cpj0201.pdf

Media

Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 7, Issue 12 (April 26, 1979)

extracted text
8

Calendar ·~~1Calendar

THURSOAY,APRIL 12
Put>,k: RNllonl
AdwtMty Group mtet1 In
lib

3112,

Forum.

noon.

EVERGREEN ATHLETICS, llbr•ry

2nd floor lobby, noon.
Senior Seminar: "'How to Conduct

•-

"Contact
with Japan through Ile Ari
History," In TESC Recital HaU, Communlcatlona Bulldlng, a1 e p.m. Adml11lon: $1.
Foruma: Health ea,.: What Colt? Whit
Care? For Whom? at Pacific Lutheran
University, Tacoma., 7:30 p.m. For more
Information
call:
Carolyn Schultz
at
(1)-531.-00 ext. 291.
DOOIIE BROTHERS at the Seattle Coliseum.
CONCH and RED DRESS In the Experimental
ThNt.-, 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $3.50 at
TESC Bookstore end al the doof.



Job

eNn:l'I," lib 1213, 12-1 :30 p.m.
of Chofco: A RopoductM Rlghto

Forum, sponsored by Thur ■ ton County
National Organization t0< Women ■I the
Olympia School Otatrict otfk::e, 113 Legion
Way, 11 7 p.m. For lnfonnatlon and child
care call 86fr-72e8 or aee-t700.
Forum WAR TAX RESISTANCE, tp0nll0f'ld
by Live Without
Trldenl,
at AFSC,
81 ◄ NE 40th, Seattle, 7:30 p.m.
qe1 Co-op Clinic Series present,:
Cllmblr
Jim Oonlni on his cllmb of LATOK I In
Alghan1s1a11, al AEI, 1525 11th AYe.,
Seattle. ■t 7 p.m. Free.
SUSPENDED ANIMATION orlglnal works by
21 US artists used In the production of
anlmaled and experimental films and/or
gallery 1525 10th Ave., S.tt1e,
lhrough
April 29 For more Information
call

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1
"'The~
of Conldouaneu,•
In the
TESC Boan! Room at 8 p.m. SponOOfOdby
Sri Chlnmoy Center and Faith Cent.-.
Lecture: ''H•oea and Heroines In Amencan
History," Dr. Pac,e Smith. Pan of The
Future of our Heritage aeries, at the Olympia
Public Library, 7:30 p.m. Free.
SUPERTAAMP, aee Ap,11 16.
CONCH Ind RED DRESS, see Aprtl 17.
THURSDAY, APRIL 1
THE FINAL VALIDATION, a videotape about
baltered women, produced by EY8f'green
student, mane Halpern. In lib. 4300 al
8 p.m. SponaOfed by Tides ol Change and
the Women's Center. Thia event will be
videotaped, discussion following. Free.
Vlrglnl•
Heawen du MH, ceramics,
•nd
Eugene Pluuto, monoprlnta, at the Artist,
Gallery, 919 E. Plke, Seattle. Reception at
5 p.m. Show wlll run through May 12.
TOM ROBINSON BAND at the Place, 125nd t..
• Pacific Hwy. So . Seattle, 9 p.m. Tickets:
$5.00.
REI Co-op Cllnic Serles presen1s: Josh
Lehman on BICYCLING IN CUBA, REI,
152511th Ave., Seattle. at 7 o.m. Free.
Country Mualc program presents noon-time
blUeQrass ln the Street Cale or Red Square.

( 1)-324-5880

CHILDREN'S ART from Olympla Elementary
schools TESC 4th floor lib gallery through
April 1J
Maggi• Roe. recent works and ThomH
O.mmlng, Ralo.u PoUery, Childhocxfs End
Gat1ery Olymp,a through April 28.
A.I the Ccllecto, s Gallery, Olympla: Stephen
TH, lanCJscape series. Edward Mlllmen,
major retrosoect1ve abstracts. and Luigi
KHlm«. etchings Through April 28.
Pam B•y•II•.
clay works, and Margaret
Oawld1on. ara....,ings, at the Chrysalls
Gallery D0rm 2 Fairhaven College, Betllngham. true
- _r•I 20
CAREL spc~"-O'S 'rie 3rd annual EQUINOX
GATHERING, Vashon Island. For more
informallo
485-0366.
LESBIAN COMMUNITY MEETING, Gale lntefmezzo. 7 30 ., .., You don'! have to be a
lesbian to b·
JOE WALIKI, ,.,presentative of the WIiderness
Soc1e1y will ". •·ak on lhe lmpl\callons ol
RARE ti. lH ;,J 1 30 p.m.
Country Music ;'·,gram presents noon-lime
blueg,ass In 1-t- Street Cafe or Red Square.

FRiDAY, APRIL 20
SAMBA NOVA: Latin Amencan Ja.u, guitar &
percussion.
at the Gnu Dell, g p.m.
Cover: S1.00.
THE BERKELEY WOMEN'S MUSIC COLLECTIVE, at JacObsen Recital Hell, U. of Puget
Sound, Tacoma, 9 p.m Donation: $3.50.
Tickets available at TESC Women's Center.
For more Information call (1)-75fr3137.
DUMI at the G Note Tavem 1n Seattle.
SIZZLING WOOD, bluegrass. at Allen's Bay
Goulash
Review,
Olympia,
5 p.m.
Cover: $1 .00.

FRIDAY, APRIL i=========
THE MYlHICAL
q presents Friday
13th. Beware, s 1i1a,...,md you.
MARK ANDERSON· Loral guitarist and singer
play,ng origina1 and 1racH1lonal material at
the Gnu Deli, 9 pm co~el" St 00.
LINDA WATERFALL, 2nC111oor library Lobby
al 8 pm
T,ckels
$3.50 general,
S3 students,
1n advance $1 more al
lhe door
HOWLING GAEL, 1rad1!1onatCeltic music at
Apple 1am B pm r,ckets 52.00
UFO. JUDAS PRIEST, 1nd WIRELESS at the
P&tamount 8 p rr T _k.ets S7 50 Information call !H-623-5722
THE MARGARET JENKINS DANCE COMPANY will perlorm t'lrt,,, N •~s at Washington Hall. Bellevue -, ml'l'unlty College at
8 Cm
SISTER 1s sponsoring the,· ' UT1h ~easonal
EROTICA FESTIVAL If" tt\p C,1$iER office,
·oo NE 561h. Seattlf' ;,t 8 p ll1 Adm1ss1on
55 00 Proceeds 10 'l.., to suopar1 Sister's
Sea1t1ell'lst1tule tor Se• Tri, raoy Educa
• ry, ~l'IClResearch)
EQUINOX GATHERING see Aord 12
SATURDAY APRIL t4=========
rhe Eclectic Union T-ieaie•
,gos Pap.,.,
F 1r wers in TESC f};,er1men1.::il Theater tl'I
:t,r.
C( ,.1rT1un1ra'1:>ns
Bu1ll'.l+no ::ti 8 om
r •t>1<: S2 5u Qt-nl'•a vr \1 ".U studPr>\o;
F • ,nT,:.Hn,01,en ,, •eservar1ons
Cdl'
Pl:i6-6126
•• <><·ture1denionst1ar1on - '""" -eltic harp
and hammered dulcimer :,y PHIL BOULDING
Apple1am. 2 o rr Sl 00
IIJIARKANDERSON, see A~11I13
MAGICAL STRINGS. Phil BoulCl1ng, Cet11c
haro,st at App!e1am B pm Tickets St 50
RALLY soonsored by Lrve W1thou1 Trident to
oro1est Caner's 1980 budgel prooosat Meet
at Seattle Federal Courlhouse,
5th &
Madison. al 12 30 o m
GEORGE BENSON and SEAWIND at The
Seattle Center Arena, 9 p r Tickets S9 00,
se so.
& se.oo
lnforma11on
r:a11
(1}-3-44-7271
MARGARET JENKINS DANCE COMPANY:
lecture/ C1emonstralion/ performance,
see
Apnl 13
EQUINOX GATHERING. see April 12
SUNDAY, APRIL 115::=========
INTERNATIONAL
FOLKDANCING,
CAB
lobby, 7 30 p m Everyone welcomet
"Clayworlll," pieces by graduate an students
from Weslern Wa.shlngton, Founh Floor
Ublary Gallery, throuoh May 5.
nShedow•~ 2-dimenalonal art woo by 20
Evergreen student photographers Second
Floor Library Gallery Through April 'Z7
EROTICA FESTIVAL, Sultan's
lavender
Crnema, 1313 1st Ave , Seattle,
see
April 13
EQUINOX GATHERING, see April 12
51.:ZLING WOOD. bluegraas. at the Town
Tavern. Pon Townsend, 9 p.m Donations·
., 00
MONDAY, APRIL 1t
BARNEY McCLURE, Northwelt. renowned ~
ptanl1t
al the Gnu Dell,
8 p.m.
Cover, $3.00.
SUPE"TRAMP at the Se.Ille Center CollNUm
a1 e o.m. ncketa: 18.00, $8.50, & $7.50.

ffllllY CIARTHWAITI!
A IIOUUE -IIEU

SATURDAY, APRIL 211========
The Slonfront
Theater . -aents "Kennedy's
Chltdren," ln TESC Expe11mental Theater In
lhe Communications Building at 8 p.m.
Tickets: SJ.00 general or $1 .50 studenla.
For more Information or reservations call
1166,6128

PAINT-IN !or ktds at Soulh Sound Cenler from
10 a.m. to 3 pm
Sponsored by lhe
Olympia AssOC1at1onfor the Education ot
Young ChHdren Materials wlll be provided.
KAOS-FM's K-H)--S will broadcast llve from
the Paint-In
.A. wof1o:shop on "The 1ntegrat100 ol ethnic
instruments int 1r-,eAmerican Jazz Idiom"
by SCOTT cossu
A; olejam.
2 p m
Cost S1 00
HERBIE HANCOCK anC1THIRD WORLD at the
Paramount. Sf-.-,:11,.. c1· 8 pm
Tickets
sa 50. sa 00 & S7 50 a1 c111
Paramount Hcket
outlets listen lo KZAM •or derails
SAMBA NOVA. Sef' Aunl 2L:
SUNDAY, APRIL 22 =========
A IN:lure demom,trdt1on on "Mu1lc and Dancti
ol Yugoslavla
t,\
~ .ergreen
sludent.
Richard Horne 1n the E~oerrmental Theater
of !he Commun1cat1ons Building, 8 pm
MONDAY. APRIL 2
JAN HAMMER at •
Hwy So . Sea1111,9 I'

'l

.... 152nd & Pacific
Tickets. $6.00

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2s;=======:
'"The Goal ol Mechla!
In lib
3112 at
8 o.m Sponsored t
Chlnmoy Center
and lhe Faith Cenie,
HARRY CHAPIN at the Seattle Opera Hou"'
8 p.m.
San Francl1co
Mime Troupe
presenta
"Electro-Bucks,
2nd IIOOf library Lobby,
8 p.m. Tlcketa $3.50 general. 12.50 senior
citizens and high school studenta, avallable
at Budget Tapes and Recorda, Rainy Day
Records, Yenney·s Music Co. Sponsored by
EPIC

