cpj0176.pdf

Media

Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 6, Issue 16 (March 2, 1978)

extracted text
AndEventsA1ru;~ArIDcdliliw®rIDu;~J\rtsAnd
fi:ventsA1ru;~
a hap&eu tour11t get• Mllelnatad by
the hero who wu rNlly gunning for a
bod guy apy. THE LADY YANISHU
(1938) Is a movie which everyone
SWHrl
th1t they have ... n. but
nobody can quite remember the plot. It

MUSIC

ON CAMPUS
OLD TIME COUNTRY DANCING? It's
stUI happening eve,ry Wednesday at 8
pm
first

debutant1 end Mkmael Redgrave u •
folk-tong coJleQJor who compllcate
their lhlw lmmenNly when they notk>rl
that an etderty govwneu hu myaterlou ■ ly dlaapp-■ red from the tr1ln.
Pate, Lorre la not In thla fflOVJe. (Your
roommat• can lay oft thoN 1wful
Imitation• now.) LH one 7: 00 p.m. 7S

TOMMY TROMBONE wlll play on
Friday. February 24 at 6 p m. In the
MEN'S SAUNA All promotional material tor this event stresses that ll's
"men-preferred " Them's the breaka,
women

THE BATTLE OF CHILE la o

FREE For fur1her Into, call the Office
ot Coltege Relations. 866-6128.
The highly acclaimed NORTHWEST
W1NOQUINTET will present an 8\/enlng
Tueaday,

February 28 at 8 p.m. in lhe Recltal
Hall ol the Communications bulldlng.
The,r repertoire includes orlglnal compositions from the Contemporary,
Romantic and Classic eras, as well as
transcnpt1ons lrom the Baroque and
Renaissance $3 general, Sl .50 atu·
dents T1cke1sat the dOOf

RED DESERT (111114)
Tho motof
neurotic
behavior,

favorite
Michelangelo Antonlonl theme, are
expk>Nd In this film. The plot lrwoh'N
an englneet' ■ wit ■ who la In a 1tate of
mental ehock u the reeult of en aute>
mob'le accktent. She I ■ tortured by her
dlamat lndustn■I surroundings, Ignored
by an Indifferent huabend, and on the
verge of manlc deprwalon. LH one
I :30 and 7:30 p.m.

On Thursday, March 2 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE ENSEMBLES
w1Hpresent • concert at 8 p.m in the
Communlca11ons Bulldlng Recital Hall.
Under 1he direction of Faculty Musk:lan
Greg S1einke, the group wlll play
compositions by Aschallenburg. Bartok, Oebuuey, Mlll\aud, Poulenc and
Ravel. as welt as pieces by TESC student musicians

IN OLYMPIA

FANTASIAWolt DI...,.,
"'concopt"
movie, clualc canoonart Mt to the
worka of the claulc1I
compoHr ■.
Mickey MouH aa the Sorcerer•,
Apprentice 1, atlll my fa.orlte. PMr'
pre88UN dlciatN that you ...
thll
motle at ._.t once, maybe .,.., mote
than once (even If Leopold Stokowekl
)'OU to t_..)
At tho Capital
ThNter,
Now In STEREOPHONIC
SOUND, M7-7181.

tN OLYMPIA

Olympia High School wlll preaenl
tnelr spring musical, ONCE UPON A
MATTRESS by Rogers & Barer, February 23-25, and March 2.... Curtain at
8 p m Adults SJ, students $1.50.

THE 000119YE CllRL la otlll onother
altuatlon comedy by Nell Simon.
Situation: Thlrtyllh women (Mlrlha
Muon, real Ille wlle of Netl Simon) II
du'"llld by her -ty
octor boyfriend
with whom ahe la ltvlng. He ~Ill
and
■uttteta ""thelf" -.,.tment
to a n leer
actot (FUchard Oreyfua)who decldee to
ollow Mooon ond hot _._
,.,
old dllughlOJ(Quin Cummlngo)to
r'lff\!Mn In the apartment. they tall In
low. Next .,._ It will be a hit T,V,
NriN. Juat you watt. State Theatw,
M7-0.

TAYS. GRANOLA JOINTS,
& MISC (In Olympia)
THE APPLEJAM FOLK CENTER
hOlds OPEN MIKE NIQHT, February
24 On Saturday, February 25 AppteJa,n
welcomu back 1he bluegrass bend
CURLY CREEK. located at the YWCA,
220 E. Union. Main Act at 9 p.m ..
minors welcome.

Eltho<I

NEYEII YOU A
or the fANTMTIC
ANIMATION
FESTIVAL lo ot lho
C-.
Maybe )'OU ohould coll thorn
and Ond out. 9'3-S14.

IIOIE CIAIIDIN
CAFE INTERMEZZO proudly presents the Northwest Flddllng Champion
FRANK FARRELL from &-10 p.m. on
Saturday, Fet)ruary 25.
CAPTAIN COYOTES h1ghllghta ORANGE ROZE throogh February~- 2410
W Harrison 357◄ 191.
GNU DELI preMnta MtcHA.EL MtCHALETTI, JIM DONEY, A PAUL TYSON
tor an evening ot contemporary Jazzon
Thursday, February 23. On February 24
& 25, Gnu presents IETSY WELUNQ
with tolk music and so~ Mexican folk
ballads Corner of West Thurslon
Avenue and Capllol Way. 943-1371.
THE OREENWOOD INN spotllghls
the THREE P.M. TRtO through Saturday February 25. Funny little beds that
buzz to: • Quan• around the comeir.
~

RICHARD'S ROUNDHOUSE atilt haa
KID CHRYSLER. S1111no comment ~
2222
IN SEATTLE
Tonight. Thursday February 23 KZOK
presents STRIKER/PAT TRAVERS at
lhe Paramount Northwest. Tickets S2.
THE SEATTLE CHAMBER SINGERS
present HAYDN/THE SEASONS on
February 27 Meany ThUtre. U ot W, 8
pm

DAYE BRUBECK, March 10 at the
Paramount Northwest

ON CAMPUS

AnER NINETY. a por1rall of ma
beyond lhe age of ninety by the late
IMOOEN CUNNINGHAM, will remeln
at The Evergreen State CoHege library
Gallery through March 5. The exhibit
tea1urea ewer&O photograph,. Acco...,,_
panying the Cunnlngf'lem lhow la •
.-tee of p&lnlinga by Calttomla stla1

----

n.

IN SEATTLE

IN SEATTLE
The Artlata o.1'9ry, 919 Eaat Pike
St., ta holding over lta exhibit of KIM
STEELE phOtographa until Februaty
~- On Wednesday. March 1 the Gallery previews recent sculpture by
RJCHAAO CONTRUAS from
to 9
p.m. The Contreraa show la acheduled
to run through March 18. Fot more
Information celt Patrick Orton, 322-0111
Of 324--0400.

e

THEATER

A Contemporary ThHtre, 709 Flr1t
An. Weat, SHttle.
h ■ a scheduled
HENRY IV ~ART I by -u
11, Oral play of the HUOn,
to be produced May 11 thfOughJune 3. Contact
Loulea Moneneon,286-3220, for more
lnfonnetk>n.

-.c:ELLANEOUS
LECTURES

ON CAMPUS

a ,......ntattve
tho Sponllh NationalCont-Ion
MIQUEL MESA,

ON CAMPUS
The T.. 9\'lalon and Dtwna Group
Contract of TESC wlll
produee
Ten,....._
WIiiiama' THE NtoHT OF
THE IGUANA on tour ....,Inoa and one
aft.noon from February 23 to 21.
E\lenlng perlomw101i1 .,. aeheduted
for 8 p.m., and the matinee at 2 p.m.,
Friday, Februery 24. All perfom.lCN
wlll take place In the Recital Hau ot
Evergreen'• Communlcatlona Building.
Admlaalon la S'1.50 and $3 tot adult1 at
the door.
Al 8 p.m.. March 1, In the E~,-,,
library the oetebrated BREAD ANO
PUPPET THEATER will make an
unprecedented Wuh1ngton State ~
pearanoe. The troupe wlll perform AV£
MARIi STELLA THIEATtR. Tk:ket1 we
avallabte at the E....,.green 8oo6I; Store
and Yenney'a Music, and coel $2.7S,
(11 50 lot aludenla).

The Experlmental Theeler, with a
cast ot 13 Evergreen atudent1, wlll
perform EOUUS undef the dlrecHon of
Faculty Membef AINA.AA WILDER In
the Communications Bulldlng March 2,
3, 4. 5, 9, 10, 11. and 12, at 8 p.m.
IN TACOMA
STEPHANIE RICH, actreaalmlme
artl1t, will present a frN pubOc perlormanoeaponlOf'edby the T~PMroe
CountyCivic Atta CommlMlon Friday,
Maren 3 a1 p.m. k't the Tacoma Put>nc Library Aud4torium.

e

gram wm unfofd Thuradey, Mwch 2 at
8 p.m. In Oki Architecture Hall at the
IJW. COLEWESTON, tho tounh of
notld photographor, the lato EDWARD
WE8TON, will lllumlnata THE WOfllK
OF EDWARDWESTONIn a sllde-lllu•
trated tectUl'9, For further lnformeuon
call Jet1 McDonald Of Sueen McAlll1ter,
<M7..t729.

of
of
labor,
wlll give a talk entitled,
SPANfSH LAIIOlt: THI! RDHITH OF
UNIONISMIN l'OST.f'IIANCO SPAIN
Thuraay, February 23 M 7:30 p.m. In
lecture Hall Th,... The talk la span-,
IOf'ed by EPIC, and la frN.
IN OLYMPIA

