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Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 4, Number 4 (October 16, 1975)
- extracted text
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the
URNAL
evergreen
state
college
Olympia , Waslwlgton 98505
Volume IV Number 4
October 16, 1975
CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATES ON CAMPUS
by Ga ry P la tz and Rick Skadan
Fleetwood Mac
on Warner Bros. /
reprise records
ALBUMS
&
Tape
Eco n om ics a nd e n e rgy were th e s ubj ects
th a t dom inated di sc ussio n a t th e s pecial
Co n g r ess io n a l For um - fea tu r ing a ll
seve n o f Was hin g t o n ' s Co n g re ssio na l
d e lega tes held Wedn esday ni g h t at
Eve r gree n in th e mai n lobby of th e
libra r y.
The event , co-spllnsored by Evergree n
and t h e Thur·, t un Co unty l eag ue of
Women Vo ters , a ttra c te d a large c r o wd
th a t inclu de d seve ra l s tate o ffi cia ls a nd
repre,e nt a ti ves and ot h er loca l po li ti ca l
fig u res T h e Evergreen ap p eara n ces was
th e fo ur th Si0 P by t he Co n g ressmen o n
th e ir l our-dav t o ur throu g h Wash in gto n
.1nd is the <l nl y pu b lic for um in cluded in
Ihl' ir e ig h t- c it y visit th roug h th e s t a te.
,\ Iter in tilldu c tor y rema rks b y Everg rL'l'n prc<; ici ent ChMles McCa nn , Re p, '
I), 'n I~,' nker , the new est member o f the '
llln)!re<;'"> io n ..1i delq;Ll ti n n and represe ntatrv(' Ir olm thl' Thi rd Di,trict of w hi ch
l )Ivrnp r..l i, ..l p..lrl , 'Ll id tne purpose of the
I,'rum ,md " I Ihl' tnur wa<; tn " hea r what
" "ll 111ll' I' l'''I,!ct h ..lVe to ~ay a n d a nswer
" 'lll ljUl"t!l'n~ .
Illlnke r sa id th e Co n hrl','r1l l'll '''-'..Inted to dev tlt l' mnst of th eir
11111,· 1" ,111,,,'I' n ng Cj ll l'sl i,'n s a nd th at th"y
,1,,1
rNmGY, ECONOMICS DOMINATE
l PnLl' rn \l Vl'r thl' '"> tat t' 0 1 th e econ omy
.I ill I tlw C llng re" i"n il l res pon se to thi s
l)r,,['I,'n) w .." d L'ml1 nQra ted several times
h,' I1ll ' lllbel' " I t lw ..lUdi e n ce. Ma n y
qlll', II, ' n , were ..Iddr e~se d t l' Hr ock
:\d.1 Il)' (h,lIrman " I th e p owe rful H o u se
Il ud gl' t (tlmml t lee.
1," 1 1,1 I'1:.;lrl
.\ 1,'," /'
357-4755
Positively 4th St.
I1I<tllt"i
(I.'Ilke MC~""Il1(k . Ols ll' lel -1 : DOli BOllker, Dist ric t 3; LIn ,lit I
~
,\dam, m ..lde CleM Iris d,,,at ,s fac ti on
\\,Ith : hl' r'ort! aclll1ill,.,tr ..1ti(lIl ' ~ hJndl ing 01
Ihl' L'(()nllmi( ~i l ll,ltilll) a nd sa id he did
11 (It IlkL' th ,> ,,'ay t he ('cOIll)mv h as bee n
nl.ln,lgl'd .."n n' 10 70 and Ih a l hI' wantl'd
1(1 Il'turn t" Ihe I'rmplOrily "I Ihe 10 60 's."
l\dar1l " a Deillocral , d ~ are all the
dt'll'g,ltl" PXll'pt lOl' l f'r itc h,lrd . .,d id hl'
"'l"
tlw lalk "I dlc(lrd between Congres',
.Intl l're~ ldl'll t F.'rd ..1' t i,t' mdjor <,t umblini!
blnl k prr'vl'nlin~~ IlH',lI1ingtul economic
1".)1(\' ulmin)' ,'ut "I tht' gove rnmen l. Hl'
"(lid
Il·g l .... l~ll ll ln
IlIl
co ns ide ri n g provi ding fin a ncia l s upport
for m o n ey -tr oub led New ' Yo rk C it y, but
did n ot ru le o ut th e po ss ibi l it y of
pro vid in g s u c h s upport in the futu re after
a n .i nves tiga ti o n of th e c ity's pro bl e m s.
Re p. Ll oyd Meeds fr om Ev e r e tt s t resse d
th e n ee d for crea ting pu b li c se r vice job, to
he lp ~ t imul a l e t he econ o m y, b'.I1 s a id
muc h m ore th a n t ha i is need ed to solve
eCllnomic p rob le m s.
'' In a ddition 10 th e crea t ion of public
.,e r viet? jobs, we need to s timulate th e
eco n omy ," Meeds said. " In thi s type L) I
eco n e)m y, t he pr iva te sector mus t bea r a
large b urde n in pr clV iding jobs."