TUESDAY, APRIL 1
.._..
ef TrwllN
meeting In Lib. 3112 at
10:30 a.m. AdmlNlon: "-·
...
~ wtll prWNnt a alldellectut9 on

ON CMIIPUS
T11unday, Aprtl 12 - Thi Cent.- fot Lit.,.
turw In Performance klcke off their ambltlou1
Char1te Chaplin aeries wtth TIie Gc:atk.cua;
Tramp, • 1972 documenta,y about ~In
and Tho a,ptln -.
(1918-23) • coflec11on
of three of Chaplln'e bltt ahort1, A Dog'e
Lite, Shoulder ·Arme, and Th• ,11,rtm.
Should8r Amie la an antl-ww fllm Chaplln did
durtng 'NOf1d W• I which WU con1lderab'y
altered by the cen1ore. In Th• Pllgrtm,
Chaplin attack• both rellglon wtd .!JNtatatt.
The ending, In which he Is forc.d to hop bllck
and forth acroae the Amertcan-Mexlcan borotr
'#Nie being pursued, le extramtly funny and
justly famou1. LHl1, 3, 7, & 10:30 p.m.
One do'lar.
Frtdey, Aprtl 13 - Friday NIie Fllma & the
Evergreen Community
prHent
a apeclal
benefit for the e....,.grwn fllm 1tuoent1 with
Bob Rafelson'a FIH Eaay PlecH (1970),
starring Jeck Nlcholaon and Karen Black. Thia
tlmeleu examination of alienation, roollea•
ness, and peraonal rebellion IJ one of the
best American fllma of the laet decade.
Nlcholaon gives one of hl1 finest performances u a reatleaa drtfter trying to ncape
hla upper class and academic background.
The rest of the caat lncludee Suaan An1pach,
Ralph Waite, BIiiy Green Buah, Fannie Ftagg,
and Sally Struthera.
Mualc by Tammy
Wynette. Screenplay by Adrien Joyoe. Much
of the fllm was ahot on locatlon on the Puget
Sound. LHl"I 3, 7, & 9:30 p.m. Admlaaion la
$1.25 for this week only.
-,
and r-,,
Aprtl 11 and 17 EPIC preaentl
Union Maida (1948), an
excellent documentary about women·• roles In
the t930'a lebor mowwne11t.The fllm focuaee
on three old-time commlel who relate their
ordeals and lucces&N. L~,
Monday at 7:30
p.m. and Tuesday at noon.
WldnNdly,
April 11 - Academic Fllma
presents Robert Altman·• long forgotten
That Cold Day In Ille Palll (11189). Thia one
wae made before Altman became famous with
MASH and started
his upward climb.
(Unfortunately, he aeema to be In a downhlll
trend right now.) The lllm la about a atrange
young woman who plcka up a stranga young
man In the pa,1(. The young man•• strange
steter comes Into the picture and thlnga
become very aexually perverted. Moat of
Altman's admirers would like to Ignore thla
film, although others aay that lt'a one of his
best and moat overlooked. Cinematography by
L.aazlo Kovacs. LHl1, 1 :30 and 7:30 p.m.
Thu.-y,
Aprtl 11 - Tha Charlie Chaplln
series continues with The Kkl, A Woman of
Par1a, and two shorts, Sunnyalde, and The
ktle ClaH. The Ktd (1921) waa Chaplln'a 11~1
feature length film and a child ata, out of the
then !Ive-year-old Jackie Coogan. A Woman of
Parts (1923) Is a serious drama written and
directed by Chaplin, bul his appearance In the
lllm Is brief. Unavailable fOf year,, the mm
was flnally brought oul ol limbo just a few
years ago. Sunnyside (HM9) Is pert,aps the
mos! visually beautiful ol Chapun·s films
LHII, 3, 7, & 10:30 p.m. One dollar.
Friday, April 20 - Friday Nlte FIims
presenls a SurreaUs1 Mini-festival with. 1)
Luis Bunuers Simon of lhe 0...11 (Me,clco,
1965, 43 min.). An absurdisl attack on the
Cathollc Chu,ch in which the 15th-century
samt, Sjrnon Stylites. gels what Bunuel feels
rie deserves There are too rnany crazy things
here that defy description, like the mul!ilvrmea female Satan, the C1war1, and the
insane l!nale In a New York dl8CotheQue A
wild and tunny leaturette! (In Espanol with
Enghsh sub-Illies J
2) Orson Welles· The Trial, based on the
novel by Franz Kalka (France, 1962, 118 min)
Slarrlng Anlhony Perkins, Orson Welles,
Jeanne Moreau, Romy Schnelder,
Akim
Tamlrolf, and Elsa Martlnelll. "Few films are
more extravagenlly e,cpreaslonlstlc In terms ol
vlsual style than Welles' adaptation of Kafka's
ntgh1marlah novel about a man obsea8ecl by
an undellned gullt. The whole fllm, In !act, la
sullused with subtle black comedy lhat keeps
It from being overwhelmlngly
morbid."
-Joseph
McBride.

Sally Crulkahank'e
Qu11t at the
Oteeet 11 ? (USA, 1075, 15 min.).
One of the flneet cartoon• you'll ...,.
see, upeclany In terma of animation, artwort(,
humor, and uu,._ Showtlmet are 3, 7. and
10:15 p.m. LHI/. One ~lar.
W..
d1w, Ap,11 21 - The Academic FIim
a«teo ..-,ta
IIlle Owl Coll lly with Tom Courtney, and a Norman McLaren
short, Pae de Duex. LHl1 at 1: 30 and
7:30 p.m. Free.
IN OLYMPIA
The Cinema Is playing Hal Alhby'a Harold
and Maude. Next to Ktng of .._...,
thl1 11
the moat popular of the eo-calltd "cult-fllma."
Like King of Hearta, the tllm It ■ lmplletlc and
JUW1nlle,_,no
to and grotllyl"I!the fuzzy
hip, quael-left-llberal notk>naof 111 audience
without ever being challenglng. Ruth Gonion
playa Maude, an ~year-old
hippie who hu
an affair wl1h a repulsive teenagtf (bud Cort)
who aharN her low for lunera,s. Maude
does "hip" thlng1 llke riding motorcyclee
and smoking dope (gee, Isn't lhe cool?)
and Harold doe8 aueh nea1 things as
finding more unique way, to fake 1ulclde.
(Cute llttle Devll, Isn't he?) The lllm trtn,
In a confused, Irresponsible way, to say
aomethlng about love, death, and age, but
the charactere come olf as totally false and
unbelievable. To be fair, there a«1 a few
genulnely tunny moments (very few) but
the taetelesa rip-oft from "Dr. Strangelove"
Is unforgivable. The Cat STevena soundtrack Is partlculartyoverbearing, and many
.soeneaexist u an excuse to ptey Cat's
pretentious and syrupy songs. Hat Ashby,
whose fllma garner numerous
Oscar
nominations
each year, directs In his
usual, unimaginative manner. (I know that
aJmosl everyone's faYOrlte fllm around here
la King ot HNrta: or Harold and Maude, but
really, I'm not a muochiat.
Just your
everyday subversive who belleYM In the
endleae posalbllltles of film aa art.) Call
943-591• for ahow11mes.
The Capltol Malt Cinema la currently
showing The Chine Syndrome, a frighteningly
tlmely poUtlcal auapenae thriller. The film la a
combination of the Karen SIikwood Star; and
the Thl'M Mlle Island Incident, although It
was released over a month ago. (There's one
scene In which one of the characters aaya
that a meltdown would deatroy an ar• "the
size of Pennsylvanla. ") Due to the bizarre
coincidences surrounding this fllm, It just
might help change peopln minds for the
better, the way o,...,.. of Wrath and I ,m a
Fugitlw from a Ctllln Gang did beck during
the deornalon.
Jane Fonda and Jack Lemmon give their
best per1ormances In years, the suspense
becomes almost unbearable, and you feel
almost llke wanting to kll1 prc>nukes when
you leave lhe !heater. TI,e China Syndrom11
may not be art, but It's the moat effective
polltlcat thriller I've seen since "r first
came out.
Th■ Deer Hun1er Is playlng downtown al the
State AlthOugh somewhat flawed, this is a
powerful and Important mm that will make
both conservatives and teltlsts uncomfortable.
(The Viet Cong are shown as ruthless
murde<ers, Russian Aoulett Is used as the
film's central metaphor, and It ands with ··Goo
Bless America •• Directed by Mlchael Cimino
and starring Aoben DeN1ro A more detailed
rev,ew will appear 1n 1he next issue Call
357-4010 for showtlmes (Note· this is a
three-hour lllm and only show once nlghtly.)
-T J Simoson

V~rt'f
LITTL~

EN~'f
,CT
Tl+e'

C. PJ"

fmpo.rted Beer and Wine

..Ma~~
Self-Service Gas

Seminar■ on varloua multl-medla
topic,,
Gordon Mumma, Communlcanon, Building
Alcltal HaU,9 a.m. Admlulon: $USO.

A1

Aajnbow Tevem In Seattle.
CO-OP general l'nNtlng to dlecuaa crttena for
moving.
Call
lhe Co-op
for
more
6ntormaton.

Films

THUIISDAY, APRIL ■

-

-lno

el T-

10:30 a.m. AdmlNk>n:

8oml1W11,-

-•

In Ub. 3112, ot

F,_ .

-Ap,11

2!1.

The Cooper Point

3)

111111DY
PIIDTRY.
7-,.11JJ
,

....

Groceries
Fresh Meats

Produce
Sunµrles

ourna
Vol.

7, Number

12

The Evergreen

State

College

Theaterof the
Unemployed
.. by Patricia Cleland
Using slides, mime, song and dance,
members of the Theater of the Unemployed write and produce plays based on
current political
issues. Founded in
February, 1975, by two women, the
group has now expanded to a core of
thirteen. The group's base is Olympia,
though
tours have taken them to
Portland, Seattle, Bellingham and Eastern
Washington. According to Beth Harris,
one of the founders, the theater group
beg.an as "a way to offer support to those
fighting capitalism." They operate collectively, sharing skills and ideas.
In pursuit of this aim, the Theater of
the Unemployed h•s produced eighteen
plays in the past four years. One of their
most recent works, The Sound Before the
Fury, is based on information gathered
through working with prisoners in Purdy,
Shelton, Monroe, •nd Walla Walla
penitentiaries. Members . of the theater
became involved in prisons when they
started drama workshop, in McNeil and
Purdy (a women's prison). "Prisoners
have no way of expressing themselves,"
says Harris. Another
member, Don
Martin, put it this way, 'They are at the
bottom of the system and can understand
the power trips."
The inmates were concerned with
diffuent issues at each prison, Harris
explained. "In Walla Walla, it was the
daily violence necessary to stay alive. In
Monroe, it was racism. In Purdy, it was
the pettiness of the administntion's
control and in Shelton. it was the sham of
rehabilitation."