A ._ium
collod THE IIYSTENOUS LEAP FMIND TO IIODY,
t-■ turlng gu11t apeaker GEORGE
POUUCK, M.O., otrector of the lna1.,_
tuto of 1'11~yolo
of Chk:ogo, ond
Profof Poydllatry • tho Noflh.
western Unw.r.lty School of Medicine,
wtll bo hold Sotunloy, MoR:h11 boglo>nlng at 8:30 Lm. tn room 120, Kane
Hau, U. of W. The ■ymp01lum la ~
oorld by Tho -tlo
1'11,-IOIY,lc
lnatltut1 In conJuMOon wtth the 1M
Department of P ■ ychlatry and the
Soaftle 1'11)'Choone!Y,lcSociety. ond

co.ta 1215.
The C'.rat>ehe41
Alliance wlll pNNnt
en anti-nuke educatk>nalafternoon at
the Gnu °'111 In downtown Otympla
Sunday, Fobnwy 2111.boglnnlng • 2
p.m. E-ii.-••
KN,.,,. (PIID
Physics) wlll •PNk on the IUbfeCtof
THEWOIIKIN080FNUCll!AJIPOWER,
to be followed by • film entllled, HOW
SAFE ARE AMERICA'S NUCLEAR
REACTORS? Per~nolly (U tho ponon
wrlting thla little Item), I WOUid tm.
glne that Am«lca'a nucl..,. reactot'I
are probably among the NfNt In the
world, probably eY9l"I uf•
than the
one that blew up In the USSR wu.
A pub/le educ■tlonal forum on GAY
RtoHTS, aponlOf'edby the Evergreen
Gay Reeource Center. will take place
Wedneeday, Match 1 at 7:30 p.m. at
the Otympla Community Cemer, 1314
E. 4th, Olym~•- Four apeakera will
ptt,Hnt
Information on the plight of
homoaaxual1. For more lnfonnatton
c:ontact the G■y Retource Center. ~

eMI.
IN SEATT\.E
Another oplooclo of tho Soaftle An
MuNum'■ IIIHOTOQflJAIIIHY •71 pro-

KENTUCIIY FlUED MOVIE lo ono of
thoM moriN that rnaka tun of t...,._
alon, ond other .-..
(of llt<o
GROOVE TUBE). It opooto 50'0
■ ttuatlon comectya, dllMI•
moriee,
■-xplo4tatlon ttk:ka, cornmerc6at1, and
nwtlal arta Himswith \IVflng degr9N
of suooeu. Otympla Theat•, 357-3422.

EUIEWHERE
OUTIIAOEOUS la ptaylng at the
Town n.tor oil PIiia StIn -lo.
It la an exoel..,.t Canadian film lbout •
oc:h-,C
womanond her ,_
lmperw,one1or roommate. Ifs thl ktnd
of -

-

thol )'OU feoltng tho
they tell )'OU thot Nlmo llt<oYOU

UQtlT Uf' 11Y UR ohould. lt'o wttflout bolng lnolpld. Wltflout • tho -t
<:anod.., tllm •DON'T
KNOCK THE OX. CorlOOl,ololy
Ille Canadian film ..,.,. It' ■ wonct.rtul.

-

up tho llOC«Y

--

l'ICTUIII

8lt0W thlo Saturday, thumb your,_

oc -GI,_
"ond Ft9d
AttalN f'l'KNM le at the AoNbud thla
WIik, KUf'ONIWa
OWi wait; Just 00 Ne

ON CAMPUS

Ol/flWIEOUI.

FRIDAY, FEB. 24 AND
SATURDAY. FEB. 2S

SATURDAY NIGHT fEYEII lo o film
which Jolln T,_ta
proety.
11'1about dl ■co dancing In Btooldyn.
Gl~ofrom ~ 1o¥oIt. F_,. of tho

In

Thia week'• Frtdey Night FIim, pr-.
Nf'lta a tr1pte fMtuN ot Hltehcock
clualct. Certainty lt'e a wttcome rwllef
from the much-too-long
month ot
Fol>Nory(oo _.I u from tho Frwnch
Now W-,
ond J-••
Somo Old
W-)
THE MAN WHO KNEW TOO
MUCH (11134,
7ll min.) lo tho Ol1illnal
and aomewhat lhorW ...,.ton of thla
tale of polltlcal Hua I nation and
eaptonag■. HappllyI note that thll II
the ..,.,on In which the ,.,.,.._ teed Is
ployod by Eclno lleot. not DPrto Doy.
Llonel Bank1 playa the ,,,... teed lat•
auumed by J.,,,.. Stewa,1, end Pwter
Lorri aurfac. In thla tllm In hl1 flm
Englllh -ng

IEClllf AGENT
(11131)
lo on o ol llu,1woot
Maugham 1torl11 and atare John
Otolg<,clond L.oml(pl-,. •

---~-...

B

pw

Sta.

eau..

Oli,aii.la,
- 16 -March
Vol.
6, No.

powM1ul dQcumentary ahot In Chile
prior to and during the coup that
ousted the leftlet Allende go,,emment.
The footage of the fllm had to be
smuggled out of Chile, and Director
Patricio Guzman and other Cl"N and
cut memt>erwweraarreetectorabduetld by Chi•NCm
ponce. Their
whef'Nboull
are 1tlll unknown. LH
one, Sunday at 1 ..and 7 p.m,, Monday
at 7 p.m. Donation raquested.

cert. beginning al 8 p.m. In the Recltal
Hall ol the Communications
bulldlng.

on

~Journal

SUNDAY. FEB. 28 AND
MONDAY, FEB. 77

THE EASTERN WASHINGTON UNI•
VEAStTY STRING CHAMBER ORCHESTRA wlH present a February 27 con-

music

~ The Cooper Point

conto.

EPtC will host a FREE dance on Frtday, February 24 4th floor Library
bu1ld1ng

chamber

by Mandy McFarlan

atara Mergar.. Lockwood u a young

wilh a t1ve band and calle< on the
floor ot the Library
bulldina.

"AIIYe and Klckin' .. Donations appreclated.

ol

Council Tolnterpret
COG III Board Regs

------lt."-opfe-do
thlnoa llke Wl1t• mm blurbe tor the
Arts and Eventa column In the C. PN
Jay wlll probebty never get around to
SNlng It. Muelc Box Thnter
In
Seattle.

2. 1978

Evans Invested As
President
by Nancy Ann Park"
Daniel J. Evans was formally
invested as Evergrttn's second
President on Sunday. February
26. The man who had served
three terms as Washington's
governor took the presence of
state leaders and the blinding
flashes of reporters' cameras in
stride.
Among the
distinguished
speakers who addressed charges
to Evans during the investiture
were
Congressman
Joel
Pritchard,
Secretary of State
Bruce Chapman, Director of the
Department of Fisheries Gordon
Sandison, and Chairman of the
college's Board of
Trustees
Herbert D. Hadley.
Evergreen speakers included
Alumnae/Slaff
Member Mary
"Ellen Lewis, Faculty Member
Richard Jones (a member of
TESC"s original planning committee), and Kattn Kramer, who
was chosen by College Relations
dittctor Judy Annis on Evans'
recommendation
to represent
TESC atudents.
The most interesting of the
charges put upon President
Evans came from faculty member Richard Jones. Characteri ..
ticaUy citing Freud, Jon.. told
Evans that the psychoanalyst
had named three careers in
which failures were an integral
part of success: government,
education, and psychoanalysis.
Jones, who is involved in both
Psychology and Education coun
.. led Evans:
"'So Dan, if I may speak as
one chronic two--time loter to
one who has chosen to become
another two-time IORr, I shall
begin with a piece of advice:
try, as a former governor, in
your new carttr u an educator,
to be as little interested
in
matten psychological, as I, a
psychologiat and educator, try to
stay interested in matters govemmmtal. Nobody nttds three
time l01tt1."
Charges delivered to Evans
during the ceremony were numttou1, and left the impreuion
that he would be expected to do
all but hold an umbrella over the
wooded campus to pl'n'Ont It
from becoming drmched by the
Northwest rain.
4

Pr.lid<mt 1:vana luv .. podium lollowina lnvatltutt --In raporue to th• Iona list of
John R. Raser, Dean of the
expectations,
President Evans
School of Social lnquirv at
spoke of continuing the developMurdoc "h University in Western
ment of Evergreen's
unique
Australia.
was the keynote
'strengths as an institution. He
speaker at Sunday's investiture
expressed
his hope for an
dinner. Raser, who was obeventual graduate program on
viou1ly impressed with Everthe TESC campus. In addition,
green's development over the
Evans pointed out
several
past ten years, defined for the
triumphs of the young and
audience the alternative he saw
growing college, such as the
TESC providing:
successful Vancouver Outreach
"Evergreen creates slulltd senprogram (which brings TESC
eralisls," said Raser, ana:.dded
curriculum to Vancouvuites who ! that this was preferable
to
can not attend school in Olymproducing graduates whose hlahpia).
ly specialized skills made them
There was no rest for Evans,
unadaptable. In support of these
as he moved
on to the
statements, Raser cited EverGreenwood Inn to share a light
green·, overwhelming 90 pm:mt
dinner with some 350 noted
placement rate of its graduates.
government workers,
TESC
He added lhat elsewhere in the
taculty and staff, students, and
nation graduate placement was
old friends.
twenty-five percent lower.
After the refruhina
meal,
"W• at Murdock University
Administrative
Vice President
are so impressed by the way
Dean Clabaugh introduced thote
things are done at Evergreen,
seated at the head table, includthat when our President reaigned
ing Secretary of Stat• Chapman.
a few months ago we considered
Following the introductions, a
inviting the Governor of Western
photographic history of EverAustralia to be our new Presigrttn (put together on slides and
dent," Raiser said jokingly.
Kl to music by TESC Media
Evans, compassionately aware
services) wu received with a
that his guests had listened to a
warm round of applause by the
great many 1peechn throughout
audimce.
!he day made his closing remarks
brief:
"You have bttn prayed to,
apoken to, and ahown slides to.
and that's enough
for the
evening. Besidea, I've already
given a speech today ... ," said
Evins. " ... I think in being
difttrent we can best fulfill lh•
great promise that is Evergreen ... :·

D£RSU UV.LA(THEHUNffll) lo lho
latNt Aklra Kuroeew• film, and It'•
showing at the Harlard Exit. It takN
place In Siberia and la "photograplllcallymojMtlc"according to lho
Soottlo Wo•dy.

You can \Ike In ITM WAAS at the
UA 180 Thel.ter In 8Nttte and CLOII
IEIICOUNttlll of tho King on tho
day ond think -y
ol>out

......,,.,,_1n--.11~.

Faculty ManNr RichardJo- dollven chupo to new

l'Noldent.

Following tho
after-dinner
speeches, Evans and his wife
Nancy received the many friends
and associates who had come to
help them celebrate. O.Spil• the
hand shaking and last minute
photographs by reporters, it was
obvious that Dan and Nancy
Evans wen not at all uncomfortable with lheir rolH u the
President and his Fint Lady.