O n e idea Meeds has t o h e lp the
econ(lmy i ~ b y s p onso rin g a bi ll - alo ng
w ith S en. H enr y Jack son
th at wo u ld
c r e<lle a Yo un g Adul t s Co n serva tion
Co rp s. Thi~ latte r -day version 01 the old
Civil ia n Co nserv ation Cnrrs 01 the 1930's
wou ld prov id e yea r-rou nd jobs for men
and women betwee n the ages 0 1 19 dnd
23.
Rep ub lican Prit c ha rd sta ted tha t the
most impo rt a n t prob lem facing t he n at ion
i<; th at of inllation .
''Not hin g ca n b e so lved witho u t ge t t ing
a ha n d le o n in fla ti o n ," sa id Prit c h ard , and
wen l on to say that con cern wi t h soc ia l
legis la t io n has to ta k e a b ac k seat to th e
in fl at ion p rob le m . H is fe ll ow d e lega tes
co n c u r red wi t h h im o n thi s s ubject.
McCORMACK ON ENERGY
Mu d e r a t or Macleod i n form e d th ~
a ud ience th at Bonker h as a n noun ced he is
co -s po nsorin g a bi ll th a t wou ld prov ide a
('Li.lnnmic
nl(lttl'rr.;
i..,
,,'II,tllutlnnallv Ihe re~pI1n'ibrli l y of
( (\ "~rL'" ,Jnd Ih"t h1rd I, hin dering rather
th"n helpln)' I1ldttl'r'.
III ,1n"vt'r II' ,1I1(>lher qUl' <; l lll n , Ad a Ill ~
~ ,lId th,11 Congress is not al thi., tim e
l ive-yea r mor ..It o riu m on the canst ru c t iun
o i nu c lear puwer pIJnt <; , an J nnouncell'1l'nt I h at wa~ gree ted by c hecr; from
a udience . 13,'n~ er s<l i cI, " Th e ball ,..,
necc".,ary until Wt' all s wer <II I tIl('
qUl's l iun<, a buut Ihe II UlkM planh ."
I~t'p . M ik e McCormack. c h a ir man p(
t he Lner~y R e~eJ rc h J nd Devl' lopmpn t
l\dmini<;tr<Jl illn subcomil) ittec a nd out<; pnk en pr ('ponct 01 nu clear enlrgy
d"d grl'l' d With l3l'nkl'l <; , t.lIld ,Ind do,h.~'d
him to jl11 1l till' re q "I Ihe VVas hington
dl'll'g ..1tlnn In their suppl1rt (11 nucll'dr
1,1 ,1l1h.
~1( l llrm..lck demono,tr.ltl'd hi, I",perti,l'
(In the ,u bjl' Ll when he dc'livl'red ,1
1 5~m inllt(' 'pI 'l'c h in dl'len~(' 01 nu c ll ',ll"
pUIA/ t'r.
T h e lL1JirJilll ha , cha n ged its face again. hom
d
Lefl 10 RIF: II I : Brock Ada"l s. Dist ric t 7; Fl oyd Hicks , D rst rlct 6· To m Fo/ f'Y·
Dlstrld 5
H l' began by pni n t in g ou t th a t th e
wo rl d hd ~ pa ssed l rom the e r a of
"db und a n l a nd c h eap lu e!> to a n era 0 1
s h or ta ge a nd high pF ices," Becau se of thi s,
hp s;:I id , a lt e rna ti ve S'1 UITes of e ne rgy
must b e found a nd , in h is o pinion ,
nu clea r e n l' r gy is th e o il l y prac ti cal
<ll tern<1 ti vc.
MILITARY SPEND IN G AND OTHER
ITEMS
Rep. Floyd Hicks , a memher of the
Armed Serv ice Comm i Lce , said t h e
bud ge t for t he m ilit a r y " may be cu t a
little bi t moP! , b ut not s ubs t an tia ll y." He
said th at th e military budgel cou ld have
t he eff ect e)1 increas ing in,tab ilit y in the
M iddl e E.lst.
"We' re t rying tn do till' lw'i we can to
hrin g SLll1)l' 'iemblancc ul st dbiht y tll the
Midd le Ed, t ,' said Hi ck.,.
13 0nke r ,1 1" , agreed e'n Ihe imp ortance
"I kl'l'p ing PCd(l' III Ihe ~1i dd)P Ed,!.
<;dvin g , " It i., imp"rt..lnt t o main tai n a
billame u l p,'wL' r' III thl' Middle East. .
Dl)nkn h"wl'ver . IV,]., ,1t a lo'iS tor
word<; e,H I in in the p r ugra m . \;\' hl'n
queslilllll'd ,1~ til whethe r h e wou ld
suppll rl ..I bill intruduced by New York
r epre~entativl' Bel la Abzug providing
equal ri gh ts Il'r Gay p('()pic , a lt er ,llille
hesi tatilill he rt'p li l'd that he wou ldn ' t , ..I
reS pl'n Sl' th<lt received sC Jttered app la u se
t rnlll the ,llIdl enct?