,;Our aim Isn't to become
better
theotrfcally
but to
1
become better at jtgnting
the
capitalist system.
The opinion of the theater group is th.at
most of those incarcerated in prisons are
victims of capitalism. Because the best
interest of the capitalists
lie in the
preservation of a large unemployed body
of ~pie,
robbery and burglary become
the only means of survival for those
~pie.
Consequently, those who fight
back in order to survive represent a
danger to the ruling class. Its reponse:
prison.
The writing of plays is tackled oollectively. Usually six pN>ple work on one
play, discussing ideas and format. All
three of the members interviewed agreed
that this can ca1..~ problems. The final
ve:rsion is often "a combination of disgust
and satisfaction," commented Harris. Don
Martin added that being forced to
consider many different pempectives was
an advantage of Avriting col1ectiveJy.
Theatrical writing was ·a new ex
or ams w en t e group
nt
n.
She said that Berthold Brecht was the
guiding light for her development. Indeed,
~~ approaches are similar: characters
are not as important
as ideas. The
perspective is always political.
Unlike conventional theater, the Theater of the Unemployed does not have
stars. "All parts have equal respect," says
Harris. Consequently, lnexperienad actors are welcomed. In fact, the corwnsus
of opinion was that they are prefeable.
Harris said that experienced actors a.re
dependent on the director to loolt after
them; the group has no time for that.
Newcomers
tend to have a stronger
commitment to the pL.y. Martin spokeof
the gratification felt as new acton begin
to make progress. "There are all ltirds of
skills to be lea med here."
However, for Beth Harris, Don Martin,
continued on paoe four

Group Pickets Disco
by Alexis Jetter
The Conestoga Roadhouse, a restaurant
and discotheque in down1own Olympia,
has been the foc.al point of organiud
feminist action for the last two months.
A picket is planned for this Saturday,
April 28, to protest the managemttlt's
ctiscrimin;itory treatment of women dancing together.
. Sina early March, there have been
repeated inl:idents of harassment by both
the management and patrons. On Man:h
3, a group of several womm suddm.ly
found them,elves "cut off" from the bar.
When approached for an explanation, the
owner, Jerry Craig, stated that he had the
right to refuse service to anyone, and
ordered the women off the premises. 'Tiley
were told they would be risking arrest if
they returned.
On March 16, another group of women
was approached by the security guard and
asked to leave. The women requested an
explanation.
Instead, the management
called the police, and four armed officers
led the group off the da.nce 1100<. A
number of customers, expressing surprise
and disagreement with the Conestoga's
action, left with the group.
On March 24, women were verbally

and physically assaulted at the Conestoga
with little protection from onlooking
security guards. Women were threatened
with having their "eyes ripped out," with
beatings in the parking lot, and with
unspecified future assaults. O.her dancers
on the floor, in the guise of "disco-step5,"
kicked, slapped, and shoved women who
were dancing together. Security penonnel, whose numbers have been stepped
up in recent weeks, watched throughout
this assaultive behavior.
Two of the- women, expressing fear for
their own safety, asked a guard to
intervene. The guard spoke to a few of
the abusive patrons, but did not ask them
to leave. Several of the women, ho~ver.
were asked to leave the dance noor. and
eventually
were escorted out of the
building by a security guard.
Over the las.t month and a half. the
management has enacted a new dress
code, established a cover charge, ard on
one occasion lowered the maximum fire
code capacity,
denying entrance to
several women for over two hours while
at least ten people left the bar.
The Conestoga Task Force, a group of
concerned local women, has formed to
explore legal steps and means for public
education about the situation. Legally at

April 26, 1979
least, the group is at a disadvantage.
There is no law in Washington State
prot«ting people from discrimination on
the basis of sexual preference (perceived
or actual). House Bill 876, which would
have prohibited "discrimination because
of sexual orientation," never even got a
hearing in committee, and was "functionally dead'" by the April 2 cut-off for
all non-revenue bills this session.
Many women on the task force see the
issue as human rights rather than gay
rights, but lhe legal footing is tricky here
as well. The management is standing on
its "right to refuse service to anyone.'
Unless discrimination
as a "class" of
people can be proven-for
example.
under the Washington State Equal Rights
Amendment-the
management
of lhe
Conestoga is within its common-law
rights to refuse service to whomever they
choose.
So the issue boils down to an ethical
question.
The task force has been
gathering eyewitness accounts of incidents
at the Conestoga for a formal complaint
to the State Human Rights Commission.
A statement of the group's concerns has
been given to the management of the
Conestoga. Representatives of the task
force have tried to meet with the
manager, Rose House, before a complaint
is lodged or a picket organized. Ms.
House, however, failed to appear at the
scheduled meeting on April 18. and has
since announced her refusal to meet with
the group until June 1.
Consequently, the t"'!).l force is organizing a picket of the Conestoga, at 9th and
Columbia, for the next thrtt weekend,;
The group is also oonsidering a picket of
the Olympia Oyster House. anothe-r
establishment owned by Jerry Craig. The
picketing has two purposes: to pose to
the public the moral and legal questions
raised by the Conestoga's actions, and lo
induce the management to sit down and
discuss the issue honestly and openly.
The issue, for those involved. looms
much larger than disco dancing at a
downtown bar. For the women organizing
the picket, the situation represents a clear
case of unfair treatment in a time when
discrimination
usually lakes a subtler
lone.
As the owner
of a rival
establishment commented, "The Conestoga handled it wrong They made it
obvious they didn't wan I ~r1ys."

Put Down Your Books, Pick Up a Gun
by Pearl Knight

{Editor's note: It is likely that soon
legi..sl~tionwill be pas~d to reirutate draft
registration to Americim mm Rges 18-26.
Conscription might begin. Women might
be drAfted. Student deferments might be
banned. The Privacy Act might be
amended to permit Selective Service
access to currently private files for the
purpo~ of tr«king down those who
don't register. Conscientious Objector
....d.assi/i.co.Jion
might_ be next to im29ssible
to obtain. And few people other than
those who may pass "this legislation have
show much concern over this issue.)
Involuntary induction into the U.S.
military ended in 1972. In 1975, the
Selective Service System (SSS) went into
"deep stand-by" status, ceasing registration and classification of men eligible for
the draft. Since then, U.S. military has
been an All Voluntttr Force (AVF).
The A VF has come under harsh
criticism by some memben of Congttss,
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the House
and Senate Armed ~rvices Committtts.
In an atmosphere of heightened worlowide political tension, they fur that the
AVF is incapal>le of providing adequate
national
security.
Five studies were
commissioned by President Carter and the
House and Senate Armed Services
Committees to examine the A VF and the
SSS. Curm,I results of these studies show

the same conclustions:
that the SSS
cannot meet new manpower mobilization
requirt!ments. This is the major, most
effective argument against the A VF.
The Pentagon requires 1ha1 the SSS
~liver its first group of new inductees 30
days after a call for mobilization, with a
second group of 100,(X)()draftees to arrive
al boot camp in 60 days. A study by lhe
Congressional
Budget Office claims it
would take lhe SSS 65 to 95 days to
deliver the first group of inductees.
Other criticism of the A VEis...thal jt Ii.is.
left asliortage otS00,000 personn•I in the
Army. Some of the legislation now under
consideration
calls for conscription.
Almost all criticism of the A VF and the
SSS's deep stand-by status call for
resumptiQn of-.draft ~istration at least.
DRAFJ'BIUS
The extant drah laws ~uire
only an
Executive
Order and money
from
Con~ress to resume the re,tistration
process. There are currently nine bills
the legislative Anned Services Committees
calling for resumption of draft registration. Seven of the bills an in the House
Committee,
two are in the Senate
Committee.
At least two of theoebiUs, the Hou..
(H.R.23) and Senate (S. 226) versions of
"The Military Registration and Mobilization Act of 19?'9," call for amendment of
the Privacy Act to give the SSS access to
"age and addre11 information
in the

records of any school, any agency of I he
United States, or any agency or political
subdivision of any state, for the purpose,:;
of conducting registration .
• The Monlgomery Drafl Bill (H.R
2404) calls for registration, classificatio1,
and induction of 100,000 to 200,0(',
people each year into the armed for('(';
Representative G.V. Sonny Montgomcrv
(D-MS) favors drafting women, saying. "I
don't have any problem with it .
In
this equal rights environment, men are
going-hl-4al~
in court any le-gl$'l~lion
that drafts them and not women." Th('
Montgomery Bill would revise some of
the deferment and exemptions provisions
of the Selective Service Act, including
banning student deferments. As yet, there
is no word on how this bill would affect
conscientious objectors.
The other bills which would call for
inductions as well as registration are two
National Service bills. These would negate
consci~ntious objector status by requiring
all eligible people to choose between
military and civilian conscription.
The National Service Bills have run into
strong opposition. Two major problems
are pointed to by Congressior',111critic.:
compulsory national draft service would b-.:
costly (523 billion by estimale of the
Congressional Budget Office) and it may
also be a constitutional violation. The
Thirteenth Amendment prohibits involun-

Letters 1L~
Thanks Artists
To the Editon,
Artists, now showing your work in the
Ubrary Gallery, thank you for sharing
the clarity that flows through your hands
and eyes. You have grown wise in the use
of many tool, but bnt of all you luov•
mastered
the giving of yourselves,
unmaslted, in the images of your work.
Thank you for bring, and creating 50
freely I
gall•ry watcher
RU1SellDavis

Cooper Point
Refuge
Bad Priorities
To the Editors:
Twice now the Men's Center has
written articles to explain tht- purpose of
our Men's Awareness Group. Twice now
we have been ''boxed," not printed due to
lack of space. Articles of specific interest
to the community receive priority.
So what's on the front page7 The rising
gas prices. And anside7 Gasahol. The
men ~ group meets here on campus and
r-eeds support, as do other functions and
student groups, like the GRC, ERC, EPIC,
UJAMAA, and the Women's Center. We
are not merely con~med with students,
but include any person in the community
who shows interest in change. I think
we're of interest to the community.
Articles on energy took prKedence over
ours since that was the theme. Yet even
when the th~e was 5e'Xuality, we were
not printed, nor were other articles from
the Men's, Women's, and Gay Resource
Centers. Also the CPJ has a column
specific•lly for S&A groups, but only if
the article addresses a critical issue. How
can the Men's movement ~ome critical
enough to get printt'd7 The~·s no need
for violent demonstrations or demands for
equal rights. Just awa~ness.
Everyone who cam al~ady knows we
faa, $1.00 a gallon gasolin•. And I don't
know of any stations in the community
th•t plan to sell Gasahol. So why can't
the CPJ be what it is-a
campus
paper-and support campus activities7
Many people tell me the third floor of
the library, where our offices a~. has
ht-en too quiet this year. I find it hard to
get interest going when nobody can find
out what we have to offer.
The Men's Awa1tness Group mttts at
7; .10 p.m., Sunday evenings in Libr~
3211.
Stev•n P. H•dley
The Men's Resource Center

TESC

The Sun Brings
Them Out
To the Editors:
Som~ne made a comment to me once
wt they .,_..._rd
• vui1<><
.. y, ·wi-.are the students7" I suppote, walking on
to the Evttgrem campus on a typial day.
it does appear void of peopl,. the logic.al
answtt to the visitor's question is, ·we
don't luov• bells, E.ach cl..ss mttts on its
own Khedule, so we don't have the mus
movements you'd find on a campus like
th• U. fo W. In addition, students u,ually
whil• away th• houn hidden in dark
de.sertt'd comen, with their noteS buried
in books." While this it a nice way to
account for the lack of observable human
movement, I, myseU, find it hard to
beli~• this school has attracted 2,000
hard-nosed intellectuals.
Being trained as an ob-server. I have
come up with a by-no-means-original
hypothesis to account for this phenomena Today looks and fttls like a typical
lunch hour on the University of Arizona
c~mpus. It's almost like somwne rang the
~II People flooded out of th, buildings

and into Red Square.Dogs bounced about
as dogs have a tendency to do. Frisbtts
were flying and music was playing.
Guitars, voices and harmonicas filled the
air in a chorus for all who cattd to listen
or join in. P~ple and picnic lunches ... but
what makes this day different from all
other days7 It's in the air. It's all around,
on people's cheeks and in their smiles.
The sun brings out all that's green and
healthy.
Sounds of hands, drums, sticks and
bells echo; restless natives announce tht
day from the hill by the square.
Consensus has been reached. as the beat
slows to a background chant. The bell has
rung again. Maybe it's a blessing
that this school is buried in the almost
rain forest of the Pacific Northwest. It
gives us mo~ of a reason to look like
hard-nosed intellectuals.
Carol Ellick

It's the Image
To the Editon,
I do not want w~r a cap and gown. l
do not want to walk across a platform to
~ recognized and I do not want to sit _in
a roped-off section a.way from my family
and friends. I would like to gather with
interested graduates who have strong
feelings about the graduation ce~ony
and who would like to help me organize
some changes.

