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Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 6, Issue 26 (June 1, 1978)
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edmond: TESC
No Sanctuary
by Nancy Ann Parkes
La.st Wednesday's "narcotics" bust which produad a s~ttering
of marijuana plants and a quarter-ounce of Columbian CaMibus
will not be the la.st ·of such incidents at Evergrttn, according to
~ TbeCooperPohat
Thurston County Sheriff Don Redmond.
lstlJouroat
n.E
pwww....
0.-.-,
Volufflo t, -No. 21-
"You better get this on the
Journal exactly one week a.ftn
facts real straight and let your
come in and do the approp~te
Cal ....
the law. I'm tittd of people out there thinking 1hey can do what
Juno 1, 117'
they want. Evergreen is not a sanctu.uy."
When asked to comment on reports th.at undercover narcotics
agents had been "drinking" inside an automobile in the dorm loop
before the arrests were made, Redmond said: "It doesn't make
any difference. Were you there7 Neither was I. They were doing
what they were supposed to do and they were doing their job."
Redmond indicated that ongoing invntigations at Evergreen are
focused on the sale of cocaine, although he would not answer a
question as to whether or not last Wednesday's arrests had been
expected to tum up "hard" narcotics ... That's (cocaine) a part of
the ongoing o~rations. That was only one (arrest) and there's
probably a lot more going to go on now," Redmond said.
The sheriff's comments Wednesday did not reflect the tone of a
meeting which ht took part in on Tuesday morning with Olympia
Police Chief Chet Breuer, Evergreen President Dan Evans, and
Chief of Campus Security Mac Smith. After the meeting Tu~ay
Smith said that to his knowledge there were no undercover agents
remaining at Evergreen that were placed here as a result of a
mid-March request made by both himself and Evans.
'1 could be whistling Dixie, and tonight somebody could raid
somebody," Smith reflected. "But I think from whal l'v• heard
today that they (law enforcement agents) have already gotten
what they wanted and more. They have apprehended those
civilians who were not students here, and that was what they
were after in the beginning."
The civilians Smith ref•rred 10 include three Grays Harbor
County men who were arrested by Seattle narcotics officers after
they followed a suspect from Thurston County to King County.
law enforcement agents presently beliew the three were involved
in trafficking cocaine with Edward Even Gudger. an Evttgrttn
student who was arrested one week ago Sunday on charges of
delivery and pos&ession of cocaine.
The Grays Harbor County men who were arrested include
Randy Flink, ,30, of Montesano, Michael laff•rty. 25, of Elma,
and Russell Painter, 21, a Montesa.no mailman. According to
Graduation
Ceremonies Sunday
by John Seward
Large crowds are expected on
Red Square this Sunday for
Evergreen's
I as
alkingDown
The Street
OneDay
and a bum walktd up to me and said, "I haven't had a bite for three days".
So I bit him!
At Campus Housing no one will let you get this hungry (or get away ,"'ith
such bad jokes!). In fact, to help you keep food on the table we wont be
raising the rent this fall.
For as low as the same $53/month you can have the sa~e old ca~~tt,
friendly environment
of low· deposit phones, 8 d11feren_t hfuUg
arrangements, frtt TV-FM cable, dos, to ca~pus livi~g,_ free parkmg,
Y
furnished apartments, private bathrooms, kitchen faaht1es, a 10-37 perant
reduction on unit lease contracts, and managen who would rather give you
spare change than bite you.
Come live at our place.
Campus Housing
"A" Building, Room 322, phone.866-6132.
The ENl\11..enState College
~
annual graduation
ceremonies. At that time mott
than 600 seniors will be turned
loose to face the real world (if
they haven't already). The ce~
monies will consist of an array
of seven speeches, a two-hour
open mike session and the
so-called largest potluck in the•
world.
Planning for the ceremony wu
initiated by the Office of the
Registrar, with Walker Allen and
Judy Huntley acting u the prime
moven.
'We started out oencling q ......
tionnaires to prospective graduates during Winter Quarter,•
uys Huntley. 'We oent out 700
and got back about 300. I thinlt
that's a pretty good response."
Huntley says that 1tuclmts ,..ho
indicated an interest in planning
graduation wm, contacted, and
they then formed a commiltft.
Six or seven studfflts formed a
core group, with numeroua
others giving input. 'The stuclmts really did everything," says
Huntley. "We're just sort of
doing the underground work. I
think It's going to be a great
graduation-we're only praying
for the sun."
The eottmony dt-viJed by the
group over the put few months
will start at 2,00 p.m. Each
graduate will be preoented with
an ev•rgrttn &ttdling contributed
by the Weyerhaeuser Corpora•
tion. Presiclmt Dan Evans will
int"toduce the thrtt
student
speakers:
Mamie
Pearce,
Margaret Greene, and Steve
Rabow. Faculty Member Suasie
Straaser and Staff members
Kathy Jordan and Stone Thomas
are also scheduled as speaken.
After thne formal addresses
are made, the "largest Fingff
Food Potluck in the World" will
commence on Red Square. Graduation goen are urged to bring
record now," Redmond told the
the marijuana incident, "get thereaders out there know. We will
thing if there is any violation of
Sheriff Don Redmond, a number of the "buys" leading up lo the
arrests were made at Evttgrttn
or near it.
Continued on page 7
whatever food they can to the
ceremonies. Concurrmtly with
the potluck, a two-hour open
mike seuion organiud by Karrie
Jacobs will take place. "Originally, there wen, all thae debates
during the planning sessions,"
says Jacobs. '1t Sttmed like a
good way too for people to do
whatever they want in front of a
large audience." Jacobs Hys
anyone c.an sign up for the opm
mike session at either the
Wormation Center of KAOS in
the CAB Building. "People can
make 1pttches, tell sad stories,
sing off key, or whatever.
Graduation should be as unborlng as possible."
Steve Rabow.
graduation
speaker and sometime member
of the planning committft, deocribed how plans were arrived
at. 'The committft tried in all
sincuity to bue their work on
eve
w
the poll &entout. The poll really
had some good ideas for the
ceremony. I thinlt if there was a
theme ii was the divenity of the
school. I don't have any complaints about the way things
went-we had a pre1ty good
consensus about things, and
some people got involved who
wanted to remain traditional in a
non-traditional way."
Rabow d•nies he will be
wearing his geoduck outfit during the course of his speech, and
declined to discuss its content.
He did howrver, mention his
of rumon that things are
~
becoming more traditional h•re.
"It really hasn't happened, but
students can't expect things to
continue as they are if people
remain pusive. They will find
that things quickly will tum into
a homogenous mess and become
systematized."
Another student speaker is
Margaret
Greene,
a Native
American born 56 yean ago in
lummi territory near Belling•
ham,
Washington.
She
has
worked in nursing, weaving, and
social ,ervices dealing with the
planning of many economic,
educational and health consider-
ations of the tribal development
of the Samish Tribe. Greene has
been very active during her life
in Native American concerns,
from demonstrations
to tribal
govtmfflfflt.
'1'm on a kind of experience
trek," sht says. "I'm finding out
what obstacles
there an in
education for Native Americans.
I'm hoping to gd a mute.r's
degree in h•alth administration
and use it to help my people. I'd
like to see fflore Native Amffl.
cans able to achieve some of the
goals
I
have.
I
have
11
. grandchildren who I'd like to ,..
at least go through a four-year
college. I hope one day soon the
administration
and faculty
of
EV1'rgreen will be •ble to give
Native American students a
better chance. It seems they
don't want to sweat and plan for
it, but that's what we've bttn
having to do as a ~pie
all
along. What I've sttn at TESC is
more problems for our prople
than resolutions."
Grttne says that Evergreen is
in a good central location near a
number of Northwest tribes, and
therefore is in a good position to
develop goals for itself in Native
American education. She hopes
to support Evergrttn in any way
she can in the future, and in
general. feels good about her
education at TESC.
A third
student
speaker.
Marni• Pearce, told the CPJ, "I
never thought graduation was
meaningful until now. It's a kind
of community thing. At a ,chool
that's highly individualistic like
Ev•rgreen. we'll all be together
for once. It's the kind of thing
that ties people together and
makes them a part of the
culture, like any ritual or rite.··
earce
Pearce has spent two and a
half years at Evergreen, doing
women's studies and counseling.
"Speaking at the ceremoney will
be a new experience for me, like
most of the things I've done at
Evergreen. I think as an indivj.
dual I'm repn-sentative of a lot
of facets here. just by virtue of
the fact that we're all going
through Evergree-n together. I
think graduation should be a
celebration. It's a rite of passage.
not an ending really. I think 1t
should be a great ceremony. Wr
had a good cross-section
of
students
responding
on the
planning
committee-people
really had ample opportunity for
input,"
A quick survey of back issues
at the CPJ intending to turn up
fun facts about past graduations
proved largely fruitless
It 1s
rumored that it has never rained
for a ceremony. In 1974 President Charles McCann bestowed
upon Ptanulbutter,
a dog, an
honorary Baccalaureate Degrtt
llilll
Thi Cooper Point Joumial "June 1, 1978
Tho=---1,1m
Letters(Q)~fuID001IDLette~l'imllloo
Lett
a Design Tool; Natutt, Society
and Design: and, Energy Systems; m•mbeB of KAOS and
the ·other student organiz.ations;
and all the peopl• who got
involved on their own. For them
as well as for us, this has been
an education that means far
more than classroom exercises
ever could; we've participated
together in a cooperative effort,
and we're getting
a good
building out of it. There is still a
great deal mure to be done, but
now we know: it works I
Rob Fellows
Michael M•haffy
Joanne Mason
Brian Milbrath
Bill Weber
Jon Collier
Martha Strom
CAB II Design Team
P.S. Don't miss the CAB II
Kegger Thursday (today!) in th•
Coffeehouse al 3: 00.
Fellows A Hit
j
,8
a
Dixy Refuted
To the Editor:
There are many things which
Governor
Ray said in her
interview
with Nancy Ann
?arkes which merit a response.
Howeve-r, l am going to restrict
my comments to Dr. Ray's
statemt>nts about low level radiation.
The variations
in natural
background radiation throughout
the world which Dr. Ray
presented are, to my knowledge,
essentially correct. But she went
on to state that there is "no
f>vidence" that people are being
harmed by the higher levels of
radiation
in such places as
Denver, Colorado or Kerala,
India; therefore, she implin, we
can assume these levels of
exposure are safe. What Dr. Ray
failed to say, and what the
nuclear industry and the AEC/
'-IRCtERDA/DOE have consistE'ntly fail~ to say in their "low
level radiation is safe" propaganda. is that,
until very
recently, meaningful studies simply hadn't bttn done on these
populations to determine whether or not people were ~ing
harmed by radiation.
Con<,equently. it has been true, but
deceptive, to state that "no
evidence"
exists that it is
harmful.
Dr. Rosalie Bertell, who spoke
at Evergreen in March, has been
involved in low level radiation
research for many years. In a
study involving 13 million persons, Dr. Bertell identified aging
pffects from levels of radiation
far below those which Governor
Ray assures us are safe. These
effects include cataracts, hardening of the arteries, and susaptab1lity to heart disease, anemla,
and diabetes. The funding for
Dr. Bertell's work has been
terminated by the government.
Dr. Victor Archer has recently
reported a study which, according to Dr. Bertell. "confirms the
increase in radiation
related
cancers in the Denver area". Dr.
Bert,11 also st.ited that "~I
studie-s it Kerala, India, show
significant increasn in Down's
syndrome in areu exposed to
high background radiation .. ," In
addition, Dr. Archer ~rted
in
the Feb. 1978 Journal of the
Health Physics Society his conclusion that 40 percent of all
cancers att caused by natural
background radiation.
A 13-year study of atomic
workers at Hanford (in Richland,
Wash. I by Dr. Thomas Mancuso
indicated that certain workers
had died as a nsult of <xposutt
to radiation-at levels far below
the permiHible
occupational
dose. Whil• Mancuso' s study has
bttn vigorously criticized for its
"unorthodox'' methodology and
analytical technique, its most
significant results have been
duplicated by a number of th•
critics themselves.
There is
agreement that multiple myeloma (a disease of the bone
marrow) and cancer of the
pancreas have caused Hanford
deaths at rates higher than
expected by chance alone; and
the "excess" deaths were associated with higher-than-averagebut permissible-radiation doses.
Dr. Mancuso's funding has also
been terminated. His study is
now being conducted by institu•
tions heavily reliant on nuclear
research contracts c:ith"tr than
health studies. To produce evidence of low level hazards would
jeopardize the nuclear industry
and consequently the financial
position of the institutions now
responsible for continuing Mancuso's research; this situation is
clearly inappropriate and must
be changed.
I hop, I have <kmonstrated
that Governor Ray's comments
regarding th• dangers of low
level radiation do not reflect the
unanimous verdict of the scientific community.
Dr. Ray is
undoubtedly aware of, at least,
the Mancuso study, yet in her
statements she chooses to ignore
it. This is a misleading and
callous approach to an extremely
urgent issue, an i11ue which
many art trying to bury. Wt
must insist that it not be buried
and that the approprn1te studin
be carried out by truly independent researchen to conclusively
.. tablish the effects of low In-el
radiation.
While it is extttmely Important, low level radiation ii only
one of many serious problems
with nuclear power. Othert
include: fuel and conttruction
costs, which have risen dramatically over the past five years;
the fact that nuclear plants
produce plutonium, a potential
weapons material for monsters
such as Trident; and th• need
for poli~t.ite
security to p~
vent "terrorism" in a nuclear
power based economy. w~must
say no- to nuclear power. And
when w• have th• opportunity
(1980, if not sooner) w• must
say no lo Dbcy Lee Ray.
