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Part of The Cooper Point Journal Vol. 2, No. 32 (August 1, 1974)

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The Evergreen State College

Olympia, Washington

Vol. 2 No . 32

August 1, 1974

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Cooper Point
Journal
fhe Evergreen State College Olympia Washington

Vol. 2 No. 32

August 1, 1974

Times at TESC

page 3

Letters

page 4

Campus News

page 6

Capital

page 8

Budget

Editorials

page 10

Cover story :

Citizen Bonker
Reviews
Northwest Culture

page 12
page 13
page 15

Cover
'

This week's cover photo, taken by Dianne Hucks, shows candidate for Congress
Don Bonker talking to the Young Men's Business Club at a luncheon in one of the
Golden Carriage's banquet rooms.

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2

Editor - Knute Olsson H.G.S. Berger: Managing Editor - Stan Shore: Business
Manager- John Foster: Production Manager - Ingrid Posthumus: Editorial Editor - Nicholas H. Allison: Photo Editor - Andrea Dashe: Writing and Production - Dean Katz. Dianne Hucks, Wendy Kramer, WUiiam P. Hirshman, Andy
Ryan, Tom Graham, len Wallick, Rosalie Frankel, Thomas R. Lenon.

The Cooper Point Journal Ia published hebdomadally by The Evergreen State College Board of Publications
and members of the Evergreen community. It Ia funded, in part, by student services and activities fees.
Views expreAed are not necessarily those of the editorial ataff or The Evergreen State College. The Journal
news room Ia located on the first floor of the college Activities bldg. rm. 103. Phone: 866-6:Z13. The
business office is located on the third floor of the Daniel J. Evans Ubrary. rm. 31Z9. Phone: 866-6080.

Cooper Point Journal

AMERICAN BALLET

Washed in by the wake of the great
Swami's departure last week came a large
number of young women to spend this
last week at Evergreen plying their art of
ballet Americain. The women, all members of Shelton's baton twirling team the
Robinettes , lodged themselves in the
dorms, and used the campus facilities to
prepare themselves for their art's ultimate
moment: . The National Baton Twirling
Championship to be held in San Francisco
on August 13.
We came upon some of their number
rehearsing routines in Evergreen's open
pavilion near the Mods, prancing to the
cassette recording of what would set the
rhythm of their dance . The Overtures
from Gigi, Applause, and Little Me, along
with tunes of Neil Diamond set them to
twirling batons and marching in intricate
patterns as if their choreographer had
been a spider · spinning a unique web.
Casual and poised in manner, they
seemed undaunted by complicated maneuvers which entailed juggling their
batons, sending them spinning back and
forth, in risky pirouettes high above their
heads, leaving an awed audience of a few
·
passersby .
Intrigued by their art, we asked if they
might show us a few of their tricks which
they performed with deceitful ease.
Taking a baton in hand, our teacher, Lizann, began by showing us the simplest
movement of all: The wrist twirl. Holding the instrument at the fulcrum we were
told to move the wrist in a figure-eight.
After a b~ief demonstration we tried. The
motion resembled a figure-one. We 'tried
again creating a unique figure-four, and
suggested that a more complicated trick
might be easier for the novice, unchained
by the doctrines and disciplines of the art.
Thus we were initiated into the rites of
the "underleg under leg:" After observing
instructions closely, we approached the
silver shaft with a new-found confidence,
thrust it vigorously beneath a raised leg
and eyed the baton as it sommersaulted
q~ickly end over end reflecting the light
With ~ve_ry turn as it propelled towards its
zenith . As it made a churning path downward, we snatched it deftly from beneath
the other leg with dextrous ease to the
August 1, 1974

amazement of the batonists - now our
awe-struck audience . "Now turn around
while the baton is in the air," Lizann said,
urging us on toward unexplored dimensions.The baton went up, we spun on our
foot, but as we faced frqntward again, the
baton was already bouncing dangerously
across the floor.
We parted soon afterwards, leaving the
twirling to the young experts, but solaced
by the knowledge that we had once been
at the top in the art of baton .
HOT FILM

"Roll tape . . . . sync . . . action" A
student rushes to the campus phone on
second floor Lobby of Dorm A. He expertly punches 3333 . "This is an·
emergency . There's a fire on the eighth
floor of Dorm A in the community
kitchen ... " We came upon this scene the
other day as intern Tom Johnston and his
faculty member Bob Barnard were filming
the final shots for a ten minute color
movie on fire safety in the residence halls
to b_e_~hown during Fall orientation week.
Th.E! seems all very well and good, but

36th & Overhulse
866-1252

we .can't help but wonder what it takes to
make cement burn .
GROUP SINGS

The scope and breadth of the cultural
life here at Evergreen never fails to astonish us . Last Tuesday we attended a concert in the library lobby by the Old Coast
Highway Orchestra and Tattoo Parlor, ~
lively group of four women and two men
who perform 1930's style vocal music. The songs vary from originals written by
members of the group to their own arrangements of old standards such as "Blue
Moon" and "Don't Fence Me In." The
four women, Susie Grant, Patti Lott, and
Lisa and Chrissie McPhaden, alternate
from song to song on lead vocal while the
other three provide euphonious background harmonies, and they are ably
backed up .by Jerry Nicholson on piano
and Carl Spaeth on trombone and guitar.
The crowd was enthusiastic in its response
to the music, and on walking out we observed a number of listeners humming the
group's last number, "It Had To Be You, "
quietly to them_selves .

10 to 6
Tues. thru Sat.

3

s
Moss on roof

To the Editor:
This delinquent response to the March
4, 1974 recommendation of the Hazardous Activities DTF should clear up any
misunderstandings as to the disposition of
those recommendations as well as pinpoint responsibility for various aspects of
the policy. I would appreciate the adoption of these policies in whatever manner
might be appropriate for campus-wide
applicability.
4

