cpj0182.pdf
Media
Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 6, Issue 22 (May 4, 1978)
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Faculty
Guidelines
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Evergreen Hosts
Energy Exposition
Faculty seminars and the makeup of hiring committees were
among the issues discussed during a faculty meeting on
Wednesday, May 3.
These issues came up in a discussion of further revisions of the
new Faculty Handbook. A DTF was formed during the spring of
1977 to undertake a review of the current faculty handbook.
bringing forward recommendations
for changes. The new
document is intended to improve faculty self-governance and put
less weight on administrative evaluation, according to a memo
written by Academic Dean Will Humphreys last spring.
The new handbook, presented at the mttting by the DTF
group, says that teachers should involve themselves regularly in
faculty seminan in which "Faculty draw upon their respective
areas of expertise to share view points. and offer criticism on the
at hand." The handbook goes on to stole, 'The seminars
of teaching, but repremt
an important
scholarly activity, and in part roplac• th• 'publish or perish·
1111,ject
are not discussions
syndrome p~vaJmt at other institutions."
Seminar members an to negotiate a covenant, including a list
of materials to be covered. and then notify the deans of their
arrangements.
The document
makes it clear that these
arrangements are not intended to prevent individual scholarship.
U a teacher wants to pursue individual research instead, he or she
should submit a plan to the deans for "acknowledgement."
Faculty members questioned this provision, wondering what
constitutes "scholarly activity" and, more specifically, who will
decide. One commented, "I feel that as it stands now, 'appropriate
activity' is subject to the interpretation of the particular deans we
happen to have." Peta Henderson also had some reservations
about this point. "Just posing an extreme case. suppose I want to
study something that I feel is very important to my intellectual
development and the dean does not7 It seems we have to rely on
some kind of benevolence from somewhere, .. she said.
It was pointed out that deans couldn't actually forbid faculty to
undertake certain projects, but if they persisted over a number of
quarters they could indirectly endanger their jobs. Bob Filmer
mnarked of the handbook, "Frankly I find the whole documen1
MUSIC
ON CAMPUS
On Thursday, April 'll, there will be
CAPTAIN COYOTES la fHturlng
RAIL & COMPANY through
the
weekend. TOULOUSE COITIMWed,...._
a benefll dance featuring the NO TOY
BOYS from 8 • 12 p.m. In the CAB
Cafeteria (Saga). Proceeds wlll benefit
a Reclamation and Legal Rally at the
Salaop Nuclear Site, to be held on
day. 2410 W. Harrleon, 3S7-4191.
AtCHAAO"S ROUNDHOUSE 11111has
SAUSOUTO thl1 weekend. ~2222.
June 2,. St .50
blues. 123 W. 5th. 7~9945.
There will be no lame Jokee about
lhe OREENWOOO INN thl1 week. They
On Friday, April 28, a benefit contor the ENEROY NORTHWEST
CONFERENCE wlll be held at 8 p.m.
on the second floo, of the Lltnry
Bulldlng.
FHturlng
NO CAMHAILE
and
THE
HURRICANE
RIDGE
RUNNERS with 1r1,n and tradlUonal
American music. Advance tickets can
be purchued at Rainy Day Record•.
and the Gn11Dell for $2.
On Saturday, May 6, the BEAUX
ARTS COSTUME BALL la happening at
'3 o'clock on the fourth floor of the
_1bfary Dancing wm be lo two bands,
GEORGIA ROSE, and the CAAAf9£AN
C8f1
SUPER STARS
The PUB TAVERN brings you RAIN
!his weekend, performing rttythm and
are feeturlng a FASHION SHOW on
Wednesday. The band IIAJAC continues nlghtly.
CAFE INTERMEZZO leeturea MIA
ALEXANDER Saturday at 1 p.m. and
from 8 to 10. Mla pefforma ortglnaJ
acouatlc guitar and voc:a6music.
ON CAMPUS
ECCENTRIC ART, an exhibit reflect•
Ing lhe talenta of 21 NorthWNt-,11te,
Is still on dlaplay at the Library
Gallery. Wonh a look.
Fndlly, April 28. Anyone la welcome to
come and do a Ian-minute spol. No
Penelope Allen-Chac,man, and L. Maki, la on ahow at the CoUector'a
Gallery, 2103 W. Harrlaon, through
9,U.1371
IN SEATI'L;E
The
A DIBARIIAIIENTCONFERENCE
production
la frM and wlll
hlghHght the Ar11 and Communlcatlona
lnlormatlon Day.
LECTURESAIIDPO£TIIY
IN OlYMP1A
The Center For Llt.,.tura In Pwf~
ance 11 apontor1ng two ...,,t,
thla
WHk In the CAB COIINhOUH.
OMENKAI FRIENDS:YOICO FIIOII
AFRICA,will be rNd on Thuraday,
Ap,11 71. WILLWII EVE,__
I
IN OlYMPIA
CURRENT ART IN OLYMPIA, INtur-
ing the worka of Gloria CrouH,
May ...
Prints and bruahwOfk ~Ina
by
RUSS HAMAMOTO, and pe,lntlnga on
paper by JEAN HARRINGTON .,. on
dlaplay at the Chlldhood'aEnd GaJlery
through May 31. 222 W. 4th.
POLITICS
IN OLYMPIA ~
Janet Suther\llnd, founding member
of the EMtslde Femlnllt Alliance,wlll
•on Tl!£ 11011CHUIICH:
RIGHT
WINO
IIIIBIDNARIEI
.AGAINSTWOIIENTll....-y,
Apnl 71
at F,.....,
Hall, 3115-6th A... N.E. at
8:30 p.m. For Information, childcare,
or traneportatlon, call 832-1815.
Thera will bra a demonetratton at the
Capitol on F""°V,
Apnl 28. Tllll wlll
auppoirtof the demOnat,.
tlon happening at Rocky Ftate, COio.
be held In
Call eeo-e,91 for detalta.
ENERGYNOflTHWEIT,
an expoe.,_
tlon concerning energy
THEATER
ON CAMPUS
HARD TIMES, a theat« group from
Seattle, wlll be on campu1 WednNday,
May 3, to perform • ,,_ vaudewttle
UH and
app<<>C)riall technok>gy, WIii bra hekt In
Olyffl1)LaMay 5th, Ith and 7th. The
event tocu... on the appt~llty
of
1olar energy. S1mlnar1, fllma and
apeekerawill bra fNtured. FOfInforma-
tion caU 886-8191.
$.
_.04.
~
SHUFFELBOARD
fl I I A
/---tv'"Lvo
~ " >~)
,.....I
POKER
210 E. 4th
753-9944
t
/jJea ~ogue•
<ia.Uerv
of ~en'•
•
;Jlirintvlms
...
,. .-ng.
Mel
It ogoln. Showing with
while _..
-
-
UNl'nllll
~AOAENT,which (I
woukt g!JN.1} you can ■- ~ yearon TV. 7:06 and 9:06 at tho Caf)ltol.
Sun Day, Evergrttn will hoot the
IN SEATTLE
At
the
by Nancy Ann ParkH
ln celebration of International
Neptune,
Bernardo
Energy Northwest Exposition on
May 5, 6, and 7. Nobel Peace
Prize nominee Amory Lovins
Bartoluoc:1'1 1•
,,_
,.. o,q,octod
Seattle combeck, 7:15 only.
If by chanoe you
want to IN STAii
WAIIB ogaln, you owe It to yo,Mwt to
IN It at the UA a,...,,. 1eG In 70mm
Dolby .....
, t :45, 4:30, 7:t5 and
9:40.
II JULIA (the uNUthonnd \l'lf'llon of
o omoll port a4 Lllllon Holl,_,.,
Ille)
will be one of many experts in
the field of alternative energy to
speak at the three-day conference.
Critic's P'OU,beet FOfWgnFIim of
1955, ahowlng with a LAVES IN
and 9:10? Y•.
of the national best...,ller "Soft
Energy Paths". will offer a
BONDAGE, • --lhort
lllm, Frtdoy,
""'11 28 at 3:00, 7:00 and 9:30, 75
cents. L.H. 1.
•
Fll.118
ON CAMPUS
The Friday Nile FIim ~ pt9e1nta
Henry-GeorgH
Clouzot'• LES DIA-
BOUCIUU (tho Flenda} which to,
the t.thtub whet PSYCHOdid few the
.,_,
-Ing
to 0wy Alon Moy a4
the FNF. Winner of the New Ycwtc: allll ahowlng at the Guild '5th at 7:00
AtTHECINEMA,lt'a OVTIU.QfOUI,
• comedy thot ,_
boon ,_y
compeAMI to Harotd and Maude-It'• a
1to,y obout • ochl2of)lnnlc gl~
and._...,
, ......
What wlll tho nolg,_.
and 9:30.
At Tl!E STAff,
(who ,_
thlnlc? 7: 00
JULIA ..,,_
town,a t'nO'M made
tho _,,.
,_,.,_
to
from the 1tory of
name by Lllllon Hollinon
dloomod thot they wouldn't
"'°"'"
chonga ~ghll)
tho -- and - dlrec:l«t
""" by
- Frad
tho
Zlnnaman. 7:00 and 9:211.
All -,.
won't laugh oU a4 tho 11..