Dorothy Hanks
754-9288

"Have No Fear!"
To th• Editors,
Please convey to your anonymous
contributor, writing under the name of
Dead H,ad War>, th• following message,
"Have no fear! You may eat your lunch
wherever you wish. Paraquat has not
bttn used on this campus for 1eVeral
yurs.
Dave West
Supervisor of Buildings and Grounds
(Ed,.

note:

What

do

w•

To the Editors:
Give me your tired, your poor, your
cosmic masses yearning tu relate ...
"Symposium
'79" has left me disenchanted and irritated. It seems that
Evergreen is rapidly becoming the Coopa
Point refuge for students wishing to
escape the rigors of academia and inst~d
pursue the fruits of such dubious hobb1~
as personal growth. At this point it ~s
painfully obvious that the future of this
institution is no more stable than the
water-saturated ground on which it was
built some eight years ago.
Bill Aldridge, a teacher of Evolution,
said he saw no reason why mathematicians, potters or dancers should need t~
read and write. Fine. send the mathematicians to a School of Figures, the potters to
an Institute of Ceramic Expression, the.
dancers to a Center for the Development
of Movement. lf they are not interested in
cultivating literacy, do not ~nd thnn to
colleg•. (Aldridg<, incidentally, was given
a standing ovation by approximately 80
percent of some 400 students who listened
to his symposium rm\arb.)
As an aecttdit-d (and public) college,
Ev•rgn,<n i, responslbl• for producing
graduat.. capabl• of dealing with_ the
enormous socio-political
web w1th1n
which any highly industmlittd society
operates. (Don't make any inferences
about my political persuasion: we simply
happen to live. in such a society.) And in
order to deal with that system-as
Political Economy teacher Tom Rainey
argued-one
must be able to read andwrite.
l am not contending that dancing or
pottery or mathnnatices a~ not valid
career punuits. It's just that unless there
are some criteria by which an institution
awards a degrtt, that degrtt become
meaningless, an amorphous piece of paper
attesting
to time put in and not
knowledg• pulled out,
As for thote who att determined to
explore penonal awarent"li as the foca.l
point of their Evergtten experience, they
should perhaps be awarded a heart-on-ascring, the lik., of which the Wizard

bntowed upon the Tin Woodsman, Do
not, however, give them an Evergreen
degree. Personal awareness and inner
dev,lopm,nt should be by-products and
not the centripetal
purpose of any
education.
TESC, "Brainchild of th• Sixties," finds
itself in a dilemma, c.aught betwttn ideals
and realism, Th• college, by th• very
nature of its lack of structure, should
attract self-motivated students who can
benefit from the school's uniqueness. I,
for one, do not stt those students coming
to Evergrttn. Because of current enrollment problems, TESC cannot be as
selective as it ought and is forced to
accept nearly all applicants, regardless of
their potential to utilize (as opposed to
abuse) Evergreen's curriculum. The result
is an ever-increasing
percentage
of
unmotivated, epidermal mass, parasitic on
the college and the rest of ill students.
The ideals around which Evergreen
evolves are grut. l (like most Grttners)
came here searching for an alternative to
force-fed education. I am not suggesting
that these philosophies
be radically
changed; nor am I recommending that
this campus become a miniature workingreplica of the University of Washington.
But when the fish don't bite you've got to
change the bait.
Evergreen nttds to compromise a few
of its dreams and adopt most of the CPE
recommendations. Only then will this
school r.emain anything but the University
of Washington.
As contrary as it may be to the
Evergreen philosophy,
what's needed
around here right now is a lot more
structure and a lot less space.
Tye Steinbach

Like, Wow, Man
To the Editon,
Wow. I just 1,amed 50 much from th• ,
symposium, I learned that ~erybody at
E-srttn
really cares about each other,
man, and if we all just put our energy
into it, everything'• going to work out.
And if w• REAll Y get into it the vibn
will just go all over the plaa man, ""'
up Dlxi•'• driveway, so that 1h<'II finally
be enlightened to how hip w• are. Really!
And also at th• symposium I realittd
that we don't need requirements
to
survive, we don't nttd inter-collegiate
sports, we don't need to change units into
credits-all
we need to do i1 continue
sitting out in the sun getting all tan and
beautiful man, and playing guitar on old
red square with our groovy long hair
blowing in th• wind, and •verything will
be ok•y.
Boy, so much-I mean 10 much got
accomplished at that symposium-I mean
th• group process n,ver fails-SO MUCH
WAS ACCOMPLISHEDII
later,

Mary Blu• Sky

TIie

at

u .. 1H)

Happy Endings
To the Editon:

Those of us who bepn th• Cluoplin
Seri.. by ,nduring Richard Patt,non'1,
The Gmtlem.:,11 Tr,:imp. may be surprited.
to learn that we've 1ttn the final actJ of
Ciry Lights, The Gre.:,t Dktator and
Monsieur Verdolil. Pattenon has just
completed a documentary about A.lfttd
Hitchcock. but is waiting for "Al,"as he
calls him, to die bttore he'll release it.
This film (l<ntativ•ly titled Hitch) will
contain the final acts of Frenzy. North by
Northwest
and Psycho. Fo~warned is
fornnned
G..-y Alan May

Production Coordinator:
New.Editor,
Theme Editor ;
Photography Editor,
Busineu Manager:
Ad SaI.. penon ,

Ellen Klallnan
PamO-borry
lllN &bnbq
Stn-e Churdilll

Gree Kina
Vi,pda

Lanae

Staff and Contributors,
Robin Willett, Km Du-.,
Laurie Purl Undoay-Knlaltt,
Walter urpenter, Aloi, X, Jetta, Doug Rlddm, T,J, Slmpoon, Lucy Sebutian,
Stev• Guthe, Patricia a.land, Susan Buskin, 5uNn R..ndall, Steve Francis, Daniel
Botkin, Conrad Dri&e0ll, Laboe Quina, and Sally, the waltNN at the Old Timon
Inn in Shelton,
The Cooper P-cMntJournal 11 publllhed t>IWNkly for the Cooper Point and Olympla oommunl1'•,
the atudenta faculty Ind atetr of The EvergrNn State CoUegti, Olympia, WA aeeo5. Vlewli
exptNNd ~ not ~ly
thoN ot The E..-g,-n
St.ate College, Of of the Cooper Potnt
Joumat'a edltonal attitt. Mvlttlalng metlflal prwented ,,_..n dON not neoeuwtly Imply
•ldolwnei,1
by 1h11 newapaper. Offk:lel are located In the CoU•o• Acttvlt ... Bulldlng (CAB) HM.
New-a pnone· 888-8213. Letter JM>'lcy: All letters to the edltor1 muat bl •~ned. addrNNd, and
recetved by
p m Monday f« that week'• pubUcatlon. Lett8f"I muat bli typed, ~•i-:ect.
and
be 400 wons, ~ •,_.
Lett.-. exCNdlno 400 wordt may be edited tor length. Narnee wm bl
wllh~d
on reQUNI.

&

3

Letters
Student
Groups'
Budget Cut
by Doug Riddell

In lea than a month, wo will know
how much money all of the lludmt
groups, U well U 111ch oavic:a U the
Rocroatlon Cmtor, the bu, Sywtm,, and
Driftwood Daye.are, will luove for the not
year, and what level of aorvias they will
be able to offtr, W• alroady know that
funding for all arou of lludmt lffVicn
and activities will be cut back, with the
Human Righb and Cultural groups facing
the moot snott budgd cub,
Tho Servicn and Activities FoosReview
Board (S•A Board) has begun the
difficult wit of allocating not yur'1
s.A rev.nu .. , On Wednesday, April 18,
the Board mot to lay the groundwork for
the final allocation proceN, which will
tab place over the not month, Tho
difficulty of ootting target budgd levels
for categories (Operations, Human Righb
groups, Cultural
groups, etc.) was
compounded by th• fact that the s.A
Board has no idu how much money will
be availabl• next y<ar, S•A rovmu .. att
based on enrollment (the $54 per quarter
Sa.A ftt built into ••ch student', tuition);
.ind, of course, no one knows what next
y,.r', •nrollment will be.
The Board decided to buo revenu•
estimates on a "cautioualv os,tomistk"
lorecast of 2150 Full Tim• Equivalent (FTE)
students tor next year, up about 125 from
this y•ar's •verage of all throe quart<l'I,
After subtracting $15,000 ,annarked for
the students of the Vancouver outruch
program, and $35,000 for various raerve
funds, the Board is loft with $278,000 to
allocate &:nong th• various Sa.A groups
and .. rvica. This is down considerably
from last year's allocations ($319,000),
based on overly optomistic enrollment
projections.
The Board', final action Wednesday
w•s to ..i prellmlnary budget levels for
the various categories of Sat.Agroups and
sttvices: in other words, to decide "how
big • slice of th• pi• ••ch category will
g•t."
Th• Operations category, including th•
CAB and Campus Recreation Center, th•
Organic Farmhouse, transcripts,
and
ethers, was given 70% of the total
bu~et. In dollar terms, th• budget l~•I