At a regular bi-weekly meeting of the Evergreen Council held
on Wednsday, March 1, djscussion of a DTF and memos on the
KAOS Advisory Committee raised specific questions concerning
ambiguities in Everg.reen's ccx:; III document.
Since one of the Council's major functions is to reiterate college
principles, Council members decided to develop, at their next
meeting, a concis,e interpretation of ccx:; Ill's membership terms
on standing committees (the KAOS Advisory Committee, Publications Board, S 6: A, and others.) The scope of DTF investigalory
powers is also in question.
The ambiguities in the ccx; document were brought to the
Council's attention when two students requested that the Council
take action on separate requests concerning the KAOS Advisory
Committee. Toni C. Holm, former KAOS Station Manager, expressed a desire for an objective examination and classification ot
the Advisory Committee and its policies and practices. Holm proposed charges for a DTF, including the examination of the committee's role in day-to-day operations of the station, hiring and
firing, and general station policy. The DTF proposal was
approved at the February 15th meeting of the Evergreen Council,
although Les Eldridge, who was acting as President Evans' representative, voiced opposition to some of the wording in the DTF
charges.
President Evans, a member of the Evergreen Council, disagreed
with two aspects of the DTF charge as approved. The first concerned consultation procedures in drawing up the DTF. In a letter
to the Council Evans wrote, "In instances where the charger of the
DTF is not the decision-maker involved (Evans), I believe the
Eveigreen Council should request that the decision-maker (and in
this case, the KAOS Board) be present during the consultation.
Only in this way can the Evergreen Council have the full facts
concerning the need for a DTF hefore it and therefore be able to
make fully informed and intelligent suggestions in consultation
with the charger. As a member of the Evergreen Council, I suggest
that a provision of this sort be made a part of the procedures of
the Council while consulting with chargers of DTFs."
Evans' second objection concerning the DTF was to charge
numl:>er 6, which reads, ''The DTF should examin~. attempt to
clarify and make recommendations on each of the following ... 6)
The current committee, specifically: a) compliance with its own
operating policy b) alleged unethical conduct." The President
wrote, "I believe that the Council should havf!-.cautioned the charger about Item 16 in Toni's draft. It seems to 1me that the term
"investigation," used during the presentation, here bears its heaviest weight, particularly in reference to "alleged unethical conduct."
This is clearly a grievance and in my judgment has no place in the
proceedings of an advisory. ad hoc committee such as a disappearing task force. The College possesses a carefully-thought-out, comprehensive grievance process that assures due process and fairness.
Discussion and "investigation" of such allegations in a disappearing task force would rais,e grave questions concerning the appear•
ance of fairness and the presence of due process."
Grady Ward, Moderator of the Evergreen Council, responded,
"Jn the Council's opinion, the presence of the KAOS Advisory
Board and the appropriate decision maker in this case would not
have contrjbuted to the clarification of the charges defined by
Toni Holm. Other than for the purposes of clarification, it is
clearly inappropriate for the group to be studied to modify or
effect charges which are intended to examine them ... your representative (Les Eldridge) was present and the kernel of your
objection (to #6) was discussed .. , I construe Les' participation to
be of the same force as your own."
The charges will be discussed in relation to COG Ill. which
states that "Decisions must be made onJy after consultation and
coordination with students, faculty. and staff who are both
affected by and interested in the issues ... " The Council may
reword charge 16 at the next meeting.
Stephen Rabow, a member of the KAOS Advisory
Committee, recently wrote a memo concerning the: length of terms
served on that committee. Rabow asserted that the Advisory
Committee is not in compliance with provisions of COG III which
rtates, "If it is essential for standing committtts or councils to
<·xist, there must be a frequent turnover of membership, at least
annually." There are five members of the Committee who havt
sttved for more than one year.
Les Eldridge responded lo Rabow in a memo saying 1ha1 1ho
COG document does not call for complete turnover in membership annually, but only that there will be significant turnover each
year. Eldridge fttla that the presenl Advisory Commltttt is in full
compliance: with provisions of ccx:; Ill.
The Evergreen Council spent about an hour seminaring on
COG 111,and th• intenl of the passage quoted by Rabow was nol
clear to Council members. The Council narrowed the definition of
annual tumove:r to thrtt possibilities: 1) The entire board changes
each year (like S ~ A;; 2) Each member stays for one year with
staggered terms so that only half of the board is new when a
changover occurs (Evergreen Council arrangement); and 3) Some
turnover occurs at ~ast once: a year (the current KAOS Advisory
Committtt arrangement). Willi Unsoeld. a drafter of COG III.
said that it was the document's intent to have continuity and frequent turnover in standing committees.
Some Council memben objected to the third interpretation. because it would conceivably allow a five--member board to have
four permanent members. Another objection voiced to that
arrang~ent was that students who, by design of a four-year life
at Evergreen. cannot s,erve:on committees as long as administra•
tors can are handicapped in negotiations.
The Council decided to work on the standing committee
passage in COG III, and to rewrite and print concise rules on term
lengths for all standing committttS. Then, if the boards do not
comply with the Council's interpretation, the Council will take
appropriate action.



TI,o ~

Point _....,

-

2, 1171

The Cooper Potnt Joumal March 2, 1171

LettersQ)~fil]lfi@l]lLette~fimdi@ml.

Q
~

t.

,_..

Views On
The News
To the Editor:

If journalism
were

objective

and the media
and/or

neutral,

there d be no need for alternative
or underground or official or
straight press. there'd just be The
News. Obviously. we don't just
have The News. This observallc.m is prompted by the recent
attention on the Lesbian Caucus\r\'omen·s Center concerns. and is
a reminder for those who think
that what's printed, in the CPJ
or elsewhere, is the whole or
even a good representation of
part of the issues involved.
Becca Todd

The Real
Women's Center
Story
To the Editor:
It 1s important
for us to
rt>member that conflicts in the
\-\'omen's Center have a history.
The situation,

at this point,

is

complex. Each person involved
has her own point of view, her
own memory of events. It is also
important to remember that in a
conflict, people respond to each
others emotions and are personally hurt. I don't think the essence of the Women's Center
conflicts is personal attacks and
defenses. Most women are not
trying to build a case, with evidence, to tear down other
people. I urge people lo not take
a report of a meeting, with
selective descriptions and quotes
lo be an accurate reflection of
the conflict.
Women in the
Women's Center are people with
different principles, trying to
communicate these and criticize
the organiz.ation in hopes that
women will work together,
unified by their goals. I thank
Nancy Ann Parkes for focusing
on this in the analysis which
followed her description of the
meeting. I encourage readers to
recognize that when an uninformed uninvolved person watches and reports on a struggle that
is diffi<;ult and emotionally draining to people involved,
her
presentation cannot possibly be
an accurate reflection.

I have some criticisms
of
Nancy's descriptions
of the
meetings. She chose some words
that color statements with emotions; it's hard to verify their
accuracy
and misleading
to
accept the picture they present.
For example, "Lesbian women
present resented being called a
divisive element." It is unclear
Crom the sentence if all lesbian
women present clearly said "I
resent..." or how the reporter
identified the women to be lesbians. "Accused" and "accusing"
were used to describe the statements by Lesbian- Caucus member. On what basis does a reporter
call an opinion
or
criticism an accusation? I think
the drama evoked by emotional
words and selections of quotes
and points is not helpful to an
understanding of issues.
However, I'm not sure that
any kind of media reporting can
avoid the illusion, or false picture. If women want to be con~~tructively involved in the Women's Center's growth, please
come. ask questions, find out
what other women think. What
is going on at the Women's
Center cannot be understood or
analyzed by observing a meeting. Be careful about making
judgments without information.
Marilyn Stern

Author's respOn.51!:
RE: "/ encourage readers to
recognize that when an uninformed uninvolved
person
watches and reports on a
struggle that is difficult and
emotionally draining to people
involved, her presentation caft
not possibly be an accurate reflection ...
To the contrary, Marilyn, I do
not believe an "accurate reflection" can be presented
by
persons who are in the midst of
an emotionally draining stn.,ggle.
Had I been emotionally involved
with the changes taking place in
the Women's Center, I would
have turned over the story to
another CPI reporter.
All the information used to
write both articles on the Center
was recorded on tape. In
reference to Chelle Roberts'
evaluation, I was able to identify
members of the Usbian Caucus
because I had attended one of
their meetings the previous

evening. Caucus members present at Roberts' evaluation specifically stated that they resented
being called "a divisive element"
within the group: a label which
came from other women present
at the meeting.
...
I understand
that several
women have become involved in
the Women's Center as a result
of CPI publicity. As an afterthought I am happy about
this-although my objective as a
reporter was to present a clear
picture of the events I observed,
and allow CPI readers to draw
their own conclusions.
Nancy Ann Parkes
CPI Features Editor

Re : The Lesbian
Caucus
To the Editor:
1 disagree with the formation
of the Lesbian Caucus for ·two
reasons, the first being a financial one. The Lesbian Caucus
does nol deserve fifty percent of
the funds granted to the Womyn's
Center because it does not comply with the S&A proposal of
1977. I am referring to the part
of the proposal
that states
"whereby all women can achieve
a greater self-awareness
and
work to heighten their feminist
consciousness."
By the very
formation of the les\,ian Caucus
the majority
of womyn on
campus have been consciously
and explicitly excluded from that
part of the Center. Even within
the Caucus there is the exclusion
of lesbians who do not agrtt:
with the idea and label of "Political Lesbians."
Ideologically
I resent the
formation of this caucus because
it once again forces womyn to
define themselves in the context
of a sex role instead of as
people. In the statement of the
Lesbian Caucus the identity of
womyn is still seen in a negative
relationship to males. rather than
in a positive way as womyn,
the~by leaving womyn without
any identity once the sex role
ceases to exist in their life. There
is a nttd for womyn to be able
to identify themselves outside of
their sex lives as womyn and
people.
Laurie Frankel

[

.......
.,..