Thom Lufkin
Semantic
Slander
To the Editor:
I just picked up th• May 18
issue with John Martin's review
of the Dance Contract's "Spring
Produce." 1 can't stand it any
longer! I must s~ak out. Please,
everyone, stop using the word
"routine" in describing a work of
dance! A "routine"
is just
that-and
what an insult to a
choreographer,
especially any
choreographer
who produces
works like those seen in the
recent performances. Like composers and painters, choreographen produce workt or piect1.
Or dancn, if you lik•. Pluse
take us seriously. Thank you.
Margattt I. Hunt
The Voice
Of Reason
To th• Editor:
Angry Olympia Resid,nt1 would lik• to supplement
your l<tt,r about shoplifting. I
too, in th• Jut month, have
p,"°nally Ileen a penon 1tealing
at a grocay store.
But lint I would Ilk• to
add..... th, lack . of clarity in
your 1tatement. Is it that you
wore trying to get th, last word
In a social situation that wa1
inappropriately handled
(by
•ither the "mild
mannered
friend"whatever
that is
111pposed to imply-or younelf)
n,prclless of intent, or that you
stopped by to talk about them.
Some of the more critical
comments expressed the fear that
at a time of budget crunchH
w•'re spending $650,000 on a
"fun - and - games" building.
Agreed, that would be idiocy.
But that isn't what w•'tt trying
lo do. To put It simply, w• fttl
that a lot ol the difficultieo at
Evergreen stem from the lack of
a good social meeting and
activities center. Crating such a
place ii what CAB II is all
about.
After spending Fall Quarter on
.--uch and Winter Quarter on
design, we took the plans to the
. Sa.A Board and the Board of
Trust..,.. Both boards an, excited
about th• project and about th•
1partidpatory process we'tt using. Funding has bttn approved
and ii now being arranged. At
the beginning of Spring Quarter,
an architecturaJ firm from Seattle
was hired to work with the
Evergreen community on final
plans and to develop construction documents. Bob Hull, Dave
Miller, and Patrick Sheahan of
RIA architects (Patrick was
form,rly a design t<am member)
are just as excited about the
project u w• an,. They'll need
everyone's guidance and involvement over the summer and fall.
If all gqes w,11, we should be
building by Winter Quarter.
We all started thl1 project
because we were firmly convinc•
ed that architectutt should be
democratic-that the only way
to design a ttally good building
ii to involve the people who att
going to UM! it in the design
decision making. It -,,led 1ih
such an obvious idea, especially
To the Editor:
in a democracy; yet moot people
seem ocared to try It. Now that
A year', end progress report
we've tried it and faced the add
for CAB II test, we'tt more evanseJical than
By now, most ffffYOne has
ever. True, we came a Jon, way
had a chance to Wee a look at
from getting everyone involved.
the CAB II schematic plan,
The procedure we developed for
developed by memben of the
design team, the Sa.A Boardand
making design proposal• ii ,till
unused, and a lot of people don't
the Facilities Office. What's moot
care to get involved in CAB II,
1lgniflcant about the plans ii lhat
or even know they can, But
they don't create much new
that's probably not unu1ual
space, but they do change th,
old unuoable ,pace. In a oenoe, around hen, What's exciting ii
thinking of th, people who have
CAB II ii not 10 much a ohiny
been Involved, literally hunnew wing u It ii (we hope) a
dredo-not only from the 5j,A
much better version of CAB I.
Board and the Office of FaciliWe've gotten good written fftd..
tift, but memben of Lif• Cyd,.
back on the piano, but unhappiand Cultural System•; Math as
ly, not many p•ople havo
wen, stating a belief that this is
somehow a characteristic
of
"Evergrttntn" assuming there is
such a st<tt<>typelOr was It that
the incident seemed an opportunity to make the stat~fflt:
"Guess what, Evergrteners.
If
you don't know that stealing ii
wrong, I don't want you _living
anywhere near me." This la.st
st.it,menl evades all logic.
Either you are not involved in
your community
enough to
ruliu th, divenity of "Evergreenen," or you might belin,e
they an, a group exceptionally
diffettnt from you.
As a matter of fact, I am an
Olympia n,sident. And, while
being pro~d of that, I also am at
least ,qually
proud to be
furthering
my education
at
T.E.S.C. As far as including me
in such a potential rejection I can
only hop• that I don't liv•
anywhere near you as well.
As far as th• shoplifting I saw,
it involved an old woman by
h,rself. Would you suggest that I
report her, confront her, write a
coarse letter to the Senior Citizen
Center, inform the Social Security office, demand that all peopl•
of age be M!perated from th•
community at largel You might
think that wrong-doing can be
pined on an age-group, peopl•
•from a certain geographical area,
or people 11ttking to further their
•ducatlon. W,11, guess what,
you're - not right.
A concerned O.R.
I
CAB II Report
I
I
0
To the Editor:
RE, The Rob Fellows piano
recital:
I would like to congratulate
Rob Fellows on th• excellent
piano recital he gave recently. I
was astounded to see a production of this quality
being
presented by an undergraduate
at Evergreen.
His technical
mastery had not th• slightest
flaw, and his poignant expressiveness was that of a true artist.
The intimate size of the
audience set the mood for the
evening. The select few who
ventured in to see the performance were treated to a sonorous
experience they will not soon
forget. Starting with the first
piece, by John Cage, those
present were entranced by Rob's
self-.tssured bravado. I, for one,
have never Sttn any of Cage's
works executed with such harmonious effluence. Months of
diligent practice were evident in
his sinistrorse use of the keyboard. Other notable pieces in
the evening's repertoire were a
cantata in 5/8 time by Vallois
Perret and a selection of Irish
waltzes by Dail Eirunn. Other
performers
might have been
hindered in some of the faster
pieces by such badly brok•n
fingers, but Rob seemed to use
them to his advantage.
Another moving aspect of
Rob's presentation was his graceful appropriation of theatrical
methods in combination with his
musical ability. The sequence
with the sequined tiger pajamas
was easily th• high point of the
entire evening. In this as in
many other segments, his exis-tentiaJ sensitivity was perfectly
balanced by an authoritative use
of the inane. I regret, however,
that I took note of none of the
names of Rob's many lovely
assistants in the fire-breathing
episode.
All in all, Rob's performance
was of such quality and style
that I can think of no truly bad
criticism, Rob FeUows is obviously an artist who knows
exactly what he is doing. I am
anxiously anticipating his appearance at the Highclimber
Room of the Spar on June 2nd at
8: 00. I hop, anyone who enjoys
Neo-contemporary
music will
attend.
Rose Sherman
Centralia, Wash.
Never Satisfied
To the Editor:
In the coverage of Trident
some important
points were
neglected. Somehow Dorothy
Peterson was completely ignored
(it was "Jerry Petenon'1 farm",
and h~ said,
and he expr...ed ... J. Th• "man from the
Ea.st Coast" spoke of cooperation
between movements (rather than
a wedding), especially emphasizing the labor movement and
everything's relationship in the
capitalist
system. You only
mention the environmental and
peace movements. Nothing was
mentioned about the speeches
made about Trident's connections to imperialism and Third
World people's struggles, or the
ultra-repressive Senate Bill 1437
(the old SB-1). And finally, in
your article there was no
recognition not only of the short
speech made connecting Trident
with this male supremist society
and women's and lesbians' oppression, but also of the strength
and number of the unified
women's
groups.
Even the
Northwest Pusago, though writing only one-sixth as much as
did the CPJ, managed to do that.
And it's not just through my
eyes; some local resident was
heard to ask, "You women
having some sort of gathering
today7" as people were arriving
at the farm. This negligence in
reporting weakens the communication necessary for people to be
hearing and understanding each
other, necessary for working to,
overthrow the system, necessary
for building the non-oppressive
culture we' re striving for.
Becca Todd
Shoplifting
Sociology
To the Editor:
Dear Angry Olympia ResidentIt seems to me that you have a
gross misconception ol Evergreen
students. You witnessed two or
three ··people' shoplifting. The
fact that they happened lo be
students at TESC has nothiJ,g to
do with the fact that they were
shoplifting. There is no program
at Evergreen that provides instruction for shoplifters. You are
angry at particular Evergreeners;
so please don't make a blanket
statement that includes us all.
Rational Student
Yvyrgryynyrs
Unity
To the Editor:
Reaction to Feminism, Vegetarianism, Narcoticism, Nature
People and other forms of selfindulgent behaviour.
m@nlt@rrncIDilEditorial
Why No Warning?
by John K,ogh
Dan Evans, Mac Smith, and
Ken Jacob advanced an impressive defense last Wednesday
of their actions leading to the
recent drug arrests of three
Housing residents. They faced a
crowd of students adamantly
awaiting an explanation of why
undercover narcotics agents had
been brought
onto campus
without their knowledge, and
when they left the students were
more-or-less satisfied.
The administrators' success in
placating students at Wednesday's meeting approaches the
incredulous in light of certain
aspects of the argument they
used to defend their actions.
Although th•y did establish that
a serious problem had existed in
the threat of drug related
violence, they offered no valid
explanation of why students had
not been informed
of this
danger. Furthermore, they continually dwelled on the illegality
of drug use as a justification for
calling in undercover agents, but
also claimed their reasons for
requesting the agents had nothing to do with drug use, that
the request was entirely motivated by the threat of violence.
President Evans, in explaining
why he and Director of Security
Mac Smith had kept the drug
related danger to Housing residents and the presence of
narcotics agents on campus
secr,,t, said if they had "broadly
spread the alarm" it would have
hin<kred their cha~
of effectively dealing with the problem.
This contention, on close scrutiny, seems more like a cleverly
fabricated excuse than a product
of sound reasoning. There is
only one way disclosure of the
investigation's existence could
have hindered its effectiveness:
by scaring away the people it
was aimed at, the people who
po,ed the threat of violence. If
these people had remained at
Evergreen and continued their
activities they would still have
been subject to capture by
investigators; if they'd left, they
would have brought the danger
they posed to Housing residents
with them.
One has to wonder, considering the extent to which students'
lives were endangered by this
situation, why Evans and Smith
failed to give the very people
who were threatened a chance to
defend themselves.
It's quite
possible that open dialogue with
students would have produce.
approval of their plan to call in
undercover agents, and Housin~
residents could have taken precautions against being arrested
for small amounts of marijuana
while the investigation was being
conducted.
In any case, if
students had known they were in
danger they would have had the
opportunity
to take whatever
steps they felt were called for to
protect themselves against vio•
lence. Regrettably, they weren't
given the chance.
Director of Housing Ken
Jacob, at the beginning of last
Wednesday's meeting, said he
had not bttn aware of the presence of narcotics agents on campus until Sunday, May 21. He
took issue repeatedly, however.
with students objecting to the
fact that they hadn't bttn told a
drug investigation was in progress at Evergreen. Jacob cited
numerous warnings he had transmitted to Housing residents over
•the past few months concerning
drug and alcohol use, especially
in public areas, as proof that he
had cautioned them against the
presence of drug agents; these
warnings were all issued prior to
the date Jacob claimed to have
first leained of the investigation.
Evans also stressed the illegality of drug use during the
meeting. He pointed out that
Evergreen enjoys no immunity
from law enforcement. and that
.inyone who engagt>S in illeg~I
dCt1v1ty must assume certain
risks. While indisputably true,
these statements have nothing to
do with his reason for authonzing a cloak-and-dagger
dru,!;:
probe on campus: the existenct'
of a serious and unusual threat
to Housing residents stemming
from large-scale drug traffic.
The central question involved
in this situation, a question that
was not adequately addressed
last Wednesday, is whether or
not Evans and Smith acted in the
best interests of Evergreen students by employing a keep-Jtquiet strategy to protect those
students from drug related vio•
Jenee. The fact that they
admitted to students Wednesday
that they had indeed requested
the drug probe demonstrates
their ultimate willingness to
release the information. Instead
of working cooperatively with
students from the start, though
they waited until the problem
had affected uninvolved students
to discuss it.
As the Evergreen administration is clearly Unwilling to
involvp students in decisions
vital to their welfare, students
will have to take steps of their
own if they want to be listened
to on this campus in the future.
There is currently no organized
body of student
power at
Evergreen, and that's exactly
what students here need if thPy
want to impose their opinions on
the conduct of college business.
Evergreen
needs a student
union-and
students concernea
enough with their own neglecteCI
interests to make it work.
RAINBOW RESTAURANT
4th & Columbia
375-6616
This Wttk 's dinntr:
RAINBOW TROUT
You can drool on my pillow,
You can piss on my rug,
You can barf on my briefcase,
But don't shit on me!
a Whimper
(We hope it may produce eternal revolution.)
P.S. Do YOU believe in the
revolution7
Yvyrgryynyrs Unity
Happy Birthday To Usll
If you believe in the revolution
clap your hands
If you believe in the revolution
clap your hands
If you believe in the revolution
You're not the problem, but
the solution
If you believe in the revolution
stomp your feet.
Store-wide Sale
June
15, 16, 17, 18.