A Inp ic Ihdt .,urp ri ~ i llgly d id n ot (ome
up un til nea r the e nd o f t he larum was
th at o f th e A lp ine LCl kes Wilderlle~s Area
c ontrover sy. Meeds received app lause
w hen he said it was essen tial to preserve
that a r ea
01 ten known a~ the
"W;]shing t on Alps"
locJted be tween
S teven s a nd Sn llqu a lmi e pa sses, H e sa id
he hopecl a bill on the s ubj ec t cou ld b e
Int rod uced thi s ye.J r and if Wils hin g lon's
c ()ngrl'ssillnal de !ega tl lln co uld reach an
unanimous decisi L'n nn the delai ls a bou t
the pmposed Mea ', ~ I Le, the b ill cou ld
pro babl y gn thrllu gh Congre'i'i easilv .
:v1c( orma c k re'l p l' nded bv saying he
IdVll!"' ..I slightly sma ller , izl' IlIr the
wilderJw<,<; area ,/I"l d ex prp'i',ed hi , COn(l'rn
,1bllut the potent i,, 1 I,,, , ot j(1b, in the
timher' indu,try " 1\1el,d< version III Ih('
wildl'rIle'i'i MP,I bill gill Ihrnu g h Longrt.'o;<,
II L,wcvl'r, h e did SJY he s upported the
idea 0 1 c rea t ing a wi lderness a rea: he ju st
wa llt s it to be s m a ller ,
W he n asked why Co n g l es~ ha., nol
tJke n a more asse r tive sta nd e)n the issue
0 1 Indi an fi s h ing rig ht s, Meed s replied
th a t Con gress has little or no Juthorrty 10
..le t in that matter , thai interpretation of
tr e,Jt i e~ i, the r espo n s ibili ty l't the
judi c ia ry . He .,aid though , that t he
Cn llgre s,men wou ld be meel in g '\'Ith
ti ~ herm en , :'<Jalive-American s and repre'L' n ta ti vc', u l the sta t£' Dcpartmen l ., "l
Fis lll'ries and Gamp Fnda~, On , 17 tn
d i sLu~" Ihl' prub lem ,lnd tl' d isc us., ",hat
Lan bL' d"ne tn rcli('\,(' thl' cha,,' In till'
li,l1l'rieo, ill the PaCi fic :-\"rth\\'c,t .
!\ ., I J I' d ., any ,) n e I... n 0 IV , U r ( ,1 n
rl'lllL'mbl'r, thl' I, the Ilr't tlllll' ,1Ii cd
\'\ ,..,h'llgt()n' l lIngrl''';Il!],11 dl'le g, I: ,'"
h,I \:I' (,,'l'r ,I" il" ,1r.yth , ni: IlkI' thl' IC1l,' ,lI,
ullprc' Ll, dentL' d l'ven!
fhdl il"" :'111),
o, lI r pri,ing "',1 ' ',IILI i.lq IIl ghl pLT h.JI"
duc"n ' t 111,1It('(" II, 'ill' thi1ught ri',ll
l {lllnt ...
mimeographed s heet ca lled the " Weakl y (D )/{ag " w ith th e headline, " Newspaper, Need~
W New"" Il) a live-co lumn tab lo id cal led "T he Paper" to the magazine-fo rmat (pony-tab) Cooper Poilit lormlal , th e paper h as come a lm os t
o
«
U.
>
>
W
Z
W
:I
t-
lull c ircle with thi ., w('ek'~ re turn to tabloid format. (Next week , we m ay become a mimeogr<lphed s heet .. )
Money , or rJ t her the I.llk ot money , prompted the sw it c h . It costs th l' I(Jl/mal (and ,tudenh, ~ince we are p..lrtially lunaI'd through
S& A m ('nie~) between 523 a nd 526 ex tra every week to have the paper p r inted · tr immed in the ma gaz in e formal. Thai works out to $100
.J month , 5300 a quar te r and $900 a year III addition to the regular press cha rges, However , true to Parkin son 's law ("the bill, a lway.,
l'xc('eci the incoming revenm'''), th e money wi ll be qu ickly dbso r bed by bills ,
Td[, form"t <1l so a ll ows grea t versa tilit y In la you t. Th e five -co lumn standard layo ut can be easi ly a ltered tll become four. three or t wo
co lumn s thelt ca n be mixed t oget her in innumerab le comb inations . And , because of the larger pa ges, photos and drawi ngs can be run big
eno ugh to do them jus t ice. W hen th e q ual it y pi grap hi c reproduct ion on new sprint is taken into cons ideration , th at's no mean advantage.
I Iowever, ,ume aspect s of Ihe o ld fo rm at. fir~ t adopted because it was innova ti ve, n eater, and a t that time , c heap have been retained .
The "cnver" mode , alo n g with a fl'aturis ti c news s tyle , have been retained.
Re ad on .
CONTENTS
O lvmpia Jar!
Apples
Ted Gundy
letters
Ca reer P lanning
[llll'ltdillllll'nl
Commulllty
Scu lpture
pg
pg
pg
pg
PY.
pg
pg
pg
2
J
3
>1
4
6
6
7
3
A NIGHT IN THE OLYMPIA JAIL
by Cary Plautz
According to the precepts of the
", -cal led " new j0urnalism, " a writer
cannot accurately convey the depth and
detail of a subject without experiencing
t he subject. at least in part. That used to
sou nd all well and good to me until it got
put 0f hand and I found myself locked in
the Olympia jail overnight "fo r the
expenence.
