge
dance/party and alternative edu•
cation sharing Workshop. Stay
tuned for details. lf you have
questions about anything please
come to CAB 305 and get more
information .

Students To Perform "Equus"
Evergreen's new Experimental
Theatre will open March 2 with
the production of EQUUS. Th•
play join• together the ord,al, of
two different protagonlltt: Mar•
in Dytart, a hlddenly fru1trated
child psychlatrlot, and Alan
Stran1, a 1.. nag~ poychopath.
puppet,-actoro In hup, bulbout
mHkt and vivid cootumn-lnhablt Eden and then proceed
through th• 1xpultlon to th•
Flood (rlpplln1 paper wavu and
drowning paper doll, ... "
The decor 1, a, ,lmpl• and a,
charming u the puppetry; the
,tap I• ocalloped In twirl, of
blu1, u If
trimmed i,y
Mau,,. .....
In demonttration
of their
commitment to simple valun,
members of th• Brud and

cafe

formance cott Sl.75 and $1.50
for ,tudent, to cover expenau.
The ohow 1, belna brouaht to
campuo without th• benefit of
,ubtlcly from any program budgll, by Faculty Member Irwin
Zuckerman and Marie Dillon,
and they urge everyone lnternted In ... ina the performance to
buy ticket, In advance at th•
Evergreen Bookatoro or Yenney'•
mutlc Store. Curtain lime 1, 8
p.m. Wednnday, March 1 In the
Evant Ubrary lobby.

intePrnezzo

The play "quei.tlons the tendency of many moderns to accept
without pa11ion or anger, a wellordered, watered-down exlst,nct". EQUUS requlrn a sequence involving nudity, and
penons who prefer not to be

prnent during this scene are advised not to attend the performance.
The performance will run from
March 2-5, and March 9-12.
Curtain time is 8 p.m. in Evergreen's Communication Building.

A WOMEN'SCENTERMEETINOto
bl htld thl1 Seturdey (February 25) et
12:30 p.m. In CAB 110 wlll 1t1empt to
dtflne the Women'• Center, 11'1g0111.
phlloaophy, purpoN, etc. and to come
up with I statement of unity. All
woman lnter11ted In partlcl~llng
In
t~ Women'• Center In the future ere
encouraged to ettend. Chlldcare wtll be
provldtd. A temporary oroenlz1Uone1
etructurt wlll be e1tabll1hed 11 the beginning of the mNtlng.

The Olympic cht,pter of I~ NOW
RtOHTI
TAIK
FOflCI 11 1pon10rlng I forum on
reproduotlve r\ghta on Thurld1y, the
23rd, at 7:30 p.m. TM forum wtu
Include t1tk1 on Chlld AbUN, Forced
Sterlllutlon,
Moral AtP«I•
of Abortion, tht Socl1I Coat of Abortion, and
th ■ Importance
of Se• Education.
Olympll Community Cenllt', 131• E
4th St. Fret childcare. FOf' further In•
formation,
call Kat• Albrecht
11

Rt,RODUCTIYE

aee-eu•.

A Day of AwarenMI

PflOILEM. The Keynote apeaker wlll
be RepreNntettve Aon Hanna. 9 a.m.
to 3:30 p.m. at the Gloria Del
Lutheran Church, 1515 Harrlaon. Bring
• NCk lunch.
The Mclane Fire Oepartmant will be
tHtlng
February :zefor ITUDINT
'1fll-'1QHTlflJI.
.For more Information, contact Station 03, Bldg. 21:Z, or

Work hH begun to plan th!a yNf'I
NORTHWEST WOMEN'SMUSIC FES,
TIVAL, to be held during July In
Portland, Oregon. The ne,cl regional
plaMlng ,,,..ting wHI be held Setur•
dur, February 2e 11 10.30 a.m. In
Library Lounge 3500. Women withing
to act a, regional coordlnetort, help
with publlclty, and/or perform 11 the
t1111valere urged to ettend or contact
the women at the meeting. Mort
lnlormatlon la poated at the Women'1
Center and Tld11 of Change olflc11

A IOCtAL IERYtCEI AND COUN•
IELINO JOBANDORADUATE
ICHOOL
INFOflMATION DAY 11 aeheduled lor
Wldn11d1y, March 1 from 9:00 1.m to
3:30 p.m. In L18 3112. Regl111r
through C.rNf Planning end Pt1c ►
ment In UBI 2U; prepare by 1t1endlng
1 Job Ind Orlduate School pr9par1tlon
Work1hop on February :Z7, •:OD p.m.
In LIB 1:Z13. For further Information.
call 866-81i3.

call-.