SUNBATHING - Sunbathing will be
permitted in all areas which allow general
access (lawns, courtyards, housing sun
balconies and the public portion of the Library roof). Sunbathing is prohibited on
the restricted gravel area of the Library
roof, the clock tower and the roofs of all
other campus buildings.
SIGHTSEEING &t PHOTOGRAPHY The public traffic area of the Library roof
(that area within the railings) will continue to serve as the primary facility for
sightseeing and p'ftotography. Pedestrian
traffic beyond the railinigs onto the restricted area of the Library roof is prohibited in accordance with the posted
signs.
The clock tower will be made available
upon specific request to and approval of
the Facilities Office. Plant Operations personnel will accompany persons utilizing

the clock tower for sightseeing and/or
photography. All other public areas may
be used for sightseeing and photography
but all roof areas (except the public traffic
area of the Library roof) will be off limits.
CLIMBING &t RAPPELLING - Climbing without ropes to heights of fifteen feet
or less does not require authorization.
Climbing beyond the height of 15 feet
or any climbing in which rope apparatus
is involved will require the specific
written permission of either Willi Unsoeld
or Pete Steilberg. Written permission will
be made in three parts, one part to be retained by the climber, one part retained
by the person giving the authorization,
and one part sent to Security. (Unsoeld
and Steilberg are nominally appointed because of their expertise, and frequent involvement in climbing, and their willingCooper Point Journal

ness to assume this role.)
The clock tower will be made available
upon specific request to and approval of
the Facilities Office. Plant Operations personnel will accompany persons utilizing
the clock tower for climbing.
All Housing units are off limits for
climbing of any kind due, primarily, to
the hazards imposed by windows and the
lack of adequately secured objects for attaching ropes.
Beyond these specific activities, the intent of this policy is to prohibit use of
roof areas (except public area of the Library roof) for any purpose other than
routine maintenance and repair.
Beyond the authority vested by the virtue of these policies in Willi Unsoeld or
Pete Steilberg the· Security Office will
have full responsibility for administering
the policy in conjunction, where necessary, with the Dean of Student Developmental Services.
John Moss

Lufkin

replies

To the Editor:
In what seems to be something of a
tradition, I am writing to you to object to
statements attributed to me in your article
on the Men's Center in the July 18th issue
of the Journal. While your paraphrasing
of my comments generally reflected the
essence of what I said I think it is poor
journalism to place quotation marks
around statements which are paraphrasings rather than direct quotes. The only
"quote" to which I specifically object is
the one which has me saying that the response of women to the center has been
"happy and delighted." This seems to me
not only redundant and inane, but also,
in a sense, sexist. While I am certainly, at
'times, all of these I feel confident that in
this instance I was misquoted. I do recall
saying that for the most part the women
with whom I've talked about the center
have been pleased and supportive, which
may be redundant but considerably less
inane. Anyway, my intention is not to be
harshly critical; I appreciate the opportunity to further publicize the Men's Center by responding to your article.
The center now has a room, 3211 in the
Library, and a funding proposal for the
summer has been submitted to the S&A
Board. I have talked with people interested in a men's group beginning this
summer . . . if you are interested or have
a more general interest in the Men's Center please come to a meeting on Tuesday,
August 6 at noon (in L3211).
Thom Lufkin
August 1, 1974

Marsh

rebuts

To the Editor:
Dr. Vachuda's reply to me is mostly
subjective. For the past three years he has
experienced living in the United States.
That has made a profound impact on
him. Again, I won't argue with what this
means to him personally.
Portions of his letter have the ring of
early 1950's anti-communism hysteria that
a number of us were nurtured on. I
bought that line myself at that time. But I
don't accept it anymore. Or at least I
could say that I have modified my views
considerably.
What Lenin or Stalin said and what
they did were in many cases two different
things. Following the Bolshevik accession
to power in Russia, Lenin made a lot of
statements about wanting to close down
the Foreign Ministry. But he didn't do it.
The rhetoric of a state official and the official policy of a state are two different
things. "The road to Paris lies through Peking." So what! What does that prove7
Does that remark mean that the Chinese
Communists came to power after having
visited Paris, read erotic Parisian literature, or decided that all Peking should
have sidewalk cafes7
Was it not Comrade Togliatti, who, following the Party Congress of the CPSU,
pointed out that there were now many
centers of communism? The same
T ogliatti coined the phrase "polycentrism"
with respect to communism. ' National
communism, a communism not directed
from Moscow, had come into existence
years previously in China and Yugoslavia.
I'm afraid that Dr. Vachuda is trying to
appeal to the emotions of twenty or more
years ago. The Cold War is over for us.
His time would be better spent learning
about the erosion of our institutions than
attempting to resurrect ghosts.
Paul A. Marsh

Plan

revealed

To the Editor:
The Office of Facilities has been advised
by Dean Clabaugh that funds in the
amount of $20,600 are to be made available for remodeling the Driftwood House
Day Care Center; Preliminary plans and
specifications have been worked out and
reviewed by the Day Care Center staff
(Bonnie Gillis, Director), the Day Care
DTF (Carol Spence, Chairperson) and the
Office of Facilities. The remodelldg work ·

will include enclosing the existing carport
to provide space for crafts and activities,
laundry, a second toilet room, adding 576
square feet of floor space to the existing
768 square feet. The existing portion of
the building will receive substantial remodeling and complete redecoration. The
exterior of the building will be completely
restained and 12 new windows will be
added for natural light and improved
emergency access to all rooms of the facility.
The rush is on at the Office of Facilities
to complete final working drawings and
specifications so that construction can begin early in September to minimize disruption of day care services this fall and
to limit the cost inflation impact.
In the opinion of the Day Care DTF,
this remodeling project is critically needed .
to improve the existing substandard facility so as to continue the present day care
program now serving students only with
an increased enrollment p~tential of about
five children. The project does not
provide for program expansion in terms
of extending service to faculty and staff or
significant student enrollment increase.
The question of day care services for
faculty and staff is a principal segment of
the Day Care DTF investigation not yet
completed. Persons interested in more information or plan review are invited to
call or visit the Office of Facilities, Building 201.
William M. Knauss

Helena missed
To the Editor:
I read with disbelief that Helena Knapp
is being replaced. Helena is a major reason why I continued at this institution.
She has been an important part of the Evergreen experience to me. I consider
Helena and a handful of others the Evergreen State College. Without them The
Evergreen State College does not exist.
This place gets worse each day.
Teddy M. Haggarty

The Journal welcomes letters to
the Editor from all its readers. The
deadlines for letters are: The Friday
preceding publication for guaranteed
publication; the' Tuesday preceding
publication for consideration but
•not guaranteed publication. All
letters must be signed.

5

Campus News
In Brief

The parents of Donna Manson, The Evergreen State College student missing
since March 12, have added another $500
to the reward money for information
leading to her whereabouts. The first $500
reward was posted by friends of Donna's
here on the Evergreen campus. This raises
the total reward money in the cases of the
missing women and Heidi Peterson to
$31,000.

