cpj0083.pdf

Media

Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 3, No. 25 (May 8, 1975)

extracted text
COOPER POINT JOURNAL

Classified Ads
2 WANT ho use sta rting June - cis to school. W rite Mike & lisa ,
Bx 45 in Bonn ev ill e, Wash . 98639.

PERSONALS
I ha ve fou nd your wat ch in t·he
C AB. It 's a woma n's watc h and If
yo u ca n describe it ca ll T o m Nufert ,
866 -8463 , ASH H - 12. Found 4115.

SERVICES

WOMEN , need a place to live thi s
summer? We ha ve a 5-bedroo m
hou se o n Ea s tside . Bi g yard,
garden. $40 / mo. p lus utilities. C onta c t J. G illis, 1716 E. 5t h, 352-5056 .

FOR SALE
CAMERA - Cannon FTb w i 50
mm . 1.4 lens, a lso 135 mm . 3.5
Ca nnon le ns. good co nditi on ! 35759_nl_______________

EXPERIENCED
LANDSCAPING .
We will do yo ur lawn a nd garden
work . Call Steve, 491-1276 .
COllEGE STUDENT : Prepare now
for the business world. Choose your
own ho urs . Sell established products to ho me and industry . Ca ll
866-9565 .

REW ARD OFFERED - Five bucks
for the ti p that finds us the rural
ho use that we wa nt to re nt . Any thin g fa rm v is OK . Ca ll 352-2367 .
Make us happy .

WANTED
WANTED! Vo lk s squareb ac k type
3 fron t-end . Ca ll 357-8007 after 6
p.m .

Vol. 3 No. 25

GARDEN ROTOTILlING with
Troy-bilt 8 - 10 fo r avg. garden .
Call 866-0404 weekdays 10 to 6.

Top it ~ff with Oly.
\-

-,;"'"
.

Where h ave all the flowers go ne?
Ri ght o n the front of Olympia's
Flowe r Gi rl T-Shirts.
,.
Made
of 100% cotton a nd
/
machine washable, they come in a
..., variety of colors and 4 adult sizes. Own
your very ow n fl owe r perso n for only
$3.95. Full grown and read y to wear. It
beats waiting for a bud to bloo m .

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(,rl kr i n till' ;1111, 11111t (I( S.____ · _ (or Inllll1hL'rI _____ FI(lwcr (~ irl T -ShirthL
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l'k,hL: prlill Tlli ... ",ill he you r ma il in g hhl'1. '

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( :( lIlipiL-tl' ;11ll1 fl) ;lil order f(lr lll t(l () IYlllpi;1 Brew ing C()., P.O . Bo x 200K , O lymria ,
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deli v ery.
Oly mp,n nrcwln'l Co mpa ny . O lymp,e . W;,c. h,nglon 'OLY''''

May 1,1975

The Evergreen State College Olympia, Washington

May 8,1975

Cooper Point Journal

2

EPIC NOT
REPRESENTATIVE
To the Point;

- - t o the pOInt
FORD WARNS
I

To the Point:
President Eisenhower once sa id that
education is no t o nly th e mea ns for ea rn ing a living, but for' enl a rging li fe. His
words are especially app ropria te for th ose
who complete college. Your genera l io n's
candor, sensit ivity a nd desire for creative
involvement are hearten in g signs that yo u
will be doing more th a n just earning a li ving.
You are grad uating in a particu lar ly difficult year. Yo u will be faced with many
uncertainties. But the opportunities that
await you are even greater th an the cha llenges . It will indeed be wit hin you r grasp
to en large and enrich life in o ur socie ty .
As you make the decisions that will shape
your co urse and that of yo ur cou ntry, I
hope you w ill keep in mind th at one person can make a difference.
Times have changed great ly sin ce I
went to college. But loo kin g back on
those days in the context of today's
world , I know th a t the same optimi sm
and ho pe I shared with my classmates is
very much a live in yo u today. I wa nt yo u
to know how much I ad mire your enthusiasm and determinati on, a nd how
convinced I am that you will make a difference for America.
I wish each of yo u the sa tisfact io n that
comes from doing your best at so mething
you believe in.

rigan 's wrItmg is the product of several
years of overindulgence in some wierd
substance that none of us are familiar
with (ch o pped-up peyote, mixed with
Drano, would be my guess), it' s certainly
more interes ting than the swill generated
bv EPIC and the Revolutionary Student
B~iga de eve ry week.
Yours, etc. ,
Chuck Albertson

As a member of the Evergreen community I feel that I should speak out. I
realize that "Evergreen Political Information Center" makes a nice acronym but I
feel that the name is a gross misrepresentation. First EPIC tends to be more of an
activist group than a group perating an
information center. Also the
ds
to present only one side 0
y issue
rather than presenting several views as
would be expected from an information
group that is without bias (as the name
would suggest).
Much more important is that EPIC is
using the name of Evergreen and therefore
infers that it is representing the Evergreen
comm unity. As a member of that community that does not agree with much
that is said or done by EPIC I feel that I
am being misrepresented.
I have also spoken with other members
ot the Evergreen community that are displeased being represented by EPIC. I feel
that if EPIC is to remain an activist
group, not as an information group that
presents several sides to an issue and that
does not act as a true representative of a
major poction of the members of the E,vergreen community, it should change its
name to something that better describes
its purpose and membership .
Sincerely,
Norman Gregory

A VISUAL NOTE
MYSTERIOUS ART
T o the Po int:

To the Point:
Dear Outdoor Artists,
don't know who any of you are, but I
_. - 1C5ve-fooking a t your work. Some of the
things I liked, say the pink jointed painting on the end of the Lab building, are already gone. Some things I like are still
around; the stained glass and metal strip
piece in front of the library, the welded
metal sculptures on the path to the parking lot. I hope they will stay for a while,
even forever. Psst! Dear Editor, if you are
listening in, how about a story of this art
and where it came from and what is going
to happen to it?
Thad Curtz

MORE SUPPORT OF
BOYCOTT

Ge rald R. Fo rd
To the Point :

BACKLASH TO
BACKLASH
To th e Point;
Thank s for runnin g Ih e "Conservative
Backbsh" co lumn by Michael Co rri ga n .
£\"en Ihl'ugh it is appare nt that Mr . Co r-

Name Withheld by Request

CHAI, the Jewish students union at Evergreen, supports the boycott of scab lettuce at Saga Foods. We join our brothers
and sisters of MECHA and the Revolu tio na ry Studen ts Brigade in boycotting lettuce purchased a t th e expense of underpaid and undernouri shed farm workers.

page 3

May 8,1975
We hope the solidarity and mutual understanding shown during our boycott of
scab lettuce will continue, and will help
us to work together for the cause of peace
in the Middle East, and wherever else
people attempt to se ttle their differences
with the unreasoning hatred that leads to
war.
Shalom,
Melissa Kaplan
Matthew Sperling
Shirley Rose Schaffer

PARKING PROBLEMS
PARALYZE SECURITY
To the Point :
As you are already probably aware, the
Director of Security position is now vacant. This, of course, lessens the staff
'personnel and requires everyone to take
on additional duties and responsibilities.
One of lhe necessary interim measures
we've taken is to temporarily assign some
Security duties to the Parking Forman.
The parking program ha ~ been one of
services and enforcement. Because of the
alteration of duties, we would like· torequest that people please observe the few
regulations that we have to insure orderly
parking and traffic movement. These generally include proper parking in the lots ,
no parking in the loading zones and not
obstructing fire lanes and service areas.
The other "major facet of parking is assistance which includes vehicle starts, car
unlocks and minor mechanical aid. These
will be performed as personnel availability permits.
.
I guess I should also take this opportunity to advise Evergreeners that it doesn 't
appear that the Parking Foreman position
will be funded next year. This creates a
lot of frustration for us in the Security
;Office as we have enjoyed having
someone available to respond to people
needing assistance in the area of parking
and traffic for the last two years. The
Parking Foreman averages about 30
assists a week that range from vehicle
starts to large scale parking coordination
and facilitation for special events and
groups, visiting campus. He has also taken
. the "on top of things" posture that has
made enforcement. when ' necessary, as
consistent, fair and uniform as possible .
It is an unfortunate reality that with the '
pending elim ination of this positiof), we
can probably expect the hit -and-miss enforcement and assistance that prevailed
before the Parking Foreman position was
filled. This is the same kind of inconsistency - due to staff level - that created
non - uniformity and the resu lting a llegations of discrimination in enforcement.
This also often resulted in people, who
. could ill afford it , being forced to call for
car start service and other assistance from
downtown.

This is beginning to sound grim but I
feel it was only fair and necessary to say,
so that folks with car problems and special parking needs next year would perhaps be aware of our pending limitations.
Gary Russell
Security

THANKS FROM TWBF
To the Point:
The Third World Bicentennial Forum
Commit tee would li ke to thank York
Wong and a ll the Evergreen students, faculty and staff members who helped us
during and before the FORUM . Without
your imaginations, time and efforts, this
immense task could never have been accomplished .
with love and respect,
Jane Gorai, spokesperson for
TWBF Work Committee

PSYCHEDELIC
CELEBRATION
To the Point:
A quiet, rarely identified anniversary
finds itself hidden amidst the folds of the
calendar as any unofficial day in its patent
form, standardized type (unless unduly
personified as those days fortunate
enough to fall on Sunday) would. Passed
only by word of mouth, passed over by
god and country, May 2, has become as
fond a day to the hearts of those who
were between the age of 12 and 18 in
1968 and still remember Moody Blues
lyril=s as the Fourth of July is to those
who love America - the comparison no
accident.
celebrant - wow.
flower - yes, we all are aren't we .
grass - if each of us was a flowertop .. .
celebrant - Whoa ... (specifically articulated variation)
Though I only had chance to speak
with one of the happy holidayers - I
sensed a feeling of courage and optimism,
albeit the kind that could be gone by
morning . And I knew, although there
were places where people were burning,
children starving, cars colliding and scab
lettuce being sold; there were also places
where people were laughing, living modestly, bothering none, and there were
these acid-eyed celebrants who were
happy and just enjoying the night.
LS. DeFrique
The Journal welcomes all signed letters
to the Editor, and will print as space permits. To be considered for publication, a
letter must be received no later than 5
p.m. on the Monday preceding the Thursday of publication. Letters received after
this deadline will he considered for the
following issue. Anything that is typewritten, double-spaced, and 700 words or
less has a better chance to get in.

COOPER
POINT
JOURNAL
Vol. 3 No. 25
May 8,1975

EDITOR
Ralph Smith
NEWS EDITOR
Brian Murphy
CULTURE EDITOR
Robin Stanton
PHOTO EDITOR
Doug Buster
BUSINESS MANAGER
Jim Feyk
ADVERTISING MANAGER
Craig Lozzi
PRODUCTION MANAGER
Ti Fleming

GENERAL STAFF
Brian Bach
Millie Brombacher '
Billie Cornish
Michael Corri~
gan
Ford Gilbreath
Barbara Harnisch
Mary Hester

Neil Marshall
Robert W . McChesney
Kraig Peck
Tom Pitts
Andy Ryan
Stan Shore
Wendy Squires
Eva Usadi
Carol Welch

Faculty Adviser
Margaret Gribskov
1 he Cooper Point journal IS pub·
li shed hebdomada ll y by the Evergr een
State Co llege Boa rd of Publi ca ti o n s
and members of the Evergreen co m·
munity . It is funded . in part , by stu '
d e nt se r vices a nd d c tivitif' s f ees
Views ex pressed are n o t necess ar tl y
those of the editOrial staff o r Th e Evergree n State Col lege Th e j o urnil l
news and bu siness room s are loca ted
o n the third floor of the co ll ege Ac ·
tivities bldg., CA B rm . 306 Phon e
86&-62 13. For advert ising and bU Sin ess
tnfo rmatlOn : 866-6080.
The jo urn al is iree to all stud ent s
of The Ev e r~r ee n State Co ll ege and IS
d i stri buted on camp u s With o ut
c harge. Evergree n qud ent s may reo
ce ive , by mati . sub SC ripti ons t o the
journ al With out c harge Fo r no n· f ve r·
gree n student s. a nin e m o n th , ub·
SC ripti o n ma y b e obtatn cd at Ih(·
p ri ce of four d o llar s Fo r Infn , mat l', n
866-6080

Cooper Point Journal

2

EPIC NOT
REPRESENTATIVE
To the Point;

- - t o the pOInt
FORD WARNS
I

To the Point:
President Eisenhower once sa id that
education is no t o nly th e mea ns for ea rn ing a living, but for' enl a rging li fe. His
words are especially app ropria te for th ose
who complete college. Your genera l io n's
candor, sensit ivity a nd desire for creative
involvement are hearten in g signs that yo u
will be doing more th a n just earning a li ving.
You are grad uating in a particu lar ly difficult year. Yo u will be faced with many
uncertainties. But the opportunities that
await you are even greater th an the cha llenges . It will indeed be wit hin you r grasp
to en large and enrich life in o ur socie ty .
As you make the decisions that will shape
your co urse and that of yo ur cou ntry, I
hope you w ill keep in mind th at one person can make a difference.
Times have changed great ly sin ce I
went to college. But loo kin g back on
those days in the context of today's
world , I know th a t the same optimi sm
and ho pe I shared with my classmates is
very much a live in yo u today. I wa nt yo u
to know how much I ad mire your enthusiasm and determinati on, a nd how
convinced I am that you will make a difference for America.
I wish each of yo u the sa tisfact io n that
comes from doing your best at so mething
you believe in.

rigan 's wrItmg is the product of several
years of overindulgence in some wierd
substance that none of us are familiar
with (ch o pped-up peyote, mixed with
Drano, would be my guess), it' s certainly
more interes ting than the swill generated
bv EPIC and the Revolutionary Student
B~iga de eve ry week.
Yours, etc. ,
Chuck Albertson

As a member of the Evergreen community I feel that I should speak out. I
realize that "Evergreen Political Information Center" makes a nice acronym but I
feel that the name is a gross misrepresentation. First EPIC tends to be more of an
activist group than a group perating an
information center. Also the
ds
to present only one side 0
y issue
rather than presenting several views as
would be expected from an information
group that is without bias (as the name
would suggest).
Much more important is that EPIC is
using the name of Evergreen and therefore
infers that it is representing the Evergreen
comm unity. As a member of that community that does not agree with much
that is said or done by EPIC I feel that I
am being misrepresented.
I have also spoken with other members
ot the Evergreen community that are displeased being represented by EPIC. I feel
that if EPIC is to remain an activist
group, not as an information group that
presents several sides to an issue and that
does not act as a true representative of a
major poction of the members of the E,vergreen community, it should change its
name to something that better describes
its purpose and membership .
Sincerely,
Norman Gregory

A VISUAL NOTE
MYSTERIOUS ART
T o the Po int:

To the Point:
Dear Outdoor Artists,
don't know who any of you are, but I
_. - 1C5ve-fooking a t your work. Some of the
things I liked, say the pink jointed painting on the end of the Lab building, are already gone. Some things I like are still
around; the stained glass and metal strip
piece in front of the library, the welded
metal sculptures on the path to the parking lot. I hope they will stay for a while,
even forever. Psst! Dear Editor, if you are
listening in, how about a story of this art
and where it came from and what is going
to happen to it?
Thad Curtz

MORE SUPPORT OF
BOYCOTT

Ge rald R. Fo rd
To the Point :

BACKLASH TO
BACKLASH
To th e Point;
Thank s for runnin g Ih e "Conservative
Backbsh" co lumn by Michael Co rri ga n .
£\"en Ihl'ugh it is appare nt that Mr . Co r-

Name Withheld by Request

CHAI, the Jewish students union at Evergreen, supports the boycott of scab lettuce at Saga Foods. We join our brothers
and sisters of MECHA and the Revolu tio na ry Studen ts Brigade in boycotting lettuce purchased a t th e expense of underpaid and undernouri shed farm workers.

page 3

May 8,1975
We hope the solidarity and mutual understanding shown during our boycott of
scab lettuce will continue, and will help
us to work together for the cause of peace
in the Middle East, and wherever else
people attempt to se ttle their differences
with the unreasoning hatred that leads to
war.
Shalom,
Melissa Kaplan
Matthew Sperling
Shirley Rose Schaffer

PARKING PROBLEMS
PARALYZE SECURITY
To the Point :
As you are already probably aware, the
Director of Security position is now vacant. This, of course, lessens the staff
'personnel and requires everyone to take
on additional duties and responsibilities.
One of lhe necessary interim measures
we've taken is to temporarily assign some
Security duties to the Parking Forman.
The parking program ha ~ been one of
services and enforcement. Because of the
alteration of duties, we would like· torequest that people please observe the few
regulations that we have to insure orderly
parking and traffic movement. These generally include proper parking in the lots ,
no parking in the loading zones and not
obstructing fire lanes and service areas.
The other "major facet of parking is assistance which includes vehicle starts, car
unlocks and minor mechanical aid. These
will be performed as personnel availability permits.
.
I guess I should also take this opportunity to advise Evergreeners that it doesn 't
appear that the Parking Foreman position
will be funded next year. This creates a
lot of frustration for us in the Security
;Office as we have enjoyed having
someone available to respond to people
needing assistance in the area of parking
and traffic for the last two years. The
Parking Foreman averages about 30
assists a week that range from vehicle
starts to large scale parking coordination
and facilitation for special events and
groups, visiting campus. He has also taken
. the "on top of things" posture that has
made enforcement. when ' necessary, as
consistent, fair and uniform as possible .
It is an unfortunate reality that with the '
pending elim ination of this positiof), we
can probably expect the hit -and-miss enforcement and assistance that prevailed
before the Parking Foreman position was
filled. This is the same kind of inconsistency - due to staff level - that created
non - uniformity and the resu lting a llegations of discrimination in enforcement.
This also often resulted in people, who
. could ill afford it , being forced to call for
car start service and other assistance from
downtown.

This is beginning to sound grim but I
feel it was only fair and necessary to say,
so that folks with car problems and special parking needs next year would perhaps be aware of our pending limitations.
Gary Russell
Security

THANKS FROM TWBF
To the Point:
The Third World Bicentennial Forum
Commit tee would li ke to thank York
Wong and a ll the Evergreen students, faculty and staff members who helped us
during and before the FORUM . Without
your imaginations, time and efforts, this
immense task could never have been accomplished .
with love and respect,
Jane Gorai, spokesperson for
TWBF Work Committee

PSYCHEDELIC
CELEBRATION
To the Point:
A quiet, rarely identified anniversary
finds itself hidden amidst the folds of the
calendar as any unofficial day in its patent
form, standardized type (unless unduly
personified as those days fortunate
enough to fall on Sunday) would. Passed
only by word of mouth, passed over by
god and country, May 2, has become as
fond a day to the hearts of those who
were between the age of 12 and 18 in
1968 and still remember Moody Blues
lyril=s as the Fourth of July is to those
who love America - the comparison no
accident.
celebrant - wow.
flower - yes, we all are aren't we .
grass - if each of us was a flowertop .. .
celebrant - Whoa ... (specifically articulated variation)
Though I only had chance to speak
with one of the happy holidayers - I
sensed a feeling of courage and optimism,
albeit the kind that could be gone by
morning . And I knew, although there
were places where people were burning,
children starving, cars colliding and scab
lettuce being sold; there were also places
where people were laughing, living modestly, bothering none, and there were
these acid-eyed celebrants who were
happy and just enjoying the night.
LS. DeFrique
The Journal welcomes all signed letters
to the Editor, and will print as space permits. To be considered for publication, a
letter must be received no later than 5
p.m. on the Monday preceding the Thursday of publication. Letters received after
this deadline will he considered for the
following issue. Anything that is typewritten, double-spaced, and 700 words or
less has a better chance to get in.

COOPER
POINT
JOURNAL
Vol. 3 No. 25
May 8,1975

EDITOR
Ralph Smith
NEWS EDITOR
Brian Murphy
CULTURE EDITOR
Robin Stanton
PHOTO EDITOR
Doug Buster
BUSINESS MANAGER
Jim Feyk
ADVERTISING MANAGER
Craig Lozzi
PRODUCTION MANAGER
Ti Fleming

GENERAL STAFF
Brian Bach
Millie Brombacher '
Billie Cornish
Michael Corri~
gan
Ford Gilbreath
Barbara Harnisch
Mary Hester

Neil Marshall
Robert W . McChesney
Kraig Peck
Tom Pitts
Andy Ryan
Stan Shore
Wendy Squires
Eva Usadi
Carol Welch

Faculty Adviser
Margaret Gribskov
1 he Cooper Point journal IS pub·
li shed hebdomada ll y by the Evergr een
State Co llege Boa rd of Publi ca ti o n s
and members of the Evergreen co m·
munity . It is funded . in part , by stu '
d e nt se r vices a nd d c tivitif' s f ees
Views ex pressed are n o t necess ar tl y
those of the editOrial staff o r Th e Evergree n State Col lege Th e j o urnil l
news and bu siness room s are loca ted
o n the third floor of the co ll ege Ac ·
tivities bldg., CA B rm . 306 Phon e
86&-62 13. For advert ising and bU Sin ess
tnfo rmatlOn : 866-6080.
The jo urn al is iree to all stud ent s
of The Ev e r~r ee n State Co ll ege and IS
d i stri buted on camp u s With o ut
c harge. Evergree n qud ent s may reo
ce ive , by mati . sub SC ripti ons t o the
journ al With out c harge Fo r no n· f ve r·
gree n student s. a nin e m o n th , ub·
SC ripti o n ma y b e obtatn cd at Ih(·
p ri ce of four d o llar s Fo r Infn , mat l', n
866-6080

page -1

Cooper Point Journal

I
I

page 5

May 8,1975

l

MAZDA CASH REBATES

S&A SPRING REQUESTS

News Briefs

The following is a list of the S & A
Board proposal hearings: May 8 - 9: 00
a.m., Bus System; 9:20, Men's Basketball; 9: 40, Cooper Point Journal; 10: 00,
Bicycle Shop; 10: 20, Input Resource
Center; 10:40, NASA; 11:00, Students
International Meditation Society ; 11: 20,
Third World Bicentennial Forum, Third
World Women's Organization ; 11 : 40,
Asian Coalition.
May - 9:00 a.m ., Men's Center; 9:20,
Duck House; 9: 40, Computer Film
Festival ; 10: 00, Revolutionary Student
Brigade ; 10: 20, Activities Building, CAB
Operation Support ; 10: 40 , Chamber
Singers / Jazz Ensemble; 11 : 00, Creative
Resources; 11 :20, CoHee House ; 11 :40,
Leisure Education Program . The hearings
will be held both mornings in CAB 108.
Next week's hearings w ill be from 9 a.m .
to 12 noon, May 14, 15, and 16.

TEACHERS DEMONSTRATE
AT CAPITOL

Pegasus gets final touches
RX-3 WA,GC)NS

Good through May 3~t on any new'74
rotafy-englne car.
rebate toward the down pay ment if you want.) Come in for
a test drive .
One tough eng in e. One
tough car. One
hmmmdinger
of a deal.