11 HIGH ANXIETY. HI-
will laugh at leut
...
doN,
r-.
onoe when no one
and WIii
r
moetly 1Hent
Randy Flnloy'1 11111
going 11,ong (fo,
little
guy) with Cacoyannle'
IPHIOENIA
ot Tho and
IWIOlD AIID IIAUDE II Tho .,_.
mont. lph'-lo
et 7: 00 and 9: t 5;
-
IN OLYMPIA
'f
PULL TABS
In S.ttle thla Wllakend,
April 28 through 30. WO<l<ahopoand
Iota of Information.
Call Seattle
525-1213 fot men detalla. A carpoot
may bo .-nngoc, from Olympia on
Se1=;
coll Glen al "'1-eo83.
:i
r--)
POOL
wlll take place
••
CHATTERBOXTAVERN
>l-
•u
HOTCHKISS,
two Internationally
known poets, wlll f'Nd on Monday,
May 1.
ART
TAVS, GRANOLA JOINTS, A MISC.
IN OLYMPIA
The APPLEJAM FOLK CENTER la
"laving an OPEN MIKE NIGHT on
dOOf charge on Friday. Saturday, the
tool slomplng BLACK HILLS EXPRESS
is appewinQ el the Cent.-. Located el
lhe YMCA, 220 East Union Strwt,
Olympia.
The ONU DELI ia feeturlng TEASY
RYKEN doing old lime country music
on fiddle, Thursday, April 27. On
Frid•y and Saturday, the Dell la
presen!lng new wave Jazz plenlat
MICHEL MICHELETTI, doing ortglnal
compositions
end lmprova. Performances begin at 9 p.m. Comer of
Thurston Ave. and Capito! Way,
AMN1In the llbfwy lobby at 12:30.
(-
and -
et 7:00 and 8:!lO.
to montlonJULIA.-
-·
Enotl Flynn'1 CAPTAIN aLDOD and
IIOIIIN HOOD_,, tllllng tho 11111>
left by
Bunuot'1 ONCURE Dtl.lECT ot tho
-
Egypllon, _,,.,..
7:30 and
9:30-lwly.
If thei.'1 one ITIOMthlt you can
-nly
welt to, In Olympie, lfl 8non
DIPolmo'oTlll f'VIIY -•ly
Ing et tho -ton
VIiiage and tho
Ovw1o1<.o
C"-'"ln
llollovuo. No hur,y.
can22 "°'"'
11ooni, 42 -·
copa, 390 barrlcadH
and
·1,ya,_
Iona"-•-
, !17
3,000
kid• trom
No way. ...,.
eeelng the e.t....,
told. SM I WANNA HOLD YOUR
HANDto, IUbotanllatlon, oow "-'1111
et tho Volley i:in..ln,
tho Ctooltoodl
Twin, th• Aurora Cinema and th•
S.. Tac Six. Vartld ehowttmee.
MANHRIN
ff
OPEN7
Lovins, an energy consultant
to President Carter and author
Sunday
afternoon
lecture
on
renewable "soft " resources. The
professor propose that smallscale applications of solar, wind,
and biomass convenion devices
can be used u alterruitives to
non-ffflewable tt10urces or nuclear power, which he feels is
uneconomical as well as dangerous.
According
to Lovins, the
transition to the "soft path"
could be accomplished in as little
as fiv,, decades. In his book he
indicated th.at the changeover to
soft ene'l!Y would be cheaper in
the long run than corporate
power plants, and would serve
to create a multitude: of jobs.
SimsVan de,. Ryan, one of the
country's leading solar an:hitects,
will deliver a keynote ac:ktres, on
Saturday. Van der Ryan was
appointed California State Architect by Governor Jerry Brown.
He is also president of the board
of directon of Farallones Institute, an organization
DAYS
111 N CAPn0L WAY
VI
- VEGETARIAN DISHES
f
ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES
LUNCHEON BUFFET
~ ORDERS TO GO mon-thura
11 :30 - 10:30
~362-a&66
fri
11 : 30 - 12
sat
4 - 12
sun 3 - 10:30
bued on
the prffllis that "people can learn
to build
and live in an
ecologically s.me environment."
Farallonn Institute prof.....
that ~ homea can be fl'ftd
from dopendena on "c:mtrallud
exploitation and waste through a
living connection to tM nurturing valun of soil, sun, biological
growth and decay."
The -idH for the Energy
Expoaition wu born in Ever(ll'ftn' 1 Alternative Energy System• coordinated atudles pro-
gram RV..-.1 month. ago. Facul-
ty physiclat Byron Youtz explains that the major function of
the conference
is "to
make
people in the Northwest awatt
of alternative technologia."
Youtz st.....,. that the confettnce is "a positive celebration
of the sun and a presentation of
ttnewable power rnourca", and
is not intended to be political in
nature. He seems accustomed to
the questioning eyebrows raised
by sceptics who have spent a f~
yean tromping around in the
Northwest mush under a nearconstant flow of rain. Solar
energy HERE777
Although littl• climate data
has been analyzed
here in
Western Washington, the answer
is conditionally yes. Youtz illuminates the possibilities
by
pointing out that Puget Power
has recently
asked for an
increase which wo~ld nearly
dotible its present rates. Because
of the rapidly escalating costs to
the consuma for electricity in
the Pacific Northwest
(until
recently costs have been 30 to 50
percent lower than elsewhere in
the country), solar heating systems have become more eco-
nomically sensible.
Wind and wave enugy syslfflls an also serve as ~ backup
to solar coUecton and advances
in solar technology have made it
HnanciaUy reasonable for home
owntts to instaJI collect.on to
serve ~ of their heating nttds.
'We hope to help people .,.
what
some
of the technical
problems are (with solar en•'l!Y
oystems), and to offer them some
realistic prewntations of alternatives which exist at this time,"
says Youtz. 'Thia," he adds,
"could be anything from a hot
box planter to ,tart vegetablH
early, to solar hou .. deaign."
For thoH who might be
entertaining fantasia of building
a solar deaign ho.,.., oevoral
speaken will be available on
Saturday at 11 a.m. in Lecture
Hall 2. Among them will be
Faculty member Niels Skov,
owner of an awe--inspiring solar
designed home on Eld Inlet th.at's
headed by a collector system the
approximate size of a barn roof.
On a smaller scale, student
John Lang is p,esently engaged
in building a solar design home
with sub-floor wood heating
ducts. Lang will speak Saturday
to be very coercive." He felt that if the faculty seminars weren't to
deal with teaching. he might not be able to discuss for example,
education tht"Ory. Willie Unsoeld explained to Filmer that the
wording about teaching was simply to avoid housekeeping
cLiscussions about program matters. in supposedly scholarly
sessions. Summing up the document's purpose one teacher told the
group the seminar provision is included: "So you'n under
pressure to be in a facuhy Sffllinar, or to be doing some form of
rnearch that yQu can rightecusly cl.aim furt!-.ers your intellectual
development ...
Another
concern voiced during the meeting involved
stipulations in the handbook related to the hiring of new faculty.
The handbook establishes an advising committee to review all
applicants and make recommendations to the deans. Some
disagreement arose over the number of students to be included on
the committee. Byron Youtz told the group, "It seems to me
you're raising a dead herring. I've served on student committees
for years. and never. not even in the 'sixties, was there a student
coalition against a faculty member."
about his design and construeContinued on page 5
Time Is Of The Essence
Members of the Evergreen
Community have been subjected
to a lime warp since early
Sunday morning. when Daylight
Savings Time went into effect.
No two clocks on campus tell
the same time. Although Evergreen students have frequently
argued that lime is a nonexistent
concept man fabricated to soothe
spacophopbia, they seemed quite
lost without it this week.
An undisclosed administrator
and member of the highest
echelon of Evergreen brass was
seen leaving campus at two p.m.
yesterday. With a mild air of
embarrassment he told the Journal he was on his way home for
supper, maintaining
that his
office clock read "five on the
button".
We at the Cooper Point Journal made a firm resolution to get
to the bottom of the clock
mystery. TESC clock watcher
Floyd R. Peppin. who was hired
in 1972 at a salary of $12,396
per year, was unavailable for
comment. The reason for his
absense. we learned, was th.1t his
wife Elma won a trip for two to
Disneyland and the couple will
be vacationing until May 10.
An expert is being Aown in
from Grand Rapids, Michigan,
, and proper clock operation is
expected to be restored
by
Monday. In the meantime Evergrttn administraton advise students to "hang loose."
2 I
Tllo ~ Point Joumot
·r
4, ""
l
•· 1m
i!&cdlfi
~@rrfllIDilEditorialCHATIERBOXTAVERN
LettersD@)fifillll@IIDLettersD@)fiIIDfi@IID.
\-i
Vets Case Is Crucial
Searching For
The Cosmic
Conductor
To the Editor
In 1966 I saw a B/W film on
TV called the Haunting; it was a
psychological thriller with no
blood. disappearing bodies or
ghosts, but rather used as its
b.asis the theory that power
eminates into this plane of life
from some unknown ·spiritual'
plane of existence m different
locations and with diffe1 ent
qualities specialized for the
occurance of the emination. My
unusual studies in parapsychology indicate that there is definite
validity m the seemingly subversive suggestion that there is
indeed such a power that can,
indeed. impinge upon our reality
from without. Marcy lllieda of
world renown has said of this:
'The seemingly subversive suggestion that there is indttd a
spiritual plane of existence which
eminate5 power into this plane of
life through special doorways, or
cracks. in the- cosmic web is
possibly valid." Profe5sor lllieda
has also spoken of the axis
mund1, or the- connection between the- ideal forms (lurking
above the clouds) and the actual
neurotic individual. lf we take
his theory seriously, must not
our own tribal are-a have its own
11
conductor to those forms, to the
place or source of power that
generates the imperfe-ct and
actua.1 beings that we are here on
this plane of life7 Where-could it
bel
It might bf. in the women's
center. It might be in the cooling
tower at the steam plant. or at
the circulation de5k. It might be
m the set and model shop.