I Am Woman
To the. Editor:
WOMEN-those of you who
feel good enough about yourselves to have the right to this
title-I
hope you realize what
you are and can accept the
responsibility of being a WOMAN. A WOMAN is a penon
with her own individual integrity
who does not let herself be oppressed by the small-minded in
this world. Why don't all of you
womyn start focusing on developing your own individuality
and learn to hold your own
piece of ground rather than hiding in a group's safe security? If
you have wounds, why not let
them heal instead of feeding
them as a group?
Your fear is showing.
A WOMAN

Welcome
ToSAGA
To the Editor:
Would you buy bread for
$1.00 a loafl And if you did
would you hire someone to
make the sandwiches?
Welcome to Saga I Where it is
done for you I
An Impoverished
Gourmet Student

From The
Poison Pen Of
G.A.M.
To the Editor:
Why yes, I did .. y that last
week's CPJ was a "good issue" a good issue with respect to your
closest.competitor: the Daily O:
(over which you Mve seldom
triumphed) but when I spoke
these fateful words, I had not as
yet read the "Arts and' Events"
which, even with consideration
made for your youth, was an
insult to the Friday Nile Film
Series and an unforgivable slight
to Nancy Duncan's
Cinema.
When your various Mommies
cease to finance your variously
unemployable jdiosyncrasies,
l
hope that you can make as con-

crete a contribution
to your
communities as Nancy Duncan
has, but I wouldn't bet on it.
Not without odds.
As for the "French New
Wave" and the Japanese "same
old wave," I must say that it
never occurred to me that anyone (let alone an editor of a
potentially average newspaper)
could be so far behind the times.
Now I know; thanks for the
warning. You may be stupid
enough to reprint your Cinema
blurb from last week to accompany this epistle. If you are,
please do.
love and Pity;
Gary Alan May
P.S. Heterosexuals Unite! Women
preferred ...

Announcing The
I

150
LUNCH
F R
A
ERE
135 ''
PLA

Faculty Hiring
And Firing
To the Editor:
In the article on the faculty
handbook DTF I saw no mention
of students having any power in
the hiring and firing of faculty.
That upsets me greatly. Why
don't students have a real say in
who will be "teaching" them,
especially here at Evergreen, the
epitome of alternative education?
Yours
Greg Krall
P .S. I don't like long letters,
either.
P.P.S. Thank you, Kathy

Down With
The Aesthetic
Dictatorship
To the Editor:
There is rarely any good
entertainment on this campus.
and when there is, it all
coincides on the same night. i.e.,
Dumi and his band. Kaspar
Hauser, etc. Let's get it together!
Also, the Friday Night Films is
just an extension of the Academic Film Series. Let's have true
entertainment I Almost every film
shown is either esoteric fluff, or
just plain bad.• Down with this
aesthetic dictatonhip I Enough of
aspiring film-makers booking
(Letten continued on page 6.)

( Or liow ToEat $15 Worth Of Bagels ForFree)
Actually, now you can eat breakfast, lunch, dinner or anything in between on our
plan and save a bundle of money. Here's how it works:
The college is offering a food contract scrip plan, available to students, staff and
faculty alike. You simply buy either one book or two books at a time of transferable
coupons (transferable meaning that friends and co-workers can share the cost and
reap, the benefits together), and use them for one quarter of the academic year.
They re good at the cafeteria, snack bar, coffee house and even the deli. One book of
scrip, for $150 worth of food, costs only $135 (that's a 10% savings into your pocket).
Or, you can invest in two full books of scrip, redeemable for $300 worth of food for a
mere $240 (a 20o/o-discount). Good deal, eh?
'
To find out more about those free bagels (and the entire plan), drop in at the College
Housing Office, "A" Building, Room 220 or phone 866-6132. (just ask for Linda).

l

4

Tho~-

-

2, 1m

to read as foUowt:

N,arly fiv• y•an aftor Richard
Nixon abdicated th• pn,sidency.
he and his fellow Watergate conspirators continue to grow less
cttdibl, - and richer - by th•
minute. This was aptly demonstrated by the recent release of
H.R. Haldeman'• mornoin. 'Th•
Ends of Power". for which th•
former ,Pfffidmtial adviser and
his ghostwriter received a $140,
000 advance. Soon after the
book wmt on sale prominent
Watergat• figuttS began disputing Haildeman's assertions.
''Haldeman's reconstruction of
events may be the biggrst hou:
since Clifford Irving's," responded Chari .. Colson. former Whit•
House counsel and born-again
evalgelist, to Haldeman's claim
that he had been Nixon's "hit
man" and partially responsible
for planning the Watergate burglary. Sam Ervin, who chaired the
Senate Watergate hearings, observed that, "A man who
commits

perjury

under

oath

might also be capable of doing
so when not under oath." Former Democratic National Committee Chairman Larry O'Brien,
m reference to Haldeman's suggestion that the Democrats had
advance knowledge of the Watergate break in and let it proceed
to entrap the Republicans, said,
That's baloney."
But the man Haldeman accuses
of having been at the very root
of Watergate, Nixon himself, has
yet to publicly deny any of his
ex-associate's claims. Nixon's
response, as delivered by his
aide, Colonel Jack Brennan, was
simple: "The Former President
Nixon's memoirs will be published in May ..,
What will Nixon's memoirs
contain 7 One can only guess, at
this point, but considering the
former president's personality
and what is already known
about Watergate, their content
~ms somewhat predictable. Excerpts from Nixon's personal
account of Watergate are likely

Nixon ·s reconstruction of the
famow 18½ minute 1"1' in on,
of the Wat..-glJt• tap,s,
Nixon: Hold on just one minute now, Bob. I have to make an
important call to my wife Pat.
Hfflg up your phon• and I'll call
you bad in 18 minutes.
Haldornan, Anything you say,
Mr. President. !'ii expect your
call in 18 minutes.
(pause)
Nixon, Hello Pat, dear. I only
have 18 minutes to talk to you. I
thought we might spend that
time talking about our trip to
China, to Communist China, because it was 10 important to the
w,lfare of th• American people.
Pat Nixon, Oh. I thought you
were just wonderful, Dick, how
you made the world safe and
gave Henry Kissinger such a
boost by letting him take some
of the credit.
Nixon: Nice of you to say
that, dear, but Hm.ry has bttn
helpful in the foreign policy
arena. He gets along well with
the other races - Henry's good
at that because he's a foreigner
himself, you know. Henry's a
very diplomatic man - good at
following instructions. Together
we've achieved peace in the
world, and that's what I'll be
remembered for in the future, as
the man responsible for a generation of world peace ...
(minutes later)
Nixon: Bob7 Dick again. Now
what wtte you saying about
John Mitch,ll's fri,nds Hunt and
Liddyl
Nixon on his role in the coverup:

Let m• say. fint of all, that
from what I know John Dean
(who has been accurat,ly dncribed. by oth•n than myself/, as
a bottom dw,lling slug) is totally •
to blame for initiating what has
become known as the 'Watergate cover-up." Dean called a
secret meeting - a meeting of
which the American public has

- 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 in CAB 306. The
deadline for Ad Manager applications is
5: 00 p.m. Wednesday, March 22 (not the
29th, as reported in last week's ad) and
Features Editor applications
will be
accepted until 5:00 p.m., the 29th.
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
abm•t it.

had no knowledge until now sometim• in Jun• of 1972. Pre,mt at that meeting were Dean,
Bob Haldttnan, John Erlichman,
John Mitch,11, J•b Magruder.
Maurice Stans, Chuck Colson,
Herb Kalmbach, Bob Mardian,
Fred l.aRu,, Rose Mary Woods,
and John Mitchell's wil, Martha.
lt was at this meeting that what
was to become known as the
"cover-up" wu born.
Dean opened the senion
(which took place in th• Whit•
House whil• Pat and I wm, vwting with our daughter Juli• and
David Eioenhower. htt husband,
at Camp David) by bri•fing
those present on the Watergate
matter. 'Thtte'1 been a mistake
and we have to take action,"
O.an said, and h• continued to
explain that th• men John Mitchell and Chuck Colson had omployed to bug Democratic Hudquarters would be needing money.
"Shouldn't
we inform the
President about this?" Rose
Woods asked him. A lengthy
discussion followed, and finally
it was decided that th• matter
was not important mough to
bother m• with. 'Th• Pn,sident
has the most important job in
th• world," John Mitch.U said.
'We can take care of this little
problem ourselves; there's no
reason for the President to ever
find out about it."
So at this meeting in Jun• of
1972 the seed of deceit was
planted. As time prog,esed and
circumstances
worsened,
the
mornben of my staff conducted
an extmsive conspiracy to keep
m• uninformed as to th• rul
cin:umstancn of th• Wat,rgat•
affair. If only they'd had th•
sense to come to me for help the
mtitt problorn could hav• been
avoided. I would simply hav•
called a pness COIUflfflceand explained to th• Am,rican public
that certain members of my staff
had mad• a mistak•. Th• whole
thing could hav• been avoided,
but my staff deceived m•. Th,y
knew if I ever found out l'd have

to take action to restore propriety
in my administration.
Since Nixon will probably
dmy any personal role in the
W1rt,rgat, scandal, h.'11 luroe lo
du,,11 on olh,r ,upects of his
pruidency to fill spac, in his
book. On, subject h,s /ik,ly to
cover is his rol, in ending the
Vietnam War,
Now on• should bear in mind,
in readins
about how my
administration ended the Vietnam
War, that th• Democrats got
Am,rica involved in that war. I
was dedicated from th• tim• I
took office to achieving peace
with honor. and I achieved peace
with honor. The Americans
could hav• won militarily in
Vietnam, but I decidedagainst
that course of action out of my
deep respect for th• wonderful
Vietnam.., peopl•. But w• could
have won. Instead we negotiated
an honorable srttlemmt which
would allow th• self-determination of the Vietnamese citizens.
It may have appeared to th•
uninformed observer that my
settlorn,nt of the Vietnam War
was accomplished easily. I've
even heard that some people
think it wasn't a settlornmt at all
- just a retreat. Let me make
on• thing p,rf,ctly cl,ar. Th•
Vietnam War was over when we
airlihed our troops; Secretary of
State Kissinger, on my advice
and under my guidance, had
spent months in delicate negotiations with South Vietnamese
Pttsident Thieu. When h• had
obtained favorabl• terms for a
settlement of the conflict we
withdrew our troops. W, had no
way of knowing tho,. ungrateful
Vietnam..., would start fighting
again.