There 's never been a
bette r time to buy Mazda . You 'll
get a hmmmdinger of a deal
from u s - and $500 cash ba ck
fr o m Mazda - when you buy
any new 1974 rotary -eng i ne
car equipped the way you like
I

. - " it. (And you can use your

J 'J. )
_':/

Ma zd a ' ~

',,", r u1:Ll.WCU1~JIIj"
Ul

r o tary e ng in e

l i ce n ~e d

by N SU· WANKEL.

-~ ( ~-------'-'--...:.:..:::::::..:...:...:..:...:..:...:....::...;..~....:...-...:------

!I THE COACHMAN FOR MAZDA &PEUGEOT
3218 PACIFIC AVENUE
352-8558

MECHANICAL PEGASUS
In an effort to test the feasibility of
alternative energy sources, five Evergreen
students are currently working on a
"producer gas generation project," which
will allow a .1946 Ford pick-up truck to
operate using scrap wood generated gases
as fuel.
The five students are Dan Blincow, and
Michael Momany who are working under
contract to Bob Filmer, and Eldon Brown,
John Burnell and Don Samuelson of the
Humane Technospheres coordinated
studies program .
Initial planning for the project began
last fall when Blincow and Momany were
searching for a project to continue as a
part of their work within the Humane
Technospheres program , which they later
dropped in favor of individual contracts.
This enabled them to apply all of their
energies to the project without interference from other program activities.
The actual construction began approximately one month into winter quarter,
and will continu through the end of
spring quarter . The project is a modification and practical d evelopment of a
design included in a 1974 book, The
Pegasu s Unit, publi shed b.y faculty
members Niels Sko v a nd Ma rk Pa pworth.
Pegasus is an acron ym for petro leum /
p.<1 'io lin f' ,,,,hstitut e sys tPl11 s . whi ch wp r e

used by the Germans during .World War
Two when petroleum and its derivatives
were scarce.
The cost of the project, to date, has
been $600, and monies for the project
were bu<;lgeted from the Humane Te~hno­
spheres program and last years' Environmental Design program. Costs have been
kept to a minimum by the use of
scrounged materials such as old water
heating tanks and sheet metal for the
construction of the unit.
The truck will be fueled by vapors
driven from scrap wood that is gassified
in the Pegasus burning unit and filtered
and cooled in other sections of the entire
unit.
. With such large amounts of scrap wood
available for use as Pegasus fuel, it
seemed to the students that use of this
wood could be an alternative energy
source in li'ght of current and future
shortages of petroleum products.
If the projec.t ;5 ~tlccessfuL the students
hope to obtain a grant that would permit
them to build a Pegasus unit next year
th a t would be used to fire kilns in use at
Evergreen and wo~ld also enable them tp
research the possibilities of the application
of Pegasus technology to industrial fuel
~ " rr1 y I'r () hl e~:.s.~_ _ _ __ _ _ _ _--'

In respons~ to the school levy failures
in King County, between four and six
thousand Seattle teachers, parents and students rallied on the capitol steps Tuesday
to demand funding for Washington 's public schools . The rally was a last effort to
pressure the legislature for school funding
before Seattle teachers go on strike next
Friday.
This was the third such demonstration
at the capitol in three weeks. On April
22 , 5,000 high schoo l students' made
themselves heard, and five days afterward
8,000 of their teachers chanted "save our
schools" at a Washington Education Association (WEA) sponsored rall y on the
capitol steps.
School levies, which must be approved
by voters, are a specia l form of property
tax that pays for much of the public
schools' operating costs. The rallies are
the result of widespread voter rejection of
the school levies at elections which took
place April 8. While levies passed in the
Olympia and North Thurston School Districts, the levy failure was the largest in
Washington's history . Tumwater's school
levy was one that failed , forcing 28 teachers to be laid off at the end of this school
year.
The levy failures , voted at a time when
few Washingtonians can afford hi gh ~ r
taxes, wi ll , accord ing to the WEA , r.esult
in the firing of approximately 5,000 public
school employees across the state . In Seattle a lone, 1,670 teachers and administra tors have already received lay -off notices.
Seattle 's Central Area, predomin a ntly
black, will be forced to fire 251 of it s 351
certified staff members. At Garfield High ,
in the Central Area , only 32 of the present staff of 62 will continue to teach .
On April 21 , 84 percent of Sea ttl e's
teachers a nd sta ff voted to suppo rt a
strike to prot ect their iobs a nd th e prese nt
co ntinu ed o n nex t page

page -1

Cooper Point Journal

I
I

page 5

May 8,1975

l

MAZDA CASH REBATES

S&A SPRING REQUESTS

News Briefs

The following is a list of the S & A
Board proposal hearings: May 8 - 9: 00
a.m., Bus System; 9:20, Men's Basketball; 9: 40, Cooper Point Journal; 10: 00,
Bicycle Shop; 10: 20, Input Resource
Center; 10:40, NASA; 11:00, Students
International Meditation Society ; 11: 20,
Third World Bicentennial Forum, Third
World Women's Organization ; 11 : 40,
Asian Coalition.
May - 9:00 a.m ., Men's Center; 9:20,
Duck House; 9: 40, Computer Film
Festival ; 10: 00, Revolutionary Student
Brigade ; 10: 20, Activities Building, CAB
Operation Support ; 10: 40 , Chamber
Singers / Jazz Ensemble; 11 : 00, Creative
Resources; 11 :20, CoHee House ; 11 :40,
Leisure Education Program . The hearings
will be held both mornings in CAB 108.
Next week's hearings w ill be from 9 a.m .
to 12 noon, May 14, 15, and 16.

TEACHERS DEMONSTRATE
AT CAPITOL

Pegasus gets final touches
RX-3 WA,GC)NS

Good through May 3~t on any new'74
rotafy-englne car.
rebate toward the down pay ment if you want.) Come in for
a test drive .
One tough eng in e. One
tough car. One
hmmmdinger
of a deal.

There 's never been a
bette r time to buy Mazda . You 'll
get a hmmmdinger of a deal
from u s - and $500 cash ba ck
fr o m Mazda - when you buy
any new 1974 rotary -eng i ne
car equipped the way you like
I

. - " it. (And you can use your

J 'J. )
_':/

Ma zd a ' ~

',,", r u1:Ll.WCU1~JIIj"
Ul

r o tary e ng in e

l i ce n ~e d

by N SU· WANKEL.

-~ ( ~-------'-'--...:.:..:::::::..:...:...:..:...:..:...:....::...;..~....:...-...:------

!I THE COACHMAN FOR MAZDA &PEUGEOT
3218 PACIFIC AVENUE
352-8558

MECHANICAL PEGASUS
In an effort to test the feasibility of
alternative energy sources, five Evergreen
students are currently working on a
"producer gas generation project," which
will allow a .1946 Ford pick-up truck to
operate using scrap wood generated gases
as fuel.
The five students are Dan Blincow, and
Michael Momany who are working under
contract to Bob Filmer, and Eldon Brown,
John Burnell and Don Samuelson of the
Humane Technospheres coordinated
studies program .
Initial planning for the project began
last fall when Blincow and Momany were
searching for a project to continue as a
part of their work within the Humane
Technospheres program , which they later
dropped in favor of individual contracts.
This enabled them to apply all of their
energies to the project without interference from other program activities.
The actual construction began approximately one month into winter quarter,
and will continu through the end of
spring quarter . The project is a modification and practical d evelopment of a
design included in a 1974 book, The
Pegasu s Unit, publi shed b.y faculty
members Niels Sko v a nd Ma rk Pa pworth.
Pegasus is an acron ym for petro leum /
p.<1 'io lin f' ,,,,hstitut e sys tPl11 s . whi ch wp r e

used by the Germans during .World War
Two when petroleum and its derivatives
were scarce.
The cost of the project, to date, has
been $600, and monies for the project
were bu<;lgeted from the Humane Te~hno­
spheres program and last years' Environmental Design program. Costs have been
kept to a minimum by the use of
scrounged materials such as old water
heating tanks and sheet metal for the
construction of the unit.
The truck will be fueled by vapors
driven from scrap wood that is gassified
in the Pegasus burning unit and filtered
and cooled in other sections of the entire
unit.
. With such large amounts of scrap wood
available for use as Pegasus fuel, it
seemed to the students that use of this
wood could be an alternative energy
source in li'ght of current and future
shortages of petroleum products.
If the projec.t ;5 ~tlccessfuL the students
hope to obtain a grant that would permit
them to build a Pegasus unit next year
th a t would be used to fire kilns in use at
Evergreen and wo~ld also enable them tp
research the possibilities of the application
of Pegasus technology to industrial fuel
~ " rr1 y I'r () hl e~:.s.~_ _ _ __ _ _ _ _--'

In respons~ to the school levy failures
in King County, between four and six
thousand Seattle teachers, parents and students rallied on the capitol steps Tuesday
to demand funding for Washington 's public schools . The rally was a last effort to
pressure the legislature for school funding
before Seattle teachers go on strike next
Friday.
This was the third such demonstration
at the capitol in three weeks. On April
22 , 5,000 high schoo l students' made
themselves heard, and five days afterward
8,000 of their teachers chanted "save our
schools" at a Washington Education Association (WEA) sponsored rall y on the
capitol steps.
School levies, which must be approved
by voters, are a specia l form of property
tax that pays for much of the public
schools' operating costs. The rallies are
the result of widespread voter rejection of
the school levies at elections which took
place April 8. While levies passed in the
Olympia and North Thurston School Districts, the levy failure was the largest in
Washington's history . Tumwater's school
levy was one that failed , forcing 28 teachers to be laid off at the end of this school
year.
The levy failures , voted at a time when
few Washingtonians can afford hi gh ~ r
taxes, wi ll , accord ing to the WEA , r.esult
in the firing of approximately 5,000 public
school employees across the state . In Seattle a lone, 1,670 teachers and administra tors have already received lay -off notices.
Seattle 's Central Area, predomin a ntly
black, will be forced to fire 251 of it s 351
certified staff members. At Garfield High ,
in the Central Area , only 32 of the present staff of 62 will continue to teach .
On April 21 , 84 percent of Sea ttl e's
teachers a nd sta ff voted to suppo rt a
strike to prot ect their iobs a nd th e prese nt
co ntinu ed o n nex t page

1

Cooper Point Journal

Page 6
continued from preceding page
quality of education in Seattle. The strike
authorization gives the Seattle Teachers
Association's 28 member executive committee the power to call a strike when it
decides that the legislature is not acting
adequately on state funding. Such a strike
is planned for Friday, and is supported by
the Seattle Parents, Teachers, and Students Association (PTSA). The Seattle
Teachers Association, an affiliate of the
WEA, represents 4,700 teachers, secretaries, aides, and nurses.
At first, the legislature chose not to act
on state funding until August or September. Some teachers suggested that the
legislature's plan was to wait until school
was out, so students and teachers could
do nothing. Now, however, they are offering a 50 to 60 percent emergency levy
relief to keep schools open for another six
months.
Gov. Evans has other plans to fund the
schools. In a speech to a joint session of
the legislature on April 21, Evans called
for a 10 percent increase in the business
and occupation tax, (generally, 44 percent
of sales at present), a 10 percent surcharge
on utilities, and an' addi tion of .6 percent
to Washington's sales tax, raising sales tax
in Thurston County from 5 percent to 5 .6
percent.

If Evans' proposal is approved, Seattle
schools will still lose more than 1 000
teachers and staff, and no teachers will receive salary increases .
As voters have been constantly battling
to end the levy system of school funding ,
the legislature will attempt to create an income tax that will make school levies no
longer necessary. The legislature has attempted to institute an income tax twice
before, but" it has been defeated by Washington's voters because, as one teacher
put it, "It taxed those of us making under
$12,000 more than it did the rich."
vther Seattle organizations have been
outspoken in their demands on the levy
issue. T . J. Vasser, education director for
the Seattle Urban League, stated, "We are
very much concerned that the tax burden
not be placed on the little man . . . The
little man and the poor already pay a disproportionate share."
The Seattle Socialist Workers Party,
whose members have been leafleting at
the rallies, states on their educational materials, "Let's vote on the 100 billion war
budget - not our children's education.
Tax Boeing, Weyerhaeuser, N . W. Bell,
and other big corporations making super
profits."
The ,NAACP is sponsoring a march
and rally in Seattle on May 17. Their leaflet states, "Regardless of race, creed, or
color, all people should have access to
quality education."
Tuesday, black and white Seattle teachers voiced the same opinion. Commenting
on the legislature's offer, one teacher said,
"Fifty percent is not enough. If that's all
we get. we'll be forced to strike."

CJ
~
OJ

c

Center in Everett. There will also be
representatives from several community
colleges.
This conference is the last in a series of
six. The series was designed by the
Placement Office to help Evergreen
students become acquainted with prospective employers and graduate school
personnel.
Students who wish to participate may
contact Gail Martin in the Placement
Office, Lib 1224, 866-6193 and to attend a
Job Day preparation workshop Friday,
May 9, in Lib 1221 at 1:00 p.m.

May 8, 1975

Page 7

'";0

IliiJllliWIIiIIIIMIi ..,

BEWARE THE POISONED
MUSHROOMS
Four students were hospitalized last
Thursday, May 1. after ingesting mushrooms in the amanita pantheria strain.
The mushrooms had been so ld as
psychadelics. The poisoned victims were
in the intensive care unit for most of the
night , but have since been released and
are all reported to be doing well.

CAREER INFORMATION DAY
Students interested in social services or
careers counseling will have the opportunity to be involved in the all-day Job
Information Conference, Wednesday,
May 14. Representatives from 21 public
and private agencies and six graduate
schools will be on campus for the
conference .
All of the representatives will act as
career advisors throughout the day . The
morning ,session of the conference will
provide students an opportunity to ask
questions about their particular career
interest, according to Gail Martin,
Placement Advisor.
The afternoon session w ill provide
seniors and some . three year students the
opportunity to role play in' an interview
with an employer. The students will be
given responses and comments about their
resumes, interview abilities, the way they
discuss their training and / or schooling,
and the way they present themselves and
their portfolios.
Attending the conference will be
graduate school representatives from
Whitman College, The U of W,
Washington State University, Portland
State University , and Sonoma State
College.
Some of th~ professionals in counseling
and social services who were asked to
attend are from Western State Hospital ,
Youth Services Bureau, Purdy Treatment
Center or Women , Juv eni le Parole
Services, Pierce Cou nty Drug Alliance,
Office of Community Development ,
Thurston County
Senior
Center,
Tacoma's Pion ee r G roup Home, Olympia
Parks and Recrea tion . Seattle Public
Schools , and th e Children 's Reso urce

INDIANS HOLD SPIRITUAL CAMP
AMOTTKN KAS-ES-CHN-ME A
newly formed, all Indian spiritual encampment will be holding a traditional Indian
spiritual gathering. Beginning at sunrise,
Tues ., May 13, and lasting 12 days this
gathering will provide Indian people from
all tribes and all walks of life with an opportunity to learn from their Medicine
Men and spiritual leaders. Here they will
learn about their traditional ceremonies
and religious beliefs and how to prepare
themselves spiritually to carry on and
maintain their traditional way of life.
AMOTTKN KAS-ES-CHN-ME came
into being for essentially the same reasons
as spiritua! gatherings. Many Indian people coming out of prisons, BIA boarding
schools, state institutes and off the city
streets, have forgotten what it means to
be Indian. They have no direction and no
purpose with which to live. Their existence becomes a trap; from state institute
to the street and back again, constantly
having to deal with alcoholism, drug
abuse and disease as well as mental. spiritual and physical oppression.
It is imperative at this time that the
Jat~ering remain strictly Indian, so that
-Indian people may better provide for
themselves.
For furthe~ information, contact: Sally
No Heart - 6034, non-white coalition;
Amos Peaslee
6034, non-white
coalition; Janet McCloud - (206) 4587610, Yelm; Dog Wadeau - (206) 3226230, Seattle .

VETERAN STORY CORRECTEU
Here is some new information on
summer benefits for veterans:
The only veterans who will lose August
and September benefits are those taking
only a 2 unit program which ends July 28.
Any veterans who register for at least 3
units of credit, thus going to school into
August, will receive full benefits for
August and September if continuously
certified through fall quarter.
Veterans enrolled i'n summer classes
which end before August should in order
to receive August and September benefits,
draw up an individual contract extending ,
until at least August 13.
continued on page 17
~/

A series of five-to-eight minute television programs
on many of the academic programs to be offered at
Evergreen during the 1975 - 76 year, Not all the academic offerings for next year are represented, as
some programs are already full and some fa culty
members chose not to participate ,
The television programs are broadcast in con jun ction with the Academic Advising Faire and the student program selection proc'ess
See and hear the faculty desc.ribe and discu ss the
coordinated studies and group con trac ts they wiil
be participating in next year , The Cooperative Education folks will also describe internships and t he
associated process ,

Viewing time s will be between nine in the morning
and four in the afternoon, from Monday, May 12
through Friday, May 16 and Monday, May 19
through Friday, May 23 , The programs can be seen
o n Channel 12 on television receivers connected to
th e campus cable television system - in the MiniMedia Center, library building seminar rooms, the
CA B first floor lounge, the dorms and modular
housing .
Th e Living Catalog is sponsored and produced by
Electron ic Media services, The Evergree" State Coll ege Library; produced and directed by Jack
Hoffman .

1

Cooper Point Journal

Page 6
continued from preceding page
quality of education in Seattle. The strike
authorization gives the Seattle Teachers
Association's 28 member executive committee the power to call a strike when it
decides that the legislature is not acting
adequately on state funding. Such a strike
is planned for Friday, and is supported by
the Seattle Parents, Teachers, and Students Association (PTSA). The Seattle
Teachers Association, an affiliate of the
WEA, represents 4,700 teachers, secretaries, aides, and nurses.
At first, the legislature chose not to act
on state funding until August or September. Some teachers suggested that the
legislature's plan was to wait until school
was out, so students and teachers could
do nothing. Now, however, they are offering a 50 to 60 percent emergency levy
relief to keep schools open for another six
months.
Gov. Evans has other plans to fund the
schools. In a speech to a joint session of
the legislature on April 21, Evans called
for a 10 percent increase in the business
and occupation tax, (generally, 44 percent
of sales at present), a 10 percent surcharge
on utilities, and an' addi tion of .6 percent
to Washington's sales tax, raising sales tax
in Thurston County from 5 percent to 5 .6
percent.

If Evans' proposal is approved, Seattle
schools will still lose more than 1 000
teachers and staff, and no teachers will receive salary increases .
As voters have been constantly battling
to end the levy system of school funding ,
the legislature will attempt to create an income tax that will make school levies no
longer necessary. The legislature has attempted to institute an income tax twice
before, but" it has been defeated by Washington's voters because, as one teacher
put it, "It taxed those of us making under
$12,000 more than it did the rich."
vther Seattle organizations have been
outspoken in their demands on the levy
issue. T . J. Vasser, education director for
the Seattle Urban League, stated, "We are
very much concerned that the tax burden
not be placed on the little man . . . The
little man and the poor already pay a disproportionate share."
The Seattle Socialist Workers Party,
whose members have been leafleting at
the rallies, states on their educational materials, "Let's vote on the 100 billion war
budget - not our children's education.
Tax Boeing, Weyerhaeuser, N . W. Bell,
and other big corporations making super
profits."
The ,NAACP is sponsoring a march
and rally in Seattle on May 17. Their leaflet states, "Regardless of race, creed, or
color, all people should have access to
quality education."
Tuesday, black and white Seattle teachers voiced the same opinion. Commenting
on the legislature's offer, one teacher said,
"Fifty percent is not enough. If that's all
we get. we'll be forced to strike."

CJ
~
OJ

c

Center in Everett. There will also be
representatives from several community
colleges.
This conference is the last in a series of
six. The series was designed by the
Placement Office to help Evergreen
students become acquainted with prospective employers and graduate school
personnel.
Students who wish to participate may
contact Gail Martin in the Placement
Office, Lib 1224, 866-6193 and to attend a
Job Day preparation workshop Friday,
May 9, in Lib 1221 at 1:00 p.m.

May 8, 1975

Page 7

'";0

IliiJllliWIIiIIIIMIi ..,

BEWARE THE POISONED
MUSHROOMS
Four students were hospitalized last
Thursday, May 1. after ingesting mushrooms in the amanita pantheria strain.
The mushrooms had been so ld as
psychadelics. The poisoned victims were
in the intensive care unit for most of the
night , but have since been released and
are all reported to be doing well.

CAREER INFORMATION DAY
Students interested in social services or
careers counseling will have the opportunity to be involved in the all-day Job
Information Conference, Wednesday,
May 14. Representatives from 21 public
and private agencies and six graduate
schools will be on campus for the
conference .
All of the representatives will act as
career advisors throughout the day . The
morning ,session of the conference will
provide students an opportunity to ask
questions about their particular career
interest, according to Gail Martin,
Placement Advisor.
The afternoon session w ill provide
seniors and some . three year students the
opportunity to role play in' an interview
with an employer. The students will be
given responses and comments about their
resumes, interview abilities, the way they
discuss their training and / or schooling,
and the way they present themselves and
their portfolios.
Attending the conference will be
graduate school representatives from
Whitman College, The U of W,
Washington State University, Portland
State University , and Sonoma State
College.
Some of th~ professionals in counseling
and social services who were asked to
attend are from Western State Hospital ,
Youth Services Bureau, Purdy Treatment
Center or Women , Juv eni le Parole
Services, Pierce Cou nty Drug Alliance,
Office of Community Development ,
Thurston County
Senior
Center,
Tacoma's Pion ee r G roup Home, Olympia
Parks and Recrea tion . Seattle Public
Schools , and th e Children 's Reso urce

INDIANS HOLD SPIRITUAL CAMP
AMOTTKN KAS-ES-CHN-ME A
newly formed, all Indian spiritual encampment will be holding a traditional Indian
spiritual gathering. Beginning at sunrise,
Tues ., May 13, and lasting 12 days this
gathering will provide Indian people from
all tribes and all walks of life with an opportunity to learn from their Medicine
Men and spiritual leaders. Here they will
learn about their traditional ceremonies
and religious beliefs and how to prepare
themselves spiritually to carry on and
maintain their traditional way of life.
AMOTTKN KAS-ES-CHN-ME came
into being for essentially the same reasons
as spiritua! gatherings. Many Indian people coming out of prisons, BIA boarding
schools, state institutes and off the city
streets, have forgotten what it means to
be Indian. They have no direction and no
purpose with which to live. Their existence becomes a trap; from state institute
to the street and back again, constantly
having to deal with alcoholism, drug
abuse and disease as well as mental. spiritual and physical oppression.
It is imperative at this time that the
Jat~ering remain strictly Indian, so that
-Indian people may better provide for
themselves.
For furthe~ information, contact: Sally
No Heart - 6034, non-white coalition;
Amos Peaslee
6034, non-white
coalition; Janet McCloud - (206) 4587610, Yelm; Dog Wadeau - (206) 3226230, Seattle .