If you beHeve in the revolution
bomb a church
If you believe in the revolution
bomb A Dorm
If you Lelieve in the revolution
You're not the problem, but
the solution
If you believe in the revolution
bomb N.. tles (quik)
J
214Wast ith 9i3·9J8t
Friday 6 - 10pm
4
The Coopef Potnt Journal June 1, 1178
Tllo -
Opportunity
In Alaska
unless you have a campsite
reserved in the park, and there
aren't too many. We got a
wilderness camping permit and
took the bus they run, On the
way in we saw moose and
grizzly bears right on the road.
"8 The mountain was obscured by
clouds the first few days we were
there, but then suddenly one day
it cleared off. McKinley has one
of the highest vertical rises of
any mountain in the world: it's
something like 16,000 feet from
base to top, We hiked in the
park for five or six days-didn't
run into any grizzlies, but we did
see quite a few caribou. You can
sort of fool them by getting
down wind and they'll come
quite close to you.
by John ~ward
This is a travel story with a
d1ffert'nce. the author has never
bttn to the destination discussed.
Alaska 1s reasonably close to
Washington, adequately exotic
to wnle aobut, and close to the
hearts and minds of many a
local student. One of the main
11bstacles to travel is. of course,
J lack of time and money. But
by reading and talking about
Alaska, one hopes to vicariously
e'(pt>rience some minor bit of the
pains and pleasures of an actual
visit
Here it ts, almost summer. Get
lost Go to Alaska if you want.
Stones abound about quick
money to be made in the fish
tactont"S of the state, fish to be
clubbed over the head and eaten,
.ind nngs of bright water, Are
they true7 Who knows7 From
the information gleened from
-.ome past tourists and one
resident. tt seems they are about
half true
As tar as getting work in the
,tate, the word is. get something
lined up before you go. State
1obs are the most romantic or
dmong the most mundane,
depending on the assignment. It
1s possible to count fish in the
wilderness for eight dollars an
hour, but highly unlikely unless
vou're a resident with connections The resident mentioned in
this article did that. He also
pushed papers and did a variety
of other tasks for the state; in
general. he seemed to prefer
Alaska over other employers.
Our Alaskan worked in OI'leof
the infamous canneries once for
two weeks, but it didn't pay
very well. State minimum wage
1n Alaska is 75 cents per hour
more than the federal minimum,
and that's about what canneries
pay.
$3 to $4 an hour.
Canneries tend to hire a lot of
out of state labor because
residents simply can't afford to
work in them.
One widely told story about
Alaska 1s quite true: the cost of
living there is high; the $12
pizza 1s a reality. A small and
grungy apartment in Juneau can
cost S300 a month if you find
one at all. A half-acre of land in
the countryside nearby can go
for S20,000. again, if available at
all Oddly enough, in Alaska,
the land situation is tight. Very
little is for sale and homesteading 1s only available for
residents of five years.
Other possibilities for employment include logging (practically
Most of the real traveling
ended for us on the Kenai
Peninsula south of Anchorage.
We did some hiking there and
stayed at a beach where some
people were fishing. They gave
us a lot of Halibut steaks.
nil) and fishing (again, often
requiring a connection). It is
possible to make lots of -money
fishing, or none: it depends
entirely on the fish. Workers get
paid a percentage of the catch. If
the skipper knows his stuff and
the fish are in the mood during a
particular season, then fine, but
it's not unheard of for a person
to work three months and come
up with nothing.
Our resident advises prospective employees from out of state
to line a job up beforehand. It's
often possible to do so by
writing canneries in Alaska or
contacting a fishing company in
Seattle. Otherwise,
says the
resident, bring plenty of money
and be prq,a~
to do anything
when you get there.
What job has our informant
lined up for himself this summer? None. He's going canoeing
with a friend in the fiords of the
Southeast. Which brings us to a
more pleasant possibility: tourism of one sort or another. In
Alaska, as elsewhere, one finds
the usual dichotomy of tourists:
students fresh from R.E.I. and
older, Howard Johnson types.
The following anecdotes will be
directed toward the latter group.
Our Alaska resident says that
hitch-hiking in the state is not a
good idea. The weather can tum
utterly nasty even during the
summer, and one had best be
prepared to wait for days in a
EDITOR
John Keogh
BUSINESSMANAGER
Nathanid Koch
MANAGING EDITOR
Nancy Ann Pukes
PRODUCTION MANAGER
Malcom Baker
FEATURESEDITOR
John Seward
SECRETARY
Joya Bakt:.r
STAFF WRITERS
Laurie hankel
John Martin
Li~ Fleming
ADVERTISING
Mark Oambers
Joel Lindstrom
single spot. This, however,
seems to contradict any direct
experience of the ex-tourists
contacted by the author. Although they had heard horror
stories from others, generally
they found their experiences
bearable.
Your author won't be going to
Alaska in the near future, and
thereby suffers some minor disappointment (as well as rrlief in
the knowledge that he won't be
suffering mosquitoes and the
pains of wilderness hitch-hiking).
This story shall therefore dissolve into a reconstruction in the
first person of a travel story told
by one of our tourist informants
who spent two months in Alaska
duri~ the summer of 1976:
We got on th• h,rry in ~attl•
and it rained most of the way up
the coast. After two days we
reached Ketchikan, The fint bald
eagles I'd ever seen were off the
shore near that town. The place
looked dirty; people had just
dumped their old cars in the
water. Alaska is great, there's
wilderness everywhere right in
the background, but the towns
are cruddy for the most part.
Wrangle was an okay looking
place, but I think Petersburg
might have been the best on the
south coast. There was no place
to camp there, but some guy
told us about a Salvation Army
where we could stay. He took us
there and left us, We had the
whole place to ourselves the
whole time we were there, like
our private palace. It was in an
impressive setting with mountains and eagles constantly
around.
We spent a week in Juneau,
and hiked up oome ridge by the
Mendenhall Glacier, You could
see all the way to Mount St.
Elias (18,000 h,) in Canada, and
to the ocean. Another nice hike
near Juneau is up to Spaulding
Meadows.
From near Juneau, we hitched
into ·the Yukon Territory. The
Canadians gave 111 a hard time
at the border. They wanted us to
have a specific destination and a
minimum amount of money.
The Yukon was the first place
we encountered mosquitoes in
large numbers: they were pretty
awful. It's kind of dry there,
wide-open land with endless dirt
roads. The Alcan Highway is
dirt through the Yukon and
paved from the point where it
reaches Alaska. There's a town
by the border on the American
side called Tok, where you can
get free road maps and a little
button with a walrus on it that
says you've been to Alaska. 1
think they also serve free coffee
or something_.
We hitched from th• Yukon to
Fairbanks. That place Is a dump,
but the hitching Is real good
around town. We found a place
to camp just outside the city
near College, where the University of Alaska is located, We got
to take free showers in the
dorms there-nobody
cared.
Elsewhere we were paying like a
dollar-twenty-five' just to wash
up,
You should stay out of the
bars in Fairbanks even if you can
afford to go in. We heard a lot
of stories about violence in them
from people who picked us up,
After hitting Fairbanks we
hitched up the Steese Highway
to Circle Hot Springs. It's kind
of a rundown place; looks like it
was a little more popular at one
time. There were a lot of hippies
around and it had a pretty loose
atmosphere, We hiked a hew
days across tundra on the Mount
PinneU trail nearby. That was
about the most remote area we
reached during our trip. It was
in mid-July and th• tundra was
blooming with millions of flowers. The only problem we had
was with water_ Because of
pe.rma-frost, the only way you
could get it was in "sump
holes": it was pretty mucky
stuff, Tundra is great to sleep
on-a
lot of dense mou and
grass.
In a lot of ways I thought
McKinley Park was the best
place w• got to. A dirt road runs
from the entrance some 85 miles
into the park.
You're not
allowed to take privilte cars on it
SI.SOper page
v.... --
IMPORTED CAR PARTS
Peggy Harris
620 LEGION WAY
754-5644
Ph 456-6022
after 5:30
and during weekends.
On Jun• 24 and 25 near Elma,
Washington, th• Crabshell Alliance, a statewide citizens' organization which promotes safe
and lif..-affirming energy policies, will sponsor protest activities against th• Satsop planned
nuclear plants.
Protest events begin June 24 at
10 a.m. with a rally on the
Olympia capitol grounds, followed by a caravan leaving at
noon for the plant site. Other
events will include workshops on
nuclear power and alternative
sources of energy; music, nonviolence training, and a door-to-door canvas of Grays Harbor
residents, Olympia Crabshell
Coordinator Diana Moore feels,
"It is important for u1 to involve
the local residents in this action.
We want to know ):,ow they !ft(,
and to let them know who we
are."
The nuclear plant occupiers,
protutors
with non-violence
training, will plant trees and
bushes on the site to begin
reclaiming the many acres • of
cleared land, The Sabop reclamation 1tatem.a1t of pu.rp0M' ii:
TO' actiw/11 """ th• COnmMCnon of th• s..tsop nu,;/e"'
plat in a non-violfflt dind
hazard to the condition and
qw,lity of life in this world,
Some people participating in
the SatJop Reclamation action
are deeply committed to nonviolence, some recognize it as on
effective toctic in this .struggle.
Whatever our po.sition, w« ore in
agreement with the toctic of
non-violent direct action during
thi.s Sat.sop Action, ond will
follow o non-violent discipline.
All Rlclamatlon policy decisions
ore orrived ot through o process
of consensus A.11d ore .subject to
chonge by thi.s .some proces.sthrough affinity group/spokesper.son structure. Thi.s insures
thot l'Oeryone has on effective
voice in decision making.
In ordn to 11t10ia the possibility of violmn,
it is neces.sory
thot the ptarticiponts in the action
know whot to expect, ond that o
fleiibl, and rtsponsivt decUion
making process be estab/iJhed,
To this md, the Satsop Rlclamation hm established o progrom of nonviolence training
workshops, and porticipation in
one of these v,ork.shops
is
r,quired for all tho., who intmd
to occupy Satsop,
RCtion.
- To """' a cellbration of Ii~
affirming alt,mativn,
- To hw/op strong and lrMltina tin with th, community.
- To ftiucAt, our communitia
a to th,ir ,dtff?Ultiva.
- To •xprns our so/idllrity with
th, worldwide anti-nucl,ar
movnnmt.
Ot,,n,in,,
The Satsop Rlclamation is a
dir,ct non-violent action to ,top
the m,lopmmt
of th, Satsop
nuclear plant, W, ful th, spr...d
of nuclear pow«r rq.,rfSfflfJ a
The Crabshell Alliance presented the Washington Public
Power Supply System, the company building the nuclear plants,
with a list of demandsrequesting
mainly the termination of construction and restoration of the
site, If the construction has been
terminated by June 25, tho
Alliance will sponsor • oolar
energy and conservation fatival
near the site at that time,
Olympians wanting to know
more about tht Satsop protest
actiona ano invited to Satsop
Sunday, June 11, at tho Olympia
Community Center, which will
include an educational program,
a brunch, and a raffle, For
additional information contact
Diana Moore, 866-6191.
Open Mon - Fri
8 -7
Sit
9- 4
STUDENT DISCOUNT
a;
ntAffL
DRUGS
WWII 11 CllftD
by Nancy Ann Parlr.H
"Best idea of the week
department: Dan Evans as the
next president of the Univenity
of Washington, The idea has
naturally occurred to quite a few
people, and at least one UW vice
president is helping to organize a
small campaign for the exgovemor .... "
The comment above appeared
in the Weekly, a ~attl• n<wsmagazine, on May 17. The
writer went on to claim that
Evans was a "shoo--in as the next
president" of the University. The
Weekly was not the only n~s
medium in Seattle to offer
Evergreen's president a n~ job.
Where are the journalists'
speculations derived from7 "I
think that this is a case of the
SeattJ, newspapen having slow
days between Sonics games,"
Evans comments.
The former governor has no
intention of becoming a former
Evergreen president, at least not
in the near future.
"I feel that when I came here I
-••--•
..
:
Juno 1, 1m
president:
"l guess that the
appeal of the University of
Washington is that it would be
one way for me to get back from
the 17 to the 50 yard line at the
football games. Someone once
asked me the difference betwttn
being governor and not being
governor and I told them it was
about 33 yards. There is a
difference between where one sits
in the president's box and where
my seats are now.
··1 still can't understand why I
don't get better seats because I've
had season tickets for 31 years
now. But that still only puts me
on the 17 yard line. What they
do is that they pass out the
tickets to the people who
contribute extra money to the
athletic program. You have to
pay a bribe, really, to get
excellent tickets."
E"·ans explains that after a
number of years he has learned
to read such articles with interest
and then forget about them
"Life is too short to try and
busily get around and correct
those things."
really had a commitment
to
Evergrttn," says Evans, "and I'm
not the type ot person who skips
around from one job to another."
Evans uys he enjoys his
position at Evergreen because the
school is small enough for him
to be intimately involved with
all its elements. He feels the
University is "more of a big
business" where the president is
"far more remote from students,
from faculty. and from things
going on in the school."
"Evergreen is still growing,"
says Evans, "not in numbers
perhaps, but growing in its
capacity and in perfecting a new
and important direction in higher
education.
It's frankly more
challenging to be involved in this
type of development."
The TESC president has his
doubts that the Board of Regents
at the U,W, had anything to do
with recent press speculation~
Although Evans firmly states
that he will maintain his post
here, he momentarily entertains
a fantasy of becoming U. W.
Results
S&A Funding
For the past four weeks Servica and Activities Fee Allocations have ~ taking place in the
Cofftthouse. Tentative decisions were made last Wednesday on the hnal category under
consideration, Services. On Wednesday, Jun< 7 FINAL decisions will be made conaming all 47
SiltA proposals. Here are the tmtative decisions made to date. Items in parenthesis are estimated
revenue.