I think we can rule these
plac~ out: 1. It's not at the faith
center, that's too obvious. 2. It's
not in the French fry bin at
Saga. 3. It's not in the parkina
and information booth or in any
of the men's toilets that I have
checked. 4. It's not in media loan
(although they do have an
inordinate amount ol power of
their own). 5. It's definitely not
in B donn.
At this writing this writer has
not the answer. Have any of you
readers discovered
the axis
and if so why are you hiding it1
Perhaps the sacred pole has not
been constructed, puhaps it will
be in the new 60,000 seat rock
concert stadium I hear they are
building just in time for next
year's Beaux Arts Ball with Kiss
and Aerosmith, and won't that
bf. fine when they get all the
people finally out of the dorms
so they can fumigate them. Only
then will we know for sure that
the special spot is not hidi.ng
beneath the rug burnt hue-s of
orange.
Very truly yours,
Kent Matowitz
The Advantage
Of Alcohol
To the Editorc
As a student at Evergreen who
is working on alcohol production
for liquid fuel uses I feel
compelled to reply to the artist
of the editorial cartoon accompa.nying the article on alcohol in
last we,eks CPJ. On• of th• fint
lessons of alternative energy
systems is consuvation. Were a
large J)ffCffltage of the trees cut
for the gas guzzlen, it would bf.
immediately obvious that the
values and actions of the society
had to cliang,. Th, damag•
would not be irreperable, as will
be the case whm the oil runs
out. Trees c.an be replanted and
soils can be revived, so that after
a long period of hardship, a
• punishment if you will, we could
continue to use this sourtt of
organic fuels and with respect
perhaps. From our present perspective there are some uses of
petroleum which are unique.
When the supply is gone we
cannot replace it. There is simply
not enough organic raw matfflal
in bio~
to produce sufficient
quantities of lubricants, a.nd how
we are gotna to·do without them
I do not know. Biomass ls a
source of valu.able organic: materials which can be used
indefinitely. All applications of
its use should be implemented so
that we can preserve our supplies
of high quality organics. As for
the allegation that it takes more
energy to produce alcohol than it
contains, these figurn are based
on processes to produce alcohol
for human consumption
and
don't necessarily apply to fu,I
production. The idea that alcohols present problems for the
maintenance of the engine is
simply not true. The city of San
Fransisco used a methanol fueled
(pure methanol) valiant for a
meter reader's cu over a period
of three years with no unusual
maintenance problems. I rest my
case.
Geof Seland
P.S. Het"""""uals Unit•!
Vis1·ons
Of ~shing
Maqtines
~.
To th• Editor.
,
Recently l have noticed a
power eminating jnto th• pavilion through a ditcarded can of
Wilson t~U.
(optic yellow)
that I find myself uncontrollably
drawn to ,ach ..._i,ht at dusk. I
hav• been ~ving
visions of a
special spiritual plan• of exis-
tence filled with ideal tennis
shoes and pieas of pie, automobiles, washing machines and
slugs, winged hones and chariots, pyramids, coffee cups and
finger nail files, ceramic bake
sales and empty hoURS. Does
anyone have any clues as to the
origin or significance or the
paradigitaJ relationship of this
occurance to the rest of lhe
anatomical
universe and in
particular what don it mean?
Sincerely,
Ivan Scoscovitch
Stick Your
Neck Out
To the Editor:
I recently saw the movie
"Julia" and was very moved and
inspired. But I realized when
coming out of the the.ater that
many people were reacting to it
as "a good movie" or "a good
portrayal of history" or comparing their views with th09e of
the film critics.
It bothers me that a film such
as this is seen from a distance, as
if there is no need.for Julia's and
Lillian's kind of courage today.
It's easy to sit back and watch
such a film with a sense of
safety, knowing it's all over and
will never N.ppe.n again. That is
true-World War II won't happen over. But what similar
circumstances of powerlessness
are we finding ourselves inl
An issue I have bttn concerned with lately is nuclear
power. Being acquainted with
th• facts, I don't think I'm
exaggerating to equate the threat
of radiation with the threat to
human life and frttdom which
Hitler posed 40 years ago. Most
people ignored those dangers
then. They didn't want to beli•v•
what might talc, place. Peopl•
now are ignoring the tremendous
problems of nuclear aims/energy
because it fttls safer and easier
to have "faith" in science.
I urge everyone to become
familiar with the issues and
dangers we are facing. Take
some time to find out about
nuclear power and the May a.nd
June demon.urations. We need a
lot of courage from a lot of us to
stop it now, before another kind
of "holocaust" tak,s place.
Sincerely.
Sally Bergquist
Thanks
For Helping
Handicapped
To the Editor:
On Saturday, April 22, a
dance for the handicapped was
held in a tent in the Yelm Park.
Yelm. It was a great success for
all involved. It allowed a group
of people to sh.are, to give, and
to interact with one another. For
some, this was an oppurtunity to
mjoy life that occurs very rarely
for th,m. I would like to thank
the following people, without
whose help and talent this event
would not have been so beautiful, Alban Pfisterer, Maureen,
Nawell, Daw Hitchens, Dedo,
Jeff Miller, Paul Rol,.,rts, Chuck
Eck.land, Maintenance, Maralyn
Frasca, Kathy Clark, Maxine
Mimms, Facilities, Tom Fatris,
Sgt. Bundage, Academia, Greg
Brady, Blake Wood,
L,sli,
Brady. Motor Pool, Erin, Susan,
Da Truck, T,.-..a. Mary. Odi,
and th• good peopl• at Media
Loan who never seem to loose
th,ir cool. Tiia.nks mucho for aU
your envolvement
and hard
work.
Love,
Larry Bey,
by John K,ogh
Evergrttn's current l,gal battl•
with the Veterans Administration
has enormous implications: its
outcome will be crucial to the
fatu of th• colleg• and th•
approximately 150 veterans enrolled h,r,. If the VA succeeds in
forcing Evergreen veterans to
comply with its 1977 "Twelve
Hour Rule" to continue receiving
full-rat• GI Bill b,ndits,
th•
vets will be denied accns to a
major portion of Evergreen's
curriculum and the college will
suffer a devestating setback in its
enrollment campaign.
The VA considers the case to
bf. critically important to its own
interests, as well. A judge in
Michigan has already ruled the
Twelve Hour Rule unconstitutional (that case is prnentJy on
appeal), and th• VA 1,.,li,ves
that without this rule it would
have to pay benefits to veterans
mgaged in curricula of inadequate educational merit. Andrew
H. Thornton. chief of th• VA's
GI educational
benefits programs, recently testified before
the Veterans Affairs Committee
of th• U.S. House of R,presentativ,s that, should th• Tw,lv•
Hour Rule cases be decided
against the VA, "Our guidelines
and regulatioM for course measurement would be rendered
practically useless and there
would be no control over huge
Federal ,xpmditures."
Mott is at stake, though, in
Evergrttn's suit against the VA
than the Twelve Hour Rule or
even Evergreen's future as a
coll,ge. If th• courts allow th•
T w,lve Hour Rul• to stand th•y
will set a precedent that could
result in massive federal intrusion on the individual's right to
freedom of choice in educational
matt,n. The VA i,n't th• only
federal buttaucracy controlling
.ducational funds, if it succttds in
hinging veterans' benefit payments on arbitrarily
imposed
standards other agencies such as
th• Departm,nt of Social Security could adopt similar policies,
and colleges and universities
could ultimately I,., forced to
tailor curriculum to the specifications of whatever government
happened to be in power. The
VA, in its conduct of the
Evergnen case, has aptly d.monstrated how dangerous this
type of bureaucratic control over
education can be. Rather than
attempting to assess the value of
Ev•rgreen', approach to learning
the VA singl,d the coll,g• out as
a violator of its standards, and
has proettde,I to do ev,rything
within its considerable power to
force compliance. Not only has
the VA ignored the fact that
Ev,rgreen has full !,gal accredidation; it overrode the recommendations of its own approving
agency in rejecting the validity
of the college's curriculum, and
has relied entirely on anonymous
and secondhand information in
forming its opinions.
While th• VA has been
conducting this campaign against
Evergreen's ~cademic policies it
has u~ vetenms-people
it is
supposed to assist in return for
their service to the country-as
political pawns. Because it is
more concemtd with preserving
its own power than with the
w,lfare of its chargn th• VA last
winter attempted
to cut off
Evergreen veterans' funding during mid-quarter. lt ha, made no
attempt to find out anything
about Eve.rgree:n from veterans
enrolled here, ind it presented
grossly distorted testimony on
the school's academic policies
before the House Veterans Affain; Commit tt. If this type of
conduct is any indication of the
amount of mponsibility fedora!
agencies can be expected to
exercise in their determining of
educational standards, thecourts
should consider the harassment
and restrictions students could be
subjected to if th, Tw,lv, Hour
Rul• ,tands Int ct.
':r:
-~--
of the Chautauqua Production
Company.
Wodnnclay, May 10 - North
African Dance Company,
a
professional
troupe of three
musicians and four dancers,
perfonners, plus blues music by
Peggy Knapp and Anthony Gill.
Thunday, Moy 11 - Com,dy
skits by Peggy & Michael. plu,
guitar and vocal music by Lis.I
Pontoppdian.