Henry David Thoreau once spent a
night in jail. I did too. Thoreau emerged
I n'm wnfinement with philosophic and
n1l'ral conclusions about the state of
justice in the United States. I did that
a lso. However. Thoreau spent his time in
jail IN wha t he felt were noble reasons his fa ilure to pay taxes he knew went to
<upport an imperialistic war in Mexico
and slavery at home . Such noble criteria
did nl't prc>mpt my choice to spend a
night in the clink: I went to jail on
cl'nnel..,, · .l ~"" ;l an investigation of
lou r~IZlTv .
[kt<'re J go on much further , the
ruq' <',e of this article is not to conden:1n
Olvl r pi~ ' s po lice department. It is ,
im tead . intended to be kind of a n
advance warning to you people out there
s<, \'l' U wi ll know what to expect if one
day v<'u tno are a guest of the city for a
night .
T hursdav . Oct. 9 . at about 11 :30 pm . I
"as at my friend John 's house. John's
rc' ommate called at 11: 45. ask ing us to
pi ck him up at a house between Puget
,1nd State Streets . T he address to this
Ill'll,e was not given . About 30 minutes
,1ttn :he call. we lett. .
The re \\'a s d house with li ght, on in the
.H e.l de,cr ibed bv Il,hn 's roomate . John
. "
,'Ui 01 th e car a nd knocked on the
d"l' r \ \'hen there wa s no an swer . he . as
," '<' metim es 00f' S. opened the house
j",'r .J nd wa lked in . calling the name ot
111_ r,' nmate aloud. I walked up to the
Jw rch. Coincidentally and ironica ll y . just
,It the time we d ro ve up . the owner of the
Iwu sl' al so dro ve up and came in the back
J,'c'r. The first thing ht' sa'", was lohn in
the trc' nt room . ca ll ing h ' r his roommate .
It IVas ob vio usly th~ wrong house. and
I"hr, Ex pla in ec! hi , mistakr to the man .
\\ ho was nc,w very angry . most ly at his
", ife fo r leavin g the front door unlocked.
Thinkin g everything was a ll right. we
ieft in Jo hn's car and in five minutes,
found the house where John·s '. roommate
\\'as. Afte r abl'u t 20 minutes . w'e left, but
as lohn walked on to Stat e . he saw his car
being towed dway . He caught up with it
and asked the dr iver why hi s car was
bein g t o wed away. Two Olympia
po licemen then appeared and told him it
wa s because the keys had been left in the
19nition and that the car represented a
'traffic hazard. " Okay.
Standing around the police car, we
heard a description come across the police
radio . It vaguely fit John. so the cop got
out of his car a nd told John to lean
against the car and began frisking him .
Then he told me to get against the car,
and did the same to me. All this time,
John's roomma te was frantically asking
the tight-lipped police what the problem
was, politely asking in a way that almost
got him thrown in jail too . Finally, as
they began putting handcuffs on us, they
told us we were being held on
investigation of burglary. Despite our
protestations of innocence, into the back
seat of the police car we were thrown and
sped off to City Hall.
JAILBIRDS AT LAST
Being held for a felony or investigation
of a felony is strange . It is unlikely any ot
you people reading this article will ever
be arrested on felony charges in
Olympia . At worst, you'll get busted on
some misdemeanor and never have to
spend any time in jail. But that's what I
thought before, too,
City Hall at 2 am is also strange, They
told us to sit on the floor while they
completed their preliminary paperwork on
u s. While this happened, there was not
much to do except watch a county
sheriff's deputy give a sobriety test to a
young fell ow .
After the handcuffs were removed, we
push-ups and sit-ups in my cell.
were st ill watched closely . They questionFinally , it was time for questioning. A
ed us . sepa rately , and let us make one
detective, who called me "so n", came to
phone call. if we wished. Then,
my cell and paraded me past several
everything was taken out of o ur pockets
sec retaries to his office. We got along
and they took a tho rough inventory of
okay. A detecti ve, after all. got to where
our possess ions and money, After one
he or she is because of at least a moderate
very, very thorough frisk that leaves no
amount of brains. He ga ve me a cigarette
stone unturned on your body, we were
a nd only tried to cross me up a co uple
sent into the inner sanct ums of jail.
times in questioning. Most of the time he
The first person that greeted us was the
looked tired and so mewhat bored and
tru stee of the jail (I th ought they o nly had
maybe even a lit tle pissed-off at hi s fellow
tru stees at the biggies like Monroe and
off icers for haVing brought people to jail
Wa ll a Wa ll a). He looked to be in hi s late
who were obviously innocent. But th e
twentie; and was wearing a w hit e jump
fear return ed when I asked him what had
suit pulled dow n to hi s waist. He threw
been sto len from the house. He said,
me a towel and told me to take a shower.