1978-79
1978-79
1977-78
ALLOCATION
REQUEST
ALLOCATION
BUDGET
OPERATIONS
Campus Recreation Center
Equipment lsau•
Recttational Arts (ceramics)
College Activities Building
CAB Operations Support
s~ Board Operations
Organic Farmh<>UM!
Transcripts
RECREATION/SPORTS
Sports Clubs
Boat Club
Folkways
Volleyball Club
Leisure Education
Women's Soccer
Women's Softball
Alpine Club
Women's Basketball
Outdoor area-Swing Set
Evergreen Skateboard Assn.
HUMAN RIGHTS
Ujamaa
Asian Coalition
Native Amer. Stud. Assn.
Gay Resource Center
Faith and Alternative Community
Men's Resource Center
Women's Center
Evergreen Political Info. Center
3rd World Women's Organiz.ation
AU INN
-
Evans Not Leaving
CULTURAL GROUPS
Friday Night Films
Supplemental Special Events
TidN of Change Productions
Center for Literature in Perform.
Tuesdays at 8
Energy Northwest
Ascent of Man Film Series
Finally, we com< to the ethical
considerations of publicizing employment and travel in Alaska.
The more people who go to the
wilderness, the less wildemesa
the:rr is. When national Geo-graphic ran a story about th•
deserted back country of Yellowstone Park, it became overrun in a year. Of coune, the
Journal is not the National
Geographic.
Aiasb has a his)i unemployment rate: 9 peK'ellt at lut
count. After some thought one
must decide it it, ever 10
slightly, unethical to encourage
large numben of people to go
thett, On< can only say that if
you do go there, don't tell
anyone.
HENDRICKS
TERM PAPER TYPING
Thll COOPER POtNT JOURNAL la publlllhed ..._ty
tor 1M atudanta, ~ty.
end stall of The Ewerv,_,, Stale CoHege, Olympe., WNhlngton -,......
.,. not MCNNf11J thoM of TIie E~
11111 Collefll. ~ng
ffll•
1ena1.,,.._,,_, "-"-" doN not necNwffy l,nptJ aidol•r••I
by ttlll ,..,,,;
; .
OfflcN .,. kicatat In the College Ac1WII... BuHdlng (CAI) )OI, Nlw9 phone:
•-an.
Ail:Mttlelng and buel,.... phone: •-IOIO . ......,. poOcy: AMi.ttert to
Iha editor muat be .....,_,
by noon TYNdey lor that --••
pubffcatlon. let.,..
--1
• typed, double-apeoed,
and 400 wcwda or ._._ lAttln •
a• O
....
be ICIINdIOI'
th. NamN •Ill
Other than hitch-hiking the
entire 2,00Q-mile Akan Highway, transportation
costs to
Alaska will run about $200 this
summer for a round trip. The
ferries from SeJttl, to Juneau
cost $89 ont way-to that one
must add food costs along the
• way, as we:11as possible trips to
the bar. Air fare to Juneau now
goes for 599 one way, and
double that for round trip. It is
probably th• cheapest way to
go, but then one misses seeing
th<, coast of B,C Perhaps an
agreeable way to go would be
some combination of boat and
plane. The bus to Anchorage
costs $249 one way, and it
sounds like pure torture.
A book called Milepost is very
useful to anyone touring Alaska.
it's updated annually by itt
publishers and is available at the
TESC Bookstore for $6, It's
almost five hund~ pages long,
and provides good browsing
information.
by Lauri< Frank.el
LAIIOEIIIICOUNT
IIKOIID lalCT10N
MANUSCRIPT &
PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
Thomas Hood
Other informants had a variety of tips for the tourist. Most
commonly mentioned was bug
protection; bring lots of -1lent. A hat of some sort soaked
in DDT or a similar substance
can be very helpful, Bring lots of
money. One person suggested
that for a summer of camping
there, $600 wouldn't be too
much including transportation.
Get on the ferries early in order
to claim a good sleeping spot.
Alliance Planning
Satsop Protest
_,
SERVICES
Driftwood Daycare Center
Women's Health Clinic
Bus System
KAOS-fm Radio Station
Cooper Point Journal
Duckhouso
Environmental Resource Cen.
Self-Help Legal Aid
Unnamed Student Organization
Bicycle Repair Shop
Career Planning Job Day,
~
Organic Farm
Student-Run O.li
$60,884 (25,000)
16,106 ( 2500)
25,567 ( 3810)
82,366 ( 2864)
40,721
4664
-06971
292
1040
260
250 ( 987)
unc:omparable
455
225
898
522
-0-0-
-0250
84
305
-0500
-0-
8455)
2501
4632)
3154
3701
7250
3651
1199
375
5288 ( 1840)
1>421
2479
6693
7775
18,301
23,131
19,892 (10,000)
3426 ( 2200)
274
4615
-01500
1500
2458
-0-
63,483 (28,000)
15,220
21,403
83,857
43,174
5092
20,000
6113
( 3363)
( 3810)
( 3224)
57,028
11,519
18,576
83,281
43,174
(28,000)
( 3363)
( 3810)
( 3800)
5092
( 9000)
-0909 ( 384)
250 ( 100)
300
641
4000)
200
-0609 ( 2625)
350
-0-0-0- 110,861)
500 ( 500)
109 ( 3000)
2316 ( 300)
tabled
229
5001
1001
406
1942
2196
4776
3478
ta~led
1866
41(18
4466
1062
6000 ( 30791
8852 ( 3036)
18,000 (2-9000)
16,139 ( 7500)
12,247 (10,00())"
-0300•
3484•
-0479
300)"
-01425
200)"
-0-
5000 10,000 Reserv•
3115 ( 9000)
722
1371
3841
350
1102 ( 33071
1000 ( 41131
200
595
1728 ( 23251
505
2000
I 001
400
-0- (10,8611
500 ( 500}
I09 ( 3000 l
2817 ( 300)
1050
5001
476
40t>
2980
3254
6932
3803
1368
2997
9095
6754
2000
6236
10,892
23,605
21,523
16,712
2790
4960
J926
50
2306
2000
3350
8434
( 3079}
( 27601
( 9251)
( 75001
(10,0001
( 20001
(
(
501
200)
•in addition to these allocation all of the budgets funded within the Services category must
reduced an additional 16 perant.
NNIU
W•aTa,01
S"O""'"•
C&NT••
OLYMPIA. WAIHINGTON
~
6
7
The Cooptf f)o,nt Journal June 1, 1171
Narcotics Arrests Continued
A Day
At The ~ireus
President
Evans does not
believe t-hat drug traHicking
exists on campus to the degree
that "some would make it out to
be." "I think there may be a lot
of this 'playing the big-time' kind
of thing on the part of certain
peopl•. There may be a sack of
sugar or something sitting there
and that"s "the big stuff.' "
He asserted, howevefl)
he
college would contin
an
effort to crack down
' th•
wholesal•
Photos and text by Maureen Pierre
Hundreds of Olympians fulfilled a timeless and universal fantasy
last Monday when the Carson and Barnes circus came to town.
Circus roustabouts invited the community to help set up the big
tent in the morning. Kids, housewives, office workers and dads
wearing baseball caps and big grins grabbed heavy c.-nvas and
ropes and pulled the tent into shape. Then the African el~hants
strained against thick steel poles, raising the big top.
Care.on and Barnes plays a different town every day, putting on
afternoon and evening shows. A half-hour ~fore show time
circus chldren as young as thrtt years old were helping their
p.irents set up the trapezes, inner rings, the exotic animal ring and
the high wires. Circus acts ranged from two not-so-funny downs
to a spectacular trapeze act perfonned by the Fearless Flying
Fantastics-the Flying Caballeros from Mexico. The Caballeros, a
family act. featured the father as catcher, cousins, and 8--year-old
Romero Junior perfonning a breathtaking, suspensful act.
Several times during the two-hour circus, acts were performed
simultaneously in several rings. At one point. spectators were
rubbernecking to catch Miss Magnolia on the slackwire, jugglers,
unicyclists. and Mr. Frazier on the tightwire .. Miss Rosalita,
resplendenl in a white evening gown. put her Liberty ponies
through their paces making them stand on each others backs,
prance in unison and do other tricky things. One of the most
delightful acts was Bobby's Dogs-a
group of trained white
shepards who perfonned dazzling acts, s.µch as jumping rope on
their back legs, and loving it.
Wayne Ragen, billed as America's Foremost Young Subjug.ator
of the Wild Beasts, kept six young lionesses and Bengal tigers at
bay with a snapping whip, having them jump through a burning
hoop, stand on their back legs., and perform other daring acts. At
one point, Ragen saw fit to give each lioness a hug, but the tigers
were too feisty and he didn't attempt to get too close. They were
beautifully trained, as were all the animals, and all were treated
affectionately before and during their performances. The circus
elephants. each weighing about 8,000 pounds, danced for the
crowd, and one, possibly named Lydia, performed a solo comedy
act for the crowd, pantomining an elephant ill lunch. She would
only rise and leave when the crowd wildly applauded.
The acts were dazzling, the timing fast-pilced, and the crowd of
hundreds. mostly children with pilrents, loved it. After the circus
was over, and children were groaning at its end. kids all over the
tent were grabbing onto cable wires and prilcticing swinging.
How many of those drumers will go home and practice circus
acts on their swing sds7 So, filled with visions of dancing
elephants. glamorous rhinestone-studded stars, ilnd faces sticky
with cotton candy, the kids left, grinning and exhausted. And the
circus packed up for another town tomorrow.
operation'\
, hard
narcotics, and would· c:ooperilte
with local authoritin
i'W~
.. thilt
effort.
Evans told the Journal this
past Wednesday morning that he
did not believe the arrests of
Students Kathryn Sue Hahn and
Leslie Ann Jackson were intended by authorities to produce a
mere quilntity of marijuana.
"I have to usume that they're
not just there to bust up
marijuana plants growing in the
window. Their time and their
involvement of undercover
agents. which after all (on~ an
arrest
is made) they blow
another undercover agent, and in
that respect its an expensive type
of operation. To do that just for
some marijuana plilnts seems not
lo be a very smart use of their
staff."
The search warrant issued for
the two Evergreen
women's
dormitory apartment listed marijuana plants in the window ilS a
"probably nuse." That does not.
however. necessarily
indicilte
that marijuana is all the agents
expected to find.
According to Smith. the two
women had nothing to do with
any type of hard drugs and the
agents had been "looking in the
wrong place." Both Evans and
Smith reiterated after their mttting with Breuer and Redmond
that the prime issu• th•y
This may be your la.at chance to
exprea1 yourMlf at E..-green. If you
are • graduating Nnlor with talent In
some shape or fOfffl you ahouid 1lgn
up tor the GRADUATION OP£H MIKE
that will take p&aoe dlrKtly after the
ceremonyon June 4th. You can 1lng,
dance, toll -Ing
J-,
1peeches or almoet anything elN. Act•
lhould be about 5 ffllnutN tong. Sign
up today, June t, 1978, or Friday, on
the poeter on the eide of the CABInfo
center or leeve your name. pnone
number and a brief delcf1ptk>n of your
.ct in Box 130 at KAOS. For further
into contact Karr~ Jacobi: at 8186-52&7.
"'°""
concerned with is the wholesale
trafficking of hilrd narcotics, and
not "a joint here or there."
Evans speculated further that
if good communications
had
existed within and between the
state and 1.ocal law enforcement
agencies,
last week's "bust"
might never have occurred.
"I don't know what kind of
communications they had up the
line. I think the same sort of
difficulty in g•tting good communications
within
agencies
exists, il5 the difficulty in getting
good communiciltions between
ilgencies. Sometimes that's a
problem because you Ciln get the
enthusiasm of someone who's
been involved in an investigation
and that enthusiasm may not be
translated accurately on up the
line. They (the enthusiastic
party) assume approval to do
something when in fact there
would have been no approval
given if the communications had
been more adequate."
Evans described
Tuesday's
meeting
with
Breuer
and
Redmond as ··satisfying",
and
said it conveyed a "cooperative
effort"
on the part of all
involved. He added that both
chiefs had reaffirmed a "gentlemen's agreement" with him that
thef will notify him before
authorities come onto campus to
arrest students unless circumstances prohibit
it. No such
notification
had been given
before the arrests took place lasl
week.
"I think what it does do,"
Evans said of the agreement, "is
give us the opportunity to make
sure that we have college
involvement and superv1s1on
during any arrest pr~u~.
1
have asked to be notified
personally, regardless of what
time of day or weekend." lf
notification is given to college
Tomporwy (juno 7-21) WORK-8TUOY
ttOSITIONI OPEN et The Organic
FennhouN. Mott w0ftt will be outdoora, cleaning up the site and
organizing materlala;
1ome heavy
lifting, painting end errands. Pay la
$3.30/hr •• 20
per -See
Gomer at the FarmhouH, or CIIII 8101,
"°""
Any dytte lnter .. ted In taking pert In
some way tor the Sat10p llcilon ehould
contact Becca e&e-3835. Tentative
theme Is ..Lesblanlam u en alternative
source or energy."
The quesllon of how fhe performing
be funded wlll
be
d!ecuued In an open forum prnented
by C.A.A.P.A. at the Olympie Community Center, Thu~y.
June 8, al 7
p.m. Free.
"off-duty'' 1s a misnomer e•plaining that officers are nevt"r
off duty.''