ii $195,000, ..,_
from Slm,000 laat
year,
Tho Rocroation/Sporb category and the
Cultural Groupe catqory (Friday Nlaht
Films, Center for Utonturo in Perform..
ana, etc,) wore each liven target levols of
0,5'11,,or $3810,
Citing 1ow 1tudont oupport for human
right,," bao,d on tho rnult1. of Jut
month', mail IUl'Vt')', the Human Righb
Groupe category wu roduad from 7'11,of
the total s..A budaiot to 4 'II,, or in clollan
from $22,000 to $11,000, Thia ateaory
includes all ol the Third World Groupe,
tht [n,11-.
Politic.al Information Cmm
(EPIC), the Mm'1 and Women', Cmmn,
the Gay ~urce
Cm tor, the Faith and
Alternative Con,munltia Centn, and tho
Environmental Raowa c-m.
Faculty ne1ew11tatiw Rainer Hr
11ah
pr-,!
f!>r an inaIn the H1111111n
Right& Group,' bud110t level, citing
Evorv-n'• nood to attract and main
Third World lludenta, He also uld that
support for human rilhta groupo wu "a
moral 1tatomont" and that the levtl ol
support for t"minorities afttctl the
"atmoophett of the ontiff campus,"
Marilaa Zwiclt, not yoar'1 coordinator,
Insisted that the noods of the majority oi
■tudenb luod to be conaldorod u -11,
through 111pport of the Operations and
Servicn categories, This viewpoint wu
definitely predominant
among Board
members,
Th• Servicn category, which includes
KAOS, the Cooper Point Journal, the Bus
System, Driftwood !nycaro Center, the
Women's Health Clinic, the Organic
Farm, S,lf-H,lp
L,gal Aid Program
(SHLAP), and others was given 25'11, of
the "pie" ($69,500), down from 28'!1, of
last y•ar's allocations (88,000). Th•
Services category bore the brunt of last
year's
budget
cutbacks
and
will
apparently hav• to be cut back ~.,,
further this year.
E..ch Board member will spend this
Wttk
and not with soveral s.A groups,
in order to .. tablish budget prioritlos
(which parts of th•ir budgets they would
least lik• to - cut), This will mabl• at
1... t one Board member to be •cquainted
with the finest details of ••ch budgd
proposal before th• final •!location
mmings in mid- and late-May,
On May 9, the Board will mttt to
make preliminary cuts in th• Operations,
Recreation/Sports
and Cultural categorin. On May 16, they will mttt to do
the same with the Human Rights and
Services categories.
Final allocation
decisions will be made on May 23. For
information of times and locations of
future S•A Board meetings, contact Bill
Hucks in CAB 305, phon• -220.

TESC Master's Bill
by Pam,la Dusenberry
Th• Hou.. of Representativn passed
th• Substitute Sen•t• House Bill 2610, on
April 9, This bill authorizes Ev•rgn,en to
offer a Master's degrtt in any area,
subject to the approval of the Council on
Post-secondary Education (CPE), This bill
wu amended to require an annual report
frqm th• Board of Trustees on progrns in
implementing the CPE recommendations,
"increasing enrollment, reducing costs and
expanding service to Southwestern Washington."
This ff])Ort
shall inc uae yearly
enrollment figurrs as well as "a review of
overhead
and support costs at tht
College," •nd a review of lffVicff off•rod
to the residents of Southwnt Washington.
Other suggestions to complement the
Master's
degree include making an
arrangement for other collegn to use
Ev,rgreen'1 facilltin, and •ttracting an,a
high school and community
college
students.
This annual report will be shown to the
legislature and governor. In January,
1985, the committtt will "evaluate the
effoctivenHS of th• steps the College has
taken and ma.kt a rttommend.ation on the
·College's instructional program, at which
time the l,galatun, shall review and act
upon the recommendation."
According to l.n Eldridge, Assistant to
the Pn,sldent, 'Then, is money in the
budgd now for a Muta',
dopw in
Public Administration If the governor
signs Ithe bill)," Ho added that envlrot>-

mental sciences is another possibility for a
, Mast,r's degrtt,
Th• •mended bill was agrood on by th•
Senate, and delivered to the governor on
April 20, Sh• luosuntil April 27 to sign or
veto it. If the governor does not take
action, the bill will become law.
(FLASH, Gov. Ray today signed

the Master's

Bill

into law!)

Death of Unit
Th• Ev,rgreen Unit of Credit .it II<~!!of next fall, w• Ev•rgreen students will
earn standard quarter credit hours for our
efforts. And no longer will, potential
students look in the catalog supplement
and vcclaim, "You only get four credits
for doing all that work in a program11"
And Computer Services will have to write
a new program
for record-keeping
purposes, And th• Registrar's Office will
havr a hell of a busy summer transcribing
all th• transcripts, But other than that,
the change isn't very significant.
Byron Youtz, pr<Knted th• proposal
fqr the change to quarter houn at tho
April 4 Faculty Mttting, After an hour of
discussion, the faculty voted to acapt the
plan, with the ammdmmts tluot 1tudenta
may earn no more than aixtttn credit
houn per quarttt and that programo m111t
be offered for riaht, twelve, or llxtoon
Cftdlt houn, Module■ and worbhopa,
however, might be offered for one, two,
throe, or four (not Hw) Cftdlt houn.
~

Fo,um
by

emAldridge

CPE Directions

In raponso to tho■e CPE recommmdations, we an, in the procao of
malting changH which 1i1niflcantly
alter th• l,arnln1 phllo1ophy and
climate of thi■ collog,e. Individually
none of t"- changes is a major one;
taken collectlvoly they amount to •
revolution:

Since Faculty Forum is
l2.-...lv tl"'I """'rtin• bv
uch DTF, allowing litti• room for
dilcuNlon of the ovll'<III impact of the
pn,po■od changn, I am writing you to
expraa my views,
First of all, there is a definite
quntlon n,prdins the integrity of the
CPE Report it■elf, Tho objective of tho
CPE &tudy, u I hurd it, wu to ■tudy
Evorgr-. and mah m:ommmdations
regarding the institution.
Yet no
f11eultJ1mffllbns wett intorviowed in
that .-ment,
At least 10 far as
tsyron }'outz knows and so tar as thrtt
CPE staffors I contacted know, none
Weft interviewed.
As an educational .-archer,
I find
it strang• that • group -king to study
an institution would fail to mttt with
any reprnmtative of a major leYel of
employtt in that institution. I do not
know how or why this was the case.
However, since much time was spent
w,m severaJ statt memoers, 1t appears
to me that th• report is lik,ly to
rept"-'$t"'nta mostly administrative view
of the functioning institution.
(120
current Evergreen students we~ also
interv'iewed; this number is such a
small percentage. of either our au~nt
student body or of the thousands of
students who have attended the college
that it carries little weight.) Since the
CPE R,port is th• driving force behind
the proposed changes in our college, it
SttIJ\5
important to be as clear as
possible regarding the natu~ of that
report.
There has also bttn a significant
change in administrative style. Lowell
Kuehn was appointed
to a very
important position without nominations from the faculty. While we
clearly
have
a "constitutional
monarchy,"
there has traditionally
been a strong leaning toward dem~
cratic practice. Among the issues
involved in thew new procedufff are
the questions of patronage (be visible,
do good, and I'll be rewarded), racism,
se,i;ism, and lack of clarity regarding
what qualifications
were seen as
desirable. It may be simply chance that
our new administrative
team is a
replica of traditional
white male
political machines. Perhaps women
and minorities were considered for
appointment.
The new autocratic
private process leaves these iuues
unclear. It is a move toward a style of
leadenhip I do not support. It is a
radically new dirrction.
The apparently innocuous proposal
for specifying "career routes" in the ten
divisional areas, on the surface, is an
apparently desirable move to bring
predictability
to the curriculum. It
,..m,
desirable that a student can look
at four yean of pttdictable educational
programming. The system of attendant
prerequisites seems a small price to pay
in frttdom of choice for the security of
pr<dictability.
In terms of educational philosophy,
in terms of preparation for life, this
change Is a major one. What the
college says to the student under this
system is that Wf' know what is best
for the studatt. We make the choitft
for him or her and guaranttt that he
or she is prepared to enter the existing
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corporate or profaaionaJ llructutt.
What w• luovo dml,d the lludmt
under this propo■od &yltem lo the
exporionce of choia, the exporimce of
facing confusion and frustration and
then making her or his OlDrt decision,
W, have educated the 1tudont to be a
follower of authority; we luovo not
educated tho 1tudent to be indepondmt
and ..U-UMrtlv•. And w• luow also
not oducaml the &tudent to doal with
the frustration and uncertainty of •
cha.ngins world,
Wo could go other untried rout .. ,
For instance, wo could try &imply
offering more of the kind■ of programs
students consistently
and currently
want. I have yet to teach in a program
whore the waiting list hu not boa, at
lout as largo as the enrolhnont. This is
illways true for Outdoor Eduatlon,
any program dealing wlth human
growth (P,ychologlcal Growth, for
instance, was over enrolled l1Ut April),
certain programs in the arts, ceruin
programs in science, and probably
some others of which I'm unaware.
The shortage of students is a myth.
The shortage is for programs studmts
want, and this is where the de.sin for
"predictability"
arises.
Provide
programs in Rrtas of student interests
and "career routes" will be totally
unnecess.ary. It was to provide such
coverage that specialty areas were
invented in the first place .
l support the addition of programs
for nurses. paramedics, teachers, adults
of all ages; l have been a strong
advocate for these programs for years.
And as one who has worked in the
field of Adult Education for twenty
years, I am de,1d certain that older
adults are not attracted by images of
rigor and academic difficulty; they are
unrealistically terrified that they are
academic.;a_llyinadequate. Last night l
asked sixtttn adults in my semirullr
how many would have been sitting
there had we emphasized rigorous
academic standards in our program
description. No h,1nds went up.
On the contrary, to attract adults,
we must emphasize our conce.m for
their interests, for their dreams. for
their goals. We must express concern
for them as people. And l guess this is
also true if we wish to attract minority
students.
In my view the changes proposed
move us strongly in the direction of
traditional colleges and they give us
essentially all of the disadvantages of
the traditional college. Inherent here
also is an image problem. We Sttm to
be struggling toward an image of
"Harvard of the West." Personally. I
don't believe we can attract students
who want a prestige university; I think
our image as an alternative learning
institution is the only solid im.1ge we
have and I think we should run with
it. That image may not have Sttmed
viable in the "slttpy 70's," but we a~
entering the 80's.
What I am asking here is that we
look as clearly as we can at what the
market is likely to be in the 80's. Then,
I believe we should look at our
philosophy,
our institutional
belief
system.- our v..Jua, and 5ft how we
can best mttt the nttds of students in
the 80's. To blindly give up our major
~ucational beliefs simply to mttt the
possible needs of today's students
seems a bad gamble. To give up our
integrity in a desperate struggle to
survive may lead us to the discovery
that without integrity life is not worth
living.
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American • Hawaiian

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4
Arts SelfStudy
by Ell•n Kissman