Friday, May 12 - Music by
Euphoria, a jazz band, dance
routines by Meg Musick, and
Helen Hunt, and guitar and
vocal music by Dave Badley and
Captair\ Imperial.
RANCHO
call theater for show times
943-5914
POPCORN HALF-PRICE
with
Bridges
music by Jimmy Buffet
PULL TABS
fl/If)
v'
.,,..I
>)
POKER
/--1:v~l~
~17
POOL
~
210 E. 4th
753-9944 ·
MANBARIN
ffEDIE
OPEN 7 DAYS
111 N CAPITOL WAY
Andttw Thornton's fur that
"there would ~ no control over
hug•
F,doral
,xp,ndituru"
should the VA lose the Twlev,
Hour Rule cases would be
justified
but . for one fact:
education
in the U.S. has
managed to survive without
advice from the VA for hundreds
of yean. Existing accredidation
procedures pr'?.vide all th• control that's nei3kl over educational standards, and the VA. as
it has proven in its dealings with
Evergreen, is unqualified to pass
judgement on educational matters anyway. Veterans don't need
to be told by a federal authority
what does and doesn't cOnstitute
worthwhile
curriculum-they
need freedom to direct their own
lives and the money for eduution the miJitary promised them.
VEGETARIAN
DISHES
ALCOHOLIC
BEVERAGES
LUNCHEON
BUFFET
ORDERS TO GO mon-thurs
352-8856
11 :30 - 10:30
11:30-12
4 - 12
fri
sat
sun
3 - 10:30
- Help Wanted The Publications Board is now accepting applications for the positions of Editor
and Business Manager of the Cooper
Point Journal for Summer Quarter and
beyond. Applicants must be students, and
should apply at the President's Office by
5 p.m., May 10.
Both of these positions pay $3.05 an
hour for 19 hours per week, but will pay
only on alternate weeks during Summer
Quarter in accordance with the Journal's
beweekly publication schedule. Students
can also earn academic credit for the
work involved by arranging individual
contracts.
The Editor's job requires strong writing
skills and some experience in journalism.
Applications
for this position should
include resumes, statements of
interest,
and writing samples.
Throughout the week, visual
art including sculpture, pottery,
woodworking, slide/tape shows,
films, paintings, and petroglyphic boulders will be available
for viewing arr campus.
Other events sponsored by
Foote's program include Pam
Schick's Dance Company on
May 11, 12, and 12 at 8 p.m. in
the Experimental Theatre, a May
13 dance featuring Euphoria on
the 4th floor of' the Library at 9
p.m., and, wrapping up the
week's celebration on Sunday,
May 14, Linda Wai,rfall will
appear in concert on the 2nd
floor of th• Library at 7,30 p.m.
AFTER MAY 15TH
LA TIERRA WILL
BE LOCATED
DOWNTOWN AT
218 WEST
FOURTH
NTU
EDAT
AVE.
MPIA
Cheap popcorn and cheap thrills!!
FISTFUL
DELUXE
Jeff
SHUFFELBOARD
>lo
_,_,...C-elehrilt.ien-Of The Arts Festival This Week
Saturday, May 6, marks th•
kick-off dat• for a wttk long
··cel,bration of the Arts". hosted
by Tom Foote's P,rformance and
Production Cluster. Throughout
the week noontime
musical
p,rfonnanc,s will be h,ld in th•
cafeteria or on the cafeteria
patio, depending on the weather.
Those performances will inc.Jude:
Monday, May 8 - Music by
The New Gnu Revue, a country
music band,
and by solo
guitarist Barbara Ansley.
Tuacloy, Moy 9 - Mu,ic by
guitarist Ed Gudger and the
Trout Masters Jazz Quartet, plus
"A Clown's Play," by m,ml,.,rs
...-04
6
OF DOLLARS
TUT ....... AIIATION
INCIALIITI
·with Clint Eastwood
IDITOR
John Keogh
BUSINESS MANAGER
Nathoni,1 Koch
MANAGING EDITOR
Nancy Ann Pukes
PRODUCTION MANAGER
Malcom Baker
FEATURES EDITOR
John S.ward
SECRETARY
Joyce Baker •
ST Aff WRITERS
Lauri• Frankel
John Martin
U.. A,mlng
ADVERTISING
Mark Chomb<n
Joel UndstTom
IINCI 1NI
Visit 0111
Centers
Md Sit ,_, YooneK
MorWt Thi DlfforlflU
MOVING SALE
MAY 4TH - 11TH
Call Dlyi. [WI I W11tlend1
FOf lnforfflOtMtn C.H
Ou, C.ntw,
206-523-5224
SIATI\I
UnwenilyV ...........
..... 200
,._2
thA
PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
Thomas Hood
ty,_ ._ .........
TheCOOPIII POINT JOURNAL le publl1hed ....
and 1111ftof TIie ~ ..... c.llege, Olyfflp6e, WwNc.gl•o tllll.
ptMNd.,.
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,...,. ltlON of
Eu14p&I 11111C-olterft.
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doee not~.....,.
a.du.we••• bJ._
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-....a11. - AdM11111te;:
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buelMu pNfll:
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llo-lor
-
-
llitlllftr,
VlaN •-
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(CAI) D. .,._,
1010 ~ piolley: Al ......
to, thlt ....-.
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pa1111111 . Leftlft
LetW9
··-
Tho ~
4
Point-
• HIit
Mey •• 1ffl
Trident
Invades
Washington
Editor ·s Mote:
This is the first in a series of
articles dealing with the Trident
system, its military significance,
and citiuns' efforts to block its
solved;.,Concuned About Trident lost
the lint round of legal battla
before Federal Court Judge
George L. Hart, who ruled that
the Navy, beau.. of national
defense Concernl,
WU
etempl
from the National Environmental
Policy Act. Hart's ruling was
later overturned on appeal, and
the Navy was forced to file
constn.~ction.
by_Roger Stritmatter
Trident-planned
to be the
most destructive
weapon on
earth-is now under consb"Uction
at the placid township
of
Bangor, Washington,
just SO
miles northeast of Olympia on
Hood Canal.
Trident is the Navy's newest
and most expensive addition to
the U.S. nuclear arms arsenal-a
fleet of 16 nuclear powered
submarines, each equipped with
24 nuclear missiles. Nearly two
football fields in length, four
stories high, and weighing over
18,000 tons, each Trident submarine will be twice the size of
the Polaris-Poseiden subs which
currently carry the Navy's nuclear stockpile.
The first Trident submarine is
now scheduled to cruise into
port in 1981, two years behind
schedule and costing half-again
as much as originally projected.
In fact, the price tag on the
entire fleet is so astronomical
that even the Pentagon has
characterized Trident as "the
most expensive weapon in the
history of warfare."
Pentagon planners argue that
Trident subs have several advantages over the Poseidens they
are designed to supplement. and
eventually replace: quieter op-eration for escaping detection,·
superior sonaT for self-defense,
and increased mobility acheived
by a doubling of the maximum
cruising speed to 40 miles ~r
hour. ln addition. Trident submarines will utilize sophisticated
new missile technology. Trident
missiles will have greater accuracy and range and far more
destructive force than the missiles carried by Poseiden subs.
Two generation$ of Trident
missiles are planned. Missiles of
both generations will carry eight
tc-seventeen nuclear warheads,
each capable of destroying a
different target. This will give a
single Trident sub the firepower
to destroy as many as 408
additional impact statements.
2
O The legal suit, however, was not
f sucassful in slowing or stopping
construction at the base.
Other opposition to Trident
2 has come from tho,e who believe
a.
§ it is an unprecedented
and
i dangerous escalation of the
Ji nuclear arms raa,. Th.,.. people
- oppooe not only the Trident ba,.
j but th• entire weapons system:
~. base, submarines, and miuil ...
Groups such as the Pacific Life
Community have waged a cona,rted campaign of civil disoi><,.
diena, against Trident. Since the
Winter of 1975, over 200 persons
have been arrested for taking
part in such action; on August
14 of last summer, over 2,000
persons from as far away as
Australia and New York City
rallied against the submarine
base at Bangor.
1
seperate targets, each with a
nuclear blast seven times as
powerful as the Hiroshima explosion.
The two generations of mis-siles are ref-erred to as Trident-1
and Trident-2.
Trident-1
is
designed to fit both Poseiden and
Trident submarin... It will be
backfitted into ~isling Poseidens
when the second missile is ready
sometime in the mid-1980s. Triden t-2 will be even more
accurate and powerful than its
predecessor, and wiU ruive an
increased range of over 6,000
miles.
The Pentagon was attracted to
the Bangor site for a varidy of
reasons. The existing Bangor
Naval An.nee.was already a base
for Poseiden submarines; Hood
Canal provided an excellent
Faculty Interviews Set
During the nv:t two weeks
students will have opportunities
to take part in the process of
selecting prospective
faculty
mem~rs.
On Friday. May 5, Keith
Muscutt, a prospective faculty
member with a strong back.round
in theater will be interviewed at
10 a.m. in Library 2205.
On Thursday, May 11, students are invited to observe a
dance workshop facilitated by
Georgea Schliestett. a candidate
for next year's PSYCHOLOGICAL GROWTii program. The
workshop will be held at 10:30
a.m. in the Recreation Building
multi-purpose room.
Students are encouraged to HJ1
out rating sheets, take a look at
the candidates' resume files, and
offer SUSl,'eStions, and/ or criticisms to the ac.ademic deans.