Evans and Smith asked local
law enforcemenl authont1h ~veral weeks ago lo assign undercover agents to invest1gatt> Jru~
traffic at Evergreen. Their request to local authorit1e~ camt'
after Director of Campus Housing Ken Jacob informed Smith
that drug related act1vi11e~ Wt-rt'
prompting life-threatentmg situations on campus.
at
1 :05 a.m. No arrests were mAde.
officials, Evans stated that either
he or Smith will make sure
someone is present to see that
students rights are not violated
in any way.
Several clouds of confusion
still surround last week's "narcotcs" busts.
Although Redmond says it is immaterial
whether or not narcotics agents
were drinking outside the donnitories shortly before the c1rrests
were made, Evans and Smith are
not so readily assured that this is
the case. Indications stemming
from another meeting between
Evans, Smith, and the State
Patrol are that the "drinking"
was a part of the narcotics
agents' "cover-up."
More than one member of the
Evergreen community have signed statements testifying that the
officers involved were drinking
outside the donns.
Evans explained that undercover agents will dress, act. and
look like students to the best of
their apility. He said. however.
that it was a "dumb cover if
students don't actually drink
outside the dorms."
Other authorities indicate that
HOUSE NEE0£0 BY MIO JUNE-2
bedroom wld hookup; yard spac,e, up
to $210 month. Mull allowkids, 1 CIII.
Call 866-0380.
AFFECTIONATE, PROTECTIVE OOQ
1-1/2 yr. 0kt med. alze female. Greet
companion and watchdog. C■ II Martha
days at Media Loan, 866-8253, eYea.
491-5291.
HELP MAKE DECISIONS AT EVERGREEN by being a studenl fl'Mnber ol
the Evergreen Council. ~our new
student membersare needed, 10 11you
are Interested leew a meuage at the
Evergreen Council's mailbox, CAB305.
arts should
Tt,11 very afttm00n (Thuntday) from
3 to 5 p. m., THE CAI PHASE II
DESIGN TEAM
1$
Sl'ONSORING A
KEOOER In the CAB cotfNflOuse. The
purpoee or the keg09f' 11 to give the
new architects, hl...c:tto flnleh the CAB
II work, a ch1nce to meet the
Evergreen cotnmunlty and har their
Ideas, and vlu-veru.
Classified
Faculty couple needs to hous.slt
tor 6 weeke: June 15 through July 30
whUe our hou• 11 finished. Papworth,
-.0722
O< flfl6.0fl88.
TIIT Hll,AAATION
IPICIALllff
IINCI 1tll
Vl~I OurCttttffl
AndSN for YourMtf
WhyWt Milt The Dtfftrtnee
Call Dly1, ENI I Wnbftdl
fo, lnfwmotMm Coff
Out
c-, .. ,
206-523-5224
SEATTLE
Uni-,ityV
............
..... -200
4900-25th
,
one of the men present during
the search and seizure lasl
Wednesday was a state patrolman who was not on duty at the
time, but was just along for the
ride. Students have signed statements to the eftect that this
particular "state" man was discourteous and bt"lligerenl during
the arrest procedures, although
an officer from Redmond·s unit
was described as being almo'it
helpful.
Evans feels that
at this
juncture there is good reason to
investigate the off-duty officer's
behavior al the dorms during the
course of the two Evergreen
women·s upcoming trials.
Lieutenant Feldhaus-er. State
Patrol information officer and
administrative aid to the chief of
the Stale Patrol, maintains that
Smith told the Journal la'il
week that dangtrous si1uat1ons
involving drugs included Evergreen Student David Boniske's
dissapearance from campus last
summer, a threat to a female
Housing resident made by a man
not associated with Evergreen
who was armed with a 38
caliber revolver, the dissapt>ar·
ance of $900 from a student'>
dormitory
apartment
and at
least fifteen students· confidence.,
to Smith since Bomskes dissapearance that they "feared' for
their own or their roommates
lives due to the drug related
incidents.
Evans told the Journal this
warned by Jacob about the dru~
related violence, although communications "should have been
handled better. .. At this point. he
said, "there is only next time to
consider." Evans promised that
1f there were a "next
time
students would be "better in
formed ..
RKDRDCO.
ECM Jazz Sale!
7.98 list LPs
$4.66
Limited to stock on hand while they last.
Westside
Cen.ter
357• 4755
"'------------
,
The Coop« Point Joum,il June 1, 1978
Tho~
-
-..,
.,._
1, 1171
HERE ARE LOTS OF WAYS
TO SEE THE WORLD.
GIVE YOU
A WAY TO UNDERSTAND IT
You'll understand the world and
vourself a whole lot better after a year
or two of experience as a Peace Corps
or Vista volunteer.
Whc1her you're a specialist whose
wish is to sharpen your profr:ssional
skills in engineering. education, math,
phvsical and life sciences. health,
business or a dozen other areas, or a
liberal arts grad eager to share your
1alen1s while acquiring new skills and
insights, the Peare Corps and Vista
will open an entire new world to you.
You ·11 not only experience
Announcing The
What To Give
Your Graduate
a new
and learn a new language,
\ou'I\ also share in the development of
an emerging nation, or help the poor
and powerless in AmCrica to gain
more control over their lives.
Complete information on volunteer
openings beginning this summer in
Africa, Asia, Latin America.
the
Parific, and throughout the U.S. is
now available.
L'Ulture
FOR INFORMATION
CALL OR WRITE:
THE PEACE CORPS/ VISTA
1601 SECOND AVE.
SEATTLE. WA 98101
Telephone 442-5490.
Collect calls accepted.
by John Martin
C•atterboa
Tavern
210 E 4th Ave.
• Homemade Sandwiches
• Free Pool Sunday til 8
• Real Stereo (bring your records)
.
.
25c Schooners (with a ballpoint pen)
- Lots of Help Wanted That's what we're going to need to put
out a new Cooper Point Journal on June
29. The Journal will have a new editor
and will depend largely on a new staff.
We can redesign everything about the
newspaper if you want. The main goal is
to examine some meaningful and important issues and produce a high quality
paper.
Do you write? Do you do artwork,
cartoons, photography?
Do you have
ideas about what's happening in Olympia,
the Westside, at Evergreen? Do you want
the Cooper Point Journal to deal with
those things? Come and help. We need
you.
The Journal has some paid positions
and many more unpaid positions open.
Students can earn academic credit by
arranging 'individual contracts.
If you are interested in applying for a
paid or unpaid position, please contact
me (the new editor) by leaving a message
at the CPJ office, CAB 306, TESC, or call
me in the evenings before 11 :00 at
352-2589. Thank you.
- Brian Cantwell
What does one buy the
Evergreen graduate who has
nothing7 You may consider
buying your favorite graduate a
sporty new ru,tchback, a food
prott560r or ~ybe a graduation
ring the size and weight of an
iron lung. None of these things
quit• suit th• laid baek attitude
,f tho Ev•'111ftn student except
maybe the iron lung. I Sll8Bat
you sit down and consfdtt this
problem attfully, for the Evergrttn
student is a very spocial
person whoH tastes are as
delicat• and refined u his fflffltal
hoalth. Buy for your gradua~
something which is a reflection
of his or her lilntyl•. not youn.
Parents,
this is especii1lly
important. I heard of one particuJar graduate whose pa~ts
bought him a hatchback D~
As~n; his fri•nds shunnod him
as if he had received a nuclear
reactor. and he was banished
oprn evrr-y day
10 - 7 Sunday
9 - 9 daily
WESTSIDE CENTER
MUSIC
Monday Night
Spring Concerts
Jun• 5, 12, 19
OBRADOR
S2 per show
June 26 (two •hows)
PHILADELPHIASTRING
QUARTET
$7 per show. 6 p.m. & 9 p.m.
fo~vtr to Bremerton. Just ~
cause you tat plutonium for
breakfast,
don't malct your
grad~te tat crow.
look attfully at tho group of
peopl• your Gl"ttner auociata
with and this may givo you 10mo
du• u to WNlt to buy.
If your gradual• io a fanatic
vogotarian it io wise to givo him
som•thins alons th• lin•• of
wooden bowls or monogrammod
chopsticks or maybe a year's
supply ol B-12. Do not buy your
vqgi• srad prnent1 1!1<•WaterPiks or a Son of Hibachi. Some
clothn. fflisht' be nia_ Don't let
your vqgi• fool you. H• wants
to be a sharp looking man on
th• so and still retain his
individuality. Your bat bet io to
hang around a morgue or a
hospital emergency room and
ask for clothH that nobody
wants anymore. Salvation Army
is out this year, as simply
everyone shops there. Use your
impeccable judgement or consult
his psychiatric rKOrds.
For the Evergreen sraduatt
who insists on fouling his body
with drugs and/or alcohol tho
list of graduation gifts is endless.
For the boozer who is tired of
endJns trips to the bathroom a
catheter is one gift that won't be
tucked away out of sight until
you come to call. They come in
all sizes. Just be sure it's the right
one. And of course every drunk
loves a good fast car with lots of
insurance. Volvos are out this
year. Too m•llow, and baides
they've gone commercial. Som~
thing like a Porsche is in, a
favorite in school zones and
orthopedic
wards. For that
yellow eyod grad I suggest a n•w
liver. Difficult as it is to come by
a good used livor th..., days, th•
effort is worth it for the special
graduate.
Your Greener grad doper
deserves the very finest present
your Master Charge can buy
him. Four to eight years of
sruoling tripping, snortins, and
etatera has loft him exhaustod
and 10mewhat confused. Maybe
you should mnind him that he is
graduating. Buy him that littl•
corner pharmacy he's always
drHmod of owning. If you roally
want •to make your dopey
gradual• Nippy, send him back
to Evorgroen. Dan will tak• can,
of him. Right Dan7
Lastly but not . IHstly comes
the int•lloctual Evorg1ftll ,uaduaw of 1978. For him a Volvo io
v•ry much in sty I•. H•' s tru,t
srad you just know is soing to
wri~ for New Tima or will sav•
that Third World woman from
the evil corporate Snidely Whiplash. And to do all this h• must
look in~Uoctual. Gone att th•
baggy khaki and th• loose-fitting
: sweater and those nice little
glassos that mad• him look lil<•
Trotsky. Buy your G,..,,.r srad
a nice tweed jacket with leather
elbow patch••· Buy hor that
peasant dress that male.es her
look and ·Ettl just Iii« Joni. Sh•
wants the liberated intellectual
look and she's goddamn going to
get it. After all, it's going to be
either Green~•« or tho ACLU
that will employ her. Maybe an
all expense paid trip to Africa
would be in order so that your
intellectual graduate can study
first-hand the rasins Third
World crisis.
These are just a few sugges--t ions. Undoubtedly
you will
think of many more. Use taste in
your selection of your Evergreen
graduation present. Do not be
kitsch. Talk Uncl• Bob into
giving your graduate a job at the
factory.
MANDARIN
ffBDIE
OPEN 7 DAYS
111 N CAPITOL WAY
VEGETARIAN DISHES
ALCOHOLIC
BEVERAGES
LUNCHEON BUFFET
ORDERS TO GO mon-th1,.1rs
362-8866
11 :30 - 10:30
fri
11 : 30 - 12
sat
4 - 12
sun 3 - 10:30
<
•
'' 150
LUNCH
FOR
A
ERE
135 ''
PLA
( Or How ToEat $15 Worth Of B~gels 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 contra.ct 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 boolcs of scrip, redeemable for $300 worth of food for a
mere $240 (a 20% 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).
I
10
n.
Thi Cooper Point Joum,a;IJuna 1, 1971
Evergreen
Collection
Cooper Point Joumel June, 1, 1t71
11
Previewing
The Evergreen Collection, an
unusual collection of contemporary art, will soon become a
permanent part of The Evergreen
State College.
The collection was purchased
with capitol construction funds
set aside by law for the Lab II
building and totalling
$37,000.
"Nehemiah & Rene" ·-
ii
Most of the 100 pieces are by
Northwest artists.
Paul Sparks, Evergreen visual
arts faculty member, and a team
of advisors collected the works
over a period of tw0 years. The
artwork can be viewed in the
Evergreen
Library
Gallery
through June 9.
Included in the collection is
the work of Potter
Frank
Boyden, whose ducks and other
themes on nature swoop the
sperical lines of his earth-tone
works. the electic oriental expressions of Sculptor
Patty
Warashina, the softly definitive
lines of an acrylic painting by
Barbara Rogers, and comments
on modern times by Acrylic
Artist Frank Samuelson.
painting by Barbara Rogers. Acrylic on
canvas.
Photography
the collection;
by
the
late
is also a part of
it
includes images
New
York
Artist
Diane Arbus and contemporary
images
by
Photographen;
Judy
Dates and Edward Weston.
Other artworks include a wall
hanging
"Under My Coat" - a quilted banner by Jeanne Oetlor.
•
cafe intermezzo
Thursday. June/,
Salurday, Junt 3, 8 p. m.
8 p.m.
C.-IROLr,v STREET
MARIE FARRELL
E\pres:m lady reads her poetry.
Guitar and vocals.
Covtr by donation.
Open Mon-Wed 9am-7pm, Thu-Sat
llam-!0pn
212 W 4th
943-7668
by Elayne
l•vensky,
ceramics
by Frank Goldsrud,
paintings
by Charles Stokes, and
mechanical works by Jeweler
Marilee Thompkins.