ROSE'S SLOT OPEN

ADVOCATE DTF FORMED

Pete Steilberg, the director of recreation
and campus activities, has now established procedures for selecting a replacement for AI Rose, who resigned his post
of Assistant Director-Student Services last
July 1 over a controversy concerning student fees.
The procedures, released in a m,mo to
all student funded groups on campus, will
involve an initial screening process by
questionnaire. The questionnaire will
center on the type of work the position
entails, such as the general administration
of the co-curricular activities program,
and counseling student groups in financial
and legal matters.
The answers to the questionnaire will
be tabulated by the Personnel Office and
the Recreation and Campus Activities
staff.
The second step will involve interviews
conducted by representatives of all Student Services and Activities Fees funded
groups, as well as student staff members
in the areas the position will supervise. "I
hope that when the time comes for taking
part in the group interviews, that each
(S&A) group will find time to be sure
that the activity is represented at these
group interviews," said Steilbers.
The final decision will be made by Steilberg himself, but he assured campus
groqps that his selection will be based
upon the appraisal of the student staff
and the S&A groups.
For information about the position and
the application process, one should call
the Personnel Office at 866-6361. The
closing date for applications is August 20,
1974.

A disappearing task force, (DTF), appointed by students, will meet for the first
time August 1 at 7:00 p.m. to discuss the
formation of a student advocate office at
Evergreen.
The need for such an advocate or ombudsman office is clear, according to the
memorandum sent out last week by students Wendy Kramer, Bill Allen, John
Foster, Rick Holmes, Bev Feuer, Annette
Klapstein, Andy Ryan and Knute Berger.
Before explaining the purpose of an
ombuds-man office, which they propose
to be supported initially by Services and
Activities Fees Funds, the students list a
number of "givens" which make the establishment of such an office essential. They
include
--"There exists a wide gap between
Evergreen's stated philosophy and its present reality.
-'This gap has resulted in factionalization between staff, faculty and students.
--"Existing channels of governance,
decision making, . . . and information"
dispersal is inadequate.
As a result, the students want the advocate office established to guide people
through the bureaucracies here and to educate them to their "rights and obligations" as spelled out in the Governance
document and Administrative Code.
According to one of the student sponsors, the need for the office crystallized
with the resignations of Assistant Activities Director AI Rose and the people at
the Lab Access Center including Doug
Barnes.
"After they left," the student said, "we
realized the problems of a bureaucracy
were not going to lessen as the school became more organized, but get worse."
The people asked to serve on the DTF
are: Paul Sparks, Anthony Watkins,
Annette Klapstein, Knute Berger, Chuck
Gill, Byron Youtz, Jane Gorai, Bev Feuer,
Naomi Greenhut, Andy Ryan, Jeanne
Hahn, April West, Jcihn Foster, Peggy
Walker, Greg Logan, Cruz Esquivel,
Eunice Barnett, Mary Nelson, Denis
Snyder, York Wong,Bonnie Hiltz, Dave
Hitchins, Bill Allen, Rick Holmes, Lem
Stepherson, Carole Sadler, Lee Riback,
and Edwina Dorsey- Travis although
anyone showing up August 1 is invited to
join the DTF.
Cooper Point Journal

NEW CLUES FOUND
IN MISSING WOMEN CASE

A clue has finally appeared that may
help police solve the cases of the seven
women missing in this state since the first
of the year. The clue is a man named
"Ted," who was seen in Lake Sammamish
State Park and on the Central Washington State College campus, first when
Janice Ott and Denise Naslund disappeared, and then one hour before Susan
Elaine Rancourt disappeared from Central.
6

TED
Did he attack Evergreen woman?

He was between 5'6" and
5'8", about 160 pounds, of athletic build,
has brown neck-length hair, dark brown
eyes, and wears a cast on his left arm.
On October -31st, there was an attempted abduction near The Evergreen
State College by a man fitting the description of "Ted."
The attempted abduction occurred one
block east of Overhulse Road on the college parkway. The student was walking
down the parkway, when a man ran up
and grabbed her. She screamed, but he
put his hand over her mouth. In the ensuing struggle his hand dropped and the
woman screamed again. This time the suspect fled. The approach in this case was
different, and the man did not have a cast
but as Rod Marrom said, "we're grasping
at straws. This may very well be the same
man." Officials believe the cast may just
be a ruse to attract the woman by sympathy.
Rod Marrom asks that anyone with any
knowledge pertaining to this man, either
having seen him around campus in the
last school year, or knowing of anyone
who has been approached by him or
someone resembling him, to contact the
security office at 866-6140. All information wijl be held strictly confidential.

t

'BIRDS' TO BE PERFORMED
Aristophanes's play, The Birds, will be
performed by students of Gordon Beck's
Intermedia 74 program on August 3 in the
Olympia National forest. According to
Beck, the play is "loosely adapted" from
Aristophanes to fit the Pacific Northwest
and current American political scene. It
will be performed at 3 p.m. five miles east
of Sol Due Hot Springs.
The performance is free. But, to see it,
viewers must be prepared for, as Beck
says, "a rigorous four-mile hike," into the
Trail Shelter at Deer Lake, right off the
Sol Due Trail.

YACHT CLUB MEETS
Geoduck Yacht Club member Gary
Marcus has announced that the Club will
have a meeting tomorrow (Friday) night
at 6 p.m. at the Geoduck House. The
meeting, said Marcus, will be for the purpose of discussing the possible purchase of
new boats. All members are urged to attend.

"Since the Co-op program began in
1971," said Donohue, "we've had hundreds of internship positions available to
students in social service agencies that just
couldn't afford to pay students a salary or
stipend. Although we've been able to fill
many of these positions, many more went
ut:tfilled because students simply couldn't
afford to volunteer their time. PLS will
provide us with a source of secondary
funding for some of these positions."
The Co-op office has already mailed
PLS applications to some 400 Evergreen
intern employers who nominally qualify
for funding under the program. Eligible
employers who have returned their applications will be contacted by PLS and will
be included in the PLS resourcP catalog.
Volunteers interested in participating in
the program may pick up an application
in the Evergreen Cooperative Education
office, Lab 1000 (telephone 866-6391) or
may call the toll free PLS "Hotline" 1-800562-8986. The Co-op office will provide
special assistance for Evergreen students
interested in the program and for nonstudents desiring to enroll at Evergreen
and will continue working with PLS during the placement and selection process.

Applicants need not
be college students, although the program
is particularly relevant to students since it
provides an opportunity to earn college
credit through the internship mode. PLS
is seeking some 1,400 applicants for 700
positions around the state. Final selection
of applicants will be made randomly by
computer. Those selected will receive $50

DRIVE CONTINUES
A "Food and Clothing Drive" for Yakima migrant workers will continue for the
next few weeks, according to student
spokesperson, Carol Welsh.
Any donations of edibles or apparel can
be left at the Recreation building, rm.
202.
Welsh can also be contacted for more
information at 943-0162.