Being his thfensive and paranoid self, Nixon'"wi,ll undoubtedly devol• a large portion of his
memoirs to blaming other people
for his failure in the pre$idmcy.
Of course he'll dump what he
can on his old political associates
- that goes without sayinR -

but ,inn. despite all his faults.
he can see Watn-gate in th,
broader context of American
social chang•. he'll probably
focus furth,r blame on two old
and elu.siue enemies: the media,
and youth,
R,gardl... of th• fact that I
was Presid,nt of Th• Unit•d
States for IHS than two full
terms, let it be known that I wu
the only president elected twltt
during th• Vietnam ora, and that
I served more time in office than
any other pfftident of that era.
Public misconceptions about th•
Vietnam War, about its importance to dom,stic oecurity, forced
me, and every other president
during that period, to conduct
the nation's business in the face
of rampant advenity. Haraummt from the news media was
so Rvere that I had to drutically
limit my press confettnces. I
addressed th• nation directly via
telrnsion instead, because I believe the . American public has
,very right to know what th•ir
elected officials ar• doing. I believed that th•n and always will.
Now let m• say this about th•
anti-war movornent, I like kids,
always hav,. ThoR were good
kids with th•ir h•art• in th• right
place; I talked to some myself
one morning at the Arlington
Cornetery. and about that I can
aay this, thote kids thought they
wm, doing th• right thing. They
were just wrong, making an
honest miltake, but at the same
tim• they wm, damaging th•ir
country. Too much of my time,
too much of my ene:rgy was siphoned away from important
govemmmt busin... by all th•
ruckus those kids wen, raising
when th,y should hav• been in
school. So let me say this,
dammit, that those. that that
bunch of kids wasted too much
of my time. Let me say that I
think that they should hav• left
m• alone, that Woodward and
that Bernstein .. pecially. that th•
nat.ion's problem during that
period was that, let me say this,
that that problem was that...

State Police Crack Down

The Washington State Patrol,
at the request of TESC S<curity.
has begun a special campaign on
Cooper Point Road and the
Evergreen Parkway to control
speeding and to make "spot
checks" on vehicles for equipment tests. Washington State
residents who have failed to
obtain Washington licmse plates
can be charged a $45.00 penalty.
Campus S<curity has asked th•
State Patrol to control speeding
and drag racing which have
become problems around the
campus. Security can't control
th• speeding problem without
outside assistance. Security officials are hoping that the prnmce
of police officers will aid in th•
prevention of future assaults at
Evergrttn.
Although th• police att mainly
pulling speeders over, spot
checks are also being made on
random vehicles to test headlights, brak,lights. blinkors and
horns. Since spot checks require
mo~ than one office.r, two or
three police cars parked in one
location will not be uncommon
around the college.
Stat• Patrol Officer G.M.
Pugh aimed a radar speed
detector at vehicles in a 35 mph
zone on the Parkway
on
Monday aft,moon, February 27.

radar unit; which talr.,s
instantaneous speed 'pictures', ii
worth $2,900, but costs littl• to
operate.)
Pugh says that patrol officen
found 150 vehicles in campus
parking Iott with expired out-<>fstate license plates. Warnings
and/or tick•t• are being issued
for these and other traffic
offen....
Th, cost of a spttding ticket
varies according to how far over
the limit the car is traveling
when cloclc.ed. According to
Washington's Uniform Traffic
Code, if a car. is going 10 mil,s
per hour over th• speed limit,
(Th•

the fin• is $30; for 20 mil,s over
the limit, the cost is $68.00.
Officer Pugh clocked a car in at
51 mph, 16 mil,s ovor th• limit,
and that ticket will cost th•
driver $49.00.
Pugh says that th• presence of
police on th• Parkway has
already slowed traffic down
considerably. H, added that h•
feels it is better that peopl• are
forewarned about dowing down,
updating license plates, getting
Washington platu (resid,nts)
and checking equipmmt before
they an, ,,topped or fined by
police.

Open Interviews Scheduled
The Faculty Hiring DTF will
hold open interviews of candidates for full time teaching
positions at TESC March 2, 3,
and 6.
On Thursday, March 2, at 2
p.m. in Ub. 2219, the DTP will
interview Roberta Brown, who
hu applied for a polition under

the category of modern languag ...
On Friday, March 3 at 2 p.m.,
in th• Library 2204, Donald
Tompkins, who specializes in
three dimensional art, will be
interviewed by the DTP.
On Monday, March 6 at 10
a.m .. in Ubrary 1503, Clarisse

Zimra will be
interviewed.
Zlmra's specialty area is in
modem languagn/humanitiH.
These interviews are open to
all students, faculty, and staff
who may wish to qu..Uon th•
pr<><pectivecandidat,., and/or
make recommendations to the
DTP.

Informed Of Daily O Series

Trustees

Nixon's Memoirs: A Sneak Preview

by John Keogh

s

T11o~-..--2.1m

-

by Mandy McFarlan
At a Board of Trust•H,
meeting on Saturday, February
25, President Evans and Adminiatrative Vice Preaident Dean
Clabaugh brought to the Board'•
attention a omH of articl.. in
the Daily Olympian concerning
Ev,rgttffi't inventory 1.-.
Evans dacribed the article u
having numerous errors and
mitconceptiona. Clabaugh said
many of the itorns reported u
being missing have been ttCOVor,d or paid for, and that the
figuru
us,d in th• Daily
Olympian wm, not used with
care and accuracy. H• said that
the reporter had gathered every
rumor about bad management
practice at Evergreen. Evans told
th• trust... that a DTP had
already been studying the probl•m and is ,till compiling

Duey

Information on the baJance of
stud•nt acc,11 and Inventory
lou, Hpecially regarding Media
Loan proceedures.
Acadornic Dean WIiiie Panon,
u part of the Pttaident's Report
to the Board, outlined the future
of the Vancouver Outreach Program. Parson said that th•
program, which 11 currently
located on the Clark College
campus in one office and two
classrooms, is becoming espec:•
ially cramped, with 65 1tudent1
currently enrolled. The Vancou- •
vor V,terans •Administration has
offered the Ult of a duplex clooe
to Oark Colleg, for flv• y•an at
the nom~I cost of one dollar
per yur. Necessary ttpaln to
the duplex would cost Evergreen
$21,375. The Board of Trust...
feels that th• program has been
sucressful and will continue to

D.C. Remarks

Clarifies

by Nancy Ann Parkes
John Whit• of th• Associated
Pn,ss reported on Wednesday,
March 1, that Governor Dixy
. Lee Ray "returned horn• last
night (from th• National Governors' Conference) in a feisty
mood, claiming sh• was both
misquoted,
non-quoted
and
taken out of context in Washington, D.C."
According to the Governor's
Communications Director, Janet
Smith, Governor Ray never said
she was misquoted concerning
her recent remarks about President Carter and nuclear reacton.
Th• S.attl• Tim.. reported on
those remarks Tuesday in an
articl• compiled from th• Washington Post and th• Los Ang,les
Times. According to this articl•.
r'" •' ~"':.o,
Ray told reporters at a bru.kfast
,;

grow, 10 th•y ,ndors,d
th•
project. The funds will com• out
of other souras to be detmnined during the May allocation
procna.
Richard Montecucco, Auilw.t
Attorney Gen..... ! for Ev,rgttffl,
deecribed the cu.rttnt situation
concerning the lawauit filed by
the college against the Veterans
Administration for withholding
G.I. Bill benefits from Ev,rgttffl
vets because of a 12-hour
tucher-student
cont•ct
rul,.
Montecucco aaya that the primary injunction •nttted in th•
lawsuit will require the VA to
pay full educational allowances
to veterans attending Evergreen
for March and probably April.
There will be another h•aring on
th• subject, possibly in May.
Also, part of th• President's
Report to the Board of T rusttts

meeting in Washington, 0.C.,
that "it may be 'wax in the ears'
that prevents President Carter
from h,aring her message that a
plutonium nuclear reactor at
Clinch River, T,M .. is safe and
nttded."
Th• Times also reported that
" ... th• Governor ref,rred to Mr.
Carter's 'paranoia' in opposing:
th• brttder reactor. 1 gu.., h•
was frightened in his mother's
womb.'"
According to Communications
Director Smith, Ray "wu not
angry. I was thett and I did not
detect any anger" during the
Governor's rem.arks to AP reporter White.
In reference to th• Carter/
nuclear power remarks made in
Washington, D.C., Ray told
report en on Wednesday, March
1, "Y,., I did use tho,. words. I

Tbe

Women's
Center

was Ginny lng•nol's brief outlin• of th• progn,ss of Management and th• Public Interest, a
two year program with a total
enrollment of 84 students. Sh•
explained that th• ongoing program, which ii now in ill second
year, is for junion and seniors
int,rested in carttr preparation,
specifically in how businesses
can best Rrvt th• public inten,st.
Th• trust,.. mdoned planned
tuition rates for Summer Quarter, 1978, and for th• '7S-79
school y•ar. As mandated by the
State Legislature. full tim• tuilion for residents this summer
will b• $197.00. This will
incru"" to $206.00 in th• fall
and remain at that level through
summer of 1979. Full time
tuition for non-resid,nts
will
continu• at $661.00 per quarter.

Thirty women met Saturday.
February 25, to discu,a and
defin, th• collectiv• purpooe of
th• Womm's C,nter. Th• following statement was issue from
that meeting:
"The Women's Center is open
[b all wotllffl. Whil• w• realiu
that feminism has political implications and connotations, the
Women's Center is for the
promotion of women's equality
in all sen,es-economic,
IOCW,
political, personal. and interp,ersonal growth. These do not
,ecessarily have to be inter-related and we encourage all
women who an interested in
discovering, exploring, and promoting feminism, to be part of
the Women's Center."
The women also decided at
Saturday's meeting that there
would be no qualifications for
Women's Center membership per
se, rather, women would be
Olga Broumas, a 29-year-old
encouraged to vote on issues
poet currently residing in Euabout which they feel nespongene, Oregon, will be reading
sibly informed.
her work Thunday, March 2, at
On March 8 another Women's
8 p.m. in the CAB Cofftthouse. P
Center meeting will be h•ld to
Ms. Broumas' first book, Begindiscuss the coordination
of
ning with 0, won her th• 1977
volunteer
services, and the
Yale Younger Poets
Series
Center's short/long term goals.
Award. Th• ruding will b,
following by a discussion for
women about feminism and
11/"MlllfTI&
poetry. Brouma.s's appearance is
s
,,, 511.D§ #IQ!T@
sponsored by the Center for
~
Ol'l1
•$VIEDroTA'.I0E.5
F0R.
Literature in Performance.
7WOBITS.QUAR:t5 01" &JD
FOR. SIX.

------------.
Bro11mas

have the unfortunate habit, some
would say a weakness, of saying
what comes to my mind. rhere
was no offense meant. There
were comments made during the
full hour session with bureau
chiefs from most of the major
newspapers."

in its Tuesday, F,bruary 28
article the Seattle Times also
reported that Ray contended
civilian usage of nuclear energy
had never caused a death, and
that atomk weapons development had resulted in only seven
fatalities among workers. The
Governor was reported as having remarked that chances of a
nuclear disaster in a power plant
were 1 in S billion, saying,
''You've got more chance of
being squash,d by a falling
met~r."