VETERAN STORY CORRECTEU
Here is some new information on
summer benefits for veterans:
The only veterans who will lose August
and September benefits are those taking
only a 2 unit program which ends July 28.
Any veterans who register for at least 3
units of credit, thus going to school into
August, will receive full benefits for
August and September if continuously
certified through fall quarter.
Veterans enrolled i'n summer classes
which end before August should in order
to receive August and September benefits,
draw up an individual contract extending ,
until at least August 13.
continued on page 17
~/

A series of five-to-eight minute television programs
on many of the academic programs to be offered at
Evergreen during the 1975 - 76 year, Not all the academic offerings for next year are represented, as
some programs are already full and some fa culty
members chose not to participate ,
The television programs are broadcast in con jun ction with the Academic Advising Faire and the student program selection proc'ess
See and hear the faculty desc.ribe and discu ss the
coordinated studies and group con trac ts they wiil
be participating in next year , The Cooperative Education folks will also describe internships and t he
associated process ,

Viewing time s will be between nine in the morning
and four in the afternoon, from Monday, May 12
through Friday, May 16 and Monday, May 19
through Friday, May 23 , The programs can be seen
o n Channel 12 on television receivers connected to
th e campus cable television system - in the MiniMedia Center, library building seminar rooms, the
CA B first floor lounge, the dorms and modular
housing .
Th e Living Catalog is sponsored and produced by
Electron ic Media services, The Evergree" State Coll ege Library; produced and directed by Jack
Hoffman .

Page 8

Cooper Point Journal
May 8, 1975

EJ's Grocery and Tole Shop

Printshop Revisited

8 am - 11 pm Daily
cold beer - wine - party ice

WESTSIDE SHOPPING CENTER
11 - 7 Sund ay

Hours : 9 - 9 Da il y

1821 Harrison Ave.

Tel: 357-7133

BUY YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS
AT

HENDRICK'S

4f.i
\.}

.

.

:'jJ,.

DRUGS
943-3111

WESTSIDE CENTER

*
*

RECORD RACK
CAPITAL CASSETTES
sixty-minute tap~s

:::::--: '.

~'\~~'
\~~~J

*

HEADPHONE
EXTENSION CORD
25' curly cord

/'
(( the

5u11ie.st

memanic5 in fown..
THE
DUCK.
HOUSE

serrrrl~

' l5
\fOLW'- ((eOnor

10:30- .2:3 0
CAB

845EMENT

Commentary

Prices effective \
until May 31, 1975 \

69¢
69¢

ten 8-track cartridges

By DON MARTIN
Two weeks ago the Secret Service was
on campus investiga ting an apparent illegal reproduction of postage stamps by the
college print shop . In · a meeting with the
faculty, administrators, and print shop
workers involved in the incident , the SS
agent asked several probing questions to
determine who was actually respo nsible
fo r the printing. Facing possible cha rges
of 15 years in jail a nd $15,000 fin es each,
for mail fraud , mak ing the plate, and' reproducing the counterfeit stamps, those in
the meeting responded nervo usly to questions .
And who printed the stamps 7 the SS
agent asked. Before print sho p workers
could respond , Arnold Doerksen, director
of General Services a nd top superv isor for
the print shop , blurted ou t, " Carlos did
it," according to two eyewitness accounts.
Doerksen's information was secondha nd ,
since he was not a witness to the print ing.
"During the whole day they were investigating this thing, it seemed li ke they
were trying to put responsibi lity on me.
Howard should have caught the stamp in
the very beginning, but even he didn't realize it was illegal, " sa id Ga rlos Ortiz, offset duplicator operator fot the pri nt sh op.
"I don't even remember w ho did the
printing. It was just a nother job. Authorized bulk rate stamps are printed a ll the
time."
Ortiz was refused legal counsel by the
school attorney , Richard Monteccuco , in
the meeting, though ad ministrat ive decisio ns representing institutional po li cy
could be defended . Doerksen subseq uently
claimed responsibility rested with Howard
Griffith, print shop superv isor.
Though no thing yet has come from the
investigation, and several adm inistrators
have mentioned th~ whole m a tter was
grossly overemphasized, both Ortiz and
Dan Meier, office assistant in the print
sho p, feel the process of the invest igation
and the respo nses of Doerksen and Griffith , epi tomize many of the problems in
management , personnel relation s, and
supervision of the printi ng services.
No Training
Ortiz a nd Meier cite the absence of
tra ining in equipme nt operation and maintenance, as well as general education in
the printing trade, as the major source of
problems in the shop - especially wi th
Griffit h, w ho they feel is no t qualified to
be in a supervisory capacity.
Rindetta Jones , Affirmative Acti on Officer, indicated there was an explicit agreement with the Personnel Office to provide
Ortiz with trai ning. However, the OYTI
program Ortiz enrolled in to fu lfill this

agreem ent was cancelled and no substitute
has been provided . Howard Griffith, h imself, has said 'Tve never been qualified to
teach anybody - it's not in me to teach .
I know how to run the equipment , bu t
w hen it comes to explain ing it to somebody else . . . "
"Formal tra ining is no t feasible ," acco rding to Doerksen. "We don't have the '
time or money." He went on to exp lain
the fac ili ty provided a t Evergreen is not a
pri nt shop, b ut a copy center. The Evergreen sh op is a uthorized by the state
p rinter fo r duplicating o nl y. " Once you're
set up w ith basics, not mu ch tra in ing or
updating is needed ," Doerksen sa id .
According to the state printer, an offer
was made to the college to be a n affi liate
of the Washington State Department of
Printing about two years ago. This means
the print shop could be staffed by uni on
printers, wou ld coopera te w ith the ot her
copy centers under the state printer to
share work loads and eq uipm ent , and
prov ide fo rmal training as an integra l part
of the service.
It was indicated such a n arrangement
wou ld provide a more flexible and efficient service at a lower cos t. Evergreen
has not accepted the offer, tho ugh the
state printer seems to st ill be open to nego tia ting terms.
Jim Spi vey, a printer for m6re th an ten
years and former coordina tor of prin ting
services who was RIF'd in 1973, explained
some of the background 'of the present
print shop management. He was hired in
1970 to set up .the printing facilities for
the new college, w hich included coordinatio n of all duplicating (offset and Xerox)
and provisions for a "hands-o n" fac ility
to provide' studen ts with experience in
prin ting and publish ing . Before he had a
chance to accompli sh this, however, his
posi tion was eliminated. Doerksen, who
was then purchasing agent, was put in
charge of printing a nd Howard Griffith,
who worked under Spivey, was elevated
to shop supervisor.
Sti ll concerned about the faci lity , especia lly its being in the basement with poor
ventil at ion , lighting a nd space, Spivey
sa id, "It wo uld take m a jor development s
to elevate the p rint shop to the sta tus and
rep ut ation it once had."
Management Problems
Greg Falxa , a former print shop emp loyee, explained one of the reasons he
left the shop was because of management
problems sim il ar to those that now exist.
"On severa l occasions since then , I've
been asked by Arnie (Doerksen) to come
down and get the shop o ut of a bind . I've
always cooperated in hopes th at co ndi-

Page 9
tions wo ul d improve , b ut it just hasn' t
ha ppened ," Fa lxa sta ted. He sa id he recently had to work la te to finish the program for th e Third Wo rld Bicentenn ia l
Forum , w hich sti ll had not been printed
the night, before th e Forum began .
" I was rather shocked abo ut th e conditi on of some of the equipment. In add ition to finding it poo rl y maintained , it
took me 45 minutes to ge t the ITI:.K pre~s
a rea clea n enough to run the job," Fa lxa
sa id .
Since the sta mp incident , severa l comp la int s surfaced from ind iv idua ls abo ut
the shop's service. Some of these peop le
ad mitted that a ma jor part of the problem
was they were not clear abo ut the limitations ot the shop and we re not versed in
proper preparation of copy. Th is type of
customer educa'tio n is offered to the degree th at print shop w orkers happen to be
fam il iar with graph ics terms and techniq ues, but n o direct rela ti onshi p exists
between the grap hics shop , the minimedi a area (wh ich can be used for copy
preparak io n ), and the prin t shop .
,
Steady , instituti ona l users o t the printing serv ices , such as the Registrar, Admissions, Office of Co llege Relations, President ' s Offic e, and admin i s ~rative vice
presidents, expressed appreciation for the
speed and cooperative a tt itude toward
th e ir n eeds s h own by s hop workers.
However , Doerksen revealed that he considers these regu lar customers "big jobs"
a nd assigns them blocks of time in priority to independent, lower <;tatus or "s mall
jo bs." Griffi th further qualified this , saying that cash jobs without budget numbers were often bumped when the schedule is tight , though he claimed h is intention was to try a nd p lease everybody .
Peop le who realize that they are relegated to the "small job" category expressed d issatisfaction with the quality
and lack of concern for the time and ene rgy invol ved in preparation . Ortiz
claimed that Griffith "tries to get away
w ith swit ching ITEK p lates (h igher qualit y system') for electrostatic plates. " Howa rd characterized the electrostat and, small
2650 press system as "quick and dirty :"
(The print shop offers to reprint jobs for
dissatisfied cust omers, even tho ugh the
se rvice loses money .)
Doerksen and Griffith have said they
felt the source of most dissa tisfaction
arises from prob lems in scheduling. There
are "crash" periods at the · end of quarters
w h en jobs get backlogged , especially
when "big jobs" li ke the Co llege Supplement are in; and "slack" periods, when
there is barely enough work to keep everybody busy, like t1~ring the summer.
Doerksen saw thi s as inevi table, and said ...
there was lit tle th a t cou ld be done to plan ~
schedul es. He also sa id he has tried to get
the word o ut for print ing advance jobs to I
relieve pressure during the crash periods, ~
b ut this has not been too effective ; people
always wait until the last minute.
Confusion over the limitations and po- .E
_
tentials of the printing facilitift seems to

r.

1

e

Page 8

Cooper Point Journal
May 8, 1975

EJ's Grocery and Tole Shop

Printshop Revisited

8 am - 11 pm Daily
cold beer - wine - party ice

WESTSIDE SHOPPING CENTER
11 - 7 Sund ay

Hours : 9 - 9 Da il y

1821 Harrison Ave.

Tel: 357-7133

BUY YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS
AT

HENDRICK'S

4f.i
\.}

.

.

:'jJ,.

DRUGS
943-3111

WESTSIDE CENTER

*
*

RECORD RACK
CAPITAL CASSETTES
sixty-minute tap~s

:::::--: '.

~'\~~'
\~~~J

*

HEADPHONE
EXTENSION CORD
25' curly cord

/'
(( the

5u11ie.st

memanic5 in fown..
THE
DUCK.
HOUSE

serrrrl~

' l5
\fOLW'- ((eOnor

10:30- .2:3 0
CAB

845EMENT

Commentary

Prices effective \
until May 31, 1975 \

69¢
69¢

ten 8-track cartridges

By DON MARTIN
Two weeks ago the Secret Service was
on campus investiga ting an apparent illegal reproduction of postage stamps by the
college print shop . In · a meeting with the
faculty, administrators, and print shop
workers involved in the incident , the SS
agent asked several probing questions to
determine who was actually respo nsible
fo r the printing. Facing possible cha rges
of 15 years in jail a nd $15,000 fin es each,
for mail fraud , mak ing the plate, and' reproducing the counterfeit stamps, those in
the meeting responded nervo usly to questions .
And who printed the stamps 7 the SS
agent asked. Before print sho p workers
could respond , Arnold Doerksen, director
of General Services a nd top superv isor for
the print shop , blurted ou t, " Carlos did
it," according to two eyewitness accounts.
Doerksen's information was secondha nd ,
since he was not a witness to the print ing.
"During the whole day they were investigating this thing, it seemed li ke they
were trying to put responsibi lity on me.
Howard should have caught the stamp in
the very beginning, but even he didn't realize it was illegal, " sa id Ga rlos Ortiz, offset duplicator operator fot the pri nt sh op.
"I don't even remember w ho did the
printing. It was just a nother job. Authorized bulk rate stamps are printed a ll the
time."
Ortiz was refused legal counsel by the
school attorney , Richard Monteccuco , in
the meeting, though ad ministrat ive decisio ns representing institutional po li cy
could be defended . Doerksen subseq uently
claimed responsibility rested with Howard
Griffith, print shop superv isor.
Though no thing yet has come from the
investigation, and several adm inistrators
have mentioned th~ whole m a tter was
grossly overemphasized, both Ortiz and
Dan Meier, office assistant in the print
sho p, feel the process of the invest igation
and the respo nses of Doerksen and Griffith , epi tomize many of the problems in
management , personnel relation s, and
supervision of the printi ng services.
No Training
Ortiz a nd Meier cite the absence of
tra ining in equipme nt operation and maintenance, as well as general education in
the printing trade, as the major source of
problems in the shop - especially wi th
Griffit h, w ho they feel is no t qualified to
be in a supervisory capacity.
Rindetta Jones , Affirmative Acti on Officer, indicated there was an explicit agreement with the Personnel Office to provide
Ortiz with trai ning. However, the OYTI
program Ortiz enrolled in to fu lfill this

agreem ent was cancelled and no substitute
has been provided . Howard Griffith, h imself, has said 'Tve never been qualified to
teach anybody - it's not in me to teach .
I know how to run the equipment , bu t
w hen it comes to explain ing it to somebody else . . . "
"Formal tra ining is no t feasible ," acco rding to Doerksen. "We don't have the '
time or money." He went on to exp lain
the fac ili ty provided a t Evergreen is not a
pri nt shop, b ut a copy center. The Evergreen sh op is a uthorized by the state
p rinter fo r duplicating o nl y. " Once you're
set up w ith basics, not mu ch tra in ing or
updating is needed ," Doerksen sa id .
According to the state printer, an offer
was made to the college to be a n affi liate
of the Washington State Department of
Printing about two years ago. This means
the print shop could be staffed by uni on
printers, wou ld coopera te w ith the ot her
copy centers under the state printer to
share work loads and eq uipm ent , and
prov ide fo rmal training as an integra l part
of the service.
It was indicated such a n arrangement
wou ld provide a more flexible and efficient service at a lower cos t. Evergreen
has not accepted the offer, tho ugh the
state printer seems to st ill be open to nego tia ting terms.
Jim Spi vey, a printer for m6re th an ten
years and former coordina tor of prin ting
services who was RIF'd in 1973, explained
some of the background 'of the present
print shop management. He was hired in
1970 to set up .the printing facilities for
the new college, w hich included coordinatio n of all duplicating (offset and Xerox)
and provisions for a "hands-o n" fac ility
to provide' studen ts with experience in
prin ting and publish ing . Before he had a
chance to accompli sh this, however, his
posi tion was eliminated. Doerksen, who
was then purchasing agent, was put in
charge of printing a nd Howard Griffith,
who worked under Spivey, was elevated
to shop supervisor.
Sti ll concerned about the faci lity , especia lly its being in the basement with poor
ventil at ion , lighting a nd space, Spivey
sa id, "It wo uld take m a jor development s
to elevate the p rint shop to the sta tus and
rep ut ation it once had."
Management Problems
Greg Falxa , a former print shop emp loyee, explained one of the reasons he
left the shop was because of management
problems sim il ar to those that now exist.
"On severa l occasions since then , I've
been asked by Arnie (Doerksen) to come
down and get the shop o ut of a bind . I've
always cooperated in hopes th at co ndi-

Page 9
tions wo ul d improve , b ut it just hasn' t
ha ppened ," Fa lxa sta ted. He sa id he recently had to work la te to finish the program for th e Third Wo rld Bicentenn ia l
Forum , w hich sti ll had not been printed
the night, before th e Forum began .
" I was rather shocked abo ut th e conditi on of some of the equipment. In add ition to finding it poo rl y maintained , it
took me 45 minutes to ge t the ITI:.K pre~s
a rea clea n enough to run the job," Fa lxa
sa id .
Since the sta mp incident , severa l comp la int s surfaced from ind iv idua ls abo ut
the shop's service. Some of these peop le
ad mitted that a ma jor part of the problem
was they were not clear abo ut the limitations ot the shop and we re not versed in
proper preparation of copy. Th is type of
customer educa'tio n is offered to the degree th at print shop w orkers happen to be
fam il iar with graph ics terms and techniq ues, but n o direct rela ti onshi p exists
between the grap hics shop , the minimedi a area (wh ich can be used for copy
preparak io n ), and the prin t shop .
,
Steady , instituti ona l users o t the printing serv ices , such as the Registrar, Admissions, Office of Co llege Relations, President ' s Offic e, and admin i s ~rative vice
presidents, expressed appreciation for the
speed and cooperative a tt itude toward
th e ir n eeds s h own by s hop workers.
However , Doerksen revealed that he considers these regu lar customers "big jobs"
a nd assigns them blocks of time in priority to independent, lower <;tatus or "s mall
jo bs." Griffi th further qualified this , saying that cash jobs without budget numbers were often bumped when the schedule is tight , though he claimed h is intention was to try a nd p lease everybody .
Peop le who realize that they are relegated to the "small job" category expressed d issatisfaction with the quality
and lack of concern for the time and ene rgy invol ved in preparation . Ortiz
claimed that Griffith "tries to get away
w ith swit ching ITEK p lates (h igher qualit y system') for electrostatic plates. " Howa rd characterized the electrostat and, small
2650 press system as "quick and dirty :"
(The print shop offers to reprint jobs for
dissatisfied cust omers, even tho ugh the
se rvice loses money .)
Doerksen and Griffith have said they
felt the source of most dissa tisfaction
arises from prob lems in scheduling. There
are "crash" periods at the · end of quarters
w h en jobs get backlogged , especially
when "big jobs" li ke the Co llege Supplement are in; and "slack" periods, when
there is barely enough work to keep everybody busy, like t1~ring the summer.
Doerksen saw thi s as inevi table, and said ...
there was lit tle th a t cou ld be done to plan ~
schedul es. He also sa id he has tried to get
the word o ut for print ing advance jobs to I
relieve pressure during the crash periods, ~
b ut this has not been too effective ; people
always wait until the last minute.
Confusion over the limitations and po- .E
_
tentials of the printing facilitift seems to

r.

1

e

Page 10

AMERICA FOR SALE

OLYMPIA SPORT SHOP
Rod, Reel & Gun Repair
KNIVFS - LEATHER GOODS
tly • ylng M

.

I I

Cooper Pt & Harrison
lacey - 817 Sleater-kinney

94)·8086
491-4340

By TOM PITTS

{'fials

Wed. thru Sat.
10 AM - 5:30 PM

~

FIGMO

719 E. 4th
357-75GO

ROGER'S

MARKET

Many ex-servicemen are again saying Finally I
Got My Orders .v vhen they graduate from college.
VVith an extra $2,000, in addition to GI Bill benefits, during their junior and senior years they vvill
be commissioned as Army officers beginning at a
salary of over $10,000 a year. Put your military
experience to vvork for you in Army ROTC. Call
Captain Gordon Larson at 626-5775 in Seattle.

Also Chevron Gas

Custom
Beef

Cut

Orders

Fresh Meats

"a new concept in living"

and

COLONY INN

Groceries

Adult Singles Community

2010 Division and Elliot Rd. 357·7483
I

[)

Dirty Dave's
Gay 90's
Buy two complete spaghetti
dinners (includes salad &

$3.50

a month

TWO WEEKS
FfRt:E

"
RENT WITH ,rSfX !
MONTHS LEASE
-.;r;~··'·

& Thurs.

Expires
5 /1 5 / 75

Page 11

May 8, 1975

Coo cr Point Journal

1818 Evergreen Dr.
Olympia, Wash.
98501

943-7330

"One of the things that I have in mind
is the manner in which we treat our natural environment here on the North
American territory. I think we can no
longer permit the economic advance of
our country to take place so extensively
at the cost of the devastation of its natural resources and its natural beauty,"
George F. Kennan on American Foreign
Policy, Princeton University, 1954 .
I was born and raised in the north central p:ut of this beautiful state. I have a
high interest in the proposed changes that
may occur in my home valley . .. the
Okanogan. This area of Washington is
fairly remote; it is made up of vast range
and forest land and its <:hief products are
lumber, apples, and cattle. The residents
of my valley have enjoyed a unique and
pleasant life, but this is due to change if
corporate business has its way. Aspen Ski
Corporation is in the process of obtaining
land near Winthrop, Washington in order
to build the largest ski resort in North
America. At present there is no way of
.determining all of the possible social,
economic, and environmental aftereffects
it could, bring to the Methow and Okanogan valleys. Large-scale open pit copper
mining is also being proposed nearby .
Both of these events threaten rapid change
to the existing life styles of the area and
demand vigilant effort by our citizens.
Thorough research and careful land use
planning are required to ensure protection
of the best qualities of the existing
environment. North Central Washington's
future is a "sleeper" at this moment , a
future that may hold many detrimental
changes.
One of the main factors contributing to
the attraction of these corporate investers
was the opening of the Cascades North
Cross State highway . Its construction, the
enlargement of the tourist trade and travel
through the area, was clearly done for
monetary motives, disregarding the preservation of this wild national forest.
The county commissioner from the area ,
is the owner of one of neighboring
Twisp's gas stations and car sales lot. It is
not hard to see why he would advocate
increased tourism. The impact of the
highway would be felt by the residents in
the form of increased taxes for road , medical service, a nd police protection .
During hunting and fishing season the
towns are swamped with transients . The
once a bundant wildlife is rapidly decreasing . The highway has made the area accessible to many people, increasing "the
take" of the town merchants. With heavy
snowfall in the winter, the road is presen tly closed three or four month s of the
yea r. Now with th e proposed ski resort, Ct

is central in the planning to keep it open
all year round as a special service to the
influx of skiers. This will further increase
highway ta xes and load a n even greater
burden on the permanen.t residents.
Money Machine
'.'
In the 1840's Alexis De Tocqueville
foresaw this attitude in Americans: " I
know of no country, indeed , where the
love of money ha s taken stronger ho ld on
the affections of men and where a profounder contempt is expressed for the
theory of the 'permanent equality of property."
This is another example of long term effects and community casts th a t follow in
the wake of decisions made in haste without full access to facts and alternatives,
when economic devel opment with monetary gain for the promoting investers is
the only goal considered. This is not an
isolated incident but one of a continuing
series of incidents in American history
that show how we have slowly but surely
destroyed our natural environment by
turning it into a money making machin e
rather than a quality place to live.