CORRECTION
In its July 25 cover story on the Third
District Congressional race, the Journal
mistakenly reported the primary in that
contest as being in October. The actual
date for the primary is September 17,
with the general election on November 5.

DANCE CLASSES PLANNED
There will be five days of modern
dance workshops beginning August 5 and
continuing through the 9th. The workshops will be aimed at the beginning and
intermediate levels, and instruction will be
provided by Lise Gerhard, a student from
Bennington College in Vermont.
The price of the week's classes will be
ten dollars for Evergreen students, fifteen
for faculty and staff, and twenty dollars
for community members.
For additional information, contact the
Recreation Center office at 866-6530

VOTER REGISTRATION OPEN
Anyone who is not yet a registered
voter in Thurston County but would like
to vote in the September 17 primary for
the Third District Congressional race
(Journal cover story, July 25) can register
at the Campus Information Center, located in the second floor lobby of the .
CAB building. The deadline for registration is August 17.

PROGRAM FUNDS
EVERGREEN INTERNSHIPS
A new cooperative arrangeutent with
Programs for Local Service (CPLS) has
opened up a variety of opportunities for
Evergreen interns according to Ken Donohue, the college's Director of Cooperative Education. PLS, a newly created
state-wide program administered by the
State Department of Employment Security, provides living stipends to enable
young persons to volunteer their services
to non-profit community agencies and
agencies of local government.
August 1, 1974

-BOOKS

500 CAPITOL WAY

POSTERS
COINS



SOUTH SOUND CENTER

Enjoy

Fresh
for

at

Salad
Lunch

Saga
7

-.~

!

Some Concrete Proposals
BY WILLIAM P. HIRSHMAN

Indications of Evergreen's growing stability, of establishing itself as iJ permanent
educational fixture of Washington State,
have become increasingly frequent, from
its recent trophy of accreditation to the
expectation of it~ first four year graduating class. Other indications, though less
easily decipherable, are no less significant.
Consider the fact that the Capital Budget
Request (monies appropriated mainly for

FUNDS REQUESTED -

either built, under construction or funded.
Physically Evergreen is nearly mature.
The remaining projects are the topic of
an 80-page Capital Improvement Program
booklet listing the budget requests for the
next three bienniums, which call for completion of all construction by 1981 when
Evergreen's enrollment would be approaching its peak of 4,500 students. The
requests, totaling about 12 million dollars
over the next six years, were submitted to
the Office of Program Planning and Fiscal
Management (OPP & FM), the budgetary
arm of the Governor's office for review
last July 15. Listed in the 4.7 million dollar Capital Budget Request for the 1975-77
biennium are 3 million dollars for Phase II

'These requests represent a three-fourths
carry-over from previous years," said Director of Facilities Jerry Schillinger. "I personally expect we will get the whole
thing."
Business office Accountant Don Meyer
was less hopeful. 'The outlook is pretty
miserable," he said, expecting no more
than 50 percent of the request to be
funded. 'Td be happy if we got enough
for remodelin~ expenditures." Meyer
pointed out that Evergreen had just recently received 7.6 million dollars for the
Communication Building and he would be
surprised if another 3 million dollars were
"doled out for Phase II of the CRC" so
soon.

Architect's drawing of Phase II of the Campus Recreation Center which may contain, among other things;

a bowling alley.
the planning, construction and equippi11g
of college buildings and utilities) for the
1975-77 biennium is only 4.7 million dollars, about one-tenth of the 40 million
dollar request of the previous biennium.
What this means in simple terms is that
the main hunk of the college's buildings is

DON MEYER

of the College Recreation Center, funds
for remodeling and equipping several
areas of the Library building, outdoor recreation facilities, remodeling of minor
buildings, and site improvement' and utilities. An Emergency Services Building
(cost estimated at $660,000) is requested
for the 1977-79 biennium. Also for the
1979-81 biennium, 6.9 million dollars is
requested for a 2.400-seat auditorium to
be attached to the planned Communications building. The one other major project which is planned is Phase II of the
Campus Activities building. The 1.7 million dollars would be "locally acquired,"
meaning it will come from the College
Activities Fund, monies collected from
student tuitions.
(All figures listed are based on costs as
of July 1, 1974. It is estimated that the inflation factor will increase costs at a rate
of 15 percent per year.)
The Legislature will not act on the requests until the January 1975 session
following recommendations from OPP &
FM, the Governor, and the House and the
Senate Ways and Means committees.
Opinions differ greatly on how the
1975-77 bud~et request will fare.

"I hope to hell we can show proper justification for it," said Director of Recreation Pete Steilberg who hopes for full
funding of the CRC. "We really need it. I
know I'm going to do some lobbying for
it," and then he joked becoming politically astute, '.'buy a few cigars, you know,

J£RRY SCHILLINGER

Cooper Point Journal

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get some people drunk."
And that just may be the way to do it
if the House and Senate respond as they
have in the past. The budget will come up
against a wary legislature, bent on belttightening and fiscal austerity. And
though this is the smallest capital budget
request Evergreen has yet submitted some
legislators may view it as being extravagant during these inflationary times considering the college's top enrollment of
4.500 students. But, the legislature willing,
here is some of what can be expected at
Evergreen by 1981.
Phase II of the College Recreation
Center (CRC) (3 million dollars) would
be a two-story structure connected to the
present CRC and located on the pathway
to the dorms. The bottom floor would
have space for archery, fencing, gymnastics, and a. games room which would include a four-lane bowling alley. "Everybody so far has been favorable to the
bowling alley idea," said Steilberg.
Located on the second floor would be a
high-ceiling gynmasium large eno'ugh for
three college-size basketball courts, five
volleyball courts, or twelve badminton
courts. "It will be a mixture," Steilberg
said, "with an area maybe for roller skating." According to Schillinger, the building plans were cut to 60 percent of the
original size, thus cutting out proposed
areas including handball and racket ball
courts. Completion date is set for June,
1978.
August 1, 1974

Plans for Phase II of the Activities
building were cut in half due to problems
in funding, which come from student fees.
This structure has been the source of
much heated discussion throughout the
academic year which culminated several
weeks ago with the resignation of former
Activities Coordinator AI Rose. Rose had
been concerned that S&A monies were
being spent without student approval. If
the 1.7 million dollar expansion of the Activities building is completed, it will contain some offices, additional space for the
Bookstore and SAGA Food Services, and
possibly a cafe and pub in the basement.
All this will be finished, according to the
plans, by October 1977.
Originally planned to be funded and
built in conjunction with the Communications Laboratory building, Evergreen
planners will wait until the 1979-81 biennium to seek funds from the legislature
for the proposed 6.9 million dollar auditorium. The 2,400 seat structure would be
connected to the Communications building facing Parking Lot C. The planners
(mainly Academic Dean Charles Teske)
have conceived the auditorium to be used
not only by Evergreen members but also
involving the "surrounding Olympia community." That may be necessary considering that the capacity of the auditorium is
over half the student population at peak
enrollment. Completion date is set for
October, 1982.