Appearing

Ever-Haven BulletinBoardC@l]]ll]]l1
Encounter
The KAOI

On Friday. March 3, students
from Fairhav•n Colleg• will be
caravanning down to Evergreen
in hopes of forging a spirit of
unity between th• two Colleges.
Fairhaven, like Evergreen, is a
state - supported alternative
school designed to ,flexibly allow
self-directed learning to take
place in an interdisciplinary
atmosphere. Recently, Fairhaven
was the subject of an evaluation
study and came close to being
closed down or radically alt,red.
In th• end, West•m Regional
University, of which Fairhaven is
a small part, expressed its
support of th• Coll•g• but
recommended
some
major
chffiSH in th• structure of its
curriculum.
Believing that it's time to come
together, people from Fairhavm
and planners of the event here at
Evergre,e:natt promoting a numbtt of Ever-Havm Encount,n.
Fairhavm peopl• will be arriving
at 3:00 or so and, if its sunny,
w•'II frolic on Red Square and in
th• woods. At 5,00 th,re will be
a potluck in CAB 108, "!' bring
your favorit• dish. Around 6,30
in CAB 308, thett'II be a small
group get-together whtte Falrhav,n and Evergreen peopl• will
share experiences, hopes, and
despain about alternative education in Washington, hoping to
establish a permanent connection
between students at Fairhaven
and h,re.
At 9,00 a dance will commence: it will go until one or
two in the morning, or until we
drop from exhaustion, whichever
com.. !Int. Fairhaven is bringing
the KEEP ON PICKIN' Bluegrasa
Band to provide the sounds in
th• College Activiti.. Building.
Bring your deeping bags. quilts,
serape, whatevu, u we will all
b• slumbering In CAB 108.
Come, share, and enjoy in the
first annual Ever-Hov,n Encounter.

Advl1ory

CommlttN

needs a new student member.The

Advl1ory CommlttH
hlrH the ,talion
~ end hetpa formulate pollcy for
the radio 11at1on. The Committee
meet, once a month. AppHcant1 for
this poaltlon must be raglatered 1t1r
dents at The Ewroreen State College.
For more Information, call' Dive Rauh
at 866-5267.

KAOS needs a new Bualneas Manager.
The Business Manage(• responslbllltlet Include handling all purchues for
the radk> st1Uon, managing the budget
and coordinating fund ralafng. Pay 11
2.851hr. for 10 hr1.fweek. For mor1
Information, ca.II Dave Rauh at 866-

!12117.

A lludenl SELF-EVALUATION WRITING WORKSHOP will be hetd on Tuesday, March 7 from 3 to 5: 00 In LIB
220,(. Sign up In the Academic AcMs-lng Office. The wor1c.ahopwill be conducted by Mamy Pearce and Walker
Allen.

LIBRARY USE QUESTIONNAIRES
are betng distributed, and ■re available
at the main circulation desk of the Library. Those who do not receive them
through programs and contracts by the
8th or 7th c;:.anpick them up at the library m■ ln deak.

On Friday, March 10, DAN EVANS
will hold • "brown bag" forum during
the noon lunch hour In CAB 108. He
has Invited students, staff and faculty
to )oln the forum.

TheSELF HELP LEGAL ASSISTANCE
PROGRAM (SHLAP) Is looking lo, 2
people who 1n wllllng to t~n on a
~unary bUla durtng Spring Ouarter
1978 and who wlll uaum. reaponalblllty fOf' coordinating the office during
-le
V- 11178-711.
Paid potltlon
opens up Fall 1978 at 13.05/hour, 15
houra/week. Appllcatlon1 In Ub. 3224,
due March 13, 1078. For fflOf'e Information call e1rJ7.

All library books are due March 10.
The Library will begin renewing books
Friday, Marett 3.

Jobe 1n open for peopte lnt.,.ted
In rocycllng. The ,-:ycltng project In
Houolng hu a low pooltlor.1_,_
llj>X. 3,6 houfo f)W -i
fo, Sp,1ng
Ouwtw. AppUcant1 muat be work-atudy

welcome.

quantled.
For morw

--

lnform■Uon

call Leon at

(u ooon u possible).

SELF-DEFENSE FOR WOMEN
Member9 of the F.mlnl ■t Karate Union
and the LNblan Caucul .... gtvlng •
frH thr ... hour work1hop on rape
...........
and IIIUH Ind technlqUN
ol Nll-.,N.
It will bl -Id
lou<
tlmee 10 thaJ u many women •

pc,oalblecon att_,
Monday,Man:h8,
-•
CAC 202: W-.
March 8,
-•
CAC 202; Thuroday, March 9,
7,30 p.m., L3112, F-y,
Man:h
10, 3,00 p.m .. l3112.

Ther9 will be a mwtlng tor 1tudent1
who .,. lnt.,.ted
In the STUDY TOUIII
OF EUthto sumnw on Monday,
Morch 8 at 4,00 In LIB2:208. Contact
C3of'donBectl: at -...
or In COmm

323.

WANTED: 2 1tudlnt1 and 1 faculty
member to Nl'W on a DTF charged
with looklrig Into the n>'e and practloN
or the KAOS Advl1ory CommlttH.
PJMN contact TonL C.: Holm at ~
5107 o, through KAOS Box tt8 II you
■n lnt.,.ttd
In Nrttng Of ha\111com,
ment, augg,eatlons.

°'

The women·, CHnlc will bll 8P0nlOI'·
Ing another ABORTION su,,o,n
OAOUP on Tuuday, Marci'I 7 at 8:30
In the Board Room, LIB 3112. All
women.,. Invited. For morw Inform■,.
Uon cat! tht Women'• Clink: at eee,.
8238, o, st<>o
by SEM 2t 10.

Oasslfied
boll point pen
In Lecture Hall 2. Owner', name
engrl!Yed on pen. P9f'I hu MntlmentaJ
value. PtN.N catl 456-6841 ...,Ing,.
REWARD Gold Croa

~

Two -udy

An lntonneUonal mNtlng on MODERN AIIT AND IIIODEIN UR wm...
plooe In the 8IIOOloungeol the Ulnry

10,00e.m. on Friday,lot.-, wlll bl~
on -

, end a

at

·-

The Servk:ea and Activities Board
meeta on Wedneaday, March 8 at lil:00
In LIB 3112. The Board wUI revtew
design drawtng ■ of CAB-PHASE II and
poulbly
make a decision on how
much money. If any, to ■pend on the
remodellng and upanslon
ol the
College Activities Building. Everyone

"'""

-

I.

~

Thad Cuftt.

lmmldlately.

-

-

-

-3157 loglololho9-·

growth

,_

Call -

intePn1ezzo

212 v-·estfourth

943-7668
GILA

'friday, march 3

7-10 pm

confer-

ol
cloNiy

at

S1.Cl0 cover

refills 1/2 price after B

m-w 9-7 m.

th.sat

11-10

SixIIIOl8reasons
tosfil,p
atBadget:
I.A'lftY r~ei:tiDn
«~-outs'best
IMrgalns
nnl.
1.A~,lht-to-el.Ps-l!pllf,...l,palty.
3.Allge,~action
ol.,_ openr.ln-ttere
lslriig.
4.~ a911111
stare
lilha~ staff
- not"lig,lnlplll'lllftlll
~
s.h asale- t1t1es-. .. liesdap.
6.T1ie "~-,
oft-lhitslsdie-,._.

*'

~~.L,,
~9e-9181

poelttono _,_

doing ~ -·
-ptannlng, writing on
highw -Ion.
WIii -,.

cafe

h

Point--

Tllo~

-

2, 1171

7

-~----2,1171

Lett
2
C tin!i.-pag,•
a~ showing films for their own
purposes!
Re-install the Friday Nite Film
Board!
Burton S. Freed
•However 1
enjoyed Hitchcock
nite immensely.

Homologous
Organs
To the Editor:
RE: James Thomas' inane letter
last week:
Ifs hard to take anything serious written about women by a
man who thinks that uterus(es)
and balls are homologous organs.
Don Humphries protegee, Mugsy

MUSIC

Friday & Saturday, March J&4
OBRADOR High brud iuz from
coltranf' to ongmals
Thur!l.d.iv March 9
BARBRA LILES ~lightful

dramatic

rtadmgs of ch1ldrens storie5

Friday & Saturday, March 10 &: 11
ROUND TOWN GIRLS Folk tuM5

GNU DELI is located in
downtown Olympia on the
corner of West Thurston
Avenue and Capitol Way.

Performances begin at nine p.m.
A one dollar cover will be uked
to support the performers.

S&A Needs
Response
To the Editor:
We are writing this letter as
members of the Services 5t
Activities Board. As members of
the Board we are responsible for
making decisions concerning a
little less than half-a-million
dollars. We are concemffi about
student opinion. We would like
to know what students want
funded. How can we discover
studen~ priorities7 In the past the
ServLes & Activities Board has
US<'dan opinion poll published in
the Cooper Point Journal. Last
year there were only one
hundred and twenty-five responses.
The Services .tr Activities
Board is stru,utling with how to
elicit response. In our more discouraged moments we have even
considered making funding decisions without student input, such
as having a roulette wheel and
tossing dice, but this is only
when we are discouraged. We
want to keep alive the Evergreen
philosophy of community, and
making decisions responsive to
community needs and desires. If
you have any suggestions on
how to elicit response from students please contact the Services
&: Activities Board. There is a
mailbox on the third floor of the
CAB in the Activities Office.
LAIi 305. II you take the time to
respond we will act on your
suggestion.
Services&:
Activities Board:
Angell
Dale Crouse
Joyce Baker
Steve Francis
Donna Haye,
Charlene McQuarrie
Philip Jones
Mary Kalihi

Joyce

spoons from
columbla ..
baskets from
africa ... and other
goodies ... we may
have something
tor you.

P .S. Come to the Board gatherings on Wednesdays at 9: 00
a.m. Location will be posted on
the 'Today' board. We'd love to
see you.