Sparks says the works were
selected from
both
well
known
and developing artists who show
unusual promise. In most cases
the collection represents the
talents of artists from Washington,
Oregon,
and
Idaho.
Searches outside the Northwest
area also gathered artworks by
artists and photographers
of
national reputation.
''Boy With Hand Gl'fflade" -
a photosraph by Diane Arbus.
The preview of The Evergreen
Collection provides a representa-
Building for public display.
tive sampling of the still-to-~
completed collection.
When all
The collection will also be
available for loan to other
institutions and galleries on an
exchange basis.
the pieces have arrived they will
be housed throughout the Lab 11
MUSIC
ON CAMPUS
MUSK: TO READ SQENCE l'1C1lON
BY will be prnented In a 70-mlnute
concert on Friday, June 2 beginning at
8 p.m. In the Recital Hall of the
Communlcat1on1 Building. Muelc for
the production
waa compoead by
Vl1ttlng F1eulty Musician Victor Saucedo Teceyehuatzln, who hQ bued
the presentation, on two concept,:
that evolution OCCura1towly, and that
things and events are predictable
within the llmlts of the c01moe. Mu1H:
for the production wu compoaed by
Saucedo, and computer-generated
using the Timber Tuning Sy1tem at the
Center for Music Experiment at the
University ot Callfoml&, Sen Diego.
Slides were completed by Studen1
David Sok1n ualng a program at
Evergreen•, Computer Servleel. Student JIii Bonlske created color vlaual
effects and student BIii Swenaon wlll
read e>nglnal poetry written tor the
program. FREE.
Graduating students In the various
performing arts 11 EvergrHn wlll
p,eNnt I SENIOR PORTFOLIO PERFORMANCE on Thuraday, June 8 at 8
p.m. In the Experimental Theater of the
Communications Building. The conoert
wlll fNture WOt'ksIn music, dance, and
thNter, prooentod and pot1onned by
Sue Ann Roberts, SteYen lAyton Ted
Rolsum, Mlcnae1 Menatty, Ph1111p
Hertz, and Michael Huntlberger. The
Senior Port1ollo Perlormanoe 11 aponllOnld by The Danca Contrac1, Twentieth Century Music, and by tne
Tuesdays at Elgnt concerti lecture
series. $1.~
general, $1 Hnlor
citizens, cnlldren, and students.
I Was
Walking Down
The Street
One Day,
thinking about all the things in life I enjoy:
sniffing postmen's legs, biting lamp posts, putting pieces of grass
down my throat, etc., when I realized how comfy I was living at ASH.
I eat well, too. What money my master saves on ·rent, he spends on my food.
up and down In your Hat, knee
alappln' and toe tappln"'I Comer of
Thurston and Capit~ Wey. iU-1371.
UTTU BUT KNOWN TO BE UNDENI.ULY TIIUE FACTII: Dlxy Lee
Ray once applled to be Evergreen••
President. Well, ehe WU l'l8\lef' In the
running for Prelldent, but lhe did take
0¥91' Dan's JOb at the capitol. Sony,
Don. THE OREENWOOD INN llnally
got rid of MAJIC and now fNtunta the
band TRIANGLE.
Tf111 one wlll
J)n)b&bty be there au summer. H■'f9
your next triangle et the GreenWOOd.
~RICHAAD"S ROUNDHOUSE fNturea
NIGHT LIFE over the weekend.
•M-2222.
A FINAL FAREWELLAND NOTE TO
THE NEW CPJ STAFF: Good luck.
You'll need It. The rubber dart gun Is
In the editor's drawerl-nap
ART
ON CAMPUS
PHOTOORAPHS
BY
MARY
FITZQIEIW.D AND MAROIE ■ ROWN
are on dl~•Y It the CAB CoffaahouM
now tnrough June 5.
NEW PAtNTINOS IY MARILYN
FIIAICA ... ahowlng It !he Fourtn
Floor Gatlor, of the TESC Llbrwy.
Exnlbft CIONI Juna 8.
TAVS. GRANOLAJOINTS, & MISC.
(In Olympll)
Ther9 will bl a MULTIMEDIA PRODUCTIONOF PHOTOOIIAPHERWILL
s,
CAPTAIN COYOTES hoata BLUE
lOCKWOOD on June 3 and 4 at 8 p.m.
In L■cture Hall 3. WIii hu been a
ltudent at TESC for two yeart and
WOfka In Photo Sarvlciea. This show
will be an amalgametton of his work
CMN' the put .....,
yNfl. Adml11lon
Is free.
SKY through Saturday night. 2410 W.
Hameon. 357◄191. WARNING WHITE-
SHIRTEO-POOI.-SHARK
lrom the CPJ:
aomeone you know Juat turned 211
ADULT
STUDENT
HDUSIN
3138 0VUIHUL8l
"D.
OLYM~I
WAaH. 98902
zoe •••-11•1
GNU DELI will fNture MtcHAEL
MoOALUARD I PEOQY KNAl'P on
Thursday
night.
On Friday and
Satul'Uay nights, WILD 111011l)k:kl up
the bUllng. The ,_
thet
tnl1 lrtah bend will have you "Jumping
IN TACOMA
Works done by Children trom the
Tacoma Public Schools WIii be on
dlaplay et the Children's Gallery of the
Taooma Art Muaeum througn Labor
Doy.
IN OLYMPIA
PAINTINOI IY JEAN HARRINGTON
AND RUIS HAMAMOTO wlll bl on
show 11n axtre WNk It tha Chlfdhood'I
End Gallery. Coming June 8 ere
ETCHINOS IY SUSAN CHRISTIAN,
Nit glue pon,etaln by TESC F10Ulty
Member Curt HHfar and paddled
stonew.,. by Suun Rowell.
tne T1com1 Little ThHter. Pertor•
mances on June 2, 3, 8, 9, 10, 15, 1e,
17, 22, 23. and 24. All perlOffl\lOON
begin at 8:30 p.m. Admlnlon Is 13.50,
'3.00 students and aenlor citizens.
THE SHADOWBOX,
by Mich.HI
Crl1tofer, will be performed at A
Contemporary Theater, 100 Weat Roy
Street. The play Is I humorous vl110n
of the American view of dNtn.
DANCE
IN TACOMA
Twenty ex■mplea of the flneat and
moat
complex
orlglnal
SILK·
SCREENSIY HUNDERTWASSER
AND
VASARELY are on display through
June 23 at the American Art Co., 2046
• 6th Avenue.
CONCERTSIN SEATTLE
(Concerts lfsted will all be held II the
Paramount Nortnweat and tickets are
avall ■ble In Olympia at Budget Tapes &
Records)
June 10 • LITTLE FEET
June 18 - LEO SAYEA
June 17 • JOHN PAINE
June 19 - THE KINKS
I refuN to teU you where or when
OLD TIME COUNTRY DANCINO la
happening.
I don't nave to. I'm
graduating Ind this 11 my IUt IUut.
0o?atlons, donations, donation,.
APPLEJAM con:Ually lnyjt .. you to a
performance of claHlcal
SlamHe
music by the THAl-8IAM SANQKrT on
June 10 at 8:30 p.m. YWCA, 220 E.
Union.
.!50dOnatlon.
LIMITED EDITION PRINTS IY
,\LEXAND£R CALDER wlll be prwlewed on Sunday, June 4, from 3 to e
p.m. et the Collector', a.nary. Aleo
shOwlng are MYTHOLOGICAL VIIIONI
by Rob Glacher, and IUIII by JltnN
OUver. The lhow runs through July 1.
CREATIVE GROWTH: ARTS AND
THE HANOfCAPPED, an exhlbU sponlOf'ed by Allied Arts and the Pleroe
County A11n. for retarded citizens. The
,now 11 at the Kittredge Gallery 11
UPS.
THE CHILDREN'S SUMMER WORKSHOP IN PERFORMING AND FINE
ARTS wlll be held at lhe Fo11 High
~hool from June 29 to July 27. The
workshop 11 designed to otter In-depth
arta Instruction
U'llt children don·t
generally receive during the achoo!
yea,. The fee II '20. Open to chlldren
10 to 13 YNrt of age. Call 583--4754for
more Information.
ACRnJC WATERCOLORSBY JOE
MORRIS and OtL,1 AND PENCILS av
SHARON ROIS .,. at the MlGallery tnroogn June. Located on the
aeoond floor of the Old City Hall,
THEATER
IN SEATTLE
On TUMday, Juna 13, the lntlman
Theater Company of Tacoma will open
It's NUOn with a preview perform■noe
of HENRY IV, a wlldly theatrlcal
contemporary play authored by pleywrlght Luigi Plrandello. Tha urlas
continues wltn the preview perfor-
mancaof THE WAY OF THE WOIILD.
<:onar-.
Wrtttan by Anthony
the play
le • reetoratlonoomecty ma pauibfa
by • month-long realdenot of noted
expert Anthony Comlaf'I. All produc>
tlon1 thle aumme, will be performed at
the 2nd Stage Theater, 1418 - 8th
Avenue, Saettle.
IN TACOMA
IAIU IN ARMS, 1 muak:ol by
Aodge,o and Hart, will bl pot1onned It
THE PRELUDE DANCE ENSEMBLE
wlll present I dance concert, Wednesday evening, June 71h at 7:30 p.m. at
the Mount Tahoma School Auditorium.
Tickets wllt be 1v1llable If the dOOf.
For more Information call "472-C764.
POLITICS
IN OLYMPIA
A CRABSHELL BENEFIT DINNER
will be held 11 tne Olympla Community
Center on Sunday, June 11 at noon.
Entertalnmenl (music and skits) end •
raffle wlll be held.
IN SEATTLE
RAOfCAL WOMEN MEmNO at 7: 30
p.m., Freeway Hall. A report on the
recant Women of Color conference wlll
be made. Dinner 11 aerved 11 8:30 p.m.
For lnlonnatlon on chUdcare or tran1port1tlon, call 832-1815.
The Greenpeace Foundation 11 1pon1or1no a WALK FOR WHALES In
S..ttle on Saturday, June 3. It will
begin on Pier 59 at Waterfront park.
Participant• may begin walking from
8:30 a.m. until 11 1.m. Thia 11 • fund
raising event to benefit the summer
whaling campaigns by the Foundation.
For more Information call the office In
Olympl• at
91 .
eee-e,
FILMS
Editor's Note:
Spaclal thanks to Gary Alan May
from the Joumal atatl tor his untalllng
dedication In wrltlno this Quarter'• film
notea.
ON CAMPUS
Friday Nile Fllme Pf'9N"II S!■nley
Kubr1ck'a LOLITA In whlit appNra
to
be • IHt•Of-the•HHOn
bural of
oourage. It II baaed on the nOYel by
Vladimir Nabokov (he al10 wrote the
acrlpt)
and Is tha atory ol a
mlcldl..eged man·• oblNelon with •
10-.)'WW'-oldnymphet who dNtroys his
llfe. Some say It Is • comedy. oU'lers
uy I drama; au that can be said tor
certain la that It 1tar1 Jamee Mason,
Shelley WlntMa, Peter Sellers, and
Sue Lyon as Lolila. Gary Alan May
Insist, tnat I mention !hit next week
FNF will show Clouzot'a WAGES OF
FEAR, a nltroglycertne thriller from !he
maker of DIAIOLIQUE. By the way.
the short wnn LOLITA wlll be OATINQ
DO'S ANO DON'TS. a once serious
heatlh class mm. 75 centa, Lecture
Hall I, 3:00. 7:00 and 10:00
No more academic fllma unUI Fall
Quarter. Thanks to Mark Levensky for
this year's series. Gordon Beck takes
over In the fall.
IN OLYMPIA
At the Cinema, ANNIE HALL, which
won four Academy Awards. for .some
reason. It's runny. Quite funny In tact.
but four Academy Awards? Ne•t thing,
they'll give an Oscar to Sylvester
Stallone, or John Wayne. or a dead
man. Allred Hitchcock ,,.._ won an
Academy Award. Kinda makes you
wondM, know whal I mean? Anyway,
althOugh ANNIE HALL doesn'1 deserve
any naUonal 1w1rd, It's s111t pre11y
funny .• 7 :00 and 9·00 Next? COMA
Rumor has It that THE MAN WHO
FELL TO EARTH and THE HELL·
STROM CHRONICLE will show 1n
Olympia in an e•hausttng doubl•bill
sometime In the future. Sometime 1n
the tu1ure, ge1 ii?
At the Capitol,
Walt Disney's
RETURN FAOM WITCH MOUNTAIN
and I short, HOLD THAT POSE! At
7:00 and 9:00. 357-7181.
Al 1he Olymplc. SATURDAY NIGHT
(no1 Nile) FEVEA. "America's Number
One Moviel" 7:05 and 9:15. 357-3'22
The S1a1e Thealer1 357...tOlO afler
6:30.
IN SEATTLE
Samurai Festival at tne Aldgemont 1
Kurosawa's SANJURO and YOJIMBO
Thursday thru Saturday. Kobayashi's
HARAKIRI and Okamoto·s Kill Sunday
lhru Tuesdey
Kuro11w1's SEVEN
SAMURAI Wednesday 1hru Saturday
(June 7-10) Ml1uml'1 SWORD OF
VENGEANCE and Ok1mo1o·s SA·
MURAI ASSASSIN Sunday and Monday, and lnagakl's
UNOEA THE
IANNEA OF SAMURAI and SAMURAI
SAOA Tuesday and Wednesday. Festival ticket, ere 10 bucks, so II you
move 10 Seattle; go for II As for the
res1 of us. well, we can dream, can·,
we? C.11782-7337 lor showtlme. single
evenings (double features) are three
t>ucka.