Many Trident critics oppose
the system because they believe
it represents a shift in US
military policy away from a
..countervalve" or "deterrence"
policy to that of "counteforce"
~ater
port, and, perhaps
or "fint-strilce".
most importantly, the area is
Ex-Lockheed mgin .. r Robert
already heavily dependent on
Aldredge i1 one such critic.
military employ1Pent. Pentagon 1 Aldredge was an aerospace
officials expected Bangor resiengineer with 16-yean experience
dents to be ~ive
to the
designing Polaril and Pooeiclen
project.
missiles when he quietly resigned
In February 1973, when the
his job at the Santa Clara
Pentagon quietly announced its
Lockheed facility in January
selection of Bangor as home port
1973. Aldn!di,e, who now confor the submarines, theft was
olders him,.l/ a pacifist, left
little opposition to the proposal.
because of his growing opposiWithin months, however, five
tion to the opiraling nuclear arms
environmental organizations and
raa,, He had been team leader of
two Hood Canal land ownen
the Lockheed group ... lgned to
formed a citizens organization,
develop the Mk 500 Manuevercalled Concmied About Trident,
ing Reentry Vehicle (MaRV)
to oppose coNtro.ction of the
warhead, which will eventually
base. The group filed a legal 1uit
be developed on the second
which challenged th• adequacy
generation of Trident missil...
of the Navy's Environmental
The significance of the MaRV
Impact Statement for the project.
is that it is an offensive, or "fint
They sought an
injunction
strike" weapon which can managainst further CQnstruction until
uever to correct course in
the legal issua. could be remid-fli8ht. In this manner it
Council To
The Evergreen Council will
sponsor a comnwnity forum on
"mroUment and curriculum priorities" Wednesday, May 10, •
beginning at :µ p.m.
During the Wednesday forum
Praident Dan Evano will ■peak
about the nbtflilM':up betwtt.1
next year's budget and mroUment pictures: Budget Officer
Mike Bigelow will provide additional info
• on the bud-·
get,
Academic
Will
Humphreys wjll ,
c:urrirulum prioritit!l"McjNXt year, and
Director of AdmisaioN Arnaldo
Rodriguez will provide inform••
tion on enrollment•recruitme:nt
programs and possibilities for
community participation in thoee
programs.
Those inlffested in attending
the forum wiH ruive an oppor-
fa.ti°:"
Tapes
&
Records
6 Good •-10111
To Shop At
Mlection of all kinda of music:
1. Gr2. Low .. t
3. AJwoy.
.c.L-t
5. Concert
6. Low .. t
prlc .. around
a sale at Budget
prices around
tldtets with no MfVlce charge
prices around
YNIW--wrrNYNILOW--
Sponsor
achi<'vH a very low "circular
error of probability," i.e., ex•
tn,mo accuracy. But a nuclear
strategy bated on the deterrent
policy of targettlng cities does
not require gr.eat precision.
'These pr<Cile weapons an, intended for d .. tructlon of an
opponent's retaliatory nuclear
force. As Aldre~
pu!s it,
"Extmnely accurate mlsalla are
not nttded to kill a dty, but
they
esoential if the aim Is to
k.iU a heavily incased concreteand-st.. l (missile) silo. Therefore, the drive to attain accuracy
in U.S. weapons system ii, in the
essence, a drive to prepare a
knockout lint strike."
Despite the odds stacked
against it, Trident opposition
continues to be one of the most
organized and visible political
movements in the Pacific Northwest. A group called Live
Without Trident is now spearheading activities against the
submarine system. Trident activists have agreed to continue a
firm commitment to the principles of non~violent direct action,
or civil disobedie.nce, in pressing
their cause.
The groups have recently
purchased a few acres of land
and a house adjacent to the
Trident ba,e. The site has been
named "Ground Zero Center for
Nonviolent Action," and is now
a local headquarten for organizing upcoming protests at the
base.
This spring, T riclent activists
are planning a weekend of
•celebration and resistance" at
the Trident ba.. May 21 and 22.
Protesters expect the weekend to
culminate in the arrest of ,.veral
hundred person, on Monday,
May 22, just on• day befon, the
convening of the U.N. Disarmament Conference in New .York
Oty. The Conference, organized
larg,ly by nations not aligned
with either of the nuclear
1upapowen, may be a unique
opportunity to n,vene the coune
of the nuclear arms race. Actions
similar to the Trident protat are
bring organlud all acrooo the
country by groups that hope. the
arre:st of large numbers of
persons will dramatize th• iuues
confronting the Disarmament
Conference and "inform and
enliwn" the participants deliberations.
are
unexpected acts of natutt, the
forum will take place on the
second floor of the Library
lobby.
Evergreen Poets Competing
Entries for the Carol and
Herbert Fuller Poetry Awards for
Evergreen student poets must be
submitted to Chari.. Take In
Lib. 2114 by Friday, May 19.
The awards,
which were
established to encourage the
composition of poetry and to
recogniu the achieVffllfflts of
1tudent poets, include $100 for
lint place, $75 for oecond place,
and S50 for third place.
Entrants must submit five
short poems or a total of 200
lin.. of verw. Th• poem■ ohould
not bear the poet's name, but
should be submitted in an
envelope bearing the author's
address, and phone number.
Entrl•• will be judged by
Richard Alexander, Evergreen
faculty member in comparative
literatun,; Carolyn Byerly, editor for the Office of Collqe
Relations; Don Jordan, faculty
member in autiv• writing; Cal
Xinnear, poet and owner of the
Word of Mouth Boobton,; and,
Rusty North, Eversr-,
alum,
artist-printer and poet.
•
cafe intermezzo
Friday llay ~
One lu& ....... i. ....
DWIGHT& BERNIE "8lore t1ie1 leaver
Aoaaede..._ud""-Ja
8-10,.11.CICI .. .-.,
Satvday May ..
MARIEFAllBELL
Goikarud...i.
1&8paaaoea~
Open Mon-Wed 9am-7pm, Thu-Sat llam•lOpr.
ZIZW ti
90-7888
Energy
looking the town of Quttts on
the Quinalt Indian Reservation."
The windworb, entitled "Spirit
of Evergreen" will hopefully
replace a gao-powered T. V.
repeater atop a hill on the
reservation.
The group i5 also planning to
Install a recording anamorneter
to gain a history of the 1ite'1
wind speed. '1f th• average wind
•P••d io high enough," say1
Costello, "it would be ponible to
power the entire town with
wind, and that's wh,it the town
leaden are hoping for."
Amidst other display, put on
by otudents will be a "deep dioh
pan,bolic focusing oolar collector." This particular unit is
designed to convert the energy in
sunlight-heated water to cooling
power for air conditioning and
refrigeration. '11 usa six heating
tube■ arrayed so that the middle
tube■ are at the locus point of
the parabola," student Dwight
Oquinn explains. "Cold water
l'ftten the outside tube■ and is
partially heated by diffuR radiation hitting the collector at
oblique angles, and th• final
heating is done at the focu1
point."
Construction of a local oolar dalgn hoUM. Toun available over ,
tho weekend.
-
Open Mon • F"
Sat
.. .. . .. .
SATIJRDAY, MAY 6.
Exhibits, films and displays during the day.
TOPICAL SESSIONS: 9:J0.11:00 a,m. (LH • Lecture Ha1))
WindEnorgy Convenlon: George l'ollio, The Boeing Co.; Charles Schachle,
Sc:hachle
• Sons; Richard Charter, ColllUltant, Small
ScaleWind Syst011111.
Gc.nhou. Oeoip: David Yalft, Orpni !'am, TESC; Tim Ball, ~
LH 3
Energy Sysums Program, IESC.
Scale Hydro S,o1
• GU McCoy, Univenity of Washington,
Uf 2
S.M.T. jn<>gl ■UI.
10PICAL SESSIONS: 11 :00 a.m.•12:30 p.m. (LH - lectun, Hall)
North"at Solar Ardiitechn: Angela LaVigne, Suttle Engineer and
Architect; John Lang. Owner-Builder, TESC; Niels
Skov, Solar home owner, TESC.
EnnsY
In Aplcultan: Woody Oeryckx, Faculty, TESC.
Ui4
EnnsYl..ogillatlon: Parbr Cann, Sen.ate Energy Comm. staff; King Ly,en,
!Ji 3
Chairman, Hou.. Energy Comm. (to be adirmed);
Ken Bostock. State Energy Office.
OlEADDRESS: 2:00p.m. In the main Library lobby.
An licatoptan Notebook": Sim Van der Ryn, State Ardutect for the Sta!1_.
of California, President of the
Institute. J<,
TOPICAL SESSIONS: 3:00-4:00 p.m. (LH. L«turf"f
O<un Energy: Jam.. Ringrole, Ringrose AasociaRS; Robert Knapp, Faculty
, !:i:'3
TESC.
"'lJlrett Solar Convenlon: Jan Delord, Reed College, Portland, On,gon;
LH 2
Jama Gaw, Raearch AISOdate, TESC.
Energy Conwn,ation and You: Carol CooteUo, State Energy Office.
!Ji 4
TOPICAL SESSIONS: 4:()()..5:00 p.m. (LH • Lecture Hall)
~~atlon
for the Ownor-BuUder:
Bill Knau11, Olympia Architect.
j
~ua.tlon:
Rlchard Barnhardt, Environmental Education Office,
!Ji 3
State Superintendent of Public lnotru.ction.
ood Fuol1 and Wood ~:
I.any _Farrar, National Center for Appn,prlate Technology, Butte, Montana.