The building of a huge ski resort would
greatly affect the surrounding co untryside . In order to accommodate the large
numbers of sk iers, hotel s and restaurants
would sprout up . Land values a nd taxes
would force out the orchards a nd farm s
on the productive valley floor a nd slopes.
A major airport would be needed to welcome skiers from all parts of the U . S. Bigger highways would have to be built to
handle the hundreds of thousa nds from all
over the world as well as the commuting
sk iers from the western and eas tern parts
of the state.
Such a resort would increase the need
for adequate medic a l and hospital
agencies a nd require increased police personnel. It would increase the amount of
water and electricity usage a nd demand
sufficient sewage facilities. The burden of
these changes would strike the former residents in increased taxes, not on ly in the
near area but on both sides of the Cascades.
Okanogan life Over
Living in nea rby Okanog'an, the cha irman of the pla nning commission a lso
owns a gas station and garage . He has
two sons that are competition sk i racers.
He ha d this to say upon his return from
Co lo rado , " I think our way of life in

Oka nogan Cou nty is goi ng to be over rega rdness of w hether it is brought about
b y th e sk i development, mining or somethin g else . I was highly impressed with
the cal ibre of young people at the ski
areas in Colorado. Among them are some
of the finl:'st grad ua tes from schools in the
Oka nogan Vall ey. Frankly, if we can get
th em back. I'll trade a ll of Mt. Hull and
pa rt of the Aenea's Vall ey." Get them
back for what? His willingness to barter
wit h Na ti o na l Fo rest land to obtain sk iers
in thi s area revea ls his attitude toward
presl:'rving the enviro nment. These feelin gs in the pla nn ers do not reflect the
minds o f the res iden ts.
When a citizens' group made up of
Meth ow Valley residents met to voice
their opin io ns a majority felt that they
a nd .th e environment would be better off
if things w ere left as they were. Only a
few looked forward to the plans of a
resort with en thusiasm. Thi s minority
would be th e ones to profit by tradi ng the
enviro nment for money .
Now is th e time to examine the a ttitudes guidin g our act ions toward the land
w hile there is still time to make decisions
based on all the facts . Citizens must be
made awa re of the long term effects of
new economic development and voice
their opi ni ons through their representatives. Str ict a nd observant la nd planning
mu st be used to establish top priority for
agricu ltura l and forest lands. We must not
let large corporations a nd government
age ncies stand alone, free to decide how
o ur lands will be used and sold to the
highest bidder for increased profit.
Unfree Enterprise
"W ha t the monopolists object to is any
measure o f planning for the public good
instead of private profits. What they say
is th a t we a re restricting free enterprise;
w ha t they mea n is that they wan t unrest ricted powe r to man ipu late an unfree
ente rpri se sys tem ." These wo rds, spoken
by Se nator George McGovern, expose the
m ot i ve~ of co rpo ra te power. If we are to
·· Iive on thi~ ea rth we must begin to do it
in ha rm ony w ith the environment.
The life styles and values of the people
of the Okanogan and the potential of the
valley for greatly needed food production
mu st be weighed aga in s t turning the
va lley in to o ne large profit - making pleasure m achine. W hose wi ll shall prevail,
tha t of the peop le or of the profiteering
corpora ti o ns? Unless the people answer
the cha llenge now a nd exercise their responsib ilit y to co ntact their legislators at
both state and federal lev els, another page
in land specul a ti c)n 'and pro fiteering will
be written . . . a nd as before, written by
default .. .. with too littl e informati~n . .
. . and concl:'rns exp ressed . .. all too
la tr .

Page 10

AMERICA FOR SALE

OLYMPIA SPORT SHOP
Rod, Reel & Gun Repair
KNIVFS - LEATHER GOODS
tly • ylng M

.

I I

Cooper Pt & Harrison
lacey - 817 Sleater-kinney

94)·8086
491-4340

By TOM PITTS

{'fials

Wed. thru Sat.
10 AM - 5:30 PM

~

FIGMO

719 E. 4th
357-75GO

ROGER'S

MARKET

Many ex-servicemen are again saying Finally I
Got My Orders .v vhen they graduate from college.
VVith an extra $2,000, in addition to GI Bill benefits, during their junior and senior years they vvill
be commissioned as Army officers beginning at a
salary of over $10,000 a year. Put your military
experience to vvork for you in Army ROTC. Call
Captain Gordon Larson at 626-5775 in Seattle.

Also Chevron Gas

Custom
Beef

Cut

Orders

Fresh Meats

"a new concept in living"

and

COLONY INN

Groceries

Adult Singles Community

2010 Division and Elliot Rd. 357·7483
I

[)

Dirty Dave's
Gay 90's
Buy two complete spaghetti
dinners (includes salad &

$3.50

a month

TWO WEEKS
FfRt:E

"
RENT WITH ,rSfX !
MONTHS LEASE
-.;r;~··'·

& Thurs.

Expires
5 /1 5 / 75

Page 11

May 8, 1975

Coo cr Point Journal

1818 Evergreen Dr.
Olympia, Wash.
98501

943-7330

"One of the things that I have in mind
is the manner in which we treat our natural environment here on the North
American territory. I think we can no
longer permit the economic advance of
our country to take place so extensively
at the cost of the devastation of its natural resources and its natural beauty,"
George F. Kennan on American Foreign
Policy, Princeton University, 1954 .
I was born and raised in the north central p:ut of this beautiful state. I have a
high interest in the proposed changes that
may occur in my home valley . .. the
Okanogan. This area of Washington is
fairly remote; it is made up of vast range
and forest land and its <:hief products are
lumber, apples, and cattle. The residents
of my valley have enjoyed a unique and
pleasant life, but this is due to change if
corporate business has its way. Aspen Ski
Corporation is in the process of obtaining
land near Winthrop, Washington in order
to build the largest ski resort in North
America. At present there is no way of
.determining all of the possible social,
economic, and environmental aftereffects
it could, bring to the Methow and Okanogan valleys. Large-scale open pit copper
mining is also being proposed nearby .
Both of these events threaten rapid change
to the existing life styles of the area and
demand vigilant effort by our citizens.
Thorough research and careful land use
planning are required to ensure protection
of the best qualities of the existing
environment. North Central Washington's
future is a "sleeper" at this moment , a
future that may hold many detrimental
changes.
One of the main factors contributing to
the attraction of these corporate investers
was the opening of the Cascades North
Cross State highway . Its construction, the
enlargement of the tourist trade and travel
through the area, was clearly done for
monetary motives, disregarding the preservation of this wild national forest.
The county commissioner from the area ,
is the owner of one of neighboring
Twisp's gas stations and car sales lot. It is
not hard to see why he would advocate
increased tourism. The impact of the
highway would be felt by the residents in
the form of increased taxes for road , medical service, a nd police protection .
During hunting and fishing season the
towns are swamped with transients . The
once a bundant wildlife is rapidly decreasing . The highway has made the area accessible to many people, increasing "the
take" of the town merchants. With heavy
snowfall in the winter, the road is presen tly closed three or four month s of the
yea r. Now with th e proposed ski resort, Ct

is central in the planning to keep it open
all year round as a special service to the
influx of skiers. This will further increase
highway ta xes and load a n even greater
burden on the permanen.t residents.
Money Machine
'.'
In the 1840's Alexis De Tocqueville
foresaw this attitude in Americans: " I
know of no country, indeed , where the
love of money ha s taken stronger ho ld on
the affections of men and where a profounder contempt is expressed for the
theory of the 'permanent equality of property."
This is another example of long term effects and community casts th a t follow in
the wake of decisions made in haste without full access to facts and alternatives,
when economic devel opment with monetary gain for the promoting investers is
the only goal considered. This is not an
isolated incident but one of a continuing
series of incidents in American history
that show how we have slowly but surely
destroyed our natural environment by
turning it into a money making machin e
rather than a quality place to live.

The building of a huge ski resort would
greatly affect the surrounding co untryside . In order to accommodate the large
numbers of sk iers, hotel s and restaurants
would sprout up . Land values a nd taxes
would force out the orchards a nd farm s
on the productive valley floor a nd slopes.
A major airport would be needed to welcome skiers from all parts of the U . S. Bigger highways would have to be built to
handle the hundreds of thousa nds from all
over the world as well as the commuting
sk iers from the western and eas tern parts
of the state.
Such a resort would increase the need
for adequate medic a l and hospital
agencies a nd require increased police personnel. It would increase the amount of
water and electricity usage a nd demand
sufficient sewage facilities. The burden of
these changes would strike the former residents in increased taxes, not on ly in the
near area but on both sides of the Cascades.
Okanogan life Over
Living in nea rby Okanog'an, the cha irman of the pla nning commission a lso
owns a gas station and garage . He has
two sons that are competition sk i racers.
He ha d this to say upon his return from
Co lo rado , " I think our way of life in

Oka nogan Cou nty is goi ng to be over rega rdness of w hether it is brought about
b y th e sk i development, mining or somethin g else . I was highly impressed with
the cal ibre of young people at the ski
areas in Colorado. Among them are some
of the finl:'st grad ua tes from schools in the
Oka nogan Vall ey. Frankly, if we can get
th em back. I'll trade a ll of Mt. Hull and
pa rt of the Aenea's Vall ey." Get them
back for what? His willingness to barter
wit h Na ti o na l Fo rest land to obtain sk iers
in thi s area revea ls his attitude toward
presl:'rving the enviro nment. These feelin gs in the pla nn ers do not reflect the
minds o f the res iden ts.
When a citizens' group made up of
Meth ow Valley residents met to voice
their opin io ns a majority felt that they
a nd .th e environment would be better off
if things w ere left as they were. Only a
few looked forward to the plans of a
resort with en thusiasm. Thi s minority
would be th e ones to profit by tradi ng the
enviro nment for money .
Now is th e time to examine the a ttitudes guidin g our act ions toward the land
w hile there is still time to make decisions
based on all the facts . Citizens must be
made awa re of the long term effects of
new economic development and voice
their opi ni ons through their representatives. Str ict a nd observant la nd planning
mu st be used to establish top priority for
agricu ltura l and forest lands. We must not
let large corporations a nd government
age ncies stand alone, free to decide how
o ur lands will be used and sold to the
highest bidder for increased profit.
Unfree Enterprise
"W ha t the monopolists object to is any
measure o f planning for the public good
instead of private profits. What they say
is th a t we a re restricting free enterprise;
w ha t they mea n is that they wan t unrest ricted powe r to man ipu late an unfree
ente rpri se sys tem ." These wo rds, spoken
by Se nator George McGovern, expose the
m ot i ve~ of co rpo ra te power. If we are to
·· Iive on thi~ ea rth we must begin to do it
in ha rm ony w ith the environment.
The life styles and values of the people
of the Okanogan and the potential of the
valley for greatly needed food production
mu st be weighed aga in s t turning the
va lley in to o ne large profit - making pleasure m achine. W hose wi ll shall prevail,
tha t of the peop le or of the profiteering
corpora ti o ns? Unless the people answer
the cha llenge now a nd exercise their responsib ilit y to co ntact their legislators at
both state and federal lev els, another page
in land specul a ti c)n 'and pro fiteering will
be written . . . a nd as before, written by
default .. .. with too littl e informati~n . .
. . and concl:'rns exp ressed . .. all too
la tr .

Cooper Point Journal

Page 12

Personal Requiem
By TI FLEMING
One of my best friends died last week.
She did not die of a tragic "Hollywood"
malady nor did she slip away quietly. She
died from an overdose of heroin. Horse.
Snow. She cried, ''I'm scared ... " over
and over again until ~he lost consciousness.
She was the seventh of myoid high
school chums to die. We used to cut class
and ramble the streets. of .o~ town, making great plans for our futures. But of the
group, three died in 'Nam, one in a car
accident, another from an OD of speed,
and another I watched helplessly as she
bled to death from a brutaL bungled
abortion.
Now, at 22, I feel as if I've outlived my
generation. In our teenage dreams we
thought we would live forever, do anything we wanted, and exercise independently our joy in being alive. We became
vegetarians, got into Zen, the I Ching,
and Eastern philosophy . We joyously
boycotted a Free Food store when we discovered that they weren't using UFW produce . We denounced Johnson, protested
"the war," and hoped that Bobby Kennedy
would be the next president.
We wanted everything today . If we
couldn't attain them by conventional
means - there were always the chemicals. Your best friend is holding - would
he sell you wrong? "You can have your
dreams today . .. " Faster, higher, better,
.
faster .. . Now.
But now, as I reflect on the deaths of

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~~d

my friends, I am also seeing the metamorphosis of the "Love Generation." We
grew up, graduated from high school,
went to college, fought in the war we protested, dropped out, conformed to the
new standards of conformity.
Through it all, we grew up, fulfilling
the prophesy that asks if "life is not an
illusion of death." In life, we die a score
of times as we grow from childhood to
teenage to adult.
A rhyme from a wall on Haight Street,
during the Hashbury days :
"Reds and speed, acid and smack,
Enter the tunnel
and you'll never get back . . ."
My friends and I are in that tunnel, not
necessarily one formed of drugs, but
rather one built from our own approaching adulthood . We cannot ever go back to
a world that no longer exists. We cannot
escape time through drugs or reality, but
every time I get a call or letter saying,
"Celia OD'd ... ," "Jon and Mike were
killed in a mortar attack .. . ," "Jaime's
car was mangled on IS . . ." my mind
stops time in freeze - frame sequences.
Smiling long -haired people in front of the
high school. A wistful fellow playing the
flute on a sunlit wall at the UW. Marching in rallies that had serious overtones,
but left us exhilarated with the knowledge
that we'd "done something." And .. .
mainlining heroin in a sunny alley in San
Francisco . Snorting speed at the last
senior dance .
I will never go back.

E..Rl.JCH .5WIONERS
Supplies
• Dfafiil'Kj /!4uip.
• Dote brxJks
• OffiCI!

• FYee porkli1g

120 OLYMPIA

9lJ3-83#

Ave.

TUNER & TECHN ICIAN
Tuning - Cleaning
Refelting -

~~~~t~NEW ,POiD

9

AU

'R.,..,., c.,. ",••on,. Coally R_,"

IIlD ,....S - UUS • IIEITAlS

21SN CAPITOlWY

-

943-3712

1956 International
Excellent Rubber

5-speed transmission

Air Brakes

Carpeted & stove
Asking $995
PROP~RTIES

Roger's Auto Sales
4416 Lacey Boulevard SE

456-2999

943-7111

lIT'S

aAT IN OR TAKa OUT

SIAIIT

11 YARlnlESOF

#1


107S..... St.
Icren . . . ....

..,.".aty ...

943~7575

THf KEY TO YOUR FUTURE.

YOUR WESTSIDE REALTOR
A MUltiple Listing Member

1tA'UUSOtI & DlVlSIOII
In oe,.pa.'.

#2........ c.....
.357-7575

page 13

Recent ly, I was accused of
objective journalism by one of the
Saga picketers who found out I
would be writing this story. Though
there are those I'm sure would
disagree with him, I still take great
pride in this kind of accusation.
However, in covering this story, I
find I can not write objectively . I
feeL in this case, the school is
acting in a way I can not condone.
The farm workers are being
victimized by big business - a sort
of "bonded enterprise." The school
administration is using its entrapment within "the system" to hide
behind the system and say "we
don't take political stands." and
avoid this issue. (Classy, our state
government is apolitical.) Not to act
is to act, to ignore the problem is to
perpetuate its occurring.
Anyway, this is merely to inform
you, if this story seems editorialized, that's because it is.

CALL JOHN GRACE

BOB'S BIG BURGERS
1707 WEST HARRISON

Large Bus

May 8, 1975

2423 Wesl

~arri.on

Olympia, Washing ion 98502

DONA KEHN
BROKER

Doug Bustl'r

By BRIAN MURPHY
SCAB - loosely defined, a work
situation that could be unionized and
isn't.
UFW - United Farm Workers, an
attempt by farm laborers to organize and
fight oppressive employers.
Teamsters - a superunion of truckers,
and related occupations, with political
clout matched by few organizations.
SAGA - a food service corporation
with branches reaching who knows how
far? also, a narrative of heroic deeds.
Singing impromptu protest songs and
sporting signs with "Boycott Saga, SCAB
Lettuce," nearly thirty students have spent
hours of 'the last week convincing
would-be food service customers to do
without for the day . As of Tuesday, the
picketers had begun to provide salad/
sandwich fixings as an alternative for
hungry students. Consequently, Saga
business has been"cu t by 25 % .
Evergreen is under contract with Saga
food services to provide the campus with
food for the delicatessen, snack bar and
food plan. The school runs the contract
and mandates the kind of food to be
utilized by Saga - the school has the
power to terminate use of the teamster
lettuce at any time .
The teamsters entrance into the lettuce
grow ing scene is relatively recent,
according to Mexican-Chicano Association (MECHA) member Elena Perez.
When the UFW contracts expired, the
truckers and growers negotiated a
contract ·with a lower worker's pay, no
pesticide co ntrol, no overtime pay,
superficial medical care, and no in-thefield drinking water or outhouses necessary. The former UFW workers, now
being spoken for by a union with
obviously littlf' concern for their welfare,

went on strike,
With that as a grossly oversimplified
history on my part ....
For the past t~o or three years, it has
been a continuing question on the policies
the school should adopt in r~gard to
school operation/Political sympathies.
Members of MECHA as well as other
, organizations have attempted to keep
Evergreen from supporting oppressive
institutions (what else could you call the
growers exploitation of the 'farm work~
ers). But, it appears there has yet to be an
agreement without misinterpretation or
multi-interpretation. (Notably, all agreements have been verbal, thereby leaving
no tangible referral source.)
It would serve to take a break here and
explain two things. One, SCAB defined at
the beginning, is even more loosely used
in the story. Technically, there is a union,
the teamsters, involved in the lettuce
growing. Morally, I think the term is
quite suitable.
Secondly, to dispel a rumor, the
University of Washington does not have a
constant flow of UFW lettuce. According
to UW Housing and Food Services
Director, Art Pringle, they use no UFW
or teamster lettuce. They serve mainly
California leaf lettuce, or local head
lettuce.
Verbal Ag~eements
The controversy has surfaced more
openly this year than. in the past. Protests
At the beginning of the year were quelled
by one of the nC'w infamous verbal
agreements; according to the students
involved it indicated ' UFW lettuce would
be sold whenever available and local or
leaf lettuce when it wasn't. Saga food
service manager Craig McCarty recalled it
as UFW when available, whatever's
available when UFW isn't.

The week of March 8, several persons
notified the school a protest would begin
if the teamster lettuce wasn't removed
from the counters. Moss ordered all head
lettuce removed and on March 13 called
for a Disappearing Task Force (DTF) to
resolve th~ situation. Now, the reults of
that hearing.
From a memo by John Moss, dated
May 1, 1975:
On March 13, 1975, I called II
DTF comprised of 16 people
representing a broad cross segment
of the Evergreen Community. My
charge to that DTF was to survey
the entire campus with regard to
preferences about: [Q) exclusive use
of UFW lettuce, [b) use of UFW
lettuce when it is available and use
of other union and ' non-union
lettuce in the absence of .its
availability, [c) exclusive use of non
UFW lettuce.
The DTF meeting was called for
April 8, at 3 p.m. in 3121 Library,
only two members attended that
DTF meeting. Two had previously
declined membership and one hIlS
since indicated that residence in
Colorado makes attendance impossible.
The hand written report receivfHi
from that DTF meeting in part
stated - "we do not see that a DTF
needs to function Itere."
As responsible authority for the
college food service, . I hereby
i'lstruct you to continue to secure
UFW lettuce when it is llVailable
and otherwise serve non-UFW
lettuce as well as romaine and
other greens--clearly indicating by
means of a sign, placard or other
posting that the lettuce being served

Cooper Point Journal

Page 12

Personal Requiem
By TI FLEMING
One of my best friends died last week.
She did not die of a tragic "Hollywood"
malady nor did she slip away quietly. She
died from an overdose of heroin. Horse.
Snow. She cried, ''I'm scared ... " over
and over again until ~he lost consciousness.
She was the seventh of myoid high
school chums to die. We used to cut class
and ramble the streets. of .o~ town, making great plans for our futures. But of the
group, three died in 'Nam, one in a car
accident, another from an OD of speed,
and another I watched helplessly as she
bled to death from a brutaL bungled
abortion.
Now, at 22, I feel as if I've outlived my
generation. In our teenage dreams we
thought we would live forever, do anything we wanted, and exercise independently our joy in being alive. We became
vegetarians, got into Zen, the I Ching,
and Eastern philosophy . We joyously
boycotted a Free Food store when we discovered that they weren't using UFW produce . We denounced Johnson, protested
"the war," and hoped that Bobby Kennedy
would be the next president.
We wanted everything today . If we
couldn't attain them by conventional
means - there were always the chemicals. Your best friend is holding - would
he sell you wrong? "You can have your
dreams today . .. " Faster, higher, better,
.
faster .. . Now.
But now, as I reflect on the deaths of

New & Remodel Wiring / Alarm systems /
/ Auto electric problem diagnosis
DONDED • L I CENSED· FREE ESTIMATES
ADVICE ON ALL ELECTRICAL NEEDe

SLAYMAKER ELECTRIC
Bo.J Slo'lmo~ep
PHONE

866-7586

.....::::::t•.--··--------.
... . . - _.. . . . .__
. .. . .. .. .R""\ i
~~d

my friends, I am also seeing the metamorphosis of the "Love Generation." We
grew up, graduated from high school,
went to college, fought in the war we protested, dropped out, conformed to the
new standards of conformity.
Through it all, we grew up, fulfilling
the prophesy that asks if "life is not an
illusion of death." In life, we die a score
of times as we grow from childhood to
teenage to adult.
A rhyme from a wall on Haight Street,
during the Hashbury days :
"Reds and speed, acid and smack,
Enter the tunnel
and you'll never get back . . ."
My friends and I are in that tunnel, not
necessarily one formed of drugs, but
rather one built from our own approaching adulthood . We cannot ever go back to
a world that no longer exists. We cannot
escape time through drugs or reality, but
every time I get a call or letter saying,
"Celia OD'd ... ," "Jon and Mike were
killed in a mortar attack .. . ," "Jaime's
car was mangled on IS . . ." my mind
stops time in freeze - frame sequences.
Smiling long -haired people in front of the
high school. A wistful fellow playing the
flute on a sunlit wall at the UW. Marching in rallies that had serious overtones,
but left us exhilarated with the knowledge
that we'd "done something." And .. .
mainlining heroin in a sunny alley in San
Francisco . Snorting speed at the last
senior dance .
I will never go back.

E..Rl.JCH .5WIONERS
Supplies
• Dfafiil'Kj /!4uip.
• Dote brxJks
• OffiCI!

• FYee porkli1g

120 OLYMPIA

9lJ3-83#

Ave.

TUNER & TECHN ICIAN
Tuning - Cleaning
Refelting -

~~~~t~NEW ,POiD

9

AU

'R.,..,., c.,. ",••on,. Coally R_,"

IIlD ,....S - UUS • IIEITAlS

21SN CAPITOlWY

-

943-3712

1956 International
Excellent Rubber

5-speed transmission

Air Brakes

Carpeted & stove
Asking $995
PROP~RTIES

Roger's Auto Sales
4416 Lacey Boulevard SE

456-2999

943-7111

lIT'S

aAT IN OR TAKa OUT

SIAIIT

11 YARlnlESOF

#1


107S..... St.
Icren . . . ....

..,.".aty ...

943~7575

THf KEY TO YOUR FUTURE.

YOUR WESTSIDE REALTOR
A MUltiple Listing Member

1tA'UUSOtI & DlVlSIOII
In oe,.pa.'.