: 30-5: 30
ay-satu rday
52-0700

Explaining
The L.C.
Statement
To the Editor:
As a skeleton of our points of
unity. I don't expect the Lesbian
Caucus statement to be readily
understood by the average CPJ
reader. The formation of our

LHTifHlffl

politics has requi~
years of
study, thought, and discussion.
A public explanatory statement
would be a book. At this time,
however, I want to address the
two most frequently asked questions-WHA T, lesbianism is polit ica1777 and, Do you think
heterosexuals are creeps7
There is a difference between
the term heterosexual (heterosexual individuals and their behavior) and the term used in the
statement-the institution of heterosexuality. The statement made
no remarks about heterosexuals
or heterosexuality, and certainly
did not define it as the cause of
women's oppression.· The statement describes how political lesbianism can be employed as a
weapon against the sexism in our
society. (We assume an unwritten understanding that sexism is
one tool of "the system.") The
institution of Heterosexuality is
one facet of sexism.
Heterosexuality is institutionalized in that it is accepted as an_
all-pervasive,
exclusive norm
outside of which most people
cannot see or imagine. It is
locked in place by social, civil,
and criminal law. (All except 13
states have law'S making horn~
sexual acts illegal.) Within a
woman-hating society, the institution of heterosexuality is a
woman-hating institution. The
effect is that most women (and
here remember that TESC is not
the universe) can see no options
to male-dominated heterosexual
coupledom.
Among those who acknowledge
the institution of heterosexuality,
the sickness of male supremacy,
and other facets of sexism, some
choose to work on these within
heterosexual relationships. Others become lesbians or faggots
by political choice. This "choice"
is sometimes made at a young
age without the verbal abilities
to explain one's sensitivity to
sexism. It is sometimes made
atter years of het(Tosexual marriage.
Political lesbianism, specifically, is more than a sexual preference. It is a belief system and a
strategy for social change. When
women ~ome
self-loving and
women-loving and self-identified
and women-identified-it
challenges a society in which both
men and women are supposed _to
take their identity from men.
The personal becomes political in
a very real way when women
commit themselves, their time,
energy, emotional selves . . . to
each other.
Joyce Kilmer

Geographical
Jurisdiction

Westside Center
352-0720

Iffi(O)(O)~

10 to 6
Mon. thru Sat.

To the Editor:
At 6:15 p.m. on Saturday,
February
18, I started out
through Ash toward the swimming pool. It was very black and
after I got to the Rec building. I
called Security to ask if someone
could be called about the lights
before I walked back. The man
who answered said that Ash was
off campus and it was not his
responsibility. I explained that
given there had been an assault
in the Ash parking lot, and given
that I did not know who to call
about the night lighting. I was
asking i£ he could check around
and find out. He was most relectant and seemed resentful about
my request. He was very clear
about his responsibility as to the
geographical limits of the campus.

Lest anyone think this letter is
about lighting, let me continue
by saying it is not. It is about an
attitude. The people who have
been assaulting other people this
last month have not checked to
see who has jurisdiction geographically. Therefore, I think it
is important to know if there are
agencies and people here who
say they care, but really do not.
It might be a life and death
matter.
Sincerely,
Mary Long

Down With
Machines
To the Editor:
So, there I was walking out of
the CAB building. luckily, talking and whistling were taking up
my attention. Had the full awareness crept, snuck, or smacked
into my partner's and my consciousness the result would have
been some deviant prank. Revenge of the ears! In ordinary
woods on foggy winter-spring
mornings birds and squirrels
chirp. At Evergreen engines roar.
Gas and Electric. As I walked
back to the CAB from the Communications building at 10: 00
there were 7 motorized muscle
de--<levelopingnoise makers parked at the CAB lower entrance.
Peat moss spread on an 8' X 30'
strip by a back hoel Hire people
not machines. LIT PEOPLE BE
THE BIG NOISE MAKERS.
Respectfully,
Bill E. Boy

Praising
Consciousness
Raising
To the Editor:
James Thom•• doesn't like
consciousness raising. As he tells
us in a letter to the editor last
week, feminists should limit
themselves to fighting for political and legal rights only. Only
for these goals is a collective
consciousness justified and no
further, so he .. y,, explaining
that the conscious evaluation of
the world must be fa~ alone.
This is true. But because women
face similar problems it is not
surprising that they come to
similar conclusions. The basic
conclusion is that our society
defines men as human but
women as female. The oppres-sion that stems from this goes far
beyond law and politics; it is
deeply ingrained in the social
fabric. Consciousness raising is
simply the process of bringing
this to light. It Is the process of
changing the question from
'What's wrong with me7" to
'What's wrong7"
But James Thomas is opposed
to this change. He is opposed to
the very language of feminism
because he claims it obscures
thought, but he is not opposed
to the languaae of sexism, presumably because it aids in
rational discussion.
He says
"sexism", "heightened feminist
consciousness", and "oppreuion
that is common to all women"
are "unmanned notions" and that
they are language which "does
not describe experience". Presumably
the words
"girl",
"chick", and "babe" are more
useful tools since h• object to the
fight against their usage. P~
sumably the girls who teach

many of the programs
at
Evergreen would agree, as well
as the chicks who enroll in them.
He tells women that they
should only "DESCRIBE" their
personal ex)"rience. Throughout
history women have been asked
to pretend that they have no
analytical abilities. He 5"Y5 that
feminism does not app)y to
interpenonal relationships. ls he
saying that Madison Avenue
advertising does7 As Aldous
Huxley 5"ys, "Sixty-two thousand four hundred repetitions
make one truth." Television
perpetrates distortions and outright lies which can only be
fought by the recognition and
the understanding of them, i.• ..
consciousness raising.
So why doesn't
feminism
apply to private life, James
Thomasl After all, where does
legal and political oppression
come from1 How about the facts
of life this time instead of that
old story about the birds and the
bees.
Heidi Wirt

FILM
ON CAMPUS
THURSDAY, MARCH 2
LUCIA 11 a atrlklngly dramatic fllm
which tella the atorlea of three
women's llvea during three periods of
reYOlutlon and aoclal change In Cuba.
Moat Interesting la the third aequence,
set In relattv&ly modem day Cuba, In
which machismo
h11 a head-on
colllalon with "The Revolution."LH
one 7 p.m. Free,