EVENING
TAINMENI': 9:00 • 777 p.m., 4th Floor of the Library.
BEAUXARTS BALL, An Energy North,...t AJfalr.
Music by : "Caribbean Supentan• of Seattle and
"C.Org.la Ro.. " ol Olympia.
Priuo for bat .,_gy the- costwn ...
• • • • • • • •
SUNDAY, MAY 7. Exhibits and displays during the day.
TOPICAL SESSIONS: 10:00a.m.-12:30 p.m. (LIB· Library; LH - 1..ecluft Hall)
Energy Education Worbliop for Tuchon: SpoJIIOl'Odby the Environmental
UB 3112
6ducatlon Office of the State Superintendent of
Public lnotru.ctlon, Olympia, Washington.
Peggy
Bani■
Sl\JDENT OISCOUNT
after 5:30
and dlllinJ weekends.
L~ve
So':' Design Worbh.op: Batelle Northwest, Richland, Washington.
KEYNOTI: ADDRESS: 1:30 p.m. in the main Library lobby.
"Soft EnergyPaths": Amory Lovins, London Reprnentativo of Friends of the
l!..F:..c
i"h\..
1: 0 -o
Earth and Regents' Lecturtt at the University of
41a H<:1u,.
California, Berk•l•y.
TOPICAL SESSIONS: 2:30,3:30 p.m. (LIB - Library; LH. Lecture Hall)
EnergyEducation Worbh.., for Tueller>
UB 3112
EnorgyConservation for the Stato of Washington: Dick Wat50n, Faculty,
LH 3 Social Managemm of Technology Program, Univenity of
Wulutgton.
Small Scale SolarF.nergySy11tem1: John Randolph, Faculty, University of
LH 2 PugetSound,Taa,ma.
Wind EnorgyConwnion: Chari .. Schachle, Schachle &,cSons, Moses lake.
LH4
. . .. . . . ..
PANEL DISCUSSION: 4:00p.m. in the main Library lobby.
• Altomatlve Energy futllftl for the Padftc Northw..i"
Ray Andenon, Deputy Director, State Energy Office;
Dick Watson, S.M.T. Program, Univ•rsity of
Willhington;
/•an O.lord, Reed Colloge, Portland;
James Ringrose, Ringrose AS50Ciates;and
Charles Schachle. Schachle &,cSons, Moses Lake.
O.OSING: 5:30 p.m.
WORKSHOPS
AND TOURS:
Continuous Demonstrations
Saturday and Sunday: Ecot..,ian Architectun,, Fredrick Tuso, Campus Plaza.
Energy Simulator, Petor MuUineaux, Library 2129.
Saturday:
10-lla.m.:
--...Alcohol Fuelo, Geof S.land, Library 4002
11-noon:
Small S~ Wind Project, Robert CosteUo, Library 2205
11-noon:
Seasonal Thermal Storage, Craig Conner, Library 4002
-(_'n:»I :30 p.€) Solar Grttnhou .. Tour, David Yates, Library 2100Loung,,
3-4 p.m.:
3-4 p.m.:
~
~ced:
Sunday:
11-noon:
12-1 p.m.:
As announced :
Solar Demonstration Projects in Longview, WA.
SandyMaurice, Library 4002
Solar-Hot Water Heating, Jacob Romero, Library 2205
--Methane Oigestors, KeUy Wolcott, Library 4002
"Pas■ M Solar Hou .. Construction Tour, John la.-.i,
Library 2100 lounge
An Electric Auto, Tim Dowd, Campus Plaza
Smalj Scale Wind Sy1tems, Richard Charter, LIB2205
Solar Greenhowe Tour, David Yates, LIB 2100 lounge
An Electric Auto, Tim Dowd, Campus Plaza
OISPU.YS:
Lecture Hall Rotunda _and.Third Floo,_Libral"l'..
Lobby.
(partial liating)
"""-wooc1 Stoves
Heat Pumps
Solar Collector■
Thermal Insulation and Thermal Windows
Solar Hot Water Heater (Thermosiphon type)
Windc:harser
Solar mrigerator
Olympia'Podrr:y
&.'ArtSllPJ!'I.
Inc.
TYPING
Pb456-6022
8•7
bypass the solar portion without
disturbing
the regular water
heater.
Most of the displays at the
conference will come from the
local area.
Student Chuck
Linders comments, "Our main
purpose in organizing the Exposition is to raise the energy
awareness of the community, so
that people who thought solar
energy was 'too futuristic' would
realize that much of the technol•
ogy is viable now."
ParaboUc ,olar collector to be dJsplayed at Exposition.
FRIDAY, MAY 5. Exhibits, film■ and display, during the day.
OPENING SESSION: 7: 30 p.m. in the main Librvv lobby.
Opening Remarlr.1: Daniel J. Evans, Prmdent, The Evergreen State CoUege
Keynote Address:
"Appc-opriate Energy Technology: A Vision for
the Future''
John McBride, Director of Technlcal Staff of the
National Center for Appropriate Technology, Butte,
Montarut
Reception:
9:00 p.m., 4th floor of the Library
Sl.50 per page
9.4
s
SOIEDULE OF EVENTS
TERM PAP~
112>LEGIONWAY .
two quatten to designing a solar
hot-water system which they will
install at the campus ''Mods" at
the end of thl1 term. The
system, which is ~pected to
save 50 percent in electrical costs
by pn,heating the water, will
serve a four-student apartment.
The group chose to use two
21~square foot collectors with
copper absorber plates in constructing their coUector. A special feature of this system's
design makes it possible to
May 4, 1171
Oquinn, as w•Y as co-worl<en
Ral~Muon and Paul Nishmatt,
have designed ad att In the
process of building a "pyroheliometer" -an instrument which
attracts the sun and measures
direct radiation. --Theinformation
provided by the pyroheliometer
will be used to help with solar
designs in the Olympia area.
A small segment of the
academic program has devoted
MANUSCRIPI'&
IMPORTED CAR PARTS
lnJo)
Expo On Campus
Mnj"oon
Forum
tunity to offer response and
criticism between speakers. Pro-viding the sun is mining, tho
forum will be held in Red
Square. In cue of rain or other
Continued from page 1
tion procna, and toun of the
house will be off~
to those
lnterated.
Numerous 11:udents from the
Alternative Energy Systema program will be on band throughout
the three-day exposition to
discuss and display projects they
have been woddng on for the
last couple of quarters.
"The Wind Energy Group,"
~plains student Bob Costello,
"ia attempting lo install a wind
generator (a.ero~turbine) over-
•
The Cooper Poinl JoutNI
opm n,ery day
10 • 7 Sunday
9 - 9 daily
WESTSIDECENTER
1822 W Harrison
LIQUITEX ACRYLICS
943-5332
OSMIROID PENS
W. ALEXANDER'S MAGIC WHITE
TRANSFER TYPE at 59c a sheet
DO-IT-YOURSELF ALUMINUM
PICTURE FRAMES all sizes
If We Don't Have It, We Will Get It
I
I,
Tho
eoc,p»
loolnt Joumol ~:
Coming
Battle For Alaska
by John S,ward
Somellme around the end of
this wrt'k a decisive episode in
the so-called Battle for Alaska
will take place in Congress.
After making its way through a
m1riad of committen and cornprom1ses.
the Alaska Lands
Conservallon Act (bill H.R. 39)
will finally reach the noor of the
House early this month. At stake
1,; the future of almost one--third
l)t all Alaskan lands.
Before Alaska became a state,
practi<.ally all of its 375 million
acres were classified as federal
lands. When it rKeived statehood in 1959 Congress gave
Alaska the right to select 145
million acres for state lands.
Twelve years later. in a spin-off
ot the pipeline controversy,
Congr~s approved the Native
Americans Claims Settlement
Act of 1971. This bill awarded
Native Americans there a cash
"-t'ttlement of almost one billion
dollars and the right to select 44
million acres of land, allowing
the pipeline construction
to
proceed. The two acts have
given the people of Alaska
dcreage apprOximately equal to
the combined size of California
and Oregon.
After the pipeline controversy
had ended, conservationists
turned their attention to the
preservation of as much existing
land in the state as possible. An
alliance was formed called the
Alaska Coalition. comprised of
the Sierra Club and 30 other
Nganizations nationwide. They
termed the land situation in
Alaska "The last opportunity to
do things right. ..
The Native Claims Settlement
Act put a freeze on the
development of remaining lands
1n Alaska until the end of 1978.
Congress hoped to take action
on what land would be protected
bv that time. A bill dealing with
Alaska land use was introduced
m J073. but Congress took no
action. In January of 1977,
Anzona Democrat Morris Udall
introduced the Alaska Lands
Conservation
Act before the
House of Representatives. The
bill now known as H.R. 39,
proposed that 115 million acres
of the stale be added to national
conservation
systems and be
designated as wilderness areas.
The 0H1c1al designation ..wilderness·· means that no permanent
...tructures, no motorized transrortat1on, and no ..management"
1s allowed. Including provisions
tor d~ignating additional lands
as Nat1onal Forest and other
land class1fications, the original
version of H. R 39 dealt with a
t<"ltalof 146 million acres, and
raised what is by far tht biggest
land Ust' issue in history. The
entire package would more than
double the existing parks and
wilderness system in the United
Tho ~ Paint Joumol Moy ••
,m
7
1171
Stat ...