#2........ c.....
.357-7575

page 13

Recent ly, I was accused of
objective journalism by one of the
Saga picketers who found out I
would be writing this story. Though
there are those I'm sure would
disagree with him, I still take great
pride in this kind of accusation.
However, in covering this story, I
find I can not write objectively . I
feeL in this case, the school is
acting in a way I can not condone.
The farm workers are being
victimized by big business - a sort
of "bonded enterprise." The school
administration is using its entrapment within "the system" to hide
behind the system and say "we
don't take political stands." and
avoid this issue. (Classy, our state
government is apolitical.) Not to act
is to act, to ignore the problem is to
perpetuate its occurring.
Anyway, this is merely to inform
you, if this story seems editorialized, that's because it is.

CALL JOHN GRACE

BOB'S BIG BURGERS
1707 WEST HARRISON

Large Bus

May 8, 1975

2423 Wesl

~arri.on

Olympia, Washing ion 98502

DONA KEHN
BROKER

Doug Bustl'r

By BRIAN MURPHY
SCAB - loosely defined, a work
situation that could be unionized and
isn't.
UFW - United Farm Workers, an
attempt by farm laborers to organize and
fight oppressive employers.
Teamsters - a superunion of truckers,
and related occupations, with political
clout matched by few organizations.
SAGA - a food service corporation
with branches reaching who knows how
far? also, a narrative of heroic deeds.
Singing impromptu protest songs and
sporting signs with "Boycott Saga, SCAB
Lettuce," nearly thirty students have spent
hours of 'the last week convincing
would-be food service customers to do
without for the day . As of Tuesday, the
picketers had begun to provide salad/
sandwich fixings as an alternative for
hungry students. Consequently, Saga
business has been"cu t by 25 % .
Evergreen is under contract with Saga
food services to provide the campus with
food for the delicatessen, snack bar and
food plan. The school runs the contract
and mandates the kind of food to be
utilized by Saga - the school has the
power to terminate use of the teamster
lettuce at any time .
The teamsters entrance into the lettuce
grow ing scene is relatively recent,
according to Mexican-Chicano Association (MECHA) member Elena Perez.
When the UFW contracts expired, the
truckers and growers negotiated a
contract ·with a lower worker's pay, no
pesticide co ntrol, no overtime pay,
superficial medical care, and no in-thefield drinking water or outhouses necessary. The former UFW workers, now
being spoken for by a union with
obviously littlf' concern for their welfare,

went on strike,
With that as a grossly oversimplified
history on my part ....
For the past t~o or three years, it has
been a continuing question on the policies
the school should adopt in r~gard to
school operation/Political sympathies.
Members of MECHA as well as other
, organizations have attempted to keep
Evergreen from supporting oppressive
institutions (what else could you call the
growers exploitation of the 'farm work~
ers). But, it appears there has yet to be an
agreement without misinterpretation or
multi-interpretation. (Notably, all agreements have been verbal, thereby leaving
no tangible referral source.)
It would serve to take a break here and
explain two things. One, SCAB defined at
the beginning, is even more loosely used
in the story. Technically, there is a union,
the teamsters, involved in the lettuce
growing. Morally, I think the term is
quite suitable.
Secondly, to dispel a rumor, the
University of Washington does not have a
constant flow of UFW lettuce. According
to UW Housing and Food Services
Director, Art Pringle, they use no UFW
or teamster lettuce. They serve mainly
California leaf lettuce, or local head
lettuce.
Verbal Ag~eements
The controversy has surfaced more
openly this year than. in the past. Protests
At the beginning of the year were quelled
by one of the nC'w infamous verbal
agreements; according to the students
involved it indicated ' UFW lettuce would
be sold whenever available and local or
leaf lettuce when it wasn't. Saga food
service manager Craig McCarty recalled it
as UFW when available, whatever's
available when UFW isn't.

The week of March 8, several persons
notified the school a protest would begin
if the teamster lettuce wasn't removed
from the counters. Moss ordered all head
lettuce removed and on March 13 called
for a Disappearing Task Force (DTF) to
resolve th~ situation. Now, the reults of
that hearing.
From a memo by John Moss, dated
May 1, 1975:
On March 13, 1975, I called II
DTF comprised of 16 people
representing a broad cross segment
of the Evergreen Community. My
charge to that DTF was to survey
the entire campus with regard to
preferences about: [Q) exclusive use
of UFW lettuce, [b) use of UFW
lettuce when it is available and use
of other union and ' non-union
lettuce in the absence of .its
availability, [c) exclusive use of non
UFW lettuce.
The DTF meeting was called for
April 8, at 3 p.m. in 3121 Library,
only two members attended that
DTF meeting. Two had previously
declined membership and one hIlS
since indicated that residence in
Colorado makes attendance impossible.
The hand written report receivfHi
from that DTF meeting in part
stated - "we do not see that a DTF
needs to function Itere."
As responsible authority for the
college food service, . I hereby
i'lstruct you to continue to secure
UFW lettuce when it is llVailable
and otherwise serve non-UFW
lettuce as well as romaine and
other greens--clearly indicating by
means of a sign, placard or other
posting that the lettuce being served

,

page 14
is not UFW lettuce and that the
choice of support or non-support of
the union jurisditional question is
left to the individual.
Due to the lack of response to the DTF,
Mo'ss returned to that policy and
commented, "It is a fact there are unions
represented on this campus and as the
case is with Elena and the Coalition
(Non-white) thet support the United Farm
Workers and its a good possibility there's
another segment of the campus that
support the teamsters."
Picket Begins
Perez and others informed Moss picket
lines would begin May 1, if the teamster
product remained - it did, they did. That
day Moss released the previous memo
which was the first Perez and the others
had heard about it. She got a list of those
asked to take part in the DTF and went to
talk with one of the few people's names
she recognized , Diane Miller.
Miller, who works with Affirmative
Action, told Elena she didn't show for the
DTF because she didn't "believe John was
really serious about it." Judging by the
turnout, (and the findings of the two who
showed) not many people did.
The protest began Friday morning with
a few students carrying the boycott signs
and asking people to not buy Saga
merchandise. A few were persuaded and
the day passed with little hassle.
By Monday, Moss, along with Dean
Clabaugh and Rod Marrom , had left for a
Western Association of College Business
Officers Convention in San Francisco .
The boycott resumed early that morning,
although, as was later discovered, no
hope of official policy change would take
place until Moss returned. As late as
Monday , in a phone call from San
Francisco, Moss was holding that the
Input Resource Senter (IRS) should poll
the- studentry on which kind of lettuce
would best be served. But, I don't believe
anyone was anticipating the intensity of
the demonstration or proliferation of its
participants, when he departed.
The Men's Center , who had been
planning a bake sale before they were
even aware of any pending protes t, .
merged with the pickets. Cookies, coffee,
and apple juice were sold by the Center to
stave off starving holdouts from breaking
down and buying Saga. The added
incentive gave momentum to the protest.
Old Pig Gallo
By Tuesday , the demonstrating hit a
peak. People were singing ... . "and on his
fa rm he had no union ee-j ee-i 000 , with
a scab, scab here and a scab, scab
there" . ... . but beyond the jovial attitude
in the protest (which, by this time, was
beginning to take its toll on Saga) a few
sparks were beginning to fly .
Saga empl ~ yee s were beginning to feel
maligned, pers onally , by the turnin g
away of their business . They tried to
a rgue with the protesters, saying, "it isn't
l' ur dec ision , go pi cket M oss or how 'bout

Cooper Point Journal
the state?"
The picketers involved in the exchange
responded, "then we'll pressure the state
into changing their ways, we've done it
before" with such an attitude a fullfledged chorus of We Shall Overcome felt
pending.
By lunchtime, there was a stand with
food for sale, and hungry sympathizers
swarming around the tables - Saga
business was dropping, and a few tempers
boiling. Following lunch things thinned
out and people cooled off .
Unfortunately , the protest was not
entirely without incident. (I say unfortunately because too many outsiders pick
up on a single incident in a protest to beef
about and the issue becomes ignored. I'd
hate to see that trend cloud this one.)
lettuce Rip-off
During lunch on Monday , a male
person entered the kitchen at Saga and
grabbed a case of lettuce, ran out to the
hallway and spread it all over the floor.
{At the time, following the pick up of the
lettuce , I _ was informed by a Saga
employee that the lettuce wou ld be
cleaned and served on Tuesday. She also
said it was UFW lettuce .}
According to picketers on the scene, the
spread-and-split bandit was not a part of
the protest. In fact, they said, he had just
eaten in Saga . According to Saga
employees, the female person who had
distracted them during the. theft , had been
picketing earlier in the day. Neither merit
identifying.
Beyond that single incident , there was
little mishap. A few people felt pressured
unnecessarily (as indicated by the cartoon
letter on page 2) but, frequently thaft
what it take ~ to get someone's attention.

Now What
The Sounding Board held its regular
meeting Wednesday morning, (which isn't
really too surprising) and the lettuce
controversy came to a head. Both sides of
the question got some feelings off of their
chests, neither hearing the other.
Following the hearing, a couple of high
administrators, it is said, exposed feelings
on what the outcome of the lettuce
question will be. Saga is losing money
and that relates directly to the school and
its functioning. Because of that, not
because people are upset, not because
farm laborers are being exploited for petty
gain by already rich employers and not
because someone cared enough to voice
an opinion on the campus of the armchair
activist, but because money is being lost,
there could be a resolution (in writing)
before this paper is out.
This will probably blow over without
the real issue having been dealt with. To
me, it kicks a couple pretty delving
questions about this institution right out
in front of God and everybody, if anyone
takes the initiative to look .
Should an institution dedicated to those
rejecting an education system (as well as
economic system) for being oppressive,
support industries repressing the efforts of
the worker to organize? Should the sons
of Hoffa be supported, just because it is
convenient? Or have we begun a system ·
at Evergreen with priority given to the
upkeeping of its bureaucracy, ' rather than
its principles?
I guess" for now , we have to face what
Ned Swift (picketer extraordinaire) said,
"It's like we told you , if you want to get
to them, you have to hit them in the
pocketbook. "

May 8, 1975
Page 15

APPLICATIONS NOW
BEl tJG TAKEN FOR
ED'TOR
FALL qUARTER 19'75

e---_____

-------we

SUBM IT APPLICATIONS

TO MARGARET GRJ8SKOV

II B IbOZ
• •

By MAY 2-0

- - - - - - - - . . _nm
_________

• •

PUBLICATION6 BOARD

H i;:ARI NG MAY 23
WILL SELECT tHE
~EW eDITOR

"You Don'" Have
To Be A S ..uden ..
-

to take advantage of
lovv-Iovv summer rates

Summer Rates from 99.50

Ash Tree Apartments

COOPE'J( POINT JOURNAL

g..,.~C;)c;:)C-:)
<:> C:1) GA - C? c

C)

c:> c>

<=>

3138 Overhulse

-I

,

page 14
is not UFW lettuce and that the
choice of support or non-support of
the union jurisditional question is
left to the individual.
Due to the lack of response to the DTF,
Mo'ss returned to that policy and
commented, "It is a fact there are unions
represented on this campus and as the
case is with Elena and the Coalition
(Non-white) thet support the United Farm
Workers and its a good possibility there's
another segment of the campus that
support the teamsters."
Picket Begins
Perez and others informed Moss picket
lines would begin May 1, if the teamster
product remained - it did, they did. That
day Moss released the previous memo
which was the first Perez and the others
had heard about it. She got a list of those
asked to take part in the DTF and went to
talk with one of the few people's names
she recognized , Diane Miller.
Miller, who works with Affirmative
Action, told Elena she didn't show for the
DTF because she didn't "believe John was
really serious about it." Judging by the
turnout, (and the findings of the two who
showed) not many people did.
The protest began Friday morning with
a few students carrying the boycott signs
and asking people to not buy Saga
merchandise. A few were persuaded and
the day passed with little hassle.
By Monday, Moss, along with Dean
Clabaugh and Rod Marrom , had left for a
Western Association of College Business
Officers Convention in San Francisco .
The boycott resumed early that morning,
although, as was later discovered, no
hope of official policy change would take
place until Moss returned. As late as
Monday , in a phone call from San
Francisco, Moss was holding that the
Input Resource Senter (IRS) should poll
the- studentry on which kind of lettuce
would best be served. But, I don't believe
anyone was anticipating the intensity of
the demonstration or proliferation of its
participants, when he departed.
The Men's Center , who had been
planning a bake sale before they were
even aware of any pending protes t, .
merged with the pickets. Cookies, coffee,
and apple juice were sold by the Center to
stave off starving holdouts from breaking
down and buying Saga. The added
incentive gave momentum to the protest.
Old Pig Gallo
By Tuesday , the demonstrating hit a
peak. People were singing ... . "and on his
fa rm he had no union ee-j ee-i 000 , with
a scab, scab here and a scab, scab
there" . ... . but beyond the jovial attitude
in the protest (which, by this time, was
beginning to take its toll on Saga) a few
sparks were beginning to fly .
Saga empl ~ yee s were beginning to feel
maligned, pers onally , by the turnin g
away of their business . They tried to
a rgue with the protesters, saying, "it isn't
l' ur dec ision , go pi cket M oss or how 'bout

Cooper Point Journal
the state?"
The picketers involved in the exchange
responded, "then we'll pressure the state
into changing their ways, we've done it
before" with such an attitude a fullfledged chorus of We Shall Overcome felt
pending.
By lunchtime, there was a stand with
food for sale, and hungry sympathizers
swarming around the tables - Saga
business was dropping, and a few tempers
boiling. Following lunch things thinned
out and people cooled off .
Unfortunately , the protest was not
entirely without incident. (I say unfortunately because too many outsiders pick
up on a single incident in a protest to beef
about and the issue becomes ignored. I'd
hate to see that trend cloud this one.)
lettuce Rip-off
During lunch on Monday , a male
person entered the kitchen at Saga and
grabbed a case of lettuce, ran out to the
hallway and spread it all over the floor.
{At the time, following the pick up of the
lettuce , I _ was informed by a Saga
employee that the lettuce wou ld be
cleaned and served on Tuesday. She also
said it was UFW lettuce .}
According to picketers on the scene, the
spread-and-split bandit was not a part of
the protest. In fact, they said, he had just
eaten in Saga . According to Saga
employees, the female person who had
distracted them during the. theft , had been
picketing earlier in the day. Neither merit
identifying.
Beyond that single incident , there was
little mishap. A few people felt pressured
unnecessarily (as indicated by the cartoon
letter on page 2) but, frequently thaft
what it take ~ to get someone's attention.

Now What
The Sounding Board held its regular
meeting Wednesday morning, (which isn't
really too surprising) and the lettuce
controversy came to a head. Both sides of
the question got some feelings off of their
chests, neither hearing the other.
Following the hearing, a couple of high
administrators, it is said, exposed feelings
on what the outcome of the lettuce
question will be. Saga is losing money
and that relates directly to the school and
its functioning. Because of that, not
because people are upset, not because
farm laborers are being exploited for petty
gain by already rich employers and not
because someone cared enough to voice
an opinion on the campus of the armchair
activist, but because money is being lost,
there could be a resolution (in writing)
before this paper is out.
This will probably blow over without
the real issue having been dealt with. To
me, it kicks a couple pretty delving
questions about this institution right out
in front of God and everybody, if anyone
takes the initiative to look .
Should an institution dedicated to those
rejecting an education system (as well as
economic system) for being oppressive,
support industries repressing the efforts of
the worker to organize? Should the sons
of Hoffa be supported, just because it is
convenient? Or have we begun a system ·
at Evergreen with priority given to the
upkeeping of its bureaucracy, ' rather than
its principles?
I guess" for now , we have to face what
Ned Swift (picketer extraordinaire) said,
"It's like we told you , if you want to get
to them, you have to hit them in the
pocketbook. "

May 8, 1975
Page 15

APPLICATIONS NOW
BEl tJG TAKEN FOR
ED'TOR
FALL qUARTER 19'75

e---_____

-------we

SUBM IT APPLICATIONS

TO MARGARET GRJ8SKOV

II B IbOZ
• •

By MAY 2-0

- - - - - - - - . . _nm
_________

• •

PUBLICATION6 BOARD

H i;:ARI NG MAY 23
WILL SELECT tHE
~EW eDITOR

"You Don'" Have
To Be A S ..uden ..
-

to take advantage of
lovv-Iovv summer rates

Summer Rates from 99.50

Ash Tree Apartments

COOPE'J( POINT JOURNAL

g..,.~C;)c;:)C-:)
<:> C:1) GA - C? c

C)

c:> c>

<=>

3138 Overhulse

-I

Cooper Point Journal

Page 16

CONSERVATIVE
BACHLASH

Page 17

By MICHAEL CORRIGAN
I feel a need to respond to some of the
statements made at the outdoor IndoChina rally. While the rhetoric was for
the most part familiar to me as a one time
SDS member, I did find one or two inconsistencies on which I would like to
comment.
At one point, one of the speakers said
that capitalism and imperialism were inseparable and as I recall she also said that
they were cruel and intolerable . This is
where my first bit of confusion originated .
The second is that "We 5hould support
our brothers in Indo-China. " The brothers, if my memory of rhetoric serves me
well , are the Vietcong. That I share any
bond of brotherhood with the Vietcong I
strongly doubt and I must say I resent the
presumption of those who classify me as
such.
That capitalism and imperialism are inseparable I would probably not debate. I
would also oot question that socialism
and economic imperialism are joined inseparably .
Capitalism is not the only economic
structure that requires expanding markets
and increased production. It is not always
easy to recognize the need to expand markets in state controlled economies because
prices are fixed by the state. This can
produce a state of artificial, well-being
that can disguise whether an economy is
in trouble. We are not the only ones in
trouble these days.
The ·point is that I strongly doubt that
the aid given by the USSR and China
(through North Vietnam) is for any more
of an idealistic reason than our aid is to
the Cambodians and South Vietnamese .
It bothers me that as we chastise ourselves ror the prolonged devastation of an
entire culture and ask forgiveness for our
wicked imperialistic intentions, that some
of us embrace the other side for doing
pre.: isely the same t'li'1g for almost identical motives. This is no way to deal with
th~ 9:uilt illl of us must feel.
_
I ~m--v-ery tired of hearing about the
gloriol's virtues of both capitalism and
socialism but perhaps I have no choice.
These struggles go on now as they always
have. My only fear is that as we begin to
see more clearly that capita:ism has serious problems that we run like so many
half crazed new converts to some vague
panacea .
I also wish that we could cut the phony
sentiment , the tears 00 no good, and to
some degree begin to accept the responsibility for the millions of deaths we have
caused. It is pathetic that some ·of us are
treatir.g this so immaturely by letting the
wind carry them to the other, identical
~ ide . Thai even further degrades those
-"lIntless. pl)intl ess dea th s.

May 8, 1975

----Announcements-a- __

• The Women's Center meets at noon on
Wednesdays in Lib 3214 .

• Hearings on student Services and
Activities Fees (S&A) Board proposals for
1975-76 will be held on May 14, 15 and
16 in CAB 108 from 9 a.m. to noon. The
hearing schedule is posted in the Activities
office, CAB 305.

• There will be a meeting of all students
interested in the fall quarter program
Economic Cycles, coordinated by Russ
Lidman, at noon on Thursday, May 15 in
the 1500 lounge of the Library.

• The Staff Educational Benefits DTF
will meet tomorrow, May 9 at noon in
Lab 1023.
• William Tita, a faculty candidate in
management, business and organizational
behavior, will be visiting campus Thursday, May 8, and Friday, May 9. Thursday , he will be in an all-campus meeting
In the Student Services area, Lib 1217,
from 2:00 to 3:00.

ALL WAYS TRAtlCL SCRtllDC, INC.

WESTSIDE SHOPPING CENTER

943-8701

OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON

943.8700

Playing Tennis?
TENNIS ACCESSORIES
CARRY ALLS, SHORTS, SHIRTS

. STRINGING SERVICE

ILUf'S
VI
SPORTS
ENTERPRISES

-

OIL NYLON -

~:~~
()f~t
:/ '

CUT

1 DAY SERVICE

~

-!<~ ;/

35.30 Martin Way 491-8240
M-F 10-7

1k.~>A
Sat. 9-6

INTERESTED IN CAREER COUNSELING AND
SOCIAL SCIENCE?
Representatives from: Group Health Cooperative of Puget Sound, Office of Community Development, Purdy Women's Treatment Center,
Youth Services Bureau, Juvenile Parole Services,
Olympia Parks and Recreation, Thurston County
Senior Center, Western Washington State College, Portland State University, WSU, etc., etc.
vvill be here to talk to you & ansvver your questions Wed. May 14
9: 15 a.m. in the Board
Room. Sign up in the Placement Office, Lib.
1224, 866-6193. Also special preparation vvorkshop Fri., Career Resource Center, Lib. 1221,
1:00 p.m.

• The Cooper Point Association will hold
. a fund-rai~r, May 8, featuring Willi Unsoeld's slide presentation of the first ascent of Mt. Masherbrum in Pakistan. The
slides also include several shots-of K-2 for
those following the current expedition
there. Along with the presentation, Unsoeld will comment on women's rights in
Islamic countries. The fund-raiser will be
held at the Olympia Community Center
at 7:30. Tickets are $2.50 per person.
• The Gay Resource Center will sponsor
a Benefit Kegger, featuring music by
Martha Woodhu\. Laura-Mae Abraham
and Solly Salamun Friday, May 9 at 8
p.m. in Black Lake Fire Hall. $1
admission covers beer.
• Mary Hester has been appointed the
new KAOS news director. The appointment was effective as of May 6, 1975 .
• A "Self-Help" Bicycle Repair shop has
opened in the basement of the College
Activities Building to help students with
broken bicycles. Hours of operation are
Wednesday, Friday and Saturday from 2
to 7 p .m. Charge is 25 cents for students,
50 cents for non-students.
• The Southwest Washington Bluegrass
Festival will be held in the Centralia College gymnasium May 10, beginning at 1
p.m. The afternoon actjvities will be an
open show in which any bluegrass musicians may perform . The evening festivities
are reserved exclusively for professional
bluegrass band~ - with six scheduled so
far. There will be an admission donation
of $2 for adults and $1 for children a~d
senior citizens.
• The Evergreen Political Information
Center meets every Wednesday a t 5 p.m.
in Lib 1407. All are welcome .
• Allen Ginsberg will give a reading at
Evergreen, Saturday , May 17, in the library lobby at 8 p .m. It's free so be there
o r be squ are .