Last February, a Student Work Group
rel•...d its final ttport as part oi tho
Expressive Arts Critical Review. This is a
section of th• Accreditation S.U~dy
that TESC must undertak• every five
y•ars. Tuck•d away b,hind all th•
controversy over student input (or lade.
thereof) into Evergrten's future, this
group of 22 students and two faculty
members put together a comprehensive
analysis of the effectiveness
of the
Expressive Arts Specialty Area, in terms
of student nttds.
The report consists of eight recommendations, as welJ as background information about the Specialty Area's clientele.
The recommendations
in some cases
parallel suggestions from other quarters,
such as the Enrollment DTF and the CPE
report. ln the Specialty Area, "there is no
apparent continuity
Within this
context it is often perceived as difficult to
get either basic skills or the opportunity
to do real advanced work," said Jay
Leighton, a member of the work group.
She expressed surprise at the discrepancy
between the students' frustration with
curriculum and the faculty's perception
that.
since curriculum
is planned
according to the rules, continuity is
assured. She explained that at any
particular time. a student cannot expect to
learn basic skills, as well as receive a
valuable critique.
1n other cases, recommendations
address problems that hav~ rarely been
aired in Evergreen's evaluation process.
The quality of next year's program
offerings, access to equipment and other
facilities, the prevalent "theoretical or
humanities bias" in arts programs, and
general lack of support for the arts are all
concerns raised in the repon. This reflects
students priorities better than faculty and
staff study groups have.
The report cited "frequent pointed
criticisms of staff connected to production

equipment or technical facilltiet,"
••
another concern of Expre11ive Arts
students. Thia particular iuue is complex
and raiaos many quntlono about tho
advisability of ataff-taught programs and
staff-sponsored contraru. Ono Exi>t-lvo
Arts t.. cher clarified, "Tako tho College'•
'super-gonzo-media-fabulizer',
for
instana, th• ~ ponon in clwgo oi that
particular facility views it u a machine
with a particul tochnical function. H• or
she might hav• troubl• with a lludont
who wanted to use it in a different way."
In addition, staff can maintain their own
"domain" more so than inmvidual faculty
members or students, in terms of fadlities
policy decisions.
While several recomm(ndations
are
only applicabl• to th• arts, others address
more general student concerns, such as
the effectiveness of student evaluation of
faculty. Th• group states, "histories of
some individuals (teachers) suggnt that
they might have more difficulty than the
faculty as a whole. ln this instance, we
question whether students' evaluations of
faculty carry enough weight in the total
evaluation process." The group suggested
that Evergreen undertake a "review of the
faculty evaluation process." Jay suggested
that instead of our present system, a
"three-form" system could be instituted~
with one copy of each evaluation sent to
the deans. This would have the advantage
of insuring that all evaluations reach the
deans, thereby carrying more weight in
the evaluation process. This raises the
question, to what extent should the deans
control faculty evaluations.
Overall, the work group found that
Expressive Arts students an, "committed
to Evergreen and are satisfied with the
quality of their education.'' Ever-green's
interdisciplinary structure is conducive to
developing artistic expression. However,
according to one faculty member, the
potential for artists at Evergreen is much
greater than current
administrative
support will allow. Artist nttd enough
freedom, faculty support, and administrative recognition to do their art. The
current atmosphere of change could mean
a much stronger arts program here, if the
Evergrttn community acknowledges that
the arts ii.re a high student priority, and
should be treated as such.

Booi<s

Tides of Change
by Alexio Jotter

If you went to tho Cris Williamaon
con<:ert a whll• back, you may haw
noticm tho little band oi women inl.flltly
adj111tlngknobs, monitoring oound, doing
tho lighting, collecting ticbts, M.C.-ing,
and gfflttally nmning things. They are
th• Tidn of Change (TOC) Productiono
group, and they sprang to life after tho
1st Annual Northw .. t Womon's M111ic
Festival wu hold at TESC in spring 1977.
l'raently, they're tho most actiw group
on cam.pus producing musical events, and
according
to one veteran,
Mary
Filzgffald, "w•'re th• peopl• to got in
touch with. Our name is known across
tho U.S."

Tidn of Chango hu brought such
w•ll-known performers u Holly Near and
Cris Williamson to TESC, but their major
focus is on givin11:exposure to local artists
and 1.....--mown pttformen. Tho group
works collectively, sharing and rotating
skills so that each woman learns all
aspects of production, from monitoring
sound to writing news releases. ''By the
md of th• y•ar, you should know how to
put on a conettt by younolf," postulat ..
Patti Dobrowski, another TOC member.

Kllna

Olis
Acryllca

GlazN

. Olympia'Podrry
&.'ArtSu~.

Theater of t_heUnemployed

Inc.

continued from page one

and Tina Peterson, theater is mainly "a
way of presenting political ideas in a
non-political manntt.'' They emphasized
that this was not necessarily true for all
members of the group. "Our aim isn't to
become better theatrically, but to become
bettor at fighting th• capitalist system,"
explained Harris. She considen it unfortunate that theater is such a "safe place."

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"But," ah• adds, "to battl• all th•
prob(...,. you encounter in promoting
women' 1 cultural events, you rlftd a
support group."
Tho group is committed to producing
conarts oi "womon' 1 music," which Mary
Fitzgerald dmnos u "m111lcthat sp,ab to
women's ,trugJ ... " And porformon oi
women's music "do sololy that-«> people
lib Joan B.. z don't fit my definition.•
Mary points to th• lzquimla Enaombl•
(coming April 27) u an example: ''Their
music speaks to political concemo- Third
World, working womm--not j111tbeobop.
W• bring people w• think it's good for
tho community h•no to listen to."
Tidn oi c~
has producm mostly
"open"
(women-men)
concerts,
but
"womon-profern,d" events an, still part of
th•ir ropertoire. 'Women shouldn't hav•
to have the community's okay to take
some space for them .. Iv... W• shouldn't
always be held rosponsibl, for educating
men. Besides," she emphasizes, "why
don't men support the concerts we do that
are opm7 We only hear from them wh•n
there's something they don't like.''
The Dyk• Tones Benefit this Sunday,
April 29, which TOC is helping to
produce, is the first women-preferred
concert at TESC this year. What is the
future of women-preferred
events at
Evergreen7 Mary doesn't hear the need for
them so much anymore. "The faces are
much younger,
less radical,
more
conservative; they are just coming out of
high school. They would probably fr•ak
out!"
Tides of Change plans to merge with
the Women's Center next fall. in the hope
that the "spot energy that people have for
producing concerts can be brought into
the Women's Center and get more women
interested and involved with the Center."
There's room for women to join the
production team. And if you've got an
eye for the future, Margie Brown is
interested in planning another Northwest
Women's Music Festival in Olympia for
spring/summer 1980. Planning could start
this summer.
"It's a good way to teach u many
women as possible
about
mixing,
recording, production, and lighting. And
it's a more relaxed atmosphere-an
easy
intermingling of musicians, audio technicians, and the audienc:e." Y.o..-c.ancontact
Tid•• of Chang• through th• TESC
Women's Center, Lib. 3216, or call
866-6162.

Poopl• t•nd to rogard •verything on stage
as unreal.
In order to be most effective, the
Th.. ter of the Un•mployed ii considering
changing its format, perhaps to more
simple and direct productions with a
focus on a single issue. Tina would like to
see more street theater. "If we are
invading people's spac:e, then we might
become a more threatening force."
But future plays will be no less
political. Sut'cess and money att clearly
ot the goals. 'We want to show the truth
as we stt it; otherwise there is no point,"
concluded Harris.
That is the definition of success for the
Th•ater of the Un•mploy•d and th•
reason why they will continue producing
th•ir plays. They fttl that they, as wdl as
their audience, have learned a lot. The
Th .. tor is interested in h•arlng from
people who att involved in a particular
-.tJ'li8lllrD1ctwoula!l1<,
0 p,.,..n
I roth• public.

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Bye;Bye, Bill
The Savioeo and Activities Board hu

chooon Marlloa Kall Zwick u its new
coordinator for next year. Sh• will r,plaa,
William R. Hucks starting this Juno. She
was .. Iocted over Dav• Canning, who is
on tho S.A Board this y .. r, and Doug
Riddols, a cunent editor of th• Coopa
Point Journal, who SttVed on th• Board
in 197t,..77. Doug wu chosen as alternate.
Tho Board conducted int•with
the UUtt applicants. Then it went into
executive session, with Lynn Garner,
Associate Director of Student Activitia,

Community College Blitz
Th•re has been a lot of talk lately
about the enrollment crisis here, and
about ways to solve the problem. Well,
now somethin8 is being done about it.
Lowell (Duke) Kuehn, Special Assistant to
the President. and Dave Carnahan and
staff, are organizing a regional community college recruiting blitz, The
events, called "Evergrttn Days," will take
place on seven local campuses between
May 10 and 31. It's hard sell time!
The plan is ambitious, to say the least.
The group wants to have thirty to forty
students and faculty at each community
college to promote Evergreen. They will

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talk to prospective stud•nts about specific
programs,
general areas of study,
Evergreen's educational modes: in short,
about the advantages
of going to
Evergreen.
Duke is in contact with the student
study group on marketing, but they need
many more people to make the effort
successful. Anyone can help. If you have
the time, energy, or a good idea, leave a
message with Rita Keating at Dave
Camahan's office, 866-6262, before May
3. This is a great chance to actively do
something about Evergreen's serious
situation.

House Votes Peace
Corps Out of ACTION
aid all•viate these problems? "I think,"
said Bonker, "the chairman lof the
Foreign Aid Board) doesn't like working
Last Week, a House vote separated the
with
fifteen development agencies." UX:A
Peace Corps from ACTION, .. tablishing
"is
a
neater approach.''
the Peace Corps as an autonomous
Bonker opposed the Peace Corps
agency linked to th• now International
becoming a reflection of government
O.V.lopment Cooperating Agency.
foreign and development policy since,
Although still unformed, th• IDCA is
"such a link would deprive the Peace
designed to coordinat• the P.. o, Corps
Corps of its unique people-to-people
with other .foreign aid agend... In a
character by subjecting it to the whims of
telephone interview, Congressman Don
short-term foreign policy." In his newsl•tBonker nam•d AIDE, th• Ovon•as
ter, Bonker explained that the House
Inv.. tmmt Institute, and th• lnstitutr for
proposal "insulates the Peace Corps from
T «hnological and Scientific ~pment
day-to-day policy considerations ol the
as possible agmda
cooperating under
government."
IDCA. U the IDCA idea does not got off
Richard Haugen, local ACTION Public
th• ground, th• P.. ce Corps will gain full Relations Officer, agrttd that seemingly
indopmdonce.
inevitabl• policy changes will result l the
Th• P,ace Corps was created in 1961, Peace Corps is attached to IDCA. What
By President John Kennedy. Preiidont these policy chang .. will be, and what
Richard Nixon, in 1971, drew Peace
exactly the "cooperative
relationship"
Corps and other domestic volunteer
between P,aco Corps and IDAC tnelll\S, is
lgencies under an umbrella agency,
unclear.
ACTION, which h• created "in what
Th• destiny of ACTION is also
many hav, called a deliberate attm1)t to uncertain. Separating Peace Corps from
immobilize
the Peace Corps," said
ACTION is supported by several former
Bonker.
Peace Corps directors and volunteers.
Th• House decision to malt• the Peace This move is opposed by Peace Corps
Corps an autonomous entity, establishing Director, Sam Brown, who said that
its own policy and budget through a removing Peace Corps will lead to the end
Board of Dirocton whil• remainingtiedto of ACTION.
IDCA, represents a compromile, Bonker
The senate has chosen to delay action
stated.
on th• P•ace Corps Reform Act until
Two proposals supported P.. ce Corps' Jun•. If accepted by the Senatr, the
separation from ACTION but diffffl,d on House proposal will override any acinintho amount of indq,endence Paco Corps istrative proposal for Peac:e Corps.
should have. The main controwny was
wh•ther tho Peace Corps should more
closely reflect gov•mmont foreign and
development policy, or function as a
THE
.. lf-<lirocting ag•ncy. Th• latter propooal
was introducm by Bonker and thirty
--othel' ----HmJR-membfty-. rsolutita1 to
-&i,i,NC
high drop-out ratH, low morale, and
increased training costs-results ol Puce
IN SOUTH SOUND CENTER
Corps' affiliation with the "sprawling
bureaucracy oi ACTION," Bonker said.
"Lumping program,
together simply
because they share voluntttrism just has
not worked."
Will lumping programs together becau.. they lharo involvement in fomgh
by Robin Will,t