"Nothing . but that doesn't matter ." and
After thdt . they made me dust myself
led me back to my cell.
with sc'rne kind of lice powder, not
A person hea rs sto ri es - o r reads in
becau se they wanted to protect me , but
books
- about ha rsh jail-masters. I did
rather becall,e they wan ted to protect
not
think
a nythin g like that happened in
their cells.
punk-town jails like Olympia's. But there
The baggy . in stitutional jump su it is the
he was, an unif o.rmed cop , calling
cicothing they gave me and after I figured
prisoners "a nimal s" and generally verbally
cout how to put it on. they led me into a
harrassing people. When I was to be let
ce ll and. of course. locked the door. It
out at last, he came to the cell and asked
was not as bad as I envisioned. The cell is
my name. I sa id "Cary", a nd he began a
approximately eight feet long, six feet
tirade, saying. "I don't give a fuck what
wide and twelve feet in height. There is a
your fucking first name is, whatza matter
bed wit h blanket and bedspread and three
with you?" Ah yes, who says Evergreentowe ls. Prisoners also have a combination
ers never experience the "real world."
toilet / sink and a roll of toilet paper.
We were out after_l0 hours in jail. But
There is not much to do in a cell except
no t before we were finger-print ed and had
to lay in bed (John was not so for~unate,
our mug shots taken (the cop sa id not to
however. as they threw him in the drunk
worry because this was not going on our
tank which was equipped with a hard
records; the prints were taken so they
bench and. no blankets) . . Time is a very
could identify us if we were ever found
nebulous factor in jail. A light shines all
dead by the side of the road). Then,
the time and night and day have no
without "an apology from the po lice, we
meaning. About all one can do is sleep,
were set free, and about a block from
My dreams (I drempt that night of dogs
City Hall, John and I began plotting
and cats that talked and co-existed with
revenge.
ot her animals. I woke up not remembering where I was and finally , for the first . 'iii:;;;~§;;a~11
time, bega n to feel a surge of fearl were I:
interupted by breilkfast. The trustee
brought in inst itu,tiG'nal food consisting of
two fried egp" -~ one with salt and one
' without - unsalted shoestring potatoes
and two soggy pieces of toast. I choked
that down with water and waited, doing
AN APPLE K·N OCKER'S JOURNAL
Fir51 published 10 /17 / 74.
So what does this mean to me? My
time in jail was so short that to have
learned so mething profo und about repression in institutions would be seIfdeceiving. It is evident that without a
drastic change in socie ty and relations
between people, a policing force will
always be around , and when people are
murdered and rap ed everyday. this
policing force is necessary . But until these
police understand their ro le - until our
society's lead ers understan d their role that lS. to help people rather than hara ss
them unnecessa ril y, co nditions will no t
ge t better.
One final note. It wasn't all fun an
games and "an int eres ting experience" for
us. Though we did not have to pay bail
o r a nythin g, John's car was impounded ,
]c,hn 's dog was imprisoned a nd we
received the two "par king tickets. " T ota l
cos t for our breakfasts and free bed was
$35
DO!1 ' t wa lk into a ny houses uninvited .
rorl SALE - sma ll "Id ga lley
, t,'ve s. Sanl oro &. S" n . 2103 E. 4th.
Jtl('rnol l n~ .
by John Dodge
October moves across the Northwest scene, bringing
images of a changing season. October can mean foggy
mornings and rainy afternoons, autumn foliage and Indian
summe r days . garden fresh corn and ripening pumpkins .
And in Central Washington October is synonymo us with
app le harvest time. Johnny Appleseed's odyssey fell short of
Washington soil. But the apple seed arrived and folks , the
app le's here to stay.
Apples are big business in the Evergreen State: Nation wide. Washington consistently ranks first in total apple pro duction. Washington growers, co ncentrating on the popul ar
Red a nd Golden Delicious varieties, produced 887,500 tons
in 1974. Statistics released by the Washington Crop and
Livestock Reporting Service est ima te thi s' year's harvest wi ll
approac h 950.500 tons. an increase of nine percent over
1974.
Da w l1 co III ('5 5lil1killg acr055 th e horizon. thick and grey
at th e edge5 . peelil1g back th e October l1ight. I wake L.p in
"Iy migrant labor cabin . climb out of bed and into my dirly .
5weat- stail1ed work clothes. I stoke Ih e woodstove fire. start
til!' coffee brewillg and stretch my aching, apple-pickil1g
muscles . I stare o ut al1 icy w il1dow Ol1 to a vi5 ta of frozen
apple trees . sll'etclll'l1g pa51 my v ision. The 5un ha5 yet to
ciillib above the East W€11alchee Flat5 . But Elmer the 01'cllardisl i5 already wide awake al1d roaming through his be loved orchard He '5 checking tllermomeler5 5trategically
placed 011 free trul1k5 . Some read twenty-eight degrees ;
other5 Iwel1ty-six degrees. He kl10ws we 'lI ha ve 10 wait ul1til
at lea5t eigl ll o 'clock to 5tart pirkil1g. Apple5 picked while
still fmzen brui5e ea5ily . di5color and suffer cellular breakdo w lI (tum 10 mL.sh). Then who wan ts th em? .
(Apple-Kl1o cker 's Jouma/)
It takes human hands to harvest the crop; lot s of them.
Was hingto n State employment off icia ls estimate 12.000 laborers are at work harvesting the crop. The Central Washington pear a nd app le o rchards rep resen t the northern-most
point on the migrant labor fruit circuit , and the last opportunity at fr uit harvest labor before the citrus fruit ripens in
A rizona and Florida in early winter. Jobs have become increas ingly compe titive in high yield orchards and in recent
years a labor surplus has developed.