EPIC wtll pr111nt 1n evening of
1quu1 dancing and group gamu
Friday, February 2• 11 8 p.m. on !he
There wm be I mNtlng IOf' peraon•
fourth floor ot lhl library
with Nading Of' writing problem, on
HNlth $ef\liCII lt 1pon1orlng en
'ebruarV2• from 1 :00 to 3:00 p.m. In
Informal lecture on "Good Foot Care
LIB 11503.The purpoH of the mHtlng
for Running." Dr. Donald Hcwanc1etl, •
la to organize a group lnteraettd In
local podlatrlll,
WIii bl !hi guul
mNllng on I rwgular bUlt to geln
apeaker. The lecture 11 tchlduled tor
u■ latanoe wlth reading and writing
Wldneaday, March a, 1978. II :Z:30
lkll11.
p.m. In the HNlth Service• Lounge
Or. Hovanc11k will 1110 an1wer
qu11tlon1 tor thoN ol you lnt11'111«:1
TM Women'• Cllnlc It ·now offering
an OVULATION METHOD-FERTILITYIn I carNr In podiatry w,·~ looking
torwerd to Or. Hovanctek'1 vl11t to our
AWAfllNIII
cl ... every Wedn•~•Y
campu1 and do hope you'll be able 10
from 3 to 5 p.m. For more Information
1t11nd.
Of' to make appointments lor the cllH
contact the Women'• Cllnlc, Seminar
21:10, or call eee-e:z3a.
Men ue
1trongly urged to attend end 1Nrn to
pat1lclpal1I
Tne DRll'lWOODDAY CARE CEN•
Tlfl la conalderlng I full-time day caie
program beginning aprlng quarter !Of'
1tatf, faculty and etudtnta. The IN
would be se.oo
I day. Contact e. 01111a
lmmedlately II lnterHIICI at ~220.
30!l CAB.

mnTll
.SIT.DINUi/!T'$

~lwu

,tlirorAmr.s FIJI<

1W0 BlTS.QC.1AR'I3 OF' MID

FOR. srx.

orf
$ORM,

H

tiuiNER FOIi.

G0E.S 10 rm WlhlNE!l..
B.Y.o.a.(8tlt.~tn,14ttl/lMM~o''i:

Tho OLYMPIA MOBILIZATtON FOR
SURVIVAL CHAl'TER It Inviting lndiv•
ldualt and rapreHnt1tlve1 to contrl•
bull In planning I HUMAN NEEDS
FOflJUM on funding humen n11d1
which WIii be held on Aprll 1,1.
Contact Jim Chupa, 352-1062, Glen
Anderton, •9'1-QOll.3,or Ade Keith &
Chrl1 H11Hn1t1b at 866-a338.

• .;, ~

TfBTf.R.£:!.,

~ffi.W.uf'w
rnui.sro.!l

11'C.!U'!T0L

94l·l37L,

The SerYICII and Activltlll
Board
fflNII Wednelday, March 1, at 9:00
a.m. in CAB 110. On !he agenda la •
poHible declalon on the future of
CAB-PhHI II, how much to 1pend and
which dealgn to recommend. PINN,
e\llry'one who 11 lntereeted, come lo
thll meeting.

WCD)IffiJD)
@if ]Ml(D)mJ"IrIBI
John Koo11h

BUSINESSMANAGER
Nathaniel Koch

MANAGING EDITOR

PRODUCTION MANAGER

Mandy Mcfarlan

Dana Leigh Squlr11

FEATURESEDITOR
Nancy Ann Parku
1

SECRETARY

EDITOR

RAUDENBUSH
MOTOR SUPPL V

Joyce Baku

ADVERTISING MANAGER

943-iOQB

presents
FRANKFARRELL
realonal fiddle champ
sat feb 25th
8:CJ0.10:00Pm S1.00cover
refills 1/2 price after 8
comlna soonl select coffee and tea for sale
m-w 9-7 pm
th-sat 11-10

on Saturday,

Fll>fUary2e will deal wlln UNTAPPID
JIOTENTtAL
o, YOUTH-ANINYllllLE

A 11rl11 of lorum1 on SEXISM will
1ak1 place on campu, over the ne•t
week. Their toplca, location, and tlmaa
are II follow•: IEXIIM AND FIM•
INIIM,
In the Library Boardroom,
4:30-6:30, February 27; SEXISM AND
UNOUAOI, In the Library Boardroom,
• :30-6:30, February 29; IEXIIM IN
EVIROREENPOLITICS. Libra" ~
lounge, U:30-2:00,
March 1; and,
l!XIIM AND THIRD WORLD WOMEN,
In the Ubrery Boardroom, •. 30-e: 30,
Merch 2.

Grq Hutchuon

943-3860

412 CHERRY

Westside Center
352-0720

10 to 6
IB3CD)CD)~
, Mon. thru Sat.

Thi coo,■,, ,c)INT JOUflNAL •• pubUlhed .;,..,,
lo, the tludentl, flOUity.
end 1talt of Thi l"'INM
II.Ile CoUege, OlympMI, Welhlngtoft NIGi. V..,_. •••
__,•'"not~
of Tllo1"'11,_ ltoto Coltevo.-,111,.
Nlenll pl'IMl"IIN Mf91n doN not rweaftly
lmpl\, ttldorMfnent by IN&. 14w 1p1p1r.
Oft''" I-led
In tllo CollevOAcUYltlN lulldt,. (CAIi IOI. ~:
Nl-1111. -•I
.. end bu•I~:
NI·-·
Lotpotloy: Alt loltOII lo
tllo odlt« IIIUII bo by ,_
T-y
tor tllot -••
-lootlon.
Lmuot bo tr,ed, --llflNld,
end ,oo or -·
Lot••
f'"e •

v bo •ltod

tor

th