l!!!liiiiil!!!!'!!!!iiiiiijliiiiii
-

0

-

Last week, Administrative Vice President Clabaugh dropped from the budget
request $20,000 for remodeling the Driftwood Day Care Center. Instead, the remodeling will be completed this fall, at
least nine months earlier than state funding would have permitted, with funds
coming from S&A monies. This immediate construction was a recommendation of
the Non-White DTF, the Day Care DTF,
Lhe College Activities Fund DTF, and the
S&A Board.
There are other requests in the budget
such as outdoor recreational facilities
which include a rock climbing facility. In
the 1977-79 biennium funds will be sought
to build a $650,000 Emergency Services
building.
· According to Schillinger, if Evergreen
receives all requested funds, the college
will have by 1982 all the structures it
needs - at least for a number of years. In
the meantime the Evergreen planners pray
for approval of the budget and the rest of
us try to imagine what it will be like to
see slabs of cement rather than stands of
trees.
Senior Employment Seminar
Interview Techniques
Wednesday, August 7, 3:30
Career Resource Center Lib 1221
9

Watergate: the real story
The other day, a friend and I were
talking about politics and films in a conversation that could well be entitled
"Lesser Forms of Entertainment." The first
part of the conversation was filled with
robust pride about the slow, but beautiful
regicide taking place in the District of
Columbia.
Over coffee and cinnamon rolls we
chuckled about the early ACLU meetings
we had attended and the petitions we had
signed to see the President removed from
office. Perhaps the most encouraging
thing in the whole affair was how quickly
Nixon had fallen in the polls after a landslide election.
"The People," my friend mused, "came
through this time. The people are in revolt."
"And the media," a nearby waitress
added. "The media is showing how courageous it can be."
My friend nodded his agreement, but I
wondered. if the Congress were impeaching the President because of the illegal
bombing of Cambodia, that would be one
thing. But Watergate, although definitely
an impeachable sort of crime, seemed too
ordinary to warrant a reversal of normal
political inertia.
Suddenly my mind became filled with
distorted scenarios of the past and near
future.
All were based, I think, on my odd and
slightly paranoid premise that if an institution or individual is weak enough to be
felled by an attack, he is. likewise not
worth attacking. This premise is particularly true of bureaucratic fighting but far
less so of violent confrontations.
"But if the President of the United
States in your mind is too weak to be
worth attacking," my friend broke in,
after taking a puff of his pipe, "who is
worth attacking1"
"Whoever holds the real power!" I
blurted out too loudly. In the following
frantic hours we came up with four scenarios to who engineered the Watergate
impea~hmer;tt:

The CIA
This scenario has a more or less religious tone about it. First of all it was first
proposed seriously by Jesus freak Charles
Colson, but perhaps more important it
assumes the omniscience of the Central
Intelligence Agency. A detailed version of
this idea relates that the CIA does not
want actual control of the government,
but simple veto power, similar to the military in many South American countries.
The events when honestly told run like
this: After successfully killing both
Kennedys the CIA became dumbfounded
when "their" president, Nixon, turned
against a solid Cold War policy. Still,
having matured since 1963, they decided
to bide their time. Three events brought
them to actively fight Nixon: (1) The
knowledge that Hoover had vetoed the
Huston plan, so that Nixon would be
anxious to set up an extra-governmental
spy agency (2) Nixon's landslide election
would make him confident enough to, as
Colson relates, start an investigation of
the CIA and (3) Hoover's death would
allow Nixon to appoint a director who
would launch offenses against the CIA's
domestic activities, something that Hoover would have refused to do.
Working quickly, the CIA encouraged
former agent E. Howard Hunt to undertake the domestic espionage, banking on
the time when Hunt would tum against
the president. This scenario also places
the CIA in the role of the secret informer
to the Washington Post, "Deep Throat".
The Big Business Community

The MIUtary
In this scenario, modeled roughly after
the movie Z, the military is the actual
power behind the civilian government. As
the special prosecutor comes closer and
closer to the truth, the military panics and
the civilian government gets thrown out.
In this case the impeachment trial
would rate as a huge diversionary tactic,
perhaps engineered by General Haig. Sup10

port for this idea comes from the Joint
Chief of Staffs spying on the National
Security Council. Also worth noting is
that Nixon's successor Gerald Ford has
the perfect makings of a puppet. He is
dumb, thought to be honest, pro-military,
and his chief of staff would be a former
four star general.

The logic behind this is simple: In
order to find out who is responsible for a
crime, look to see who had a motive to
do it. The business community's profit
has been two-fold. On one hand they are
living under a de facto "laissez faire" system. With the executive, who must enforce the laws, busy fighting impeachment, they can have somewhat of a picnic, as the energy crisis demonstrated. Far
more subtly, the business community is

gaining valuable special interest legislation
because of impeachment. In order to buy
votes, Nixon has had to acquiesce to the
wishes of many conservative special interest Senators. The politics of Impeachment
are thus a double blessing for the business
community.
A further motive, and explanation of
the timing is explained by the Agnew affair. Seeing that the justice Department
had violated a sacred tacit agreement between business and government by preparing to indict the Vice President for
bribery, they felt that more direct action
had to be taken.
That direct action took place in an insidiously subtle manner. First influential
Republicans, who are controlled by Big
Business, told the President to hire Archibald Cox as special prosecutor. They did
this knowing that Cox was a "Harvard
man" and represented everything Nixon
found distasteful. When a few months
later, Nixon could take no more of Cox,
these same influential Big Businessmen advised the President to fire Cox. It was this
decisive, seemingly unexplainable action
which turned Impeachment into a reality.