The eco nomics of migrant labor work are simple: pay acco rd ing to production. An ex perienced picke r fills approxi mately seve n bins (twenty-five boxes per bin) during a full
day", work. At six doll a rs a bin , the hard-working picker
may make forty dollars a day. There are exceptions; an
Associated Press article last week featured an apple picker
in Wenatchee who is filling up to twenty-one bins per day!
His advice to the amateur seeking to be a master picker is to
"make every move count" and "never stop. "
Bin prices are arbitrary, set by the individual orchardist
and surprisingly stable over the years. While the Teamster's
Union and the United Farm Workers undertake active campaigns to unionize farm labor in California and the Southwest , migrant laborers in Washington orchards remain independent of unionization attempts.
Until the 1970's, apple picking was typically the task of
mobile white migrants , Mexican-American citizens and illegal immigra nts from Mexico. (It is important to distinguish
An apple 1"1"1". bel1ch . ubiquitou5 patch of concrete alld ... a dWl1pster .. . on campU5 .
between the illega l immigrant from sout h of the border and ery bin pjcked by the laborers un der her control. The Mexth e U.S. cit izen of Mexican heritage.) The most notable icanos were discouraged from takin g trips to town for fea r
change in the las t fiv e yea rs has been the influ x of young of running afoul of immigration officia ls or local authori ties.
people from middle class backgrounds who take to the or- They had work but were virtually confined to their migrant
chards for th e expe rience, for economic reasons, or both. labor camps .
The new breed of picker has been well received . by most orTwo weeks ago . the U.S. Immi gration Se rvi ces comp leted
chard owners and fellow pickers. In most cases, the tradi- one of the largest deportation actions in Washington hi sti onal migra nt laborer feels little concern ove r job secu rity. tory. Working in the Nac hes-Yakima region , authorit ie,
Oftentimes, he returns year after year to the same orchard . rounded up 637 Mexican aliens , many of them en tire fam even the same migra nt cabin.
ilies. They were in the valley picking apples.
Ambivalence toward the youthful laborer seems to disapTh e 5 LIPI i5 5lipping bellind the Cashmere Valley ridgelil1 e
pear from the rela tionship between the veteran migra nt la- I'v e jU5t slarted pickil1g my 51xth bil1 of apple5 011 Ihi5 Illd ial1
borer and the Mexican a lien . My personal observations in summer day. A5 th e 5UI1 5et5. row after ro w of apple trees
thO? Cashmere-Wenatchee area point to feelings of racism are rescued fmm the sun '5 glare and placed i'1 cool 5hadows.
and bitterness toward illega l immigrants by many fruit ha r - My swea ty face begill5 to dry. The tractor u5ed to move til e
vesters and certain orchardists.
bi'15 idle5 behi,1d me. In a ' Jeighb orin g orchard . a ladder
For example: Older migrants complain among themselves tonglle clang5 against til e alumil1um rungs . I'm j1l5t beilil1 of the increased migration of Mexican aliens to the Cash- ning to fee l my 5econd wind.
mere Valley. They charge that Mexican aliens should "stay
I'll fi,1ish my sixt h bin mId call it a day . I'll walk ba ck to
down in Yakima Valley where they belong ." Some white my cabil1 , wash the dirt and insec licide5 off my face and
migrant s refuse to work alongside illegal immigrants. Others lrands, climb ill my car and 11 ead fo r low,l. I'll drink a beer
react with di sdain to the idea of "braceros" taking jobs from or two at the Club Tavem arId watch Jim tl1 e w ino engage
U.S. citizens. especia ll y in thi s time of high unemployment.
GU5 the gas statim1 attendant in th eir daily game o f billiards.
Orchardists react in individual ways to. the issue of hiring Tlle'l I'll 5tand I. p to leave . my leg5 moving reluctal1tly fr o m
Mexican aliens. Growers may hire Mexicanos exclusively my initial resling place of the l1ight . walk acro5s tire street
and pay them redu ced bin prices (five dollars instead of six). to b"y m y dinner grocerie5 . retur'l to my cabin and cook a
Certain growers hire aliens on an equal basis with white mi- '50 litary meal.
grants while others, wishing to remain clear of the contro(App le-Kl1 ocker5 Joumal)
versy, refuse to hire illegal aliens_
.
By the end of October, the apple harvest grinds to a halt.
Groups of Mexicanos are brought to Washington from The apples are sorted, packaged and tucked away in con California by middlemen or "contractors ." Two years ago, I trolled atmosphere storage. The mi gra nt laborers cash their
knew of a case in which over one hundred Mexican aliens checks and hit th e road. The growers say a reverent "thank
were working in the Peshastin-Dryden area under the direct you" to Mother Nature for holdin g back the Arctic stor ms
control of one contractor. The contractor found her charges and killer frosts. The trees stand devoid of apples and lea fjobs and housing . In return she received one dollar from ev- less, 10'oking vulnerilble to the encroachment of Winter.
TED BUNDY: 1965
THE ONLY STORE
IN TOWN FEATURING
VINTAGE CLOTHES
Brew Specialties
SUPPLIES for BREWING
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Wllch tor our weekly minus posted at E'IergrMn . Try our vegltarlln pizza.
Sat. 6 - 10
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Tuesday - Friday open 11 to 9
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~JOURNAL
..