You've missed the Third Seattle
lnternatlon11 FIim Fetllval
at 1he
Moore Egyptian Theatre. Trv newt vMr
PADRE PADRON£ (My Fan,.,., My
Master) 11 ,1111at the Harvwd fall
Winner of !he Grand Prize 11 1h11year's
Cannes FIim Festival. and lhe lntematlonal Critics Award. II shows nightly
If 7·15 and 9:30 ~7
I as
allting DOw.n
The Street
On8Day
and a bum walked up to me and said, "l haven't had a bite for thrtt days".
So I bit himl
At Campus Housing no one will let you get this hungry (or get away with
such bad jokes!). In fact, to Mlp you keep food on the table we won't be
raising the rent this fall.
For as low as the same $53/month you can have the same old carefree,
friendly environment of low deposit phones, 8 different living
arrangttnmts, free TV-FM cable, close to campus living, frtt parking, fully
furnished apartments, private bathrooms, kitchen facilities, a 10-37 J)ff'Cfflt
reduction on unit lease contracts, and managers who would rather give you
spare change than bite you.
Come live at our place.
Campus Housing
"A" Building, Room 322, phone ~132.
TheEwlgreenState
~I
~
College
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ThruMEMBERSHIP"
Availableat:
You Must Present Your Membership Card
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Your organization's
1.0. will be honored
if a Capitol Tire Sales/
Warehouses, Inc. Membership card has not
been placed In this
space.
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TO HLL V1 !•
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SEATTLE
422SO.flJIP~I
206) 453-0422
1206) 624-8970
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2628S. Tacoma
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206) 473- 1550
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SEATTLE OHLY
422SouthForest
6P M • SATURDAY -8A M. SP M
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IT IS CAPITOL'S CONTINUOUS PROGRAM
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78SERIES
BELTED
TUBELESS
Nylon cord bo<ly plies with strong
nylon cord belts Fits mos! campers
vans and pick ups No adde<l e,pen
d1ture tor special wheel
L,let,me
wor\\mansh1p
' E'
1 84
2 26
2 36
I.es
2 51
G78-15
H78•15
H78-15
L78-16
,,
2 65
2 82
2 45
2 75
2 94
3 08
3 22
? 11
2 ll5
J 04
A78-13"
B78-13•.
C78-13•.
C78-14•
E78-14
F78-14
G78-14
H78-14
C78-15
F78•15
G78-15
H78-l5
J78-15
L78-15
78SERIES
STEEL
RADIAL
t; 000-Mll E TREAOWEAR
WARRANI Y
Whitewalls 2 strong bells ot steel and
2 polyester cor(l piles L1letIme roa<J
hazard workmanship and materials
warran1Ies
0
BR78-13
DR78-14
ER78-14
FR78-14 .
GR78-14
HR78-14
GR78-15
HR78-15
JR78-15
LR78-15 .
£
PR,
I Qq
2 32
2 40
? 58
2 lb
2%
2 83
29&
41 48
45.28
46.77
47 62
48 64
53 44
51 76
53.74
55.61
56 86
I 64
23.39
24 08
25 26
26 94
28 19
29 37
30.54
31 91
27 99
30 00
30 87
32.75
34.31
35.56
2 ply 4 ply , at Pd
3 l4
2 76
2 4?
? 60
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2 31
? 45
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7 2~
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2 84
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GROUP PRICE
SIZE
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600-12
560-13
600-13
560-15
6001685115
blatkwalls
and
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155SR12
155SR13
165SR13
t75SR13
165SR14
175SR14
155SR15
165SR15
185 70R15
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27
27
28
31
30
33
29
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37
40
88
87
20
32
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84
94
66
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1SSSR-13
165SR-13
t75SR-IJ
t 75SR-14
t85SR-14
165SA-15
185SR-15
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175l70HR-12
175 70HR-13
185 70HR-13
195170HR-14
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BR60-13
EA60-14
FR60-14
GA60-14
FR60 15
GR60-15
HR60 15
LR60 15
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49
56
58
60
59
61
64
67
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43
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32
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DR78-14
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FR78-14
GR78-14
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FR78-15
GR78-15
HR78-15
JR78-15
LR78-15
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92
24
68
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91
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75
31
56
£
42 48
46 28
47 77
48 62
49 64
54 44
50 10
52.76
54.74
56 61
57 86
L1le1tme workmanship
600-12
560-13
600-13
PISS 800 13
18
18
19
20
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L1te11m~ workmanship
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1 82
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2 01
2
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670-1 S(tbls )
700-15
700-15
650·16
700-16
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WHEELS
Call 1ou, local wa,ehouse 10< prices
& avallablllly.
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an(l materials
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LETTERS· BLACKWALLS •
WHITEWALLS
lt 1 t1mp t0(id
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C
C
D
C
C
D
700-14
700-14
670-15
7 17 5
8 17 5
8 19 5
TUBELESS- RAISEDWHITE
2 qq
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4 )/
l1fe11rnP workmanship
& matPr1a1c.
warrt1nt1es
.>88
R.V. TIRES
SI
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NYLON
CORD-TUBELESS
1 hO
1 7;
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670-15
700-15
700-15
650-16
700-16
750-16
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,·u11 ... hipllr,
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t 75
t 60
1 8~
1 89
78SERIES
STEEL
RADIAL
\ f.,
I \ 11
.,a,! I I\ 1t I I<..._
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29
34
34
37
39
40
,p PFM f
1&
4
warranties
A78-13
878-13
C78-13
C78-14
E78-l4
F78-14
G78-14
H78-14
G78-15
H78-15
J78-15
L78-15
r I '
560-15
19 60
600-15
20 60
Add S2 00 for whilewall1
. "Tt~'r
.. ' ""
1 ,RO!
,11£
,:, 000-MILE IREADWEARWARRANfY
Olt-f'r C,uy<.
workman~t,,p
hcl/cHd
l Ti
3 0~
84
97
93
92
87
l
warran11es
,.
I ~7
BLACK
WALLS
&WHITE
WALLS
H
60SERIES
RADIAL
l1lr1,rnp
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COMPACT
I hU
I HI
RAISED WHITE LETTERS
""1a11fl',,~, 1 nn,101 hy thfl'
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A70-13
E70-14
no-14
G70-14
G70-15
H70 15
r, PRI( E
~
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47 84 j 42 48
'l2 54
51 78
56.86 4 4E, 61
60 97 4 48 64
70.35 5 ',8 73
L1leI1mP workmanship
r
Ff
78SERIESPOL
VESTER
l1fPl1mt- ruad haz,Hd
1tnt1 matpr1dls
warran
IIPc;
I
1 Al
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68
77
96
74
50
28 75
28 96
29 42
31 87
32 31
35 02
37 88
33 84
SERIE<;
39 76
47 97
185-70SR t J
195-70SR14
l'l
2 )4
60
39
38
90
83
19
Two polyPSIPr body plops
1 h,
1 71
/
, PM,
37
39
38
40
41
43
bf)rg1ass twits
1 ',4
29 24
32 33
32 45
36 09
37 22
38 01
36 68
41 69
'( SE Alf'
35 09
39 09
39 29
48 55
I 'I 7
'
30 000-MIU TRIADWEARWARRANTY
f
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Q'~
70SERIES-WIDE
TREAD
WHITEWALLS
L,ffll1me
f0dtJ
t1,u,H1
workmc=tnc;t 1p and metier ,11~
w,-ur 1r,t1es
J
I
body piol'S plus two
G78-14
H78-14
G78•15
H78-15
J78-15
L78-15.
fRlADWEAR WAR \~T
'-' Pl!
49
57
85
46
59
55
70
97
78
96
t•hf'tqlas~ bf"'lls s1" ply ttPdfJ tor Pclr,1
strength L1ft-t1me roao t,dliHd
work
m<1n~h•P and mc.:ater1c1ls
wc1rrdr.1,pc;
blac kwaus
'I
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1 7t
TRFADWfARWARRANIr
Four pelyestPr
mate",1lc..
COMPACT
STEEL
RADIAL
1 ul)+llPSS
,R( i
155SR12
155SR13
165SR13
175SRl3
165$R14
175SR14
185SR14
165SR15
warr,in
f
,pp~,
25
26
27
28
29
31
34
31
34
37
J; 000-Mllf
L1tet1me roac1
wor~mansh1p
19
19
20
20
21
90
84
89
78
& materials
"'•
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D
D
D
D
D
1
COMPACT
RADIAL
78SERIES-4+2
WHITEWALLS
l' 000-Mlll TRfA0WlAR WARRANTY
tldJard
•"'
C78-13
C78-14
E78-14
F78-t4.
G78-14
H78-14
G78-15.
H78•15
L78-15.
COMPACT
FABRICRADIAL
Tubeless
and materials
44
45
48
12 53
l:C!•l~l3
1il 1:!liJ~
I
COMPACT
2 b~
1Ies
' l 1
40 65
43 87
45.68
47 49
52 60
49 24
53.37
56.87
CR70-IJ
ER70-14
FR70-14 .
GR70-14
HR70-14
GR70-15
HR70-15
LR70-15.
workmanship
800-165
875-16.5
950-16 5
10·16 5
12-16 5
CALL YOUR LOCAL WAREHOUSE
FOR AVAILABILITY
t <l7
Two polyester booy plies & 2 fiber
glass belts L1fe11me roaa hazar(l
Whitewalls Two steel belts with PO'Y
ester cord body L1tet,me ,oad ha,
ard workmanship and materials war
rant,es
''l
62
S'
warranties
MUD&SNOW
2 t3
I.
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)
l
3
4
42 90
43 45
46.47
51 78
L1let1me wor~manshIp
~.-
lO 000--MIIE
TfllAOWEAR WARRANTY
.W 000-MILE TREAOWEARWARRAN Y
e.. ~-
warran
CAMPER-DUPLEX
TYPE
I 91
t 85
ZE
WIDE70SERIES
STEEL
RADIAL
C
C
D
D
materials
M.,
BELTED
3 19
,:,~ l~
l hi;
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and
NYLON CORD-TUBELESS
l ~7
IO I
78SEAIES-2
+2 WHITEWALLS
..'£
PAT Pl A-.,.
TRUCK/CAMPER
Whitewalls The soft riding radial tire
that you can afford
L1tet1me road
hazard workmanship and mdterials
warranties
•"'
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8
78SERIES
RADIAL
ll
M M
N[, PP
----------
35 000-MILE TREA0WEARWARRANTY
36.28
37 77
38.81
40.35
41.45
43 29
4t 54
42.10
44.96
45 25
45 97
t
"4l
H
I
REQUIRED
RADIALS
BR78-13
DR78-14
ER78-14
FR78-14
GR78-14
HR78-14
FR78-15 .
GR78-15.
HR78-15
JR78-15
LR78-15.
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11
KEEP THIS PRICE SCHEDULE UNTIL UPDATED
BECAUSf OF FLUCTUATING MANUFACTURERS
II
11rld.,
lln\\1.\\.I
11
"
11
11
,·,
INSTALLATION AVAILABLE
COSTS OUR PRICES ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE
~ Our pledge
'-'
to members
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Jnc:.Ia,
,ou
a, a lll,tonlL'I
mc:rnb,•r 111 th,·(_
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Whrtewalls The soil rrdrng radral lire
that you can afford Lifetime road
hazard workmanship and materials
warranties
StZE
' E'
I 84
2 26
2 36
2 St
2 65
2 82
2 45
2 15
2 94
3 08
3 22
78SERIES
STEEL
RADIAL
~5 IXXl-Mflf TREADWEAR
WARRANIY
Whrlewalls 2 strong belts of steel and
2 polyester cord pries L1let1me road
hazard workmanship and materrals
warranties
,.-RI.)! iP PA11 f
51/E
It•
1 99
2 32
2 40
2 58
2 76
2 96
2 83
2 96
3 19
J J4
WIDE70SERIES
STEEL
RADIAL
,1(),IXX).MflfTREADWEAR
WARRANTY
Whitewalls Two sleet bells with poly
ester roro body Ltfet,me road haz
ard workmanship and materrals war
rant1es
1,A, lt·P
S1lE.
'[
Cl&.lt1 E
CR70-13
ER70-14
FR70-14 .
GR70-14
HR70-14.
GR70-15
HR70-15.
LR70-15
40 65
43.87
45.68
47.49
52.60
49.24
53.37
56.87
IRES SOLD
2 2~
2 7I
2 89
3 03
3 37
J 0~
3 27
3 65
35 IXX).Mflf TREAOWEAR
WARRANTY
Tubeless black walls L1te11me road
workmanship
and
mat~Hdl~
warranties
.,,,..£
,1-ki1,P
f
l'flll
155SR12
155SR13
165SR13
175SR13
165SR14
175SR14
155SR15
165SR15
185!70R15
S1lE
1
~):?
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1%
2 15
I '12
2 0/
? ?l
1:i 000-Mflf IRlADWEARWARRANTY
Tubeless
blrlckwalls
L1te11me road
workmanship
,1nd mntP11als
iNarrant1pc_,
'[
,r~, lt
t55SR-t2
155SR-13
t65SR-13
t75SR-13
175SR-14
185SR-14
165SR-15
185SR-15
I·
£
Pl◄
I
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T
29 24
32.33
32 45
36.09
37 22
38 01
36 68
41 69
RAISED WHITE LETTERS
Made for 1-ap1101by the
Other Guys
l1fet1mp road hazard
workmanc:;r,1,1
,Hl<j mat~nal~ warranties
11.