The Far Left

This scenario, the most complex of all,
ties the kidnapping of Patricia Hearst in
with the Watergate Affair. The Far Left
became enraged with the governments of
the Communist Bloc, particularly Mao,
following Nixon's move at detente. They
felt that Mao had betrayed them. In a
desperate effort to gain face, the leftists
poured money and support into the McGovern camp, in a future hope that if a
Socialist became president Mao would
seem to have less obviously sold out.
When the McGovern scheme failed, the
Far Leftists furiously mounted attacks on
the President and everyone else involved
in detente.
In their crazed attack, which is ultimately self-destructive they have hit out
against such diverse tigures as Patricia
Hearst, by kidnapping; Solzhenitsyn, by
exile; and Colson, by conversion.
STAN SHORE
Cooper Point Journal

European Media Review
BY )ARPSLA V V ACHUDA

Detente
The French word detente means relaxation of tension. In the views of various
European newspapers it means something
for the West and something else for the
East. In political jargon detente means the
easing of tensions in the field of possible
military confrontation for the West, but a
firm stance and powerful defense for the
Socialist camp. It means more trade, for
the East is buying more goods in the West
- on credit, of course. It means an opening of borders, but only for the Western
tourist, not for East Europeans. It means
scientific and cultural exchange - the
West is freely giving technological knowhow, the East is sending a ballet company
to the West. The major powers involved
in the strange pursuit of a detente are the
U.S.A. and the Soviet Union; Europe has
started to play a role only in the last ten
years or so. And the task of following
and explaining the whole not very straight
road of detente is one of the most intriguing parts of the studies of so-called Kremlinologists. (A Kremlinologist is a scholar
who is trying to perform the same kind of
miracle in his field as is expected from a
paleontologist who is trying to reconstitute a skeleton from one vertebra.)
What kind of people are the main actors in this detente7 The American
organized his society sheltered by immense seas in relative security; the Russian on the other hand, in the last 20 centuries or so, was always attacked from
West and East, from North and from
South successively or in combination by
Huns, Bulgars, Avars, Khazars, Magyares, Pechenegs, Tartars, Normans,
Poles, Swedes, French, Germans and
others. Therefore the Russian desire to
achieve security by expanding the Russian
space and Russian influence is understandable even today. The Russians have experienced 20 centuries of constant, mortal
fear. They survived only because they
learned the hardest way - to trust no
one, to be suspiciously alert, to keep their
own counsel, and substitute ruse for superior strength when superior strength
was lacking. After 1945 the Americans
faced the Russians in Europe and elsewhere. The contemporary American
thoughts were best expressed by President
AUJUSt 1, 1974

Truman in 1945: "The Yalta Conference
ought to spell the end to the system of
unilateral actions, the exclusive alliance,
the spheres of influence, the balance of
power, and all other expedients that have
been tried for centuries - and have always failed." After this highly admirable
and idealistic but rather naive approach
to politics, the events of the postwar period caught America and Russia unprepared to deal with each other. There was
not a common dictionary nor a necessary
understanding of the realities of this complicated . world. America demobilized in
1945 and maintained only two divisions
in Europe (1949). Soviet Russia left six
million men under colors and occupied in
the decade 1939-1949 15 or so nations
with circa 200 million inhabitants and
with vast economic resources. The Cold
War started.
In the last 15 years the word detente
was used by the East and the West, but
meant for each side something different.
Krushchev seemed to subscribe to detente
in 1960, apparently for Western consumption, but on April 22, 1960 we could cite
as an example - there are many of those
- what Secretary of the CPSU O.V.
Kuusinen said: "Lenin has been opposed
to peaceful ·coexistence . . . To remain
true to the Marxism-Leninism today, we
must do more than to repeat the old truth
that imperialism is aggressive." In the
same time G.A. Zhukov: ". . . the detente must not become a Trojan horse of
bourgeois ideology within the Soviet society." And Secretary General Leonid F.
Brezhnev : ". . . the ideological struggle
sharpens in proportion to the achievements of socialism.''He even assumed theomi~ous title of the Secretary General,
prev1ously held only by Stalin, obviously
to express his position as the actual leader
of the S.U. And in the last 15 years the
tug of war of detente has continued. And
as we saw, the position of the S.U. vis-avis detente has been virtually the same for
the last 15 years. The Soviet leaders say
today, like 15 years ago, that the relaxation of political and military tensions
could bring un-Soviet thoughts into
Soviet society. Ideological coexistence is
proscribed by the Soviets, who would like
to stabilize the status quo ante on their
European and Asian borders and would
very much like Western technology, food
and credit. Some Western statesmen are
expressing the view that extended trade
and technological and economic help will
eventually liberalize Soviet society _and

bring about real detente. But the Europeans cannot forget that one of the highest standards of living in Europe did not
save Germany from Nazism - and the
subsequent hunger and death toll of the
cruel war in a totalitarian State could not
bring about the change of regime. A
closed society under the boot of the police
is able to survive and the standard of living is never essential in deliberations of
rulers: they have the communications
media in hand, and the guns, too.
I feel that the crucial point in our relation to detente is to be sure to remember
the moral issues. There is after all a difference between democracy and totalitarianism, and one system is better than the
other. How nations behave toward their
own people has something to do how
they behave to other nations. There is a
relationship between internal structure
and external conduct, there is a relationship between what societies are at home
and what they ~o abroad. That was true
for Mussolini, for Hitler, and for Stalin,
and is just as true for Brezhnev. We educators need to remind ourselves of this by
adhering strict.Jy to the rule of facts. What
is this thing called detente, what is this
thing in whose name we tum our eyes
away from 250 million people living in
Central Europe, in the sphere of the Soviet Union, struggling for human rights7
And these peoples are our relatives or
friends and surely part of our heritage.
What is this detente in whose name a
great nation like the USA, which has in
the last decade spent its best men and energies in a fight for civil rights and civil
liberties, now stands by as the shadows of
indifference, opportunism and cynicism
· darken its highest ideals.

..............................................

,

In addition to its regular columns,
the Journal would like to provide a
forum for the opinions and commentaries of members of the. Evergreen community. If interested in
writing, please contact Nicholas
Allison in the Journal offtce, CAB
103, or call 6213.

.............................................
11

On the stump with Citizen Bonker
BY DIANNE HUCKS
'Started out a rushed morning, getting
lost on our way to a coffee gathering with
the handsome Don Bonker and his lovely,
pleasant wife, Carolyn. The "coffee" was
attended by about fifteen women over
thirty eating cookies and drinking coffee,
many smiles and shaking hands.
Everyone sat down to listen to Don's
informal political speech in front of the
fireplace. He talked about log exports being damaging to our economy because it
essentially exports jobs. Conjecturing that
there is a "new breed" movement on the
campaign trail partially resulting from
Watergate and all that, he hoped that
changes would take place in Congress: especially breaking down the seniority system for a more democratic one there. He
also promised that he would not become .
so entrenched in the D.C. way of life to
forget his home country: Washington.
All this time, wife Carolyn sat by his
side trying not to appear bored even
though she has heard this hundreds of
times. Children often came to various entrances of the room, only to be scolded
and run out by their mothers for their
"bad manners." Then time ran out and
the campaign troop ran out to the stuffy
car and on to our next destination: The
Young Men's Business Club of Olympia at
the Golden Carriage Restaurant.
This time it was a banquet-style lunch
(roast beef casserole, mashed potatoes,
green salad, and more coffee) with men
between 40 and 65.
One member explained the reason most
of the members were older than "young"
was that the club had been formed so
long ago and everyone just stayed on.
After lunch they called the meeting to order, said the pledge of allegiance, raffled
off prizes of beer and wine and sang the
club song. The words go as follows:
We aregathered here together,
Men of this community,
With a "howdy" and a "hello pal,"
Spirit of YNBC.
Raise your voices all together,
In a song of harmony,
Better men and better business,
That is what we stand for Men of this community.
This was written by the "Chopin" of the
business club to the tune of "Yankee
Doodle Boy." As Don started his speech,
he commented that even though they had
not improved their singing much since he