EDITOR
Ti Locke- FI~ming
MANAGING EDITOR
Gary Plautz
NEWS EDITOR
Chris Carroll
staff
PHOTOGRAPHY
Doug King
Ford Cilbreath
Kathleen Meighan
Louie Balukoff
GRAPHICS ,
Dexter Edge
LADIES & GENTLEMEN
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Ph_ 4St-8988
PRODUCTION
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ENTERT AINMENT
Gary Kaufman
NEWS STAFF
,-
Neil Marshall
Gary Kaufman
Bob Herron
John Dodge
Joe Morawski
Rain Capes
Rain Pants
Fenders
BUSINESS MANAGER
Jim Feyk
SECRETARY
Catherine Riddell
ADVERTISING
Nancy Connolly
Dan Kapsner
McLane Fire Department
wants YOU! Applications for student firefighters will be accepted
until Oct. 29th for testing Nov. 1st. Call 8666348 for details.
TYPESETTER _
Billie Cornish
PRINTER
fSf]ourrta1
The Journal news and business offices are located in the College Activities Building (CAB) rm. 306.
News phones: 866-6214. and -6213; advertising and business 866-6080.
.
Ted Bundy, left, with classmAtes in Wilson High Sr:hool in Tacoma_ Photo taken from
the 1965 NOVA, the Wilson High yearbook.
by Bob Herron
Donna Gail Manson disappeared from the campus of The
Evergreen State College the night of Tuesday, March 12,
1974, Her disappearance may be connected to a ser-ies of
murders, all I'lf young women, by a man with the first name
of "Ted_" The following story is not an accusation' that. the
"Ted" mentioned in this story is the same "Ted" that was
responsible for the disappearance of Donna Manson, It is
instead the story of a particular culture, the pressures that
motivate it, and the victims it c1aims_
I was surprised to find on the cover of the morning paper
the picture of a fellow I had vaguely known while in high
schooL There on the front page was Theodore R_ Bundy,
.
one of the mythical heroes of the senior class, a member of
the "In Crowd," whose cool I. a sophomore, had always
admired, arrested in Salt Lake City for kidnapping and
possible murder and a leading suspect in the infamous
"Ted" slayings.
Tum time back to 1965, that pre-flood, pre-hippie, pre protest period bef~re the effects of the social revolution, begun in Mississippi with the freedom riders, -had had time to
reach the backwaters of America in places like Tacoma,
Washington _ The place was Woodrow Wilson High School:
huge, sprawling, impersonal except for the favored few who
were good-looking, intelligent, athletic, wealthy, or in some
other way acceptable members of the "In ,C rowd." 1£ you
were a member you called yourself a " Soc" (short for socia])
and were proud of it. If you weren't, you were either a
"Greaser, " or just one of that gray , seem ingl y o ne-dimensional crowd who filled up the halls and classrooms but had
no school identity.
The competition among members of the ruling clique was
often intense. You had to wear nice clothes and own a car.
the fancier the better. Mike Brotman was cool, his father
bought him a new Thunderbird. Others were un coo!. th ey
walked to school. "Doing your own thing" was unheard of.
You did what you had been taught by your experiences to
do: conform to the accepted mode. Imagine then the frustration of those who wished to be cool and w ished to conform, who may even have had looks or physical prowess.
but whose parents cou ld not afford to buy them a car or to
dress them the way they felt they must.
For women, the efforts to be "in" must have been awesome. even for those already among the Select. For those on
the outside. the efforts to achieve even a foothold mu st
have at times approached sui cidal. I remember women who
drifted in and ou t of the "In Crow,d ," coasting on their
backs, for want of other access. What psychological torments must these trussed-up, garter laden . pre-liberation
women (liberation 1 That's something we did with bombers. )
have experienced? What triumphs? What lasting defeats?
What victims could they have been of the male "Soc" whose
popularity depended on their charm, their looks. what their
father did for a living, or how often they could score?
This article is not an accusation that Ted Bundy was the
same person who is under investigation for the disappearances of linda Ann Healy, Susan Raincourt. Roberta Kathleen Parks, Brenda Ball, Janice Ott, Denise Marie Naslund
and Donna Manson . I am not a detective _ I am. however,
concerned that maladjusted people exist in this society that
are not being helped. Many don't even know how to ask.
And if they ask, how many of us will listen 7 These people
come in a variety of forms, from a variety of backgrounds.
One may even have gone to my alma mater, Woodrow Wilson High School in Tacoma, Washington, been a member of
a much-envied "In Crowd," and conformed to pressures he
could not resist.
Could "Ted" have been Ted Bundy? I don't know. Could
Donna Manson have been you ?
3
A NIGHT IN THE OLYMPIA JAIL
by Cary Plautz
According to the precepts of the
", -cal led " new j0urnalism, " a writer
cannot accurately convey the depth and
detail of a subject without experiencing
t he subject. at least in part. That used to
sou nd all well and good to me until it got
put 0f hand and I found myself locked in
the Olympia jail overnight "fo r the
expenence.