• Dr. Morse Peckham, noted author and
distinguished professor of languages and
literature at the University of South
Carolina, will discuss "Society, Ideology
and Literature" in a free, public address
May 12 at 3: 30 p.m . in Lee. Hall 1.
.. The Graduation DTF will hold a
special meeting for final input into
graduation ceremonies Thursday, May 15
at 5 p.m . in Lib 3111 . Contact Carrilu at
357-5315 for more information.
• Any fourth year student that wants
their work to be included in a feature
story on fourth year Evergreeners should
come to the CPJ office.
• KAOS-FM presents a simulcast featuring the Old Coast Highway Orchestra and
Tattoo Parlor Saturday, May 10 at 10
p.m. Audio will be on KAOS, 89.3 FM,
with video on campus cable channel 10.
• The Olympia YWCA is offering Self
Defense for Women - Thursday nights at
Washington Junior High School. The lessons are $20 for non-members and $15
for members. Some scholarships are
available. Contact Ethyl at the 'Y' for
more information.
• Richard Kirsch, western ·o rganizer for
the Public Information Research Group,
(PIRG) will speak on· ·~ the focus and
purpose of the organization as well as
past and present efforts to organize at
UW, WSU, PLU, WWSC and Evergreen
Friday, May 9 at 2 p .m . in the Library
1600 lounge. The event is sponsored by
the Lawmakers / Lawbreakers program.
• Students 'interested in the program
Humanistic Psychology: Its Roots and
Modern Thought for fall 1975 must fill
out and return questionnaries to Wini
Ingram in Lib 2209, no later than
Tuesday, May 13.
• "Dialogues in Dance" will be presented
by Eye-5 in conjunction with the
American Contemporary Dance Co.,
Wednesday, May 14 at 8 p.m. in the
second floof Library lobby . The company
will also present a workshop at 2 p.m . the
same day in the multipurpose room .
• Graphic designer Connie Hubbard will
offer a free, special workshop on how to
critique, organize and present an art
portfolio on Thursday, May 15 from 2 to
4 p.m. in the Board Room (Lib 3109).
Register at the Placement Office, Lib
1224, phone 866-6193.
• Anthologies of student work from the
Self Exploration Through Autobiography
program are available to all students
who were in the program. Two copies per
person may be picked up from program
sec reta ry Ca rnl Pa yne in Sem 3152 .

• The Cooper Point Association will hold
a fund-raiser Thursday, May 8, featuring
Willi Unsoeld's slide presentation of the
first ascent of Mt. Masherbrum in Pakistan. The slides also include several shots
of K-2 for those following the current expedition there. Along with the presentation, Unsoeld will comment on women's
rights in Islamic countries. The fund raiser will be held at the Olympia Community Center - at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are
$2.50 per person.
• Deadline' for film submissions to the
1975 Student Film Awards, sponsored by
the Academy for Motion Picture Arts and
Sciences, is May 20. Films must have been
completed after October 15, 1973 and
should be submitted to Linda Anel,
Pacific Film Archive, 2621 Durant
Avenue, Berkeley, Calif. 94720. Categories include dramatic, animated , documentary, experimental and "special award. "
• A preparation workshop for all
students interested in attending social
services and counseling Job Information
Day will be held Friday, May 9, from 1
to 3 p.m. in the Career Resource Center
Lib 1221.
.
,
• Jewish Students Organization will be in
operation this quarter in Lib. 1611. We
are available for information, counseling,
and services.

Classified Ads
WOMEN , need a place to live this
summer? We have a 5 - bedroom
hou se on Ea stside . Big y a rd ,
ga rden . $40 / mo . plus utilities . Contact J. Gilli s, 1716 E. 5th . 352 -5056 .
Need aggressive person on CWSP
for Managing Editor position with
the Coo per Point Journa l. $2.33 per
hour" 15 hours a week paid for
full time work . See Ra lph at the
Journal 8 to 5 weekdays .
Applications are being taken fo r ed it()rship ()f the Cooper Point Journal
fall quarter 1975. For more informa ti()n call 866-6213 . Submit applica li()ns to Margaret Gribskov in Lib
1602 by May 20th .
LOST BMW hubcap . Driftw oo d
R()ad . 866 - 1568 o r 866 -601 7.
WANTED: VW Bus w / good b od y
for rebuildin g . · Does n·t necessa ril y
have tl> be in running co nditi o n .
. C all N ina . 866 -5199 .
LANDSCAPING .
EXPERIENCED
W e will do yo ur law n a nd ~ ard t n
wn rk . Ca ll Steve . 49 1- 1276

J

Cooper Point Journal

Page 16

CONSERVATIVE
BACHLASH

Page 17

By MICHAEL CORRIGAN
I feel a need to respond to some of the
statements made at the outdoor IndoChina rally. While the rhetoric was for
the most part familiar to me as a one time
SDS member, I did find one or two inconsistencies on which I would like to
comment.
At one point, one of the speakers said
that capitalism and imperialism were inseparable and as I recall she also said that
they were cruel and intolerable . This is
where my first bit of confusion originated .
The second is that "We 5hould support
our brothers in Indo-China. " The brothers, if my memory of rhetoric serves me
well , are the Vietcong. That I share any
bond of brotherhood with the Vietcong I
strongly doubt and I must say I resent the
presumption of those who classify me as
such.
That capitalism and imperialism are inseparable I would probably not debate. I
would also oot question that socialism
and economic imperialism are joined inseparably .
Capitalism is not the only economic
structure that requires expanding markets
and increased production. It is not always
easy to recognize the need to expand markets in state controlled economies because
prices are fixed by the state. This can
produce a state of artificial, well-being
that can disguise whether an economy is
in trouble. We are not the only ones in
trouble these days.
The ·point is that I strongly doubt that
the aid given by the USSR and China
(through North Vietnam) is for any more
of an idealistic reason than our aid is to
the Cambodians and South Vietnamese .
It bothers me that as we chastise ourselves ror the prolonged devastation of an
entire culture and ask forgiveness for our
wicked imperialistic intentions, that some
of us embrace the other side for doing
pre.: isely the same t'li'1g for almost identical motives. This is no way to deal with
th~ 9:uilt illl of us must feel.
_
I ~m--v-ery tired of hearing about the
gloriol's virtues of both capitalism and
socialism but perhaps I have no choice.
These struggles go on now as they always
have. My only fear is that as we begin to
see more clearly that capita:ism has serious problems that we run like so many
half crazed new converts to some vague
panacea .
I also wish that we could cut the phony
sentiment , the tears 00 no good, and to
some degree begin to accept the responsibility for the millions of deaths we have
caused. It is pathetic that some ·of us are
treatir.g this so immaturely by letting the
wind carry them to the other, identical
~ ide . Thai even further degrades those
-"lIntless. pl)intl ess dea th s.

May 8, 1975

----Announcements-a- __

• The Women's Center meets at noon on
Wednesdays in Lib 3214 .

• Hearings on student Services and
Activities Fees (S&A) Board proposals for
1975-76 will be held on May 14, 15 and
16 in CAB 108 from 9 a.m. to noon. The
hearing schedule is posted in the Activities
office, CAB 305.

• There will be a meeting of all students
interested in the fall quarter program
Economic Cycles, coordinated by Russ
Lidman, at noon on Thursday, May 15 in
the 1500 lounge of the Library.

• The Staff Educational Benefits DTF
will meet tomorrow, May 9 at noon in
Lab 1023.
• William Tita, a faculty candidate in
management, business and organizational
behavior, will be visiting campus Thursday, May 8, and Friday, May 9. Thursday , he will be in an all-campus meeting
In the Student Services area, Lib 1217,
from 2:00 to 3:00.

ALL WAYS TRAtlCL SCRtllDC, INC.

WESTSIDE SHOPPING CENTER

943-8701

OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON

943.8700

Playing Tennis?
TENNIS ACCESSORIES
CARRY ALLS, SHORTS, SHIRTS

. STRINGING SERVICE

ILUf'S
VI
SPORTS
ENTERPRISES

-

OIL NYLON -

~:~~
()f~t
:/ '

CUT

1 DAY SERVICE

~

-!<~ ;/

35.30 Martin Way 491-8240
M-F 10-7

1k.~>A
Sat. 9-6

INTERESTED IN CAREER COUNSELING AND
SOCIAL SCIENCE?
Representatives from: Group Health Cooperative of Puget Sound, Office of Community Development, Purdy Women's Treatment Center,
Youth Services Bureau, Juvenile Parole Services,
Olympia Parks and Recreation, Thurston County
Senior Center, Western Washington State College, Portland State University, WSU, etc., etc.
vvill be here to talk to you & ansvver your questions Wed. May 14
9: 15 a.m. in the Board
Room. Sign up in the Placement Office, Lib.
1224, 866-6193. Also special preparation vvorkshop Fri., Career Resource Center, Lib. 1221,
1:00 p.m.

• The Cooper Point Association will hold
. a fund-rai~r, May 8, featuring Willi Unsoeld's slide presentation of the first ascent of Mt. Masherbrum in Pakistan. The
slides also include several shots-of K-2 for
those following the current expedition
there. Along with the presentation, Unsoeld will comment on women's rights in
Islamic countries. The fund-raiser will be
held at the Olympia Community Center
at 7:30. Tickets are $2.50 per person.
• The Gay Resource Center will sponsor
a Benefit Kegger, featuring music by
Martha Woodhu\. Laura-Mae Abraham
and Solly Salamun Friday, May 9 at 8
p.m. in Black Lake Fire Hall. $1
admission covers beer.
• Mary Hester has been appointed the
new KAOS news director. The appointment was effective as of May 6, 1975 .
• A "Self-Help" Bicycle Repair shop has
opened in the basement of the College
Activities Building to help students with
broken bicycles. Hours of operation are
Wednesday, Friday and Saturday from 2
to 7 p .m. Charge is 25 cents for students,
50 cents for non-students.
• The Southwest Washington Bluegrass
Festival will be held in the Centralia College gymnasium May 10, beginning at 1
p.m. The afternoon actjvities will be an
open show in which any bluegrass musicians may perform . The evening festivities
are reserved exclusively for professional
bluegrass band~ - with six scheduled so
far. There will be an admission donation
of $2 for adults and $1 for children a~d
senior citizens.
• The Evergreen Political Information
Center meets every Wednesday a t 5 p.m.
in Lib 1407. All are welcome .
• Allen Ginsberg will give a reading at
Evergreen, Saturday , May 17, in the library lobby at 8 p .m. It's free so be there
o r be squ are .

• Dr. Morse Peckham, noted author and
distinguished professor of languages and
literature at the University of South
Carolina, will discuss "Society, Ideology
and Literature" in a free, public address
May 12 at 3: 30 p.m . in Lee. Hall 1.
.. The Graduation DTF will hold a
special meeting for final input into
graduation ceremonies Thursday, May 15
at 5 p.m . in Lib 3111 . Contact Carrilu at
357-5315 for more information.
• Any fourth year student that wants
their work to be included in a feature
story on fourth year Evergreeners should
come to the CPJ office.
• KAOS-FM presents a simulcast featuring the Old Coast Highway Orchestra and
Tattoo Parlor Saturday, May 10 at 10
p.m. Audio will be on KAOS, 89.3 FM,
with video on campus cable channel 10.
• The Olympia YWCA is offering Self
Defense for Women - Thursday nights at
Washington Junior High School. The lessons are $20 for non-members and $15
for members. Some scholarships are
available. Contact Ethyl at the 'Y' for
more information.
• Richard Kirsch, western ·o rganizer for
the Public Information Research Group,
(PIRG) will speak on· ·~ the focus and
purpose of the organization as well as
past and present efforts to organize at
UW, WSU, PLU, WWSC and Evergreen
Friday, May 9 at 2 p .m . in the Library
1600 lounge. The event is sponsored by
the Lawmakers / Lawbreakers program.
• Students 'interested in the program
Humanistic Psychology: Its Roots and
Modern Thought for fall 1975 must fill
out and return questionnaries to Wini
Ingram in Lib 2209, no later than
Tuesday, May 13.
• "Dialogues in Dance" will be presented
by Eye-5 in conjunction with the
American Contemporary Dance Co.,
Wednesday, May 14 at 8 p.m. in the
second floof Library lobby . The company
will also present a workshop at 2 p.m . the
same day in the multipurpose room .
• Graphic designer Connie Hubbard will
offer a free, special workshop on how to
critique, organize and present an art
portfolio on Thursday, May 15 from 2 to
4 p.m. in the Board Room (Lib 3109).
Register at the Placement Office, Lib
1224, phone 866-6193.
• Anthologies of student work from the
Self Exploration Through Autobiography
program are available to all students
who were in the program. Two copies per
person may be picked up from program
sec reta ry Ca rnl Pa yne in Sem 3152 .

• The Cooper Point Association will hold
a fund-raiser Thursday, May 8, featuring
Willi Unsoeld's slide presentation of the
first ascent of Mt. Masherbrum in Pakistan. The slides also include several shots
of K-2 for those following the current expedition there. Along with the presentation, Unsoeld will comment on women's
rights in Islamic countries. The fund raiser will be held at the Olympia Community Center - at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are
$2.50 per person.
• Deadline' for film submissions to the
1975 Student Film Awards, sponsored by
the Academy for Motion Picture Arts and
Sciences, is May 20. Films must have been
completed after October 15, 1973 and
should be submitted to Linda Anel,
Pacific Film Archive, 2621 Durant
Avenue, Berkeley, Calif. 94720. Categories include dramatic, animated , documentary, experimental and "special award. "
• A preparation workshop for all
students interested in attending social
services and counseling Job Information
Day will be held Friday, May 9, from 1
to 3 p.m. in the Career Resource Center
Lib 1221.
.
,
• Jewish Students Organization will be in
operation this quarter in Lib. 1611. We
are available for information, counseling,
and services.

Classified Ads
WOMEN , need a place to live this
summer? We have a 5 - bedroom
hou se on Ea stside . Big y a rd ,
ga rden . $40 / mo . plus utilities . Contact J. Gilli s, 1716 E. 5th . 352 -5056 .
Need aggressive person on CWSP
for Managing Editor position with
the Coo per Point Journa l. $2.33 per
hour" 15 hours a week paid for
full time work . See Ra lph at the
Journal 8 to 5 weekdays .
Applications are being taken fo r ed it()rship ()f the Cooper Point Journal
fall quarter 1975. For more informa ti()n call 866-6213 . Submit applica li()ns to Margaret Gribskov in Lib
1602 by May 20th .
LOST BMW hubcap . Driftw oo d
R()ad . 866 - 1568 o r 866 -601 7.
WANTED: VW Bus w / good b od y
for rebuildin g . · Does n·t necessa ril y
have tl> be in running co nditi o n .
. C all N ina . 866 -5199 .
LANDSCAPING .
EXPERIENCED
W e will do yo ur law n a nd ~ ard t n
wn rk . Ca ll Steve . 49 1- 1276

J

Page 18

Cooper Point Journal

May

s.,

1975

Page 19

EVERGREEN COINS~
._o,

~
' ,.-,

AND

INVESTMENTS

Silbscribe to
Revoilltlon IS the month ly publication of the Revol utlonarv Union ( RU ), a nat iona l communis t organiza '
li on . We would apprec iate any comments or criticisms you have of Revulution , and also articles ,. letters, car ·
toon" photos, poetry, etc. you wou ld like to SUbmit. Please send them to the Revolutionary Un ion , P.O .
Bo x 3486, Merchandise Mart, Chicago, II I. 60654 .
(3121 383·6638
For : urt her Information abO ut the AU. p~ase wnt e to our natio nal address l aoovet or to the AU a l ontt of 'he tollow Ing .dd..... "

In the East:
P.O . Box 12053, W. sh ingto n , D.C. 20005
P.O. Box 1992, Baltimore , Md . 21203
80" 427, Dorchester, Man . 0 2 122 (Bost on area )
Box 714, Dover , N.H. 03820
P.O . Box 9 165, Providence, R.1. 0 2940
G.P.O . Bo x 2722, Tre nton . N.J . 08607
G.P .O . Box 2253, N.Y.C .. N.Y . 10001
P.O . Box 890, Ellicott Stn .. Bu ffalo, N .Y. 14205
P.O . Bo x 1183 , Roch ester, N.Y . 14603
P.O . Box 12109, Phil ade lphia , Pa . 19105
Box 3203. Reading, Pa . 19604

In the Midwest :
P.O. Box 3486, Merch . Man, Chicago , 111 .60654
Box 3541 , Highland Pork, Mich . 48203 (Detroitl
P.O . Box 132, Iowa City , Iowa 52240
P.O . 80x 12245. Cincinnat i, Ohio 45212
Bo x 2537, Cleveland, Ohio 44112
P.O . Bo x 2663, Madison , Wis . 53701
P.O. Box 1754 , Mi lwaukee, Wis . 53201

BUYING : SILVER & GOLD COIN
DOLLARS
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COMPLETE
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1722 West BUilding 1722 Harrison
(across from Bob's Big Burgers)
3

, m/re not on the wrong side.
llie are the wrang side. '

I n the Northwest :
P.O . Bo x 03341, Port land, Ore . 97203
Bo x 3224, Seanle , Wash . 98114
In the West:
P.O . Box 3864, Los Angeles, Cal. 90051
P.O. Box 7435, Spreckels, Cal. 93962 (Salinas Valley l
Box 291 , 1230 Gr.nt Ave ., San Francisco, Cal. 94 133
P.O. Box 9001, Denver, Colo. 80209

In the South:
Box 1445, Bormln gham , AI• . 35201
Box 10743 , Atlanta, Ga . 30310
P.O . Box 9036, Houston , Texas 77011

Beyond Vietnam

Daniel Ellsberg

...........................................................•.............. '
En c l ose d IS $4 for a one -year su bSCrip ti on . Beg," w ith _

_

Enc l osed IS $2 for a SI x -month subsCripti on . Begin With

(month) Issu e.
(month, luue .

I wo uld li ke t o be pa rt of a m on thly sustaln er program for REVOLUTION . I Will contnbute
$5 ,
$ 1 D.
$ 15 a mon th (o r m o r e
) for one vear . ThiS Includes a one -year subscnptlon .

~

I cannot make a mOnthly cont flbull on but have enc losed $ _ as a contribution t o the newspape r .

Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Addre ss _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
City _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

_

_

Slate _ _ _ _ _ Zip _ __ __

IForelgn ond au mad kJbs . air U .S, and Ca nada , $ 10; regular Canada, $6 , other countnes, surface mail $6.50 . ai r $ 15.
BookstOr e ra tes availa bl e.)
Please make ou t checks or m o ney orders to R evo luti ona ry Union Send to AU , P.O . BOI( 3486. Merchandise Mart, ChI '

qam.1b 2am.
Sun. noon-tD

midni.re.

cago, 111 . 60654.

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

th SOund Ncitioria\ 80nk
I


n.- rta.

.... .
. ..

\

..
. .'

:

.. . .

.' .

By EVA USADI
When I saw the movie Hearts and
Minds several weeks ago, the war in Vietnam was still raging, Since then, the Saigon troops have surrendered, the city has
been renamed Ho Chi Minh City, most
United States military personnel have left
Vietnam, an<:i thousands of refugees and
orphans have been airlifted to "safety ." In
the light of these developments, the film
takes on a new, a more pertinent meaning,
Hearts and Minds appears to be a film
about Vietnam, but is really a film about
America - America, land where the warwithin-the-war still rages .
Hearts and Minds is a sensitive film,
The scenes of dying people, and devastated land are there - it would be difficult to make a movie about AmeriCans in
Vietnam without them , Yet, the emphasis
in the film is of a more subtle brutality.
Continually addressed in the film is a
question which persists for many American people, "How are we going to prevent such international involvement in the
future?" This is done effectively by interspersing actual footage of Vietnam, which
was shot in Hung Dinh village, northwest
of Ho Chi Minh City, with speeches given
by high gover~ment officials, and scenes
of football games in a small Ohio town.
Probably, the Intention of this type of
filming is most clear during a segment in
which a high school football coach is giving his "boys" a pep talk in the locker
room before a game. He begins by arousing their confidence in their ability to play
a good game. Suddenly, the man gets extremely excited, and slaps each player
across the face (using both hands). while
he screams hysterically and repeatedly,
"don't let us lose!" Immediately the scene
changes to an aging LB], addressing a
group of soldiers as he tells them serenely
to "get in there (Vietnam) and win."

A glaring contrast between two cultures
is made when we see a desperate, frightened young child wailing at his father's
grave. The sound of his pain is disturbing ,
but, the mood changes abruptly as we listen to General Westmoreland saying that
the Vietnamese have a different respect
for life, that, "life in Asia is very cheap."
Unlike many of the films which came
out of the Indochina war years, Hearts
and Minds shows more than that Americans did terrible things to the people and
the land of Vietnam. It is a powerful social statement about the macho male arrogance which produced, prolonged and intensified the United States involvment
("commitment") in Vietnam. The clearest,
most brutal depiction of the dominant
male ideology that is a main thread in
American society, is the interaction between two GIs and two Vietnamese prostitutes. The men degrade the women in a
way which is clearly indicative of an intense sexism; this, for many women , is
the most difficult scene in the film to
watch.
The lies, the deception on the part of
the U. S. government throughout the Vietnam war, produced a blind American patriotism that encouraged men like Lt.
George Coker, prisoner of war from 1966
to 1973, to say what got him through
those long years in northern Vietnam,
was "faith in my, family, my god, and my
country ." He then added that hitting his
target during a bombing mission was
"enormously satisfying."
Of course, there were people who were
. outspoken critics of the U.S , interference
in the Vietnamese revolution. One of the
more sensitive sections of the film is a
close- up of Daniel Ellsberg saying, "it is a
credit to the American people that the
government had to lie for so long ; it is
not a credit ~at it was so easy. "
As many "controversial" films produced

during the war years, Heqrts and Minds
went through more than its share of
trouble before it was released .
The film was originally purchased by
CBS, as part of a six-movie package to
which Bert Schneider and Peter Davis had
agreed (other films by Schneider and
Davis : Th e Selling of th e Pentagon,
Hunger in America , Five Easy Pieces, and
The Last Picture Show). Columbia executives were nervo us about distributing an- '
other controversia l film after being admonished by a Congressional committee
for their "disrespect" in showing Tile Se lling of the Pentago n .
One week before its screening at the
Cannes film festival last spring, Columbia
refused to release Hearts and Minds . The
film was screened anyway , and continued
to be shown through the summer and fall.
It qualified for and won an Academy
Award for Best Documentary of 1975;
Schneider and Davis read the letter they
had received from the Hanoi government,
as part of their acceptance speech .
Finally, Schneider aQd Davis "bought"
their film back from CBS, and made a
distribution arrangement with Warne r
Brothers. Although it is available , and has
broken first run records, many movie theater operators have declined offers to run
it.
The reviews have been overwhelmingly
favorable. This is the text of an ad which
appeared in the U of W Daily . It was
written and pa id for by Randy Finley, the
owner and programmer of The Movie
House,
"The movie Hearts and Minds presentl y
playing at my competitor's theater, The
Varsity, is the most urgent and important
motion picture of o ur time. It is difficult
to express this, but I thin k those w ho do
not see Hearts and Minds do a great diS service to themselves a nd the decision to
not attend is a care less and insensit ive decision. For everyone's sake , see I t."