Hucks

CHECKING INnATION - Don Banker and his wife Carolyn examine food prices in a
local store.
'

had last· seen them, at least they were better than Rotary. Unfortunately there was
also a Rotary member in the group. But it
all worked out.
This time though, the speech was
shorter and a bit tenser. Don was speaking to a conservative group containing at
least two John Birch Society members and
one man who, we later found out, was
not going to vote for Lud Kramer because
"Kramer is too liberal."
We escaped o~ce again now with full
stomachs to the womb of the "Bonker for
Congress" office. Waiting in a hot
summer office of telephone calls, planmaking, hustling and bustling. Down to a
quick take at the central city park for
portrait pictures. Tony, the Italian-gangster-type PR man directing the prize
couple to walk down the path, sit on the
stump. The lighting was bright causing
odd shadows on Don and Carolyn's faces,
so we caught a classic candid jacket-overthe-shoulder shot.
_
Next we were all whisked away by the
office sidekick, Ron, in the Bonker's Station wagon limousine to the Food King

Supermarket to take some shots portraying rising food costs: inflation. After
clowning around the store (eating grapes,
tossing boxes of Pampers back and forth,
laughing discreetly and being subdued by
the store manager's inquiry as to who we
were) there came some real seriousness
beside the sugar and meat counters. This
had been a real full day. Don commented
that it had not been one of the more interesting days. Perhaps the more interesting
include parades and street fairs?

Cooper Point Journal

-------------~usic-------------

Recitals at Evergreen
Evergreen has been the scene of a succession of concerts and recitals in the past
week. The first was a concert given July
22 by a group of young accomplished
musicians called The Kronos String Quartet playing Haydn's Fourth String Quartet,
Bartok's Third Quartet, and Opus 127 by
Beethoven.
Beginning with the Haydn piece, the
group's sensitivity and ability to play with
exact togetherness was apparent especially
in their diminuendos and crescendos. The
quartet by Haydn is especially melodic
and they performed it with enthusiasm.
The Bartok was the most outstanding.
Bartok quartets are very difficult to play
for listenability without compromising the
tonal and rythmic dissonance. The
Kronos Quartet collaborated excellently
pr~~ucin11: a flo~in~ b_ut 'l_e.!Y.___B~trtoldan

piece. Beethoven's Opus 127 was played
with less continuity than the other two
pieces. Beethoven quartets are a bit unusual because even though each part
sounds typical of Beethoven and the
classical period, with the combined instrumentation causing much dissonance, the
piece gives the effect of being modern.
Even though their sensitivity seemed lacking for this piece, the quartet continued
its enjoyable excellence.
The four men all between 21 and 28
years, are from Seattle and are establishing a growing reputation. They will be
musicians in residence for Portland area
colleges and at the Cornish School of
Allied Arts in Seattle next year. Even
though they found the disturbance of
slamming doors and passersby disquieting
in the Library lobby Concert Hall, David

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Harrington, James Shallenberger, Tim
Killian, and Walter Gray generally
enjoyed the accoustics of the room.
Renaissance Recital
Another concert was a recital given by
Robert Gottlieb's students July 29 of
Renaissance music. Music included works
by Handel, Couperin, and Teleman. This
recital was highlighted by several accomplished musicians including Cindy Siedentop. a vocalist Tom Yesberger, on the
harpsichord, and Randy Mead on the
flute. Siedentop did an impressive job esContinued next page

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Continued from preceding page
pecially on some of the ornamentation in
her piece. She has recently been studying
in Seattle with Marni Nixon who is one of
the more sought-after voice teachers in
this area. Nixon was the mysterious voice
behind J. Andrews and A. Hepburn in the
Rogers/Hammerstein musicals. Yesberger,
who ordinarily plays piano, brought some
feeling into the harpsichord playing at the
recital. Even though he was the most
comfortable with the instrument, his forte
seeins to be with the piano. Mead was
very able with his flute, especially considering his training is with the recorder; he
has been studying flute for two years.
This recital seemed generally on the yawn
side, although the court jester-style announcer served as comic relief with his
joking and great French accent.
Impressive Vocalist
The third recital ~as given _ by Patti

Lott July 30. Lott, also a student of Marni
Nixon, sang pieces by Marcello, Caccini,
Tchaikovsky, Wolf, and Massenet accompanied on the Steinway by Mary Ewing.
The 23 year old Lott has been singing
since high school and has become very
serious about it in the last few years. It
shows. For one thing, her pronunciation
of the Italian, Russian, German, and
French was immaculate, but not mechanical. It was quite visual as well as apparent
in her voice that she · felt each sound,
melody, and poetic meaning in her pieces.
But even more impressive was her support
especially in the high ranges, and the
control of volume both pianissimo and
fortissimo for expression, and arpeggios
and ornamentation for accuracy. Even
though some of the pieces were natural
tear-jerkers, classical singing is something
most Evergreen students would not ordinarily listen to out of choice. However,
L~(s_ sing~ng_ w~so inspiring that the

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crowd responded with enthusiastic approval in the form of cheers, whistling,
and a long rendition of applause.