Initially, th• bill m,t with
fairly widespread support. President Carter termed the- com~erva tion opportunity
"One of
historic dimensions-no
conservation action Congress could
take would have more lasting
value." The bill est•blish,d
procedures by which subsistence
life styles could continue on
protected
lands. contrasting
sharply with past government
dealings with Native Americans.
The bill did, however, encounter opposition, ~peciaUy in
the state of Alaska and from oil
and mining companies.
Jay
Hammond,
the governor
of
Alaska, and two of the three
elected representatives from the
stale oppose the bill, backing
instead much more limited proposa ls. Representative
Don
Young from Alaska wrote last
year to the New York Times.
calling the land u,e question "a
choice between arbitrary r~trictions on vast chunks of Alaska
lands, or a creation
of a
balanced planning proc~s for
these areas." He said that accns
to native and state land holdings
would be restricted by th• bill.
"Efforts to expand the state's
skeletal transportation
system
will run head on into the
restrictions created by H.R. 39.
What value are lands for
recreation or resource development if they can only be reached
via costly transportation
systems?" Young proposed instead
that 25 million acres be put in
parks and 55 million in National
Forests. subject to "multiple use"
that is, grazing, mining, logging,
etc. Young has teamed up with
Representative Mead of Northwestern Washington State to
oppose the bill.
When Congressman John Seilberling of Ohio, a strong backer
To A Close
AndEvents&rr~~AIDl@iliw@fill~~ArtsAnd
F:vents&rr~~
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
of H.R. 39, h.Jdhurings on it in
Alaska last summer, h• met with
mixed responses, In Sltk• the
Chamber of Commera offettd
local busin..... signs th.at said
they were <losed in protest.
Bumper stick.en around the state
read: "Alaska h.. wildem,ss;
needs jobs." Bill Royce, a lawyer
in $itka, told • reporter "Out•
sicjef'S who "t•nt large national
parks in Alaska are prev,nting
local citiuns from m•king decisions about their future." He
contended the\ the interests of
both conse:rvation and industry
could be met through citizen
involvement. ~
The Alaska. Coolition hos a
somowh•t cliHem,t perspectiv•.
Jim Gaw, W~o is acting as
Olympia orgoniur and spok,..
m•n for the group, says, "Poople
in AJ.. ka should, and certainly
do have a say in this. but we'tt
talking •bout federal land-it
belongs to •II of us." Gaw is a
Faculty Research Assistant at
Evergre,m, and spent parts of
three yun in Alaska doing an
inventory for planning in th•
Wrangell
Mountains • there.
"Thett are so few people in
Alaska comp;arffl with in th•
lower forty-eight, you've got to
expect that more people would
be concerned about it down here
than up there," he says.
H. R. 39 is scheduled to hit the
House floor some time ne)(t
week, although exactly when is
still uncertain. "It's not going to
get d,!eated," Ays Gaw, "It's
just a question of how many
loopholes will b, inserted •nd
how many compromises made."
Jim Von Nostrapd, • spokesm•n
for Washington Stat• Rqmsentative Don Bonker, was contacted recently in Washington
D. C•. He was asked how Bonkor
int•nded to vote on the bill.
Bonker has bttn working on a •
version of the bill in the
Merchant Marine and Fisheries
committee, where he has support,d a strong H.R. 39. "He
certainly supported th• bill in the
Merchant Marine committee,"
said the spokesman,
" so I
assume he'll do the same on the
floor. I kind of hedge • little because this is a very complicated
bill. Thor•'• no limit to the
number of compromises
and
combinations that can be worked
out on the floor, so until we get
a better idea how it will go, it's
impossible to say exactly what
will happen."
Gaw recently commented on
what Bonker', office had to say:
"I would expect them lo t•II you
that Bonker said last wttk he'd
stand for it i.n committee, but
when it ca.me to the floor he'd
vote against it." Gaw explaiMd
that delegations usually vote
together,
and Congressman
Me•d, also from Washington, is
a staunch opposer of the bill.
Gaw says it's important for
those wanting to see a bill passed.
that is favorable to wilderness in
Alaska to let Bonker know their
fttlings. After M•y 3 it will be
too late to write him a lettff, but
mailgrams and phone calls are
more effective anyway,
costume adventure directed by Jerzy
Skollmowskl (Deep End, BarTler) and
baaed on a series of storln by Conan
(Sherlock Holmes) Doyle ... You uk me
why my wounds ntY9f heal? (polaea)
Because I alweys have (draw• 1word)
NEW ONes, .. In COIOf',from 1970 al
3:00, 7:00 and 9:30, lecture hall one.
75 cenls
Showing with Howard
Lester's AIRPLANE OLLIE, I LOVE
YOU.
MUSIC
ON CAMPUS
The BEAUX AIITS COSTUME BALL
raturn1IIIII\IIII
(See achedule tor
Energy Northwaal Conference, thla
laaue).
On Sund•y, Mey 7, two Evergreen
planlatl
wlll present en afternoon
recital at 2 p.m. In the Recltel Hall.
Marci• Graham wlll perfonn composition• by Scarlalll, Beethtoven, and
Aachattenber'g, and Diane deMoulln
will preaent work• by Haydn, Chopin,
Ind Ravel. The two women will •lao
perform duets by Poulenc and Mll-
The Academic Film Serles presents
OENERAL DELLA ROVERE by Roberto
Rossellini at 1 :30 and 7:30 m Lecture
Hall 1, Wednesday, May 10. A alory
baaed O'l the Second World War, and
one of Rosselllnrs last commercially
successful flctlonallz111ons {he turned
to wrlling and dram111zeddocumentary
shortly afler) It's Free
haud.
TAVS, GRANOLA JOINTS, & MISC.
(In Olympll)
The APPLEJAM FOLK CENTER presenta THE OKANOGAN STRING BAND
on Friday, Mey !5. Localed at !he
YWCA, 200 E. Union. Main Acl al 9
p,m., minor, welcome.
The Gnu Dell hosts NO CAIIHAILE
on Friday and Saturday night, with
tradltlonal lrlah music on tlddle, guitar,
pennywhlalle, etc. Performances at 9
p.m Comer of Thurston Avenue and
Capitol Way.
The Greenwood Inn continues wilh
MAJIC this w&e«and tor the lhird week
In a row. Lloyd Cooney says, "I met
my molher 11 !he GREENWOOD."
9U-4000.
Swing to the music of the NO TOY
BOYS II the PUB TAVERN this
weekend. 123 W. 5th. 753-9945.
RICHARD-S ROUNDHOUSE features
SAUSOUTO through Saturday Night.
IN OLYMPIA
Al the capitol. ll's RABBIT TEST.
the story ot the wOf'ld's first preonant
man D1recled by Joan Rlvefs, who 1s
usually pretty funny Coming on the
heels ot HIOH ANXIETY. Rabbit Tes!
wlll probably draw the same audience
and con11ln many ot the same Jokes
My litlle SISier liked THE SEA
OYPSIES. so maybe you will too It's
that kind of mov1e-1no1her
Sw,ss
Famlty GIiiigan remake that ~Ins
..as
a dream •• and becomes "'!he adventure of I tlfetime." At the Olympic, 7 20
anc:1 9 ot,
ALICE DOESN'T LIVE HERE ANY•
MORE Joins the lucratlYe JULIA at
The State Alice at 7 .00. Julia al 9 00
Cheap Popcorn and Cheap Thrills at
!he Cinema-FOR
A FISTFULL OF
DOLLARS. starring the Cllnt EaslwOOd
ol several laces al 7 00 and RANCHO
DELUXE at 9 10 Rancho appears to be
a generation gap comedy, but ell I can
really say tor sure ,s tha1 In the •
previews, a man shoot• a mouse
"56-2222.
IN SEATTLE
On a more sarloua note ... the
SEATTLE OPE~A will perform Verdi's
FALSTAFF on May 10, 13, 17, 19 , 20,
21 .
Ooera-ln-EngUah Tickets •
vallable In Olympie el Yenney'a.
THAT OBSCURE 08JECT OF DESIRE, Bunuel's latest film, IS •
maNetou1 piece of work., even If he
does refer to women u "sack;a ot
excremenl •• Ifs showing
at !he
Neptune along with CRIES ANO WHISPERS. ObJect at 7:15 and 10:45, Cries
at 9:00.
ART
ON CAMPUS
ECCENTRtC ART, an exhibit rwflecllng the talents of 21 Northweat artlata.
Is 11111on dlaplay at the Library
Gallery. Worth I look.
JIii Clayburgh Is 11111
.,. unmarried
1t 1 :00. 3:30. 5:40. e 05 and
10: 20. Unmarried
but rich. and
1um>unded by rich friends ana lovers
Showing at the UA Cinema 70, Sn,:th
1nd Blanchard.
Louis Melle's PRETTY BABY IS a
story of proatltutlon and low-life in
19'17's New Or~ns, seen through the
eyes of a t2-year~d prodigy. S!arrini;
Keilh Gal'Tadine, Susan Brandon ana
BrOOka Shields. Call lo, ahowtlmes.
Uplown Theater. 285-1022.
F.t.S.T., slarTlng Sylvester Stallone.
la reported to be I crashlno bore nt
see ii at the Town 11 7:05 or 9:35 to
find out for myself, even !hough 1he
pass 11sthu been auspended Directed
by Norman Jew1son. 11 Is a lhinty
disguised and thoroughly exorcised
gossipy history of Jlmmv Holla and
the Teams1ers, according to a usually
reflable source.