B;>liticalPerspectives

Men's Awareness Group
by Dani•I Botkin
While ~lking with an acquaintance
about Mon's Liberation and my work in
tho TESC Mon's Center, I was set to
thinking by his comment, 'W•U, if you
are so conC'ttned about changring sexist
stereotypes, why don't you just go out
and do it, • instead of going off by
yoursolv.. and talking about itl"
The question hit me in a sensitive spot.
After seven months of coordinating
"men's awareness" activities, I am still
faithfully
inhabiting
this office and
plugging away to maintain our sometmes
popular men's support group. And now I
have come to question the value and
validity of the whole pursuit.
With such an emphasis on separatism
and fragmentation of people, why am I
promoting one more social division7 We
are overwhelmed by categories, fragments, stereotypes and man-made social
constructs. The sexes are already split too
far apart! How can such an exclusive,
separate group be of benefit to the
community
as a whole7 Am I not
advocating
the continuance
of such
artificial separatism7
Men share various facets and perceptions on life that are intimately tied into
the psychology of our sexual role. Much
of who we are, what we feel. think, and
see is affected by the subtle messages and
complex social influences. Message~ like.
"Men are strong and logical, not gentle or
loving. Men are achievers. not sensitive lo
emotions or intuition. Men are sexually
more aggressive than woman."
As I overcame some of these more
blatant stereotypical messages I experienced a new-found freedom. I felt as if I
had finally arrived and become fully
realized, free from my sexist conditioning.
After all, with the growing focus on
naturalism and sexual liberation, I. like
many men, have become more relaxed,
spontaneous, and open in my relations
with men. So why this need for a men's
group7
Social as well as personal liberation is a
slow, ongoing
process. The Men's
Movement is no exception. As we break
away from rigid and obsolete social
attitudes, there is a necessary reattachment to more appropriate ones: A new
and updated self-image and ,rn improved
set of rules and ideals.
One stereotype gets blasted out, and
scores more are born in the debris. In
some circles, as a result of the recent
focus on men's awareness, social "norms"
have shifted and evolved. Thus, the
appearance of the pseudo-liberated man
who seeks only to conform to the
"non-sexist, non-traditional" image.
We cannot eradicate the separateness of
the sexes. Indeed, men are different.
Whether the differences are inherent or
conditioned is irrelevant. Whether th~y
are good or bad. natural or artificial,
instinctive or imbued, right or wrong,
does not malter. The differences exist. We
cannot deny it.

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The purpose, for the men's group 11 to
own and examine these differmces. From
this base of commonality we teelt to
explore futher. By acapting our difftt.
ences (from women) we can openly
examine them, looking in detail at their
origins and validity. As a group we
provide f..dback and mutual support of
our individual explorations.
Within the group we listen to ourselves
as well as •ach other. Unrecognized and
unexpected feelings sometimes surface.
We try on new perspectives, new roles.
Our common gender does not automatically make us a tight group. We come
together as individuals. By virtue of our
personal interactions and experiences,
rather than some common view, we build
a group consciousness.
The men·!:. group is a context for the
exploration of values, and a vehicle of
social change. It is a setting to discuss
ideas, to laugh.
to find personal
interaction, to cry, to say anything and to
say nothing. It is an ongoing experiment
in group dynamics.
a forum where
anything goes. a place where we create
our purpose by simply being ourselves.
So, while we may seem to bl'
promoting sexual separatism we are in
tact planting
the seed!:> of a fluid
integration of all people. By confronting
honestly and dealing sensitively with the
screwed-up,
as well as the beautiful
aspects of our gender. our inheritance. we
free ourselves from its bondage. B\
ignoring or suppressing our difference-.
we·ve become blind to them. and have
mindlessly
perpt>tuated
them.
B)
embracing and exalting m our peculiarity
we transcend those differences and tht
limits they impose.
Note: The men's awareness group ,..
amorphous and still forming. You are
invited to attend and make of it what you
might. Sunday nights 7, 30 Lib-321 J.
SCHEDULE OF TOPICS: April 29.
:iexuality and Self Concept;
May 6,
Homopnobia and the Masculine Myth;
May 13, Male-Female Relationships; May
20, Nurturing Men; May 27, Sexism,
Separatism, and Sexual Politics.

"DON'T SAY WE NEVER
GAVE YA NUTHIN', KID"

~

352-9570
call for appointment
Mon-Fri; sometimes on weekends

and Pot• Strilberg. Director of Roaution
and Campus Activitia, to malt• Its final
decilion.
Marissa hu had oxtmaiv• organizing,
public relations, and deci1ion making
experiena, as well as serving on the
Board this y•ar. Aa a legislatiw intern,
sh• rnurched th• budgetary proceu oi
higher education, oi which S&A allocations is a part. A primary responsibility
oi th• coordinator, Marisaa thinks, is to
be an intermediary betwHn tho concerns
of th• administration and th• student
body. It io important, th•moi., that tho
coordinator undenlM\d the administrative
and budgetary procedura oi tho collogo.

CPJ OPEN

MEETING
Tho theme oi tho next CPJ illu• will be
Tho Sc:ienca. An open meeting will be
hold Tunday, May 1, at noon in the CPJ
offic• (CAB 104) to brain1torm and
chooee articles. Pleue come lf y_ou'ro
~ in doing something for tho next
ilaue, to be published May 10.

TAPES and
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-6193

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ron&ap,u1 ~ in thJa country,
,econd only to tho cold. Thia article
will lndude inlonnation on tt. ..,.,
S)'lllplOIIIO
and -"' .,._..i-,
with a 1oa,o on prn 111tion.
A woman', annual exam lnducln
routine __,.,iICralUl'I, called a
gonorrlwa culluft, or GC . Slnt-e mm
don't usually have annual phyolcalo, a
routine GCif not automatically dont.
II this article railn any qunliono
concerning 1onorrhea, fttl frtt to
come to Health Service, for the
Womm'1 Clinic for inlormation or
scrttning.

The Oitease, Gonorrhea is cauood
by a bacteria, called gonococci, so
sp«ific to the mucus membranes of
humans that there is no pouibility of
catching it ••cept by clot0 physical
contact.
Symptoms and Signs in Both s.x.. ,
Gonorrheal infections which start in
the gmitfrurinary tract, as well as in
the throat and rectum. can caUH local
irritation, soreness, and discharge of
pus. If left untreated, the infection can
get into the bloodstream, and could
c.1uK arthritis, or invade the central
nervous system, heart, or liver.
Symtoms and Signs in Woman: Up
to 80 percent of women who contract
gonorrhea show, or notice, no sym~

The job pays 25 % commission, or a
base pay can be arranged. It's good
experience, .and it's the only way the
paper can get publish~. The ads position.
is easiest if you've got transportation.
Contact us a• the CPJ offia,, CAB 104,
-213.

tODII. Tho earlillt lipll lo looll for Aft
pain, ur1ency and frequency of
urination, put cllocharpd from the
cervix or urethra, or any infection or
..ddming of the arvlx. The inhctlon
may spread into the ulaul, fallopian
tube., pelvic cavity, or appendix or
contribute to ectopk pregnancy. Ti.,. all good reuono for regular ..U
spec e,wninationo.
When women get culture, taken
from the anuo, u well u tho cervix,
the acxuracy of the culluft ii l!'Cftued
u Infection. oft111 spread to the anuo
via vaginal IKfftioM.
Symptom,
and Sign• In Men,
Fortunately,
moat men develop
aymptom1 within a week of catching
gonorrhea. Early 1ymptoa-.1 include
pain or burning with urination, and a
whit• or yellow di1char1• which
gradually becomes thlclttt. Later, the
inl«tlon may oprud to the proetat•
and taticlft, cauoing pain and i-aJble
sterility. Pnvention mutt be straaed,
as well as notifying all po11ibly
infected partnen, 1ina they may not
be lucky enough to have visiblr
symptoms.
Prevention: There is no 100 percent
sure means to prevent
catching
gonorrhea. But any preventative mea•
sum used consistently will gradually
d.cn,...
the incidence of the di,ease.
One important means of prevention is
simply looking at our partner's gm.1uus
for sores and unusual discharge.
Bea.use lesbians and gay men are less
likely to contnc-t 2onorrh,.:11 th,. ..
sexual preferences can also be a means
of prevention. Avoiding oral ,e:x with
anyone who's got a sore throat, and
abstaining from anal intercourse with
anyone who's got an unusual discharge
there. will also pttVent some cases of
gonorrhea. Another means of pttVention is the use ot condoms. Certain
spermicidal creams, jellies, and foams
also decrea.. th• chance of catching
gonorrhea.
These include: Delfen
foam, Emko foam, Cooper cream,
Koromex A-11 vaginal jelly, Certane
vaginal jelly, Preceptin gel, Milex
Crescmt jelly, Ortho-Cynol jelly, and
Ortho cream. Two non-spermicidal
preparations
may also be used:
Lorophyn Vagina1 suppositories, and
Proganysl (a piecription drug used in
the treatment _of vaginal infectiono).

All ti- producb may alto be UNd •
prottttion in anal intaa>111W.
Birth control plllo change tho pH cl
the vagina: 10, for womm who the Pill, exposure to gonorrhea will
generally result in A case of it.
Therefore, using other method, of
birth control is another prev111tatlve

musure.
TrHtment,
Although more and
more bacteria are becoming rniltant to
antibiotics, there are sWJ no 1traina of
gonorrhea that tome typo of antibotic
doe, not destroy. Most 1train1 of
gonorrhea are ,till killed l,y either
penicillin, ampldJUn or tetncycline. In
Ught cl tho cwabillty cl the dileaN, it
is -,,tial
that we all do four thJnp,
l) pt gonorrhea culluftt annually, 2)
if we are exposed to or catch
gonorrhea,
get treated as 100n as
i-aible,
3) if we have gonorrhea,
abttaln from intimate contact until two
nqatlve tnt reoulb are reaived, and
4) contact
all partners who have
pouibly been ex_,!
10 they can be
treated if they nHd to (mnanber,
some men and moat wotnffl do not
show •arly symptoms).

Wanted 0.ad or Alive: Bicycln • TV',
352-9102

KAOS Deadlines
KAOS-FM hat a new policy for Public
S.rvkle Announcemenb. EVlllb for the
Entertainment
Calendar now have a
deadline of 8 a.m. on tho Monday prior
to the OVl!lt. There is no deadline for
oubmitting Public Servia Announc:emenb
but it will help if announcemenb are
turned in at lout one full day l>!oforethe
<Vlllt tabt place.
Public Service, Ride Board, and Loot
and Found iteml run for two weekt on
the Community lllllboard. Only Ride
Board and Loot and Found ~
menb will be accepted OWi' the phone.
Submit IIJ\IIOUJ1Cffllb lo, Public Servia
Director Anna C-.
KAOS, CAB 305,
TESC, Olympia, WA 96505.