--Art

Landscapes
Drawing From the Landscape is the
name of the current show in the Library
gallery (until August 19) and also the
name of the group contract that produced
the work.
Led by Marilyn Frasca of Evergreen and
Larry Gray of Humboldt State College,
the group of almost 30 students spent two
weeks camping in the mountains near
Lake Chelan. Gray, an experienced mountain man, took expeditions daily into
"The Wilderness;" Frasca stayed near the
coffeepot and took expeditions into intensive journal writing and critique.
The stories that came back with the
campers! Apparently lots of people went
a little nuts living in the wild. There was
nothing to do except : draw, paint, write,
walk, climb, cook, eat, sleep and daydream. Sing. Figure out life. (Cappy
Thompson figured it out, as you can see
in her drawings explaining the psychochemical structure of various mountain
animals).
Excerpts from the journals are offered
as part of the show.
The drawing part of the show is organized into lots of little one-man shows, one
person to a panel. The two faculty do not
show their work, having done so in May.
You get an aching fullness of mountains
from the shows but personally I was not
stuffed. I could take more, and hope to.
The freshness of all those mountains renews my thirst. Some of the "mountains"
are not the Cascades, by the way.
Briefly, here are some impressions, replies to what these people said to me in
those pictures.
I thought Makolm's drawings were divine and his painting unusually horrid. I
fell in love with Angela when I looked at
her shell-colored sky held in rock. Becky's
extraordinary sexiness of eye had a field
day with the body of the land. Suzy Jones
continues to. push her way furiously into
powerful, impatient new paint. Laurie
Katz made a green space between tree
trunks wiggle and shine. Trey hardens up
all his edges but they make volcanoes.
Lynn Robb tore into her work to such an
extent that their edges are gone, or made
new. Marjorie's heavy heart looks like
something good to eat. Robin somehow
made a calm evening amid all this
thunder. And hello again Alcinda, I see
you are as sprightly and clean as ever.
This is the freshest show w~ve had here
this year. Go see it.
·
SUSAN CHRISTIAN
Cooper Point Journal

OlYMPIA
Cinema
Lacey Drive-In: Blazing Saddles and
The last of Sheila.
Sunset Drive-In: The Three Musketeers
- Tonight, August 1 is the last night for
this swashbuckler. Beginning Friday, August 2 is The Sting - Robert Redford and
Paul Newman; The Carey Treatment
James Coburn.
On stage
Abbey: Hello Dolly - Opens tonight at
8 p.m. Performances August 1-3, 6-10.
All tickets are three dollars and may be
purchased at Yenney Music, The Music
Bar, Panorama City, The Music Box in
Shelton, Lohr's Music in Centralia, and
the Bon Marche in Tacoma. Also, after
tonight's opening performance there will
be a champagne dinner held at Panorama
City restaurant . Tickets for the supper are
seven dollars.
- Miscellaneous
The Thurston County Fair begins today
and runs through August 4. The fair will
feature livestock, crafts, food, and lots of
entertainment. Groups playing include
The Country Bugs and The Crossroads.
Fair hours are from 9 a .m. - 10 p.m.
Admission is one dollar fifty cents for
adults, seventy-five cents for children
6-14 and children under six free with
guardian. The fair will be held at the
Long Lake fairgrounds.

Harvard Exit: The Tall Blonde Man with
One Black Shoe.
Movie House: Some Uke it Hot - Marilyn Monroe, Tony Curtis, Jack Lemmon
and George Raft. Curtis and Lemmon disguised as female musicians join all-girl
band to escape gangsters.
University: Casablanca and To Have and
Have Not.
5th Ave.: Uptown Saturday Night - Bill
Cosby, Sidney Poitier, Harry Belafonte
and just about every other black actor
and comedian you can think of in ghetto
comedy.
Coliseum: Three the Hard Way - Jim
Brown; Duel of the Iron Fists.
Cine-Mond: Mean Streets and Steel Yard
Blues.
Neptune: Poseidon Adventure - Ernest
Borgnine, Shelly Winters, Gene Hackman
survive disaster at sea with acting that
makes you wish they hadn't; Last
American Hero.
Varsity: The Great Gatsby - Robert
Redford and Mia Farrow in unsatisfying
adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel.

Dawn, Aug. 24; The Guess Who, Aug.
25; The 5th Dimension, Aug. 26; Charley
Pride, Aug. 29; Charlie Rich, Aug. 31.
Tickets from usual Seattle ticket outlets.
Arena: Charley Pride - Thursday Aug.
8 at 8 p.m. Tickets from four dollars fifty
cents. The Fifth Dimension with Bloodstone, Aug. 27 at 8:30p.m. Tickets from
four dollars.
Royal Brougham Theatre: Woody Herman and his band - A~. 2 at 8 p.m.
On stage
Opera House: New london Ballet with
Margot Fonteyn, Aug. 20 and 22 at 8
p.m.; Seesaw, Broadway musical starring
John Gavin and Lucie Arnaz. Aug. 27, 28
and 29. Inquire for times.~
TACOMA
In concert
UPS Field House: Bachman Turner Overdrive - Tonight, Aug. 1 at 8 p.m.
PO RUANO
Cinema

In Concert
Pacific Coliseum: The Pacific National
Exhibition is bringing its annual cavalcade
of stars beginning August 17 with the De
Franco Family, and ending with Wolfman
Jack and the Midnight Special on September 1. Others include: Lynn Anderson
and Ray Stevens, Aug. 18; Jim Nabors,
Aug. 21; John Denver, Aug. 22; Helen
Reddy, Aug. 23; Tony Orlando and

Fine Arts Cinema 21 : The White Dawn
-Warren Oates and Timothy Bottoms.
Movie House; King of Hearts.
In concert
Civic: Rick Nelson and the Stone Canyon Band - Thursday, August 8 at 8
p.m., Charlie Pride- Friday, Aug. 9 at 7
and 9 p.m.

SEAmE
Cinema
Uptown: The White Dawn - An Arctic
adventure starring Warren Oates and
Timothy Bottoms.
Music Box: Chinatown.
Cinerama: That's Entertainment - Film
dips from some of MGM's most popular
musicals. With Gene Kelly, Donald
O'Conner and others.
Seattle 7th Ave.: Mr. Majestyk Charles Bronson.
August 1, 1974

DillY DIVE'S GAY 90's
SAVE~REESPAGHETTIDINNERI

ONE FREE SPAGHETTI DINNER
with the purdl• of one REGULAR
$2.00 SPAGHETTI DINNER'.
prlic ..._. but no Iliad.

HAPPY HOUR &-I Tu•. Wed.
4045 Pacific. Coupon Expires 8/15/74
Phone 456-1560
15

~The fuel crisis

willrequ!re

sollle · ce
by all ~~~s."
After-tax oil profits-1973
(millions of dollars) ·
First
nine
months
of 1973

Percentage
increase
over
1972

Exxon
Mobil
Texaco
Gulf
Standard Calif.
Standard Indiana
Shell
Continental
Atlantic-Richfield

1,656
571
839
570
560
390
253
153
178

59.4
38.3
34.9
60.1
39.7
32.2
40.6
23.4
36.9

Total all nine
All oil companies

5,170
52,500

45.2
30.3

Well, alntost all
Tired of paying for the oil industry's mistakes? Do
something about it. Write your elected representatives and insist on an energy policy based' on public
need, not corporate greed.

ENERGY SHOUlD BE EVERYBODY'S BUSINESS