WOfflln
IN OLYMPIA
CURRENT ART IN OLYMPIA, fNturwork• of Gloria Crouae,
-Allan-<:hapmon, and Bemen,
L. Maki' Is on •how II the Collector's
Gallery, 2103 W. Harrtaon, through
May 4,
I
P'rlnta and bruahWOftcporoafalna by
RUSS HAMAMOTO, lll)d pafntlng1 on
pope, by JEAN HARllfNGTON a,e on
dlaplay at tM Chlldhood'a End Gaiter;
through May 31. 222 W. 4th.
1ng the
The women·•
CUnlc, not tM
W<>
men•, Cent• u l'lpOf'ted In '-al week'•
paper, II 1poneol'lng a "'E-ORQAS...
MIC CL.ASS tor womenwho have ,.,...,.
had an orgasm, ""'Y had an orgum,
or are not 1ure If they have. TM clan
wlll meet tor flw weeka ,tarting May 4,
and all woman are encouraged to
come. More Information available at
the Women's Clink;.
On Friday, Moy ~ the TAHOLAS
PUBLIC
SCHOOLS
CHECKERS
CHAMPIONS will chalHHlge E....-greenera from 11:30 t'"o 1:30 In the eecond
floor CAB lobby. TMlr leechet' and
former world checke11 champion,
Kennett! GrOYer, wlll play blindfolded.
Bob Sluss and Maxine Mimms have
agreed to match their wlt1 aoa1n1t the
young champs, end everyone 11
welcome to come and teat their
checkers 1klll1 H well. For more
Information call OonJordan, ee&-8018.
Career Plannln;g And Pl.cement wlll
tpc>nsor a HOkw employment seminar
entitled,
HOW TO CONDUCT AN
fNTERVIEWTueoday, May g from 3:30
to 5:00 In Lib 1213. On May 10 Career
Planning and Placement wlll conduct a
CAREERS IN ICONOMICS WORK•
SHOP from 2:00 to 4:30 In CAB 110,
LARGE DISCOUNT
'!JliPIIDRLECOON
HENDRICKS
~
DRUGS
•=• _... .....
AU WAn
and graduate school pracoce tNt,, for
which adYancl regl,tration la requlr9d,
Contact CarNr Ptannlng and pt.,.
ment, Lib 1214.
tnterHted In crNtlng a healthful
balance In your body? A trw lecture on
POLAfUTY THERA" wlll be given May
12, 7:00 In Lib. 4003 to show you how.
A ~ wortt,hop by Jennifer and
Bruce Denburg of Polarlty House In
Seattle wlll fotlow May 13, and 14, 9
A.M. toe P.M. In Lib. 4003.
The clHa wlll Involve lecture,
demonstration, and experience of a
practical u well u theoretical natur..
!his Includes: Potar6ty ......-getk'.a, Mly
stretching poeturea designed to belance the energy currents of the body.
Food sanaltlvlty which will aid In
purifying and atrengthenlng
whlla
rebulldlno your body 1Y9tema. And
three energy belanclng technlqua of
massage which work In harmony with
the body to eliminate ,naJor energy
blocka. Sign up •hNt 1, located II
Health 5efvlcea Sem. Sid. 2110. A f•
of S35 wlll be collected tM flrat day of
claaa.
SERVICES ANO ACTIVITIES FH
ALLOCATIONS wlll be dlecuued Wed-nesday, Mey 10 at 8:00 A.M. In the
Coffeehouse. Oec:lalona wlll be mede
on 197&-79 budget• for the Recreation
Canter, College ActlvltlH
Bulldlng,
Orgenlc FermhouN, Tranecrtpta, and
mar.I Everyonewho ,taya the enu,.
Oly may help decide. All wefcorne.
WANTED: COORDINATOII FOIi THE
SERVICES AND ACTIVITIES FHS
REVIEW IOARD tor IM upcoming ,.....
beginning In July, 1978. ANponalblUtlas Include: facllltetlng all S&A Boatd
meetlnga, gathering Information for the
Boord, COOrdlnotlng budgot -•
and allocation
proctH.
Thia 11 a
ShJdenl lnternahlp poaltlon requiring a
year'a commltffllr('lt. Mot9 Information
...,.llet>la In CAB 30!5.Appllcetlona .,.
ntAlf~L XIIWC~
• ..
duo by Tueoday, May9.
On Monday, Moy 8 EPIC will p,N«ll
• PANEL ON ~MEHTAL
fACTICS. Thll PMJtf,I will dNI with Iha
QUHtlon of .Jihat method• of change
.,.. effectlw In preventing envlronmental dHtructlon
and Improving our
already-poor environment. Paneflata
will Include Phllllp Bereano of IM
Unlveralty of Wuhlngton,
and Dave
.Howard. of the Wahington Envlronmentel Council. Thi dl.cuuk>n will
take place In Lecture Hall 1 at 7:30.
TH£ CRABSHELL ALUANCE wlll
hOIII 111monthly Introductory potluck
at Utah Jack'• RatauGnt on Fourth
and Columbia Street• at 8:30 P.M. on
Sundly, Mey 7. Anyone who want, to
get Involved with C.,.baheU la Invited
1:o come, end old membarl .,.. Invited
as well. For more Information caU
Diana Moo,a, ae&-8191.
WANTED: LIFEGUARD/SWIM IN•
STRUCTDRS 15 poalllon1). Flesponalble for llfe guard and swim ln,tructlon
to various age groupa. Requlrea Water
Safety lnatructor certificate and excellent phytlcal
oondlllon.
SALARY
RANGE: $3.55 lo $3.74 hourly.
CLOSING DATE: Indefinite. APPLY:
Pwaonnef Office, QT'/ OF RICHLAND,
P.O. Sox 100, R1&11and,WA 093&2.
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY-AFFIRMATIVE ACTION EMPLOYER.
Orderl .,. now being liken tor CAP
AND OOWN RENTALSfor graduation.
The 110 f• 1, payable when you •r•
meuured and the cap wlll be youra 10
-·
Contact Oona --,
at the
bed!; counter of the booklt0f'9 by May
5 It you.,. lnt.,..ted.
A SELF EVALUATION WIIITING
WORKIHOP ._by -.i1c
A<Mllng and the Aaglatra,'1 Office will
ba hold Thu_,
Moy 11, In library
3121 from 3 to 5 p.m. EnroUment will
be limited, 10 pleue sign up aerty In
--•Ing.
:
RENEWABLE RESOURCES, 1n exhibition of pnotographa by MATT OIIAGG
will be on dlaptay at Photo Prlntwont'a,
114 Elliot W. In SHttla.
The major
emphu:ia fOf lhe lhow la comprlNCI of
character 1tudl11 auocl1ted
with lhe
"gypo"' togging tradition. April 14 to
May 14.
~atlona
are atlll available for
the Evergreen Foundation'• "'TUT AO.
VENTURE". Thia lacludN a lecture,
slide ahow and Egyptlan Banquet, u
wall u W:,mlaalon to a private ahowtng
of NTut Treuurea" this summer In S.attla. Call 888-aM.5 tor moni Information.
BARGAINS
POLITICS
ENERGY NOfllTHWEST, an expo1ltlon concerning
•nargy uH and
appropriate technology, WIii be hekJ In
Otympla May 5th, 9th and 7th. The
....,., fOCUIN on the appUcablllty of
aolar energy. Seminars, films and
1peakera wlll be f•tured. For Information caU ae&-e191.
MUSIC
W(Q)IBID@if lMI(Q)i:rJJ
TIBI
IB3
(Q)
(Q)
I[~
Weetelde Cent«
352-0720
KAOS la having an on-the-airauction
the grand flnale of tM fundralalng
marathon on May e and 7. lletM that
wlll be aucUonad off d\fftng thla ev-ant
lnclucl, a 11Mplng bag, a -•
a
Nt of Mara pens, a front end ldb for
your car, • Mt of heedphonet, an
automobile
bike carrt.,, a piano
u
Mon, thru Set.
10 toe
evenings.
a"orr111110 CaNT&•
OLYMPIA. WASHINGTON
143,8700
ON CAMPUS
ADVENTURES OF OERARD at lhe
Friday Nita FIims la I big budget
The Evergreen Punk Thea!er Group
praaenta, In honor of natlonat outdoor
sex day, "'CUCUMBERS AND CONDOMS," at noontime In Red Square.
on Monday. May e.
Thurday May 4th
OPEN MIKE
Performers
elgn up
at 7:30pm
RfCORDCO.
Friday & Saturday
May 5th & 6th
NO COMHAILE
(That's Irish fOf
no bullshit)
11 ·00 - 8·00 Mon
comer of Wn1 Thurston
A1,1enuc
and C.pttol Way.
Perforrn.ncn begin al nine p.n,
OM douar COYel'.
Minon wekomc.
943.1s11.
GN
[
Sat
NEW & USED RECORDS - CONCERT
TICKETS & LOTS OF OTHER GOODIES!
GNU OW 11k>catedIn
Wc•T•1oa
FILMS
THEATER
ON CAMPUS
-------........_
downtown Otympt.a on the
. Legislative Analyist
available with
references
Please call 866-5041
1unlng, fitly pounds ol clay, • one
hour plane fllght over Olympia and
much more. The auclton will be held
from 12 to 7 p.m. oo Sa.!urday, lrom
12:30 p.m. 10 who-knows-when on
Sunday. Tune In 10 89.3 FM to aupport
KAOS and get a bergaln.
,
' ...,
Westside
Center
357· 4755