GRC Coordinator
Nomination,
for the Cay Reaource
Center coordinatonhip can be made at
the not GRC buo!Ma ineeting on May 2,
at 8, OOpm in library , lounp 32U. Tho
coordinatol'lhlp Is a year long commitment including 1ummer. The posltlon is
p,-ntly
held by Howard Murphy and
St<VIIIDoyle until a permanent coordinator(s) can be found. A copy of the job
description and requirements will posted
in the GRC office in Library 3210.

ThirdWorldNews
MECHA will be presenting a Chicano Symposium on April 26 and 27. There
will be speakers, workshops, and cultural mtertainmmt.Scheduling is as follows,
Thunday, April 26

Library 2205
9,00-11 ,oo

Workshop

Library 2nd Floor Lobby
12,00-1 ,00
Library 2nd Floor •..obby
1,00-3,00

Cultural
Entertainment
Lttture

"Chicano Perspective on U.S. History"
Rodolpho Acuna
South American Dancers
Chicano Childhood D•velopm<nt
Dioplay
"Undocumented
Exploitation"
Rodolpho Acuna

Workers

Art

and Their

Friday, April 27

Library 2205
9,00-11 ,00

Faculty Worluhop

Library 2nd Floor Lobby
12,00-1 ,oo
Library 2nd Floor Lobby
l ,00-3,00

Cultural
Entertainment
lecture

"Incorporating a Third World Penpective
into Interdisciplinary Studin"
Francisco Httnande:z

T<atro del Piojo
from the University of Washington
"History of Chicano Education"
Francisco Hernandez

Thursday, April 26 and Friday, April 27, beginning at 12,00 in l,cture Hall 4 Chicano Rim Fntival,
El Tutro Campnino
Mexican Frozen Revolution

~

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iffl

llfflrm

UUDUCORDB
CONCM!"fla&fl

Nor•

Youraudio specialist knows.
Ask him.

OIOIUNO P.at.a'llaN4LU

DDOltl'DComt

DESCO
2306 W. Harrison

ELECTRONICS
WESTOLYMPIA

by Lucy ~astian
On April 13, 19?9, Country Music
Productions brought Linda Waterfall and
her two w.. k old band to Evergreen for
an evening concert. Linda's newly formed
family consists of Donnie Teudale on
drums, Diane Lindsay on electric bus and
electric keyboards, and Cory Johnson on
le.ad guitar.
S.!ng accustomed to Waterfall's p~
vious acoustic, folk-<ountry sound, some
of Linda's fans left the on• hour and
twenty minute performance in electric
shock. Th• soothing lyrics that sh• so
creatively puts to song Sttm~
to be
swallowed up by lightning melodi ... Th•
consequence was a sound war.
Diane Lindsay p<tforrned a few solo
numbers, accompanying Mrwlf on electric
keyboards. which _,.. th• focal point of
the concert. She has a great feel for
rhythm and stole the show with her
bluesy voice.
Donnie Teasdale's drumming deserves a
lot of upbeat prai5<. His beat, although at
times overpowering
the other instruhigh range. It seems to sound the best
the right time.
Lead guitarist Cory Johnson doesn't
appear to be as experienced a musician as
the rest of Linda's crew. His breaks were
somewhat low heat, bordering on medium
high, but it shouldn't take him long to be
untouchable.
Linda's stage presentation
is like
sunshine in winter. Very seldom does she
quit gleaming a starry smile over her
audience. Her voice has a Joni Mitchell
quality, although somewhat shrill in th•
high rang•. It sttmS
to sound th• best
when she accompaniea herself on acoustic
guitar. Here's hoping that Linda Walfffall's next visit to TESC finds h•r
strumming her satin smooth Martin with
a few conga drums orbiting around a
wailing pedal 1ted. Maybe th• mellow
sound would encourage a longer concert
and more receptive audiena-.

Labyrinths: Catch the End
labyrinths,
a weel of contemporary
performance and seminars, sponsored by
the TESC Electronic Music Studios, 3D
Design Contract and Making Dances
Contract, will wind up with three unique
event scheduled for April 27&28. Labyrinths has featured Gordon Mumma. an
internationally recognized performer and
composer of contemporary music and
Professor of Music at the University of
California, Santa Cruz. Mumma will bf>
participating in the three closing events as
musical accomp.anist for a modem dance

by Walter Carpenter
The former group contract, Shadows, is
currently exhibiting their work in the
second flc,or library gall<ry. Shadows
was an intensive two-quarter photography
program. According to Evergrttn faculty
member and coordinator of Shadows,
Paul Sparks,
the exhibit was the
program's goal.
The first priority for fall quarter was
developing critique skills and new ways of
viewing students' own, as well as othen'.
works. Sparks said it was a difficult
process ~ause
each student's skill level
was different. The program also covtted
the history of photography and its use as
an artistic medium. In addition, artist/
lecturers were brought in to expou
students to different art forms.
During winter quarter preparations for
the current exhibit began. Program
members
worked
intensively
on
improving their own styles and themes .
Selection for the show was done by group
consensus and works were not chosen
according
to an overall theme but
according to each person's directions.
Student Lori Mink described the overall
process as "agonizing as hell. Each picture
had to be perfect and mounted right.
Sometimes you could spend a week and

There will be a women's beneli~ dance
this Sunday, April 29, from 8 to 11 p.m.
on the fourth floor TESC Library. For
$3.00 dancing music will be swung your
w"'ay with the SO's swing sounds of the
Dyk• Ton... This group of eight women
from Portland
humorously
recreates
music of the SO's, so come prepared to
remember thot0 times (or fake it if you
don't remember).
NOZAMA Construction
(form•rly
Janes of All Trades) is a collective of
women builders who are working to
.. ,ablish themselvn and other women in
a traditionally male trade. This benefit is
to help foot th• bill for getting a
con.tractor's lic:ense, a necessary step for
the survival of the collective.
Donations of baked goodiOI and juia,
to sell at the dance are another way to
support NOZAMA Construction;
to
donat•. call Carol, 943-1372.

IT You
THIS TIME?

w

I 'vE' E NCOUMlcRE'DU;

SZECHUAN
PEKING
CANTONESE
AMERICAN
VEGETARIAN
DISHES
EXOTIC COCKTAILS
CUl8ED

El(.PRE~!.101-l

Fo~

RclE"ASE

you MUST

CR1E'S OIJi

!
I-IEL\>ME!

/.

pedormance
and George Manupell1·s
Fml' Short Films (music also by Robert
Ashley). In addition. he will be presenting
a talk called, Time-Keepers Mu.sicMakers
and Technology, as well as an evening ol
contemporary
performance.
All three
events feature Evergreen faculty or
student presentations.
Contact Greg
Steinke for additional information
at
866-6059, or in COM 322. Refer to the
Calendar page for times and costs of the
events.

Shadows on Display

Dance to the
Dyke Tones

WHATI':,

You've probably seen them around campus-five nice young men, intm,e about
the eyes but otherwise quite typical
Evergreeners. One thing distinguishes
th•m, they move quickly, purposdully,
as though propelled toward some ,:,urce
of light we mere mortals cannot begin to
understand. Th•y are Conch. "Olympia's
legendary progressive music ensemble."
It is not uncommon to speak of bands
in terms of their chemistry, that pMticular
mixture of styles and personalities which
makes the music happen. But Condi is no
test-lube formula. Its members: Jeft
Amsrud, Paul Tison, Phil Hertz, Jim
Stonecipher. and Mike Land; consciously
defy such scientific analyses. One is
forced to think. instead, of alchemy. five
bits of magic bubbling in a very special
cauldron.
Such is their musical mythos. Technology is the demon-god, and human
dreams cannot be fulfilled by frttWays
and factory work. Conch conjures visions
of castles and dragons, ancient heroics
and forgotten deities, offering a deep
archetypal alternative to what is seen ai. a
sterile modem reality One song, called
Spiracy, lies ••... somewhere between
spiritualism and conspiracy."
Indeed
Such depths are compelling. Conch makes
the magic work.
They are excellent musicians. The,r
stage is clutter~ with toys, everything
from a fine old bell to the latest
synthesizers:
sound-toys
which they
weave together in patterns that cmtrol
and challenge our conceptions of time and
space. Oflnon-god Technology sometimes
~ts the better of t~,
thw_arting th.em
with failed connections,
disappearing
lights. and missing moniton; but somehow their mystic mesage is strmgthrned
by th... littl• bouts with th• electronic
dragon. Conch needs this ver:' tens_ionto
survive.
lt could not exist without
amplification
and synthesizers;
yet is
cannot accept the civilization
which
provides these tools.
.
The for~ of this dilemma combines
with five tremendous talents to provide
an incomparable
mu,ical experience.
William Blake wrote, ·without contraries
is no progression." Conch is progrssing
into new musical realms before our very
ears. They must be experienced to be
believed. Hear them.

It's a fruits and nuts theme at the Beaux Arts Ball this Saturday night, April 28.
Fruits and nuts, costumes, crazies, and Latin jazz will fill the whole fourth floor of
Evergreen's Library Building from 8 p.m. on. It's Salsa! music performed by
Or-egon's finest, Montuno, and Seattle's Checkers, formerly Papia.
Tickets are $3.00 advance and $4.00 at the door. They are available at the College
Bookstore.

Muse ..• T~E

ij,:_
<tf-).
.;j,··.·:

•.--:', ••

M'( ARTIST IC.
I HI0 , 1,00 Mon · Sot

7
Conch:
Legendary
Music

A CRE1'.1"tVE &LOCK, • ::-

MAXELL SHOEBOX SALE
continues-25%
off UST
PLUS YOU GET THE BOX FREE

·

Linda
Waterfall

,,._ VISIT 'F-ROM~E

lll!IB!J- ~im

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go through 100 sh .. ts of photo paper
before you get the photo you·re satisfied
with."
Sparks said of the show. 'Th ... peopl•
are doing tough, high-<1uality, gradual•
level work. A lot of great things are
happening around here, and this is our
contribution."
Th• show will run through April 27.

Peace,Bread,
and Land
Fair Electric Rat.. Now (FERN) presents
Peacc,Brud.,and Led in a benefit concert
Sunday, April 29, at the Gnu O.li,
beginning at7,30 p.m. FERN is engaged in
rate hearings before the Washington
Utilities and Transportation Commission
to protect customen of Puget Power and
other utility comranies from unne<:ess.ary
rate increases. FERN is also in the midst
of a legal battle to prevent Puget from
collecting payments for Construction
Work in Progress (CWIP) for th• Sugit
and Pebble Springs nuclear units, and the
Colstrip, Mont..lna power plant, none of
which lave been licensed for construction.
donation.

Each quarter Olympia community
groups, businesses, Evergreen student
groups, and academic programs request
information on how to contact Evergreen
artists and musicians. Kevin Thomas,
Activities Coordinator, is compiling a
talent
resource
list to make this
information more acC'ffSible. If you want
to display or ()f!rform your art send your
name, address, and phone number, as
weJI as a description of your artistic or
musical talent to: TAient Resources, c/o
Activities Coordinator, CAB 305.

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