Page 18

Cooper Point Journal

May

s.,

1975

Page 19

EVERGREEN COINS~
._o,

~
' ,.-,

AND

INVESTMENTS

Silbscribe to
Revoilltlon IS the month ly publication of the Revol utlonarv Union ( RU ), a nat iona l communis t organiza '
li on . We would apprec iate any comments or criticisms you have of Revulution , and also articles ,. letters, car ·
toon" photos, poetry, etc. you wou ld like to SUbmit. Please send them to the Revolutionary Un ion , P.O .
Bo x 3486, Merchandise Mart, Chicago, II I. 60654 .
(3121 383·6638
For : urt her Information abO ut the AU. p~ase wnt e to our natio nal address l aoovet or to the AU a l ontt of 'he tollow Ing .dd..... "

In the East:
P.O . Box 12053, W. sh ingto n , D.C. 20005
P.O. Box 1992, Baltimore , Md . 21203
80" 427, Dorchester, Man . 0 2 122 (Bost on area )
Box 714, Dover , N.H. 03820
P.O . Box 9 165, Providence, R.1. 0 2940
G.P.O . Bo x 2722, Tre nton . N.J . 08607
G.P .O . Box 2253, N.Y.C .. N.Y . 10001
P.O . Box 890, Ellicott Stn .. Bu ffalo, N .Y. 14205
P.O . Bo x 1183 , Roch ester, N.Y . 14603
P.O . Box 12109, Phil ade lphia , Pa . 19105
Box 3203. Reading, Pa . 19604

In the Midwest :
P.O. Box 3486, Merch . Man, Chicago , 111 .60654
Box 3541 , Highland Pork, Mich . 48203 (Detroitl
P.O . Box 132, Iowa City , Iowa 52240
P.O . 80x 12245. Cincinnat i, Ohio 45212
Bo x 2537, Cleveland, Ohio 44112
P.O . Bo x 2663, Madison , Wis . 53701
P.O. Box 1754 , Mi lwaukee, Wis . 53201

BUYING : SILVER & GOLD COIN
DOLLARS
RARE COINS
COMPLETE
COLLECTIONS
1722 West BUilding 1722 Harrison
(across from Bob's Big Burgers)
3

, m/re not on the wrong side.
llie are the wrang side. '

I n the Northwest :
P.O . Bo x 03341, Port land, Ore . 97203
Bo x 3224, Seanle , Wash . 98114
In the West:
P.O . Box 3864, Los Angeles, Cal. 90051
P.O. Box 7435, Spreckels, Cal. 93962 (Salinas Valley l
Box 291 , 1230 Gr.nt Ave ., San Francisco, Cal. 94 133
P.O. Box 9001, Denver, Colo. 80209

In the South:
Box 1445, Bormln gham , AI• . 35201
Box 10743 , Atlanta, Ga . 30310
P.O . Box 9036, Houston , Texas 77011

Beyond Vietnam

Daniel Ellsberg

...........................................................•.............. '
En c l ose d IS $4 for a one -year su bSCrip ti on . Beg," w ith _

_

Enc l osed IS $2 for a SI x -month subsCripti on . Begin With

(month) Issu e.
(month, luue .

I wo uld li ke t o be pa rt of a m on thly sustaln er program for REVOLUTION . I Will contnbute
$5 ,
$ 1 D.
$ 15 a mon th (o r m o r e
) for one vear . ThiS Includes a one -year subscnptlon .

~

I cannot make a mOnthly cont flbull on but have enc losed $ _ as a contribution t o the newspape r .

Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Addre ss _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
City _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

_

_

Slate _ _ _ _ _ Zip _ __ __

IForelgn ond au mad kJbs . air U .S, and Ca nada , $ 10; regular Canada, $6 , other countnes, surface mail $6.50 . ai r $ 15.
BookstOr e ra tes availa bl e.)
Please make ou t checks or m o ney orders to R evo luti ona ry Union Send to AU , P.O . BOI( 3486. Merchandise Mart, ChI '

qam.1b 2am.
Sun. noon-tD

midni.re.

cago, 111 . 60654.

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

th SOund Ncitioria\ 80nk
I


n.- rta.

.... .
. ..

\

..
. .'

:

.. . .

.' .

By EVA USADI
When I saw the movie Hearts and
Minds several weeks ago, the war in Vietnam was still raging, Since then, the Saigon troops have surrendered, the city has
been renamed Ho Chi Minh City, most
United States military personnel have left
Vietnam, an<:i thousands of refugees and
orphans have been airlifted to "safety ." In
the light of these developments, the film
takes on a new, a more pertinent meaning,
Hearts and Minds appears to be a film
about Vietnam, but is really a film about
America - America, land where the warwithin-the-war still rages .
Hearts and Minds is a sensitive film,
The scenes of dying people, and devastated land are there - it would be difficult to make a movie about AmeriCans in
Vietnam without them , Yet, the emphasis
in the film is of a more subtle brutality.
Continually addressed in the film is a
question which persists for many American people, "How are we going to prevent such international involvement in the
future?" This is done effectively by interspersing actual footage of Vietnam, which
was shot in Hung Dinh village, northwest
of Ho Chi Minh City, with speeches given
by high gover~ment officials, and scenes
of football games in a small Ohio town.
Probably, the Intention of this type of
filming is most clear during a segment in
which a high school football coach is giving his "boys" a pep talk in the locker
room before a game. He begins by arousing their confidence in their ability to play
a good game. Suddenly, the man gets extremely excited, and slaps each player
across the face (using both hands). while
he screams hysterically and repeatedly,
"don't let us lose!" Immediately the scene
changes to an aging LB], addressing a
group of soldiers as he tells them serenely
to "get in there (Vietnam) and win."

A glaring contrast between two cultures
is made when we see a desperate, frightened young child wailing at his father's
grave. The sound of his pain is disturbing ,
but, the mood changes abruptly as we listen to General Westmoreland saying that
the Vietnamese have a different respect
for life, that, "life in Asia is very cheap."
Unlike many of the films which came
out of the Indochina war years, Hearts
and Minds shows more than that Americans did terrible things to the people and
the land of Vietnam. It is a powerful social statement about the macho male arrogance which produced, prolonged and intensified the United States involvment
("commitment") in Vietnam. The clearest,
most brutal depiction of the dominant
male ideology that is a main thread in
American society, is the interaction between two GIs and two Vietnamese prostitutes. The men degrade the women in a
way which is clearly indicative of an intense sexism; this, for many women , is
the most difficult scene in the film to
watch.
The lies, the deception on the part of
the U. S. government throughout the Vietnam war, produced a blind American patriotism that encouraged men like Lt.
George Coker, prisoner of war from 1966
to 1973, to say what got him through
those long years in northern Vietnam,
was "faith in my, family, my god, and my
country ." He then added that hitting his
target during a bombing mission was
"enormously satisfying."
Of course, there were people who were
. outspoken critics of the U.S , interference
in the Vietnamese revolution. One of the
more sensitive sections of the film is a
close- up of Daniel Ellsberg saying, "it is a
credit to the American people that the
government had to lie for so long ; it is
not a credit ~at it was so easy. "
As many "controversial" films produced

during the war years, Heqrts and Minds
went through more than its share of
trouble before it was released .
The film was originally purchased by
CBS, as part of a six-movie package to
which Bert Schneider and Peter Davis had
agreed (other films by Schneider and
Davis : Th e Selling of th e Pentagon,
Hunger in America , Five Easy Pieces, and
The Last Picture Show). Columbia executives were nervo us about distributing an- '
other controversia l film after being admonished by a Congressional committee
for their "disrespect" in showing Tile Se lling of the Pentago n .
One week before its screening at the
Cannes film festival last spring, Columbia
refused to release Hearts and Minds . The
film was screened anyway , and continued
to be shown through the summer and fall.
It qualified for and won an Academy
Award for Best Documentary of 1975;
Schneider and Davis read the letter they
had received from the Hanoi government,
as part of their acceptance speech .
Finally, Schneider aQd Davis "bought"
their film back from CBS, and made a
distribution arrangement with Warne r
Brothers. Although it is available , and has
broken first run records, many movie theater operators have declined offers to run
it.
The reviews have been overwhelmingly
favorable. This is the text of an ad which
appeared in the U of W Daily . It was
written and pa id for by Randy Finley, the
owner and programmer of The Movie
House,
"The movie Hearts and Minds presentl y
playing at my competitor's theater, The
Varsity, is the most urgent and important
motion picture of o ur time. It is difficult
to express this, but I thin k those w ho do
not see Hearts and Minds do a great diS service to themselves a nd the decision to
not attend is a care less and insensit ive decision. For everyone's sake , see I t."

May 8/ 1975

Cooper Point JourJlaJ

Page 20

page 21

Review/Me Chesney

continued from page 9

Chinatown
By ROBERT W . McCHESNEY

:eumrnef

ct Housing :

,

from $ 45
01 \ utikhes included .. ,
easy cnmpus access ..
free locoI -telephone
.'" ....•...

.

.. ,: .............

".0.


~~

~

. .......
f



~ :,

.... .I

... " .'

~-6194
IE5C

.. ' ...

,. '

Roman Polanski's Chinatown has returned to Olympia after a nine-month absence; this time appearing at the most
innocuous of places: "Walt Disney" Theatre. Starring Jack Nicholson, Faye Dunaway and John Huston, Chinatown is a
sophisticated melodrama that entertains
you without being insulting. The film is a
mystery that fulfills the recent nostalgia
craze by placing the scenario in the 1930s.
However, instead of creating illusions to
the tune of "Weren't Those The Good
Old Days," Chinatown goes a long way
toward presenting the past realistically;
not to glorify it but to help the viewer
understand it.
The movie is located in Los Angeles;
not the sprawling monster that is now situated on the premises, but a smaller, predevelopment L.A . that was already on the
verge of its drastic facelifting in the '30s.
The protagonist of Chinatown is a private
detective, J.J. Gittes, whom Jack Nicholson portrays with a flair and a sense of
humanity usually lacking from such roles.
Gittes' investigation of a man's supposed
adulterous affairs leads to the man's murder. He is then hired by the wealthy
widow, Mrs. Mulray (Faye Dunaway), to
investigate the cause of the murder. Gittes
soon realizes t,hat this is not a typical
murder as it develops into a scandal involvi~g powerful persons in high places
attempting to rip off the public for tens of
millions of dollars. Finally, Gittes' inves- ..,..
tigation leads him to the ringleader, Noah
Cross (John Huston). who is the aging
father of Mrs . Mulray and the ex-partner
of her murdered husband .
Chinatown is a masterful mystery insofar as it keeps you guessing as to what is
happening yet it never loses you . The plot
is further complicated by personal
intrigues between Mrs. Mulray and her
father. The film ends realistically ; not
with the triumphant Gittes exposing the
wealthy Cross for the criminal he is, but
with his fatalistic acceptance of defeat to
the rich and powerful. The direction and
editing of Roman Polanski captures the
aura of the '30s magnificently while the
camera work keeps arti st ica ll y consistent
to the theme of the movie .
Contrast all of this to the 1930s when
Hollywood was turning out movies like
UCLA turns out basketball players .
America was in the grips of the worst depression in its history and pr.e-television
Americans went to the movIes two or
three times a week . Most of the films
were of the cut and dry good guy I Bad
guy sort which place::! all the emphasis on
the gooJness or badness of t he individual.
America ns looked to movie stilrs for co nsolation and huge "cults of personality"

developed around such figures as Clark
Gable, Bette Davis, Spencer Tracy and
others.
America has undergone a number of
changes since then. People are questioning
the quality of their lives . Within this scenario, people are just not willing to accept
the one-dimensional quality of '30s
movies. While the old movies make entertaining late-show fare, attempts to duplicate them today are almost always washouts. Even television, that last bastion of
mindlessness, is making some movement
in the direction of a more realistic and
meaningful agenda. The word has gotten
to Hollywood: film-goers want real
people in real stories facing the sort _of
dilemmas they face in their own lives.
Chinatown is indeed a reflection of
America's growt h in many respects. While
it is a mystery, the plot does not revolve
around the evil designs of "Mugsy" or
"Scarface" or some other Hollywood invention. The film deals with rich people
trying to rip off the public for their own
gain. Noah Cross and his partners want
to divert the water supply to their own
land and develop Los Angeles into the
swamp it presently is. Chinatown, thus,
has a great deal of relevance as it incorporates a degree of social commentary
within the realm of a mystery.
However, despite the fact that Chinatown enters Hollywood's largely unblazed
trail 'of social criticism, it does so in an
ambiguous manner. As the film develops,
Noah Cross is seen as an insane person
whose irrational greediness is the cause of
his wanting to develop Los Angeles in a
cheap way harmful to the public interest.
Furthermore, his morality is contrasted to
the liberal Mulray; murdered for his unwillingiess to cheat the people . But, as the
last 30 years have decisively shown, Los
Angeles and other cities have been constructed ruthlessly not by the designs of a
few evil persons, but by a system which
encourages it.
Thus Chinatown carried on some of the
"cu lt of personality" of the old Hollywood. If Noah Cross is a half-'c razed
capitalist there is no explanation as to
why he is that way; of what tendencies in
our society encourage that development.
It is just a "given." While Chinatown
deals with some of the ma jor problems of
our times it is sti ll deals with individual
morality as the motive force of history,
without any analysis of the society as a
who le .
But Chill..llllWn is a mystery , not a
hi story book , and a" this is the case it is
well worth seeing. While its attempt at
social cri ticism is commendable, there are
shortcomings that warrant our attenti on.
Neve rthel ess, its splendid acting, direc tion
Jnd scrcc np lilY make it one of the finest

originate inside the shop, due to lack of
experience in management. Spivey has
made offers to Doerksen to spend whatever time is necessary to help all the
workers realize the effective use of equipment and time.
Falxa agreed this would be good, saying the organization based on experience
and understanding could go a long way
toward providing a better service, improving working conditions and promoting
appreciation for the aesthetics of the craft.
Ortiz and Meier, caught in positions of
little or no advancement, must bear the
brunt of management difficulties. These
two,and others like them, feel strongly
that organizational changes they have no
control over must be made in order for
those working at this institution to value
and respect their jobs .·

Volvo Specialists

Bob Bickers

Import Car Service
613 E. State Olympia
943-4353

paRklan€
hOSI€RY
Danskin
"like dancing
in your skin"

:. FULL DANCE
AND
BALLET STORE
• LEOTARDS
• TIGHTS
• SHOES

151 SOUTH SOUND
CENTER
· 491-3021

....

.'

.

May 8/ 1975

Cooper Point JourJlaJ

Page 20

page 21

Review/Me Chesney

continued from page 9

Chinatown
By ROBERT W . McCHESNEY

:eumrnef

ct Housing :

,

from $ 45
01 \ utikhes included .. ,
easy cnmpus access ..
free locoI -telephone
.'" ....•...

.

.. ,: .............

".0.


~~

~

. .......
f



~ :,

.... .I

... " .'

~-6194
IE5C

.. ' ...

,. '

Roman Polanski's Chinatown has returned to Olympia after a nine-month absence; this time appearing at the most
innocuous of places: "Walt Disney" Theatre. Starring Jack Nicholson, Faye Dunaway and John Huston, Chinatown is a
sophisticated melodrama that entertains
you without being insulting. The film is a
mystery that fulfills the recent nostalgia
craze by placing the scenario in the 1930s.
However, instead of creating illusions to
the tune of "Weren't Those The Good
Old Days," Chinatown goes a long way
toward presenting the past realistically;
not to glorify it but to help the viewer
understand it.
The movie is located in Los Angeles;
not the sprawling monster that is now situated on the premises, but a smaller, predevelopment L.A . that was already on the
verge of its drastic facelifting in the '30s.
The protagonist of Chinatown is a private
detective, J.J. Gittes, whom Jack Nicholson portrays with a flair and a sense of
humanity usually lacking from such roles.
Gittes' investigation of a man's supposed
adulterous affairs leads to the man's murder. He is then hired by the wealthy
widow, Mrs. Mulray (Faye Dunaway), to
investigate the cause of the murder. Gittes
soon realizes t,hat this is not a typical
murder as it develops into a scandal involvi~g powerful persons in high places
attempting to rip off the public for tens of
millions of dollars. Finally, Gittes' inves- ..,..
tigation leads him to the ringleader, Noah
Cross (John Huston). who is the aging
father of Mrs . Mulray and the ex-partner
of her murdered husband .
Chinatown is a masterful mystery insofar as it keeps you guessing as to what is
happening yet it never loses you . The plot
is further complicated by personal
intrigues between Mrs. Mulray and her
father. The film ends realistically ; not
with the triumphant Gittes exposing the
wealthy Cross for the criminal he is, but
with his fatalistic acceptance of defeat to
the rich and powerful. The direction and
editing of Roman Polanski captures the
aura of the '30s magnificently while the
camera work keeps arti st ica ll y consistent
to the theme of the movie .
Contrast all of this to the 1930s when
Hollywood was turning out movies like
UCLA turns out basketball players .
America was in the grips of the worst depression in its history and pr.e-television
Americans went to the movIes two or
three times a week . Most of the films
were of the cut and dry good guy I Bad
guy sort which place::! all the emphasis on
the gooJness or badness of t he individual.
America ns looked to movie stilrs for co nsolation and huge "cults of personality"

developed around such figures as Clark
Gable, Bette Davis, Spencer Tracy and
others.
America has undergone a number of
changes since then. People are questioning
the quality of their lives . Within this scenario, people are just not willing to accept
the one-dimensional quality of '30s
movies. While the old movies make entertaining late-show fare, attempts to duplicate them today are almost always washouts. Even television, that last bastion of
mindlessness, is making some movement
in the direction of a more realistic and
meaningful agenda. The word has gotten
to Hollywood: film-goers want real
people in real stories facing the sort _of
dilemmas they face in their own lives.
Chinatown is indeed a reflection of
America's growt h in many respects. While
it is a mystery, the plot does not revolve
around the evil designs of "Mugsy" or
"Scarface" or some other Hollywood invention. The film deals with rich people
trying to rip off the public for their own
gain. Noah Cross and his partners want
to divert the water supply to their own
land and develop Los Angeles into the
swamp it presently is. Chinatown, thus,
has a great deal of relevance as it incorporates a degree of social commentary
within the realm of a mystery.
However, despite the fact that Chinatown enters Hollywood's largely unblazed
trail 'of social criticism, it does so in an
ambiguous manner. As the film develops,
Noah Cross is seen as an insane person
whose irrational greediness is the cause of
his wanting to develop Los Angeles in a
cheap way harmful to the public interest.
Furthermore, his morality is contrasted to
the liberal Mulray; murdered for his unwillingiess to cheat the people . But, as the
last 30 years have decisively shown, Los
Angeles and other cities have been constructed ruthlessly not by the designs of a
few evil persons, but by a system which
encourages it.
Thus Chinatown carried on some of the
"cu lt of personality" of the old Hollywood. If Noah Cross is a half-'c razed
capitalist there is no explanation as to
why he is that way; of what tendencies in
our society encourage that development.
It is just a "given." While Chinatown
deals with some of the ma jor problems of
our times it is sti ll deals with individual
morality as the motive force of history,
without any analysis of the society as a
who le .
But Chill..llllWn is a mystery , not a
hi story book , and a" this is the case it is
well worth seeing. While its attempt at
social cri ticism is commendable, there are
shortcomings that warrant our attenti on.
Neve rthel ess, its splendid acting, direc tion
Jnd scrcc np lilY make it one of the finest

originate inside the shop, due to lack of
experience in management. Spivey has
made offers to Doerksen to spend whatever time is necessary to help all the
workers realize the effective use of equipment and time.
Falxa agreed this would be good, saying the organization based on experience
and understanding could go a long way
toward providing a better service, improving working conditions and promoting
appreciation for the aesthetics of the craft.
Ortiz and Meier, caught in positions of
little or no advancement, must bear the
brunt of management difficulties. These
two,and others like them, feel strongly
that organizational changes they have no
control over must be made in order for
those working at this institution to value
and respect their jobs .·

Volvo Specialists

Bob Bickers

Import Car Service
613 E. State Olympia
943-4353

paRklan€
hOSI€RY
Danskin
"like dancing
in your skin"

:. FULL DANCE
AND
BALLET STORE
• LEOTARDS
• TIGHTS
• SHOES

151 SOUTH SOUND
CENTER
· 491-3021

....

.'

.

page 22

Cooper Point Journal

Review

Wagners "Ring"
By BRIAN BA C H
Thi s co ming July the Seatt le Opera w ill
present Ri ch a rd Wag ner's four opera sp ectacle, Der Ring des N ibelunge n . Never has
a pro jec t of this mag nitude b een undertake n in t he Wes tern H e mi sphe re. It is to
be presented as Wag ne r himself intended:
a ll fo ur operas w ithin o ne week. This Fes-

tival Play for Three Days , with a Prelimill ary Evell ing h ad it s complete premiere
99 years ago a t the specia ll y built Festival
Playhouse in Bayreut h , Bavaria. After
a lm ost 20 years of work , Wag ner ca m e
up with o ne of the m os t impressive a nd
si n g ul a r crea ti o n s ever to come from the
mind o f a m a n .
The Ring was g reete d w ith mi xed feelings. Wagner had n ow m a de full use o f
his "ar twork of the future" - a synthesis
of poetry, dra ma , mu s ic, decor a nd lig hting. T hese we re intricately laced t ogether
to p ro duce a t hea tri ca l experience of a
q uas i- re lig ious ki nd. like his contempora ries, Ibsen for exa mpl e, h e looked o n
the th ea tre as n o t jus t a m eans for ent ertain m e nt , but as som et hing ennob ling and
sp iritua ll y upliftin g, after th e ancient
Greek exam pl e .

Today, af ter a ce ntury of buffeting,
cr iticism and erro neou s int e rpretati o n
durin g two world wars , the wo rk st ill
stand s intac t. Its greatness is obvious .
However , th e majority of the public s hies
away from Wagner - " . . . too long . ..
.," " . . . too heavy . . . " H e demands
muc h of his a udience. The highly charged
e m o ti o n s th at are give n o ut for as long as
four a nd a ha lf hours a re sometimes too
much for peop le to take. Fo r so m e people ,
Wag n er's works can deve lop into an e ndura nce tes t in the name of culture. Th ey
a re t o ta ll y miss ing the point, for full a p preciation o f the works, one must approach the m with an open mind, a nd
maybe a bit of prev ious research about
b ac kgro und in formation . But then carefree lyricism and pre tt y songs from Italian
opera wo uld be preferred to something
that carries so me weight or conveys a
m essage.
For a man n o t blessed w ith the inborn
gifts of Mozart o r Lisz t, Wag ner's musical
achievements and degree of comp lexity
a re truly marvelous, for · it is the mus ic
itself that stands above a ll e lse . He had a
huge ca pacity for creating new music. The
prelude to Das Rh eingo ld, the Magic Fire
Mus ic from Die Walkure, the finale of
Go tterdammerung , the hol y mysticism of
the prelude to Parsifal, these a re a ll exa mples of a new kind of musical crea tion
a nd c harac te ri zation. With a few not es o n
a page , Wag ner is a ble to create the impression of a personality, or a n a tura l
forc e., o r a specific e motion w ith complete

perfec tion . It is interesting that this man
w ho w r o te such enormou s works is actuall y the mas te r of the miniature . While
th ere a re ex te ns ive passages of beauty and
th e s ublime in hi s works, the general
feeling o f it all is a relentless intensity that
co n veys t'he listener to a faraway place .
One of the more interesting elemen ts
that I have discovered abou t Wagner's
mus ic dramas is that a cinemat ic quality
is prevalent. The drama, music , special
effects and timing are all geared for the
scree n . Indeed , the Ring would look great
o n film , but the human presence and inte ra ct io n that is so impo rtant in live performance would be gone.
In the past 30 years, Wieland Wagner's
p roduct io n s of his grandfather's works
have shown a new and modernistic approach that was begun by the Swiss set
designer, Adolphe Appia. Appia's stark ,
ba re se ttings opened up new dimensions
in the interpreta tion of these operas . And
the lis t of p ossibilities is growing. The use
of movies o n a rear projection screen is
o nly one exa mple. At last, the methods of
producing the content are becoming
worthy of the content itself .
.
During Summer Quarter here at
Evergreen, a coord in ated studies '
program ' dealing with the Ring cycle
will b e o ffered . The program will
exa mine the various elements of the
opera s, including their production
his to ry a nd reputation .
The four faculty members involved in the three week long study
are: Wa lter Asc haffenburg, David
P owell, C harl e~ Teske and Bill Wind en . T he progra m will run in conjuncti o n with the aforementioned
Sea ttle productions in July . Details
a re in the Summer Catalog.