BR60-13
ER60-14
FR60-14
GR60-14
FR60-15
GR60-15
HR60-15
LR60-15
49.59
56.57
58 43
60 51
59 47
61 29
64 72
67 72
'l't-·,
·•·
w
A60-13.
F60-14.
G60-14
L60-14
G60-15.
L60-15
A78-13'
878-13'.
C78-13•.
C78-14•.
E78-14
F78-14.
G78-14.
H78-14.
C78-15.
F78-15.
G78-15.
H78-15
J78-15
L78-15.
tut
23.39
24.08
25 26
26.94
28.19
29.37
30.54
31.91
27.99
30.00
30.87
32.75
34.31
35.56
2-ply 4 ply rated
64
I
I
I
I
72
f,ROUP
30 000-MflE TREADWEAR
WARRANTY
Two polyester bOdy piles & 2 fiberglass bells L1te11me road hazard
workmanship and materials 'Warran
11es
1/t
r 1HOOP
PAIC(
' F I
t II
25.49
26.57
27.85
28.46
29.59
31 55
34 70
31 97
34 78
37.96
I 95
1
2
2
2
:'
'17
19
.14
47
70
. 5,
2 ll
3 Q',
78SERIES-4+2
WHITEWALLS
32 000-Mllf lR(ADWEAR WARRANlY
Four polyester
body plres plus two
fiberglass
s,-. ply trec1d tor Pxt1 a
beUs
L1fel1me road hazard work
S•lf
,R(•t1P
G78-14
H78-14
G78-15
H78-15
J78-15
L78-15.
I l'
PA•(E
37.60
39 39
38 38
40 90
41 83
43.19
1
I1
85
O•
57
07
fi9
G78-15
H78-15
H78-15
L78-16
C
C
D
D
MUD&SNOW
CALL YOUR LOCAL WAREHOUSE
FOR AVAILABILITY
COMPACT
SIZE
GROUP PRICE
600-12
560-13
600-13
560-15
600/685115
f
f I
t%
T
57
I
I
I
I
I
IS
60
8~
89
COMPACT
RADIAL
(,ROUP PRICE
re r
28.75
28.96
29 42
31.87
32.31
35 02
37 88
33 84
I hO
155SR12.
155SR13
165SR13.
175SR13
165SR14
175SR14
185SR14
165SR15
I 17
I 93
? 88
2
2
2
,,
.17
18
1'1
1':i
'O SE RIES
185-70SR13.
195-70SR14
39 76
47.97
~
? 01
2 36
£
'f'
23 92
25 08
26 26
27 94
29 19
30.37
31 54
32 91
31.87
33 75
35.31
36.56
1
<,ROt IP PAI(
.'£
A78-13
878-13
C78-13
C78-14
E78-14
F78-14
G78-14
H78-14
G78-15
H78-15
J78-15.
L78-15.
7]
<J<l
COMPACT
J 62 45.84
3 55 48.89
4 12 53.78
3 70
4 11
J 15
4 1b
& materials
L1fel1me workmanship
warranties
H,..,,.
D
D
D
D
D
f•;t
~I
U,ir,J~
47.84
51 78
56.86
60.97
70.35
E.
['n,rwr
T
3 42 48.84
3 92 54 97
4 46 61.93
4 48 64.92
5 58 73.87
~
.l Sh
0,
4 6?
4 14
S 80
4
& materials
Lrfet,me workmanship
.
warran11es
',.
11,1q.,
670-15
700-15
700-15
650-16
700-16
750-16
'Jt'
...
C
C
D
C
C
D
"'
p,
29 90
32 96
37 94
31 83
35.74
43.77
'''
~-4,
2 A',
? 4H
:' hh
! 01
jt,4
11:l~!f!I
l~tH•l:13•lil•li
& materials
Lifetime workmanship
warranties
A,tr',l"
"'
',.
'l
,t •
700-14
700-14
670-15
7 17 5
8 t7 5
8.19 5
C
D
C
C
D
D
f.
I•,,.
31 94
34.44
33 77
44.69
l 48
so.es
2 hO
2 i4
i ;,,
I BJ
59.94
4
4(f
COMMERCIAL
MUD& SNOW
EX-TRACTION NYLON CORD
& ma1e11a1s
warranties
82
:' 44
2 h:"
2 81
2 66
2 8b
310
3 12
.-1 I ,~ ... ~f'
700-14
670-15(tbls.)
700-15
700-15
650-16
700-16
,i.50-16
o!
D
C
C
0
C
C
D
II'
P,
,.
35 74
35 97
3779
42 87
36.63
39 86
49 87
.' H•
l 1)4
11,'
.
I I',
'I I
.,.
I ?1
l 4 !
+~STEELRADIALTRUCK~i.
polyt-'S!f-',
o.;1qnf->c.l tr
,jel1vpr
Pr nnorny
,1nr1 lowe,
L1fPt1mP
< 11qj hOfJy ffp
n1nq•
'Ai!Hlo.llldn~h,p
,
rn1IP<hW
lupf
pt-r
milt"
11~t
rtn<J IT1d1Prt,tl!-.
f E1
42 48
46.28
47 77
48 62
49 64
54 44
50.10
52.76
54.74
56.61
57.86
2 11
~ 41
? ..,,
2 ,o
2 9?
J 12
2 /4
2 99
3 19
3 39
147
7SOR16(1t)
875-R16.5
950-R16 5
D
D
D
69.94
71 94
78 88
4 14
4 ,'4
4 '\/,
The Load Range System 1s now be°7nq
used ,nsteao of Ply Rating C
Ii ply
r at,ng D
8-ply ra11ng
WHEELS
R.V. TIRES
57
80
'I.
~r
3 52 44.90
Lifetime workmanship
I 'Jt
? 07
? Ob
? 10
rJROUP PAtC[
BR78-13
DR78-14
ER78-14 .
FR78-14
GR78-14
HR78-14
FR78-15
GR78-15.
HR78-15
JR78-15
LR78-15
llt'!I
CAMPER-DUPLEX
TYPE
78SERIES
POL
VESTER
2 44
2
2
2
,
42 90
43.45
46.47
51.78
..,
'''
NYLON
CORD-TUBE
TYPE
FE T
19.68
19.77
20.96
20.74
21.50
SIZE
92
24
68
89
26
54
"""''
Des~·
NYLON CORD-TUBELESS
800-16 5
875-16.5
950-16.5
10-16.5
12-16 5
STEEL
RADIAL
Two polyeSIPI body pltps plus lw{I t,
tlerglass bells L1te11mproact hazard
workmnnsh,p and m;tterialc:; warran
29
34
34
37
39
40
2
2
3
3
3
.!
.,
,, ... g~
l.;,tf'PI t)plf~
30000-MILETREAOWEAR
WARRANTY
,Hl h f' Pllll
, E
PRICE
32.64
40.35
42,38
46.34
42.97
47.40
78SERIES
70SERIES-WIDE
TREAD
WHITEWALLS
flt-'S
/f.
44
57
73
80
', ll'
71SERIES-2+2
WHITEWALLS
A78-13
C78-13
C78-14
E78-14
F78-14
G78-14.
H78-14.
G78-15
H78-15.
L78-15
I 96
2
2
2
2
Nylon cord body piles with strong
nylon cord bells Fits most campers
vans and pick ups No added expen
d11ure to, special wheel
L1let1me
workmanship and ma1er1als warran•
1,es
.tl
91
85
2 13
2 26
2 42
2 60
1 97
2 31
2 45
2 6'>
2 8b
2 'lJ
BELTED
TUBELESS- RAISEDWHITE
LETTERS- BLACKWALLSWHITEWALLS
L1fel1me wor Kmansh,p and materials
warranties
BlACK
WALLS
& WHITE
WALLS
I uhPIPSC, hlarkwalls
and WhltPwallS
l 1IPl1me roa,1 hazard
wrn1o.mnn~t1q1
tnd rnatPrirtlc;, wir1rrant1ps
,:,
(,R:
600-12
560-13
600-t3
P 155/800-13
,pr,~,
'
t8
18
19
20
60
60
60
60
,,
N78-15(WW)O
51 90 ''>I (8W)55 25 4 (II
N78-15
C
(RWL)55 90 l q~
10 15
C SJ 00 .1 ''
56 80 • 1R
11 15
C 58 ~0 I 4
80 80 4 ,
12 15
C
68 80 '• 4 .-
'
I 41\
I ~4
1 rlb
1 41
560-1~
19 60
600-15
20 60
Add S2 00 to, whilewalla
7.1
I 7/l
1
i,,1',
•\llll'I
I irl'
liH·
htrg,·i-1
,·11111p;111ie,
Inn l' 111ill'agl'
ha7.ard
110
111
longl·r
road
warranlil's.
C I\PITOI.
......
11\II
11,1,d
tn11,lilpti1,,11ro1lh.r
11 .. ,11 ....
Ill 1...::h1toll,,
t. t11 \11111 1tdd1, ,-..t11
lcti(ul
,1,.., k ( 1111111 \\, 11, \ltlll
11, llfl' ....,
lt,,11,,
'',
,A,:' :P PRICE
30.40
36.10
37.44
38.84
39.95
60SERIES-SUPER
WIDE
c;11£
S•ll:
HI
STILL. DOES!
.J \ 11
()(~II(,
\\I II
\\l
\\lll\
A70-13.
E70-14
F70-14.
G70-14.
G70-15.
213
2 26
2 42
2 45
l!> 000-Mfl E TRl:.AOW(AR WARRANfY
60SERIES
RADIAL
GROUP PRICE
Top Qualrty lull 78 series whitewalls
Ltfet,me road hazard workmanship
and materials warranties
I h')
1 Hll
I lJ I
2 }4
SIZE
78000-Mlll TRfADWEARWARRANTY
A70-13
E70-14
F70-14
G70-14
G70-15
H70-t5
WIDF '0 SfRl[S
175!70HR-12
35 09
175170HR-13
39 09
185170HR-13
39.29
t95/70HR-t4
48.55
I 69
I 93
mansh1p and matenals warranties
I !;8
1 f\4
70SERIES
f E 1
19.48
21.77
23.32
24.70
25.56
26.49
4-PLY
POL
VESTER
COMPACT
STEEL
RADIAL
hd1ard
.iAOUP PRICE
A78-13.
C78-14.
E78-14.
F78-14
G78-14.
G78-15.
strength
I l'
27.40
27 88
28.87
31.20
30.32
33.00
29.84
31.94
37.66
Two polyester body plies & 2 t1oer
glass bells Lrletrme road hazard
workmanship and materials warran•
118S
Blackwall A dependable trre at a very
POPUiar price L1let1me road hazard
workmanship and material warranties
COMPACT
FABRIC
RADIAL
ha,ard
t1H111d,
r,
111l1,rrt1uf11J11
\II
11r,...,ll...,1cd11r,
1uu1h_ I)\ 1h, ,,11rld"-..luq,!,-..1
lirl
prud1Hlr-..:i11cl
h'-·,·a11...,l·utn11rlu\\
prh''-...,"'
\t1111101
111111111IEH'l11r,r'-.1111111, 1111",·,,·r.
llr, \11li111111l lrnffl,
u11cl\J11111r\,•hfl-k'-,11f<1,
\,1111 l'l(,b
11rrd I Ir, \ I 111"' \ ,· Ir i, I, '-,11h I , '-,I, 1111I II n I \"
I O'I r,·, pli r, I lr11I , 11, Ir I Ir, I >l 111t,,· kt! " II Ir I ih r111111, 11I I Ii,·
1111111iii IH t 11f\. r 1 If Ii 1-.. hru 11t I 1111111"· u nd u 11 u pp1 o, l·d "c ._h: 111u, k I u pl r111 i I I h1...,, 11, r I" Id,· 11t I I, 1 lh 1110 fl 11
l,1<111r,111l1lr,·tlr,
1111lr, 11111tl111-.<fllJ>HlflCJll1-.1
I'! I \'-,I
\'-,I\ 1()'-,1 I.( .\l'll()J''-,(
()!)I
I l'-,J tll
111',1"'""'
\1\\11
\(
II
l<l
I<'-,
KEEP THIS PRICE SCHEDULE UNTIL UPDATED
BECAUSE
!
st Discount Tire Program
i
I
"'
18000-MIU TREAOWEAR
WARRANTY
35 IXXl-MILETREAOWEAR
WARRANTY
41.48
45.28
46.77
47.62
48.64
53.44
51 76
53.74
55.61
56.86
J 11
TRUCK/CAMPER
78SERIES
RADIAL
BR78-13.
DR78-14
ER78-14
FR78-14
GR78-14.
HR78-14.
GR78-15.
HR78-15.
JR78-15
LR78-15.
1
'WAREHOUSES, INC.
;;
; ...;
-;
7•
4-PL
Y POL
VESTER
36.28
37.77
38.81
40.35
41.45
43.29
41.54
42.10
44.96
45.25
45 97
5,, .,,_I.rt",,
,
RADIALS
BR78-13
DR78-14
ER78-14.
FR78-14 .
GR78-14
HR78-14.
FR78-15.
GR78-15.
HR78-15
JR78-15.
LR78-15.
di ,J
OF FLUCTUATING
MANUFACTURERS
INSTALLATION AVAILABLE
COSTS
OUR PRICES
ARE SUBJECT
TO CHANGE
WITHOUT
NOTICE