'
I

Another episode or !he Sea11Ie An
Museum's PHOTOGRAPHY '78 program will untold Thursday. March 2 al
8 p.m. In Old Architecture Hall at the
UW. COLE WESTON, !he tounh son of
noted photographer. the late EDWARD
WESTON, wHI !lluminale THE WORK
OF EDWARD WESTON In a slide-illus•
tra!ed lecture. For lurlher information
~~~;'~~cDonald
or Susan McAlllater,

FRIDAY, MARCH 3
ORPHEE (1Qe0) Jeon (THE BEAUTY
AND THE IEAST) Cocteaua' film
adaptation of hla one-act play, a
twentieth
century version of the
Orpheusmyth. In this mm Orpheua Is
a celebrated poet who la lured Into hell
by Death, a myaterloua princess with
black INther clad motorcycllat, at her
beck and cell. The film explores some
of Cocteau's favorite themes: nan:laalsm, death, and a poet's attempt to
exist both In the real world and In the
realm of the aplrlt and Imagination. LH
one 3, 7, and 9:30, 75 cent,.

LECTURES
ON CAMPUS
DA. JOHN AIKIN, director of Evergreen's Computer Services. will discuss
COMPUTER INTELLIGENCE, what 11
means to be Intelligent, and how one
might recognize an intelligent computer, In a tree publlc lecture al 8 p.m. on
March 7 In the Recllal Hall of the Communications Bullding.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 8
HESTOR STREET (1975, 92 min.) Dlrected by Joan Mlcklln SUV8f (BETWEEN THE LINES). This film uses a
series of sharp, brief Incidents to show
the palnful and comic Americanization
of two Ruaalan Immigrant, llvlng on
lhe Lower Eutekie of New York after
the tum of the century. LH one 1 : 30
and 7:30 p.m .. Free.
IN OLYMPIA
I NEVER PROMISED YOU A ROSE
GARDEN 1tar1 Kathleen Oulnlan as a
schizophrenic girt and Bibi Anderson
as her therapist In this film, taken from
the novel by Hannah Greene. Through
March 7. Starting March 8 DEASU
UZALA. Kurosawaa 1'178film comes to
the Cinema. The fllm la about a group
of mappers guided by an old trapper
through the snow fllled fo,est1 of
Czarist Russia. It Is reported to be
visually
stunning.
The Cinema,
943-5914.
THE GOODBYE GIRL la 11111
at the
Slate. Nell Simon's latest rewrite of
the 00D COUPLE lnvolvea a slightly
used and abused dancer (femaJa) and
an earnest actor from out~f-town who,
through an amusing twist or fate, find
themselves sharing an apartment. After
trading
Insults and sharing
the
bathroom for, whlle, they fall In IOYe.
Where are Oscar and Felix now that we
need them? 357-401o.
FIRST LOVE starring Susan Dey (of
Partridge Family tame) and what's-hi.,_
name, the lucky fellow who took
CARRIE to the prom) and THE 110
BUS (which Is sort of llke AIRPORT n
but different)
are playing at the
Capltal, 357-11a1.
LOOKING FOR MR. GOODBAR hat
been "coming IOOn" to the Otymplc for
many months and It has finally an1Yld.
What can I say about It? ll WIii m■ke
you feel rotten for twenty mlnutn or
so after MNHng It. ll makes the book
look gOOd. It has 11'1 moments, both
gOOdand bed, See II tor Keaton If you
see It at all. Not a gOOdmovie to aee If
you're In a bad mooel to start with.
357-3A22.

Peccant
Pedantry
To the Editor:
James Thomas You still insist on using
complex arguments
to make
simple points. And your simple
points are totally useless. Oh
well. Pedantry has always been
the mode in the halls of the
uninformed intellectual.
A member of the
anti-pedant brigade

Punk Sociology
To the Editor:
I have recently come to the
conclusion, based on 2-1/2 years
at Evergreen, that the women
here follow a pattern that we'll
call (for the sake of commercialism) Sexual Encounters of The
Third Kind. It goes something
like this: Patricia started her first
year at Evergrft:n much like any
college freshman. She socialized,
met people, and explored her
new found freedom. Her first
sexual encounter was with a man
named Joe. It was at a dorm
party and they were fairly
drunk. She woke up in his bed
the next morning alone. She 5"t
up and saw Joe coming out of
the bathroom. "Hi, what was
your name againl" he mumbled.
Angry and disillusioned, she
bolted from Joe's place and
headed for the
Evergreen
Women's Center in hopes of
finding guidance and support.
little did she know what kind of
guidance and support she would
get.
Patty was talked into attending a sistn-hood awareness meeting, where the sisters all sat
around yelling lesbians unite,
and then did. It was at the Lesbian Caucus that Pat had a sexual encounter of the second
kind.
~arrying the weight of moral
dilemma on her shoulders, she
walked into the Third World
Coalition and found salvation. It
was here that Patricia met
Mugsy and Butch, a pair of
siamese twins. The chemistry
was just right and Pat had a
sexual encounter of the third
kind. Never had she hit so
fullfilled and contented. She
found inner peace. . . and the rest
of the story ... 1 You guessed it.
Siamese Twins Unitel/1
A.C. Maleinski

trends ln Nonhwes1 art." Four Seattle
artisla-KETIH BECKLEY, JEFFREY 11SHCP, DENNIS EVANS, and CHARLES
LUCE-are each exhibiting one major
piece. The show·• theme Is the lntetractionof visual and per1o,mlng ans
and/or experimentation with tradltlon1I
media and lormal presentation. Continues through March 17. 4'17-4729.

tN SEATTLE
MY FAVORITE WIFE (1940) with
Cary Grant Is at the Rose Bud Movie
House this coming weekend. It was
deacrlbed by the telephone recording
as "'one of those screwball 1940'a
comecUes" twice In the two minute
message. In this screwball 1940's
comedy, Cary Grant's first wife who
ha.abeen missing for eighl years reappears on the night of hla wedding 10
his second wife. Like I said, It's one or
those screwball 1940'1 comectlet.
THE LACEMAKER 11 a film dlra;ted
by Claude Goretta (THE WONDERFUL
CROOK). In It a 19-year-old beauty
parlor aaslatant goes on vacation and
fall• In love with a university atudent.
It's French. (Subtitles too.) Harvard
Exlt.~7.
COMA. I know It's sleazy, but I had
to throw 1h11one In. This la a modem
day body-1netcher movie. lt'a a NCOnd
cousin to air, boat, and skyscraper
dlauter movies. In It a surgical realdent at • Boaton hoapltal (Genevieve
Bujc>id)dltcoverl that heelthy patlenta
hoapltallzed for minor operations go
Into Irreversible coma, and are shipped
off to a llfe support facility. It adds a
new dimension lo ■ppenc:Ucltla-para­
nola. Playing at varioua theetera In the
Seeule area.

MUSIC

ON CAMPUS
OLD TIME COUNTRY DANCING? It's
•WI happening ~ Wednesday at 8
nd nd
11
P•m • w llh a IIve ...
us
a
ca er on lhe
firs! flOOf of the Library Bulldlng.
"Allve and Klckln'." Donations appre-elated.
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!
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•'

SHAKLEECENTER

MISCELLANEOUS

On Thuflday, Match 2 (tonight) THE
EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE ENSEMBLES will present a concert at 8
p.m. In the Communications BuUdlng
Recital Hall. Under the direction of
Faculty Musk:lan Oreg Steinke, the
group will play compo11ttona by Aschaffenburg, Bartok, Debusaey, Mllhaud,
Poulenc and RaYel, u well 81 plecea
by TESC student musicians.
On Saturday, MI/Ctt 4 on the 4th
floor of the Library, •Chautauqua will
present "A full evening of en1ertalnment," beginning at 7:30 p.m. Entertainment wlll Include a dance piece, a
theatre piece with spring as 1t1 theme,
GREGG EARNST and RALPH JOHNSTON on lazz guitar, and QEOAOIA
ROSE (a country rock & bluee/funk
band). Thoae wishing to consume beer
or wine should bring proper ldentlHcallon. S1.50 at the door.
IN OLYMPIA
Olympia High School will presen!
their 1prlng musical, ONCE UPON A
MATTRESS by Rogerw& Ban,r, March
2-4. Curtain at 8 p.m. Adulta $3, students S1.50.

TAYS, GRANOLA JOINTS A MISC IN
OLYMPIA

On Saturday, March 4, at 8 p.m.,
Seattle'• first "new w■Ye" rock club
open1 featuring THE MENTORS, TH£
TELEPATHS, and THE ENEMY (forrne,.
ly the world famous FRUITLAND
FAMINE BAND). Tho place: THE BIRD
CO., 107 Spring St. (belWNn 1at and
2nd) In downtown Seattle. The place
IOOks promising, the bands are gOOd,
•and you don't have to dress up stupid
In order to get In. Call 325-0214 tor
more Information.

A Conlemporary Theatre, 709 Firsl
AYe. West. Seattle, has scheduled
HENRY IV PART I by Shakespeare as
its first play ot the season, to be produced May 11 through June 3. Contact
Louise Mortenson. ~3220,
lor more
information.

OOH EATON wlll be appearing at
The Comer (In the dorms) on the 7th of
March at 7 p.m. Eaton will perform an
experlentlal concert.

The Seattle Art Museum Modem Art
Pavilion bills its NEW IDEAS show as
..an exhibition reflecting contemporary

ART

IN SEATTLE

IN OLYMPIA
THE CRABSHELL ALLIANCE Is
sponsoring a poUuck and mlormat1on
meeting for people Interested in knowIng more about the planned relcamation
of the Satsop nuclear plant site (10
take place June 24). Focus wilt be on
allinity group structure. Al the Gnu
Dell In downtown Olympia, Sunday.
March 5 beginning 81 2.
DEATH ANO DYING wilt be the
subjec1 of a noon rneellng and discussion a1 the Olympia Public Library
Monday, March 6 Sponsored by the
Washington Association lor Holistic
Health, the meeting wlll feature DAN
MCCAUGHAN of Mills and Mills
Funeral Service as guest speaker In
conjunction with this meeting TESC
Facully Member BILL ALDRIDGE and
LINDA DAVIS, A. N .. will offer a threeday workshop entitled, CELEBRATION
OF LIFE IN THE MIDST OF DEATH,
March 10 through 12. The workshop
wlll explore feelings and at1Itudes
associated with death and dying. and
costs S3()...$40 For more inlorma11on or
to preregister, call 943-5755 or 352•
4641.
IN SEATTLE
The Friends ol WIiderness announce
a worttshop to be conducted by JOE
WALICKI, Northwest Regional Represenlative of !he Wilderness Society
Joe wilt present the various ways citizens can have Input In the wilderness
preservation process. The workshop
will be olfered twice on March 8. at
1 :00 and 7:00 p.m., Library 2it8 at
The Evergreen State Coll8Qe. The workshop Is free and open to all. For more
information contact Bev Brown at 8661762.
The South Branch of the FREEDOM
_SOCIALIST PARTY will hold a memorial
meeting in honor of Malcolm x Marer
4. 6 p.m at the Firs! AME Church
1522 141h AYe The meeting will begin
with a soul food dinner 6.32-7449

IN SEATTLE
DAVE BRUIECK, March 10 at the
Paramount Northwest.

THEATER
ON CAMPUS
The Experlmental Theater, with a
cut of 13 Evergreen ltudents, will
perform EQUUS under the direction of
Faculty Member AIHARA WILDER In
the Communications Bulldlng March 2,
3, 4, 5, 9, 10, 11, and 12, at 8 p.m.

Applefam hoeta • apllt show on Friday, MOrch 3, of VAN ROZAY FROM
IN TACOMA
SAN HOZE (0,d time country & orlgln■ ls), and PAT GILL" (rag pk:klng gul•
STEPHANIE RICH, actress/ mime
tarlat). DOAIAR DAN TAMBURICA
artist, wlll present a free public perforlAND and the AUZICE CHOIR, both
mance sponsored by the Tacom•Plerce
from Seattle, will perform on Saturday,
County Civic Arts Commission Friday,
March 4. 220 E. Union. Main Act at g
March 3 at 8 p.m. In the Tacoma Pubp.m., mtnor1 welcome.
lie Library Auditorium.
Cafe Intermezzo presents GILA on
IN SEATTLE
Saturday, March 4 from 7-10 p.m. 212
The Peccadlllo Players are presenting
W. 4th, ~7668.
GIibert and Sulllvan'a tOLANTHE on
Captain Coyotes highlights the rock
March 10 and 11 at the McEachem
band SHAKER through March 4. 2410
Auditorium. $2.00. Call 784-8078.
W. Ha.n1ton. 3S7◄191.
Seattle artlll KAIS WHEELER wlll
Gnu Dell presents SID IROWN (8 &
give a dance performance Friday.
12 airing, banjo, aarOde) with SUSAN
March 10 at 8 p.m. In room 307 of the
CILIIAEATH (vibes & pen:::uulon) on
College Recreation Center. WhHler
Thursday, March 2 at g p.m. See lldverwill also conduct a CONTACT IMPROtlaement In thla laaue for weekend 1111- VISATION WORKSHOP Saturday and
Inga. Comer of Weal Thurston Avenue
Sunday, March 11 and 12 from 2 10 5
nd ~-•It I W
•••
T
a
........,o
ay. -1371.
p.m. o register contact Laura MIiiin at
Richard• Roundhouae feetura the
868-6056 or 584-8240. Tickets for
dlaco band SMYLE throughout the
Wheeler's performance are $2; the
weekend. 456-2222.
w011(shopcoeta $10.
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EDITOR

BUSINESSMANAGER

John Keogh

Nathaniel Koch

MANAGING EDITOR

PRODUCTION MANAGER

Mandy Mcfarlan

Dana Leigh Squir-es

FEATURESEDITOR
Nancy Ann Parkes

SECRETARY
Joyce Baker

ADVERTISING MANAGER
Gre-g Hutcheson
The COOPER POtNT JOURNAL Jt Plib'lthed -ly
tor th9 stuctenta tacuity
and 1taff or The Ewwg,wn su .. College, Olympu, WHhlnglon ll505.
u::
prMMd arw not ,_....rtly
thoM of The E-,_.,
State eoia-...._ .._...__Isl-.,..
__, l)IWentad het'II doN
·-·•
._.. ......,..._, .._
OffloN
" ...__ not necea■rfly Imply .. IClorsem$al by thla 11ewpope,,
arw 1Gealad 1n .. .., Co4teoeActt.ltlff luUdlng (CAI) 308. Hews phone:
118·1213. Adwenlllng and butlnaes phone: 811.
. Letters policy: All ._,ten to
the edUor muat be ~ by noon Tueedly for8080
that WNII'• pubHcatlon Letters
must be typed, doubfe.apecect, and «JO wont• or leu. Let..,. ••-_
wont. ma bl edltad for
N
... -.,
_. __.._ -·-··.
• an,,eewlll
wl

y.._.

20% off retail price on all food supplements from mar 2 to mar 11--~;;;;-;h;~--~~-~~~~------···•-----'·

• baby and skin care products
•natural food supplements
•b1'odegradable cleaners
•proteinized beauty aids
noon to six weekdays
ten to two saturday
3578262
retail wholesale
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