May 8, 1975

OLYMPIA
Cinema
Thursday 5-8
Moby Di ck wi ll be show n at 8
p .m . in LH 1 by the Marin e Hi sto ry a nd Craft s prograill .
Friday 5-9
Friday Nite Fi lm s: Partner, by
Be rt o lu cc i (The Conformist, Last
Tango in Paris). is based o n Dostoevs ki 's short nove l, The Double.
Th e story co nce rn s a yo un g
dra ma stude nt li ving in Rome
who is take n over a nd eve ntu a ll y
drive n to mad ness by hi s a lte r
ego . Shows at 7 and 9 :30 p.m .
LH 1.
Monday 5-12
EP IC FILMS Blood of the Condor, shows at 1:30 a nd 7:30 p.m
LH 1.
Tu esday 5-13
Aca d e mi c Film Se ri es : Five
Easy Pieces, show s at 1:30 a nd
730 p .m. in LH 1.
On Stage
Wed nesd ay 5-14
Ame ri can Cont e mporary Dan ce
Compa ny, a gro up of Seattl ebased dancers, will perfo rm the ir
" Dia logues in Da nce," at 8 p .m.
in the li bra ry lobby . They will.
a lso prese nt a workshop at 2 p .m .
in the Rec. buildin g multipur pose
room . Both eve nts are free.
In Concert
Frid ay 5-9
App le jam The O ld Coas t Hi ghway a nd Tattoo Parl or will pe rfo rm jazz a nd o ri gin al tunes In
th e ir di stin cti ve 30's a nd 40's
sty le . Doors ope n at 8 [l .m ., ope n

mike at 8:30. Admissio n $1.
Sa turday 5-10
.
Hol ly Nea r, Los Ange les sin ge r,
compose r a nd ac tress, will be the
fe atured pe rfo rme r in " An Eve nin g with Three Bea utiful Wom e n
a nd The ir Mu sic," at 8 p.m. in
the li brary lobby She wi ll be accompanied by piani st Jeff La ngley Also pe rf orilling will be tw o
Taco ma voc a li sts, Ann a Kaene , a
so lo ist who plays pia no a nd pe rfor ms he r own co mpos iti o ns, a nd
Enid McAdoo, a fo lk sin ge r who
pe rf o rm s o n both guitar a nd
pia no . Ad mi ss io n $2 , proceed s go
to KAOS -F M and the stude nt-run
Gig Commi ss io n.
.App le ja m : La rr y Ha nk s w ill
present a show of country a nd
folk mu sic on jew's harp , acco m- .
pa ni e d b y g uitar . Also mu s ic
fro m Ire land , Japa n, Scotland a nd
Ameri ca played on a bamboo
flute . Doors open at 8 p.m., ope n
mi ke at 8:30, admi ss ion $1 .
Southwest Wa s hington Blu e grass Fest iva l wi II be held on the
Ce ntra li a Co ll ege campus , beg innin g at 1 and 6 :30 p.m . Admi ssio n is $2, $1 for senior citi ze ns.
Art Exhibits

A red cedar sc ulpture of a ki ller wha le, by Du ane Pa sco is o n
di sp lay o n the Ea st Campu s o f
th e Ca pitol g ro und s nea r th e
Hi ghway Admi ni stration Bui lding .
The Chambe r Pot fea tures c lay
sc ulptures by Kay Re illy durin g
Ma y. 4010 Pacific Ave ., Lacey
Open 11 :30 a .m . to 5:30 p.Ill .,
Mo nday thro ugh Saturday.
Aco rn Decor : potte ry by Lo ng
Lake Pot t e ry, wa te rco lo rs by

Neusc hwanger,
scratchboard
prints by Lawre nce, Butts and
Russell. 6011 Pac ifi c Ave, Lacey .
Ope n from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m .
Monday through Saturday.
Thompson 's Ga ll e ry : Water co lors of Pioneer Square and
Cooper Point scenes . 215 East
4th. Ope n 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.,
Tuesday throu gh Saturday

Art
TACOMA

SEATTLE
Cinema
Thursd ay thro ugh Sun day , 5-8
through 11
Th e Rose Bud Mov ie Pa lace :
The Gay Divorcee, starrin g Fred
As taire a nd Gin ge r Rogers, direc ted by "",ark Sa nd ri ch. Thi s
seco nd Rog e rs-As t a ire mu sica l
turn ed out to be o ne of the top
mon ey-g rosse rs o f 1934 , a nd
paved the way fo r Ill a ny mo re
films by that tea m.

Fri day and Su nd av 5- 16 a nd 18
II Trovatore , by Ve rdi , will ,be
pe rformed in Engli sh at 8 p m' in
the Sea ttle Ope ra Ho usl"' For
tick e t inform ati o n ca ll 447-4700
in Sea ttle .

In Concert

Festi\lal

Friday 5-9
Weste rn Wy nd e Co nso rt , a
gro up of fo ur mu sicians from
Sea tt le, wi ll prese nt a concert of
Re naissa nce and Baroqu e mu sic
played o n authe nt ic instrum ents
fro m tha t pe ri od . Pe rfo rm ance at
noo n at . Hi g hlin e Co mmunit y
Co ll ege

Through Sat urday 5-24
The Cornish Sc hoo l o i Alli ed
Art s is sponsorin g a va ri sty of
mu sica l and dramati c present ati o ns in th e Co rni s h Theat e r.
Eve nts in c lu de d rama , rec ita ls,
ba ll et, jazz and o ther co ncerts.
For a sc hedu le and ticke t info rmat io n ca II1 -32 J -1400

OPEN SEVEN
DAYS PER WEEK
MEXICAN FOOD- BEER-WINE
1807 w. Harrison
Olympia

efF

Opera

Consort

412 S. Cherry
943-3660

MORENO'S
MEXICAN RESTAURANT

Thursday 5-8 through Su nday
6-8
Sea tt le Art Museum Pav ili o n,
in Seattl e Center, will hos t two
spec ia l ex hibit io ns. " Prints from
the Unt itl ed Press" is an ex hibi ti o n of recent graphi c work by
Robe rt Rau sc he nbe rg, Bri ce Marde n, Bob Pe terso n, Cy Twombl y,
Dav id Brad shaw, Ro bert Whitman, and Hi sac hl ka Taka Ha shi .
" Uni ve rsit y o f Was hin gto n Masters Thes is Ex hibiti on" co nsists of
the wo rk at 29 candida tes for the
deg ree o f Maste r of Fi ne Arts at
t he U of W. Ex hibits in c lude
cerailli cs, des ign, Illeta l jewe lry
a nd pa inting

Mond ay through Sunday, 5-12
through 18
" Walk o n Air," a cultural event
e illbr aci ng a rt in a ll c reat iv e
form s, wi ll tak e place on the
Broadw ay Plaza in Crea te r Tacoma . Sponsored by the Down tow n Tacoma Associa ti on. For
mor e in for mat io n phon e 572 4200.

Raudenbush
Motor Supply
Reduce Gas Consumption. Tune-Up!

2 Shows
-?:30 pm

250

&
-9:30pm
Thursday May 8

at the door

Auditorium
Old Washington Jr. High
1113 Legion Way

943·0777

Page 23
Sat urda y 5- 10
Jo hn Prin e, fo lk s in ge r- so ng
write r, wi ll be performing at Paramount at 8 p.m.
Thu rsday 5-15
Mac DaV IS will be perfo rming
at the Seatt le Co li seum a t 8:30
pm . Comm edi a n Fred Smoot will
open the show.

page 22

Cooper Point Journal

Review

Wagners "Ring"
By BRIAN BA C H
Thi s co ming July the Seatt le Opera w ill
present Ri ch a rd Wag ner's four opera sp ectacle, Der Ring des N ibelunge n . Never has
a pro jec t of this mag nitude b een undertake n in t he Wes tern H e mi sphe re. It is to
be presented as Wag ne r himself intended:
a ll fo ur operas w ithin o ne week. This Fes-

tival Play for Three Days , with a Prelimill ary Evell ing h ad it s complete premiere
99 years ago a t the specia ll y built Festival
Playhouse in Bayreut h , Bavaria. After
a lm ost 20 years of work , Wag ner ca m e
up with o ne of the m os t impressive a nd
si n g ul a r crea ti o n s ever to come from the
mind o f a m a n .
The Ring was g reete d w ith mi xed feelings. Wagner had n ow m a de full use o f
his "ar twork of the future" - a synthesis
of poetry, dra ma , mu s ic, decor a nd lig hting. T hese we re intricately laced t ogether
to p ro duce a t hea tri ca l experience of a
q uas i- re lig ious ki nd. like his contempora ries, Ibsen for exa mpl e, h e looked o n
the th ea tre as n o t jus t a m eans for ent ertain m e nt , but as som et hing ennob ling and
sp iritua ll y upliftin g, after th e ancient
Greek exam pl e .

Today, af ter a ce ntury of buffeting,
cr iticism and erro neou s int e rpretati o n
durin g two world wars , the wo rk st ill
stand s intac t. Its greatness is obvious .
However , th e majority of the public s hies
away from Wagner - " . . . too long . ..
.," " . . . too heavy . . . " H e demands
muc h of his a udience. The highly charged
e m o ti o n s th at are give n o ut for as long as
four a nd a ha lf hours a re sometimes too
much for peop le to take. Fo r so m e people ,
Wag n er's works can deve lop into an e ndura nce tes t in the name of culture. Th ey
a re t o ta ll y miss ing the point, for full a p preciation o f the works, one must approach the m with an open mind, a nd
maybe a bit of prev ious research about
b ac kgro und in formation . But then carefree lyricism and pre tt y songs from Italian
opera wo uld be preferred to something
that carries so me weight or conveys a
m essage.
For a man n o t blessed w ith the inborn
gifts of Mozart o r Lisz t, Wag ner's musical
achievements and degree of comp lexity
a re truly marvelous, for · it is the mus ic
itself that stands above a ll e lse . He had a
huge ca pacity for creating new music. The
prelude to Das Rh eingo ld, the Magic Fire
Mus ic from Die Walkure, the finale of
Go tterdammerung , the hol y mysticism of
the prelude to Parsifal, these a re a ll exa mples of a new kind of musical crea tion
a nd c harac te ri zation. With a few not es o n
a page , Wag ner is a ble to create the impression of a personality, or a n a tura l
forc e., o r a specific e motion w ith complete

perfec tion . It is interesting that this man
w ho w r o te such enormou s works is actuall y the mas te r of the miniature . While
th ere a re ex te ns ive passages of beauty and
th e s ublime in hi s works, the general
feeling o f it all is a relentless intensity that
co n veys t'he listener to a faraway place .
One of the more interesting elemen ts
that I have discovered abou t Wagner's
mus ic dramas is that a cinemat ic quality
is prevalent. The drama, music , special
effects and timing are all geared for the
scree n . Indeed , the Ring would look great
o n film , but the human presence and inte ra ct io n that is so impo rtant in live performance would be gone.
In the past 30 years, Wieland Wagner's
p roduct io n s of his grandfather's works
have shown a new and modernistic approach that was begun by the Swiss set
designer, Adolphe Appia. Appia's stark ,
ba re se ttings opened up new dimensions
in the interpreta tion of these operas . And
the lis t of p ossibilities is growing. The use
of movies o n a rear projection screen is
o nly one exa mple. At last, the methods of
producing the content are becoming
worthy of the content itself .
.
During Summer Quarter here at
Evergreen, a coord in ated studies '
program ' dealing with the Ring cycle
will b e o ffered . The program will
exa mine the various elements of the
opera s, including their production
his to ry a nd reputation .
The four faculty members involved in the three week long study
are: Wa lter Asc haffenburg, David
P owell, C harl e~ Teske and Bill Wind en . T he progra m will run in conjuncti o n with the aforementioned
Sea ttle productions in July . Details
a re in the Summer Catalog.

May 8, 1975

OLYMPIA
Cinema
Thursday 5-8
Moby Di ck wi ll be show n at 8
p .m . in LH 1 by the Marin e Hi sto ry a nd Craft s prograill .
Friday 5-9
Friday Nite Fi lm s: Partner, by
Be rt o lu cc i (The Conformist, Last
Tango in Paris). is based o n Dostoevs ki 's short nove l, The Double.
Th e story co nce rn s a yo un g
dra ma stude nt li ving in Rome
who is take n over a nd eve ntu a ll y
drive n to mad ness by hi s a lte r
ego . Shows at 7 and 9 :30 p.m .
LH 1.
Monday 5-12
EP IC FILMS Blood of the Condor, shows at 1:30 a nd 7:30 p.m
LH 1.
Tu esday 5-13
Aca d e mi c Film Se ri es : Five
Easy Pieces, show s at 1:30 a nd
730 p .m. in LH 1.
On Stage
Wed nesd ay 5-14
Ame ri can Cont e mporary Dan ce
Compa ny, a gro up of Seattl ebased dancers, will perfo rm the ir
" Dia logues in Da nce," at 8 p .m.
in the li bra ry lobby . They will.
a lso prese nt a workshop at 2 p .m .
in the Rec. buildin g multipur pose
room . Both eve nts are free.
In Concert
Frid ay 5-9
App le jam The O ld Coas t Hi ghway a nd Tattoo Parl or will pe rfo rm jazz a nd o ri gin al tunes In
th e ir di stin cti ve 30's a nd 40's
sty le . Doors ope n at 8 [l .m ., ope n

mike at 8:30. Admissio n $1.
Sa turday 5-10
.
Hol ly Nea r, Los Ange les sin ge r,
compose r a nd ac tress, will be the
fe atured pe rfo rme r in " An Eve nin g with Three Bea utiful Wom e n
a nd The ir Mu sic," at 8 p.m. in
the li brary lobby She wi ll be accompanied by piani st Jeff La ngley Also pe rf orilling will be tw o
Taco ma voc a li sts, Ann a Kaene , a
so lo ist who plays pia no a nd pe rfor ms he r own co mpos iti o ns, a nd
Enid McAdoo, a fo lk sin ge r who
pe rf o rm s o n both guitar a nd
pia no . Ad mi ss io n $2 , proceed s go
to KAOS -F M and the stude nt-run
Gig Commi ss io n.
.App le ja m : La rr y Ha nk s w ill
present a show of country a nd
folk mu sic on jew's harp , acco m- .
pa ni e d b y g uitar . Also mu s ic
fro m Ire land , Japa n, Scotland a nd
Ameri ca played on a bamboo
flute . Doors open at 8 p.m., ope n
mi ke at 8:30, admi ss ion $1 .
Southwest Wa s hington Blu e grass Fest iva l wi II be held on the
Ce ntra li a Co ll ege campus , beg innin g at 1 and 6 :30 p.m . Admi ssio n is $2, $1 for senior citi ze ns.
Art Exhibits

A red cedar sc ulpture of a ki ller wha le, by Du ane Pa sco is o n
di sp lay o n the Ea st Campu s o f
th e Ca pitol g ro und s nea r th e
Hi ghway Admi ni stration Bui lding .
The Chambe r Pot fea tures c lay
sc ulptures by Kay Re illy durin g
Ma y. 4010 Pacific Ave ., Lacey
Open 11 :30 a .m . to 5:30 p.Ill .,
Mo nday thro ugh Saturday.
Aco rn Decor : potte ry by Lo ng
Lake Pot t e ry, wa te rco lo rs by

Neusc hwanger,
scratchboard
prints by Lawre nce, Butts and
Russell. 6011 Pac ifi c Ave, Lacey .
Ope n from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m .
Monday through Saturday.
Thompson 's Ga ll e ry : Water co lors of Pioneer Square and
Cooper Point scenes . 215 East
4th. Ope n 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.,
Tuesday throu gh Saturday

Art
TACOMA

SEATTLE
Cinema
Thursd ay thro ugh Sun day , 5-8
through 11
Th e Rose Bud Mov ie Pa lace :
The Gay Divorcee, starrin g Fred
As taire a nd Gin ge r Rogers, direc ted by "",ark Sa nd ri ch. Thi s
seco nd Rog e rs-As t a ire mu sica l
turn ed out to be o ne of the top
mon ey-g rosse rs o f 1934 , a nd
paved the way fo r Ill a ny mo re
films by that tea m.

Fri day and Su nd av 5- 16 a nd 18
II Trovatore , by Ve rdi , will ,be
pe rformed in Engli sh at 8 p m' in
the Sea ttle Ope ra Ho usl"' For
tick e t inform ati o n ca ll 447-4700
in Sea ttle .

In Concert

Festi\lal

Friday 5-9
Weste rn Wy nd e Co nso rt , a
gro up of fo ur mu sicians from
Sea tt le, wi ll prese nt a concert of
Re naissa nce and Baroqu e mu sic
played o n authe nt ic instrum ents
fro m tha t pe ri od . Pe rfo rm ance at
noo n at . Hi g hlin e Co mmunit y
Co ll ege

Through Sat urday 5-24
The Cornish Sc hoo l o i Alli ed
Art s is sponsorin g a va ri sty of
mu sica l and dramati c present ati o ns in th e Co rni s h Theat e r.
Eve nts in c lu de d rama , rec ita ls,
ba ll et, jazz and o ther co ncerts.
For a sc hedu le and ticke t info rmat io n ca II1 -32 J -1400

OPEN SEVEN
DAYS PER WEEK
MEXICAN FOOD- BEER-WINE
1807 w. Harrison
Olympia

efF

Opera

Consort

412 S. Cherry
943-3660

MORENO'S
MEXICAN RESTAURANT

Thursday 5-8 through Su nday
6-8
Sea tt le Art Museum Pav ili o n,
in Seattl e Center, will hos t two
spec ia l ex hibit io ns. " Prints from
the Unt itl ed Press" is an ex hibi ti o n of recent graphi c work by
Robe rt Rau sc he nbe rg, Bri ce Marde n, Bob Pe terso n, Cy Twombl y,
Dav id Brad shaw, Ro bert Whitman, and Hi sac hl ka Taka Ha shi .
" Uni ve rsit y o f Was hin gto n Masters Thes is Ex hibiti on" co nsists of
the wo rk at 29 candida tes for the
deg ree o f Maste r of Fi ne Arts at
t he U of W. Ex hibits in c lude
cerailli cs, des ign, Illeta l jewe lry
a nd pa inting

Mond ay through Sunday, 5-12
through 18
" Walk o n Air," a cultural event
e illbr aci ng a rt in a ll c reat iv e
form s, wi ll tak e place on the
Broadw ay Plaza in Crea te r Tacoma . Sponsored by the Down tow n Tacoma Associa ti on. For
mor e in for mat io n phon e 572 4200.

Raudenbush
Motor Supply
Reduce Gas Consumption. Tune-Up!

2 Shows
-?:30 pm

250

&
-9:30pm
Thursday May 8

at the door

Auditorium
Old Washington Jr. High
1113 Legion Way

943·0777

Page 23
Sat urda y 5- 10
Jo hn Prin e, fo lk s in ge r- so ng
write r, wi ll be performing at Paramount at 8 p.m.
Thu rsday 5-15
Mac DaV IS will be perfo rming
at the Seatt le Co li seum a t 8:30
pm . Comm edi a n Fred Smoot will
open the show.

COOPER POINT JOURNAL

Classified Ads
2 WANT ho use sta rting June - cis to school. W rite Mike & lisa ,
Bx 45 in Bonn ev ill e, Wash . 98639.

PERSONALS
I ha ve fou nd your wat ch in t·he
C AB. It 's a woma n's watc h and If
yo u ca n describe it ca ll T o m Nufert ,
866 -8463 , ASH H - 12. Found 4115.

SERVICES

WOMEN , need a place to live thi s
summer? We ha ve a 5-bedroo m
hou se o n Ea s tside . Bi g yard,
garden. $40 / mo. p lus utilities. C onta c t J. G illis, 1716 E. 5t h, 352-5056 .

FOR SALE
CAMERA - Cannon FTb w i 50
mm . 1.4 lens, a lso 135 mm . 3.5
Ca nnon le ns. good co nditi on ! 35759_nl_______________

EXPERIENCED
LANDSCAPING .
We will do yo ur lawn a nd garden
work . Call Steve, 491-1276 .
COllEGE STUDENT : Prepare now
for the business world. Choose your
own ho urs . Sell established products to ho me and industry . Ca ll
866-9565 .

REW ARD OFFERED - Five bucks
for the ti p that finds us the rural
ho use that we wa nt to re nt . Any thin g fa rm v is OK . Ca ll 352-2367 .
Make us happy .

WANTED
WANTED! Vo lk s squareb ac k type
3 fron t-end . Ca ll 357-8007 after 6
p.m .

Vol. 3 No. 25

GARDEN ROTOTILlING with
Troy-bilt 8 - 10 fo r avg. garden .
Call 866-0404 weekdays 10 to 6.

Top it ~ff with Oly.
\-

-,;"'"
.

Where h ave all the flowers go ne?
Ri ght o n the front of Olympia's
Flowe r Gi rl T-Shirts.
,.
Made
of 100% cotton a nd
/
machine washable, they come in a
..., variety of colors and 4 adult sizes. Own
your very ow n fl owe r perso n for only
$3.95. Full grown and read y to wear. It
beats waiting for a bud to bloo m .

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l'k,hL: prlill Tlli ... ",ill he you r ma il in g hhl'1. '

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( :( lIlipiL-tl' ;11ll1 fl) ;lil order f(lr lll t(l () IYlllpi;1 Brew ing C()., P.O . Bo x 200K , O lymria ,
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deli v ery.
Oly mp,n nrcwln'l Co mpa ny . O lymp,e . W;,c. h,nglon 'OLY''''

May 1,1975

The Evergreen State College Olympia, Washington

May 8,1975