Henry David Thoreau once spent a
night in jail. I did too. Thoreau emerged
I n'm wnfinement with philosophic and
n1l'ral conclusions about the state of
justice in the United States. I did that
a lso. However. Thoreau spent his time in
jail IN wha t he felt were noble reasons his fa ilure to pay taxes he knew went to
<upport an imperialistic war in Mexico
and slavery at home . Such noble criteria
did nl't prc>mpt my choice to spend a
night in the clink: I went to jail on
cl'nnel..,, · .l ~"" ;l an investigation of
lou r~IZlTv .
[kt<'re J go on much further , the
ruq' <',e of this article is not to conden:1n
Olvl r pi~ ' s po lice department. It is ,
im tead . intended to be kind of a n
advance warning to you people out there
s<, \'l' U wi ll know what to expect if one
day v<'u tno are a guest of the city for a
night .
T hursdav . Oct. 9 . at about 11 :30 pm . I
"as at my friend John 's house. John's
rc' ommate called at 11: 45. ask ing us to
pi ck him up at a house between Puget
,1nd State Streets . T he address to this
Ill'll,e was not given . About 30 minutes
,1ttn :he call. we lett. .
The re \\'a s d house with li ght, on in the
.H e.l de,cr ibed bv Il,hn 's roomate . John
. "
,'Ui 01 th e car a nd knocked on the
d"l' r \ \'hen there wa s no an swer . he . as
," '<' metim es 00f' S. opened the house
j",'r .J nd wa lked in . calling the name ot
111_ r,' nmate aloud. I walked up to the
Jw rch. Coincidentally and ironica ll y . just
,It the time we d ro ve up . the owner of the
Iwu sl' al so dro ve up and came in the back
J,'c'r. The first thing ht' sa'", was lohn in
the trc' nt room . ca ll ing h ' r his roommate .
It IVas ob vio usly th~ wrong house. and
I"hr, Ex pla in ec! hi , mistakr to the man .
\\ ho was nc,w very angry . most ly at his
", ife fo r leavin g the front door unlocked.
Thinkin g everything was a ll right. we
ieft in Jo hn's car and in five minutes,
found the house where John·s '. roommate
\\'as. Afte r abl'u t 20 minutes . w'e left, but
as lohn walked on to Stat e . he saw his car
being towed dway . He caught up with it
and asked the dr iver why hi s car was
bein g t o wed away. Two Olympia
po licemen then appeared and told him it
wa s because the keys had been left in the
19nition and that the car represented a
'traffic hazard. " Okay.
Standing around the police car, we
heard a description come across the police
radio . It vaguely fit John. so the cop got
out of his car a nd told John to lean
against the car and began frisking him .
Then he told me to get against the car,
and did the same to me. All this time,
John's roomma te was frantically asking
the tight-lipped police what the problem
was, politely asking in a way that almost
got him thrown in jail too . Finally, as
they began putting handcuffs on us, they
told us we were being held on
investigation of burglary. Despite our
protestations of innocence, into the back
seat of the police car we were thrown and
sped off to City Hall.
JAILBIRDS AT LAST
Being held for a felony or investigation
of a felony is strange . It is unlikely any ot
you people reading this article will ever
be arrested on felony charges in
Olympia . At worst, you'll get busted on
some misdemeanor and never have to
spend any time in jail. But that's what I
thought before, too,
City Hall at 2 am is also strange, They
told us to sit on the floor while they
completed their preliminary paperwork on
u s. While this happened, there was not
much to do except watch a county
sheriff's deputy give a sobriety test to a
young fell ow .
After the handcuffs were removed, we
push-ups and sit-ups in my cell.
were st ill watched closely . They questionFinally , it was time for questioning. A
ed us . sepa rately , and let us make one
detective, who called me "so n", came to
phone call. if we wished. Then,
my cell and paraded me past several
everything was taken out of o ur pockets
sec retaries to his office. We got along
and they took a tho rough inventory of
okay. A detecti ve, after all. got to where
our possess ions and money, After one
he or she is because of at least a moderate
very, very thorough frisk that leaves no
amount of brains. He ga ve me a cigarette
stone unturned on your body, we were
a nd only tried to cross me up a co uple
sent into the inner sanct ums of jail.
times in questioning. Most of the time he
The first person that greeted us was the
looked tired and so mewhat bored and
tru stee of the jail (I th ought they o nly had
maybe even a lit tle pissed-off at hi s fellow
tru stees at the biggies like Monroe and
off icers for haVing brought people to jail
Wa ll a Wa ll a). He looked to be in hi s late
who were obviously innocent. But th e
twentie; and was wearing a w hit e jump
fear return ed when I asked him what had
suit pulled dow n to hi s waist. He threw
been sto len from the house. He said,
me a towel and told me to take a shower.
"Nothing . but that doesn't matter ." and
After thdt . they made me dust myself
led me back to my cell.
with sc'rne kind of lice powder, not
A person hea rs sto ri es - o r reads in
becau se they wanted to protect me , but
books
- about ha rsh jail-masters. I did
rather becall,e they wan ted to protect
not
think
a nythin g like that happened in
their cells.
punk-town jails like Olympia's. But there
The baggy . in stitutional jump su it is the
he was, an unif o.rmed cop , calling
cicothing they gave me and after I figured
prisoners "a nimal s" and generally verbally
cout how to put it on. they led me into a
harrassing people. When I was to be let
ce ll and. of course. locked the door. It
out at last, he came to the cell and asked
was not as bad as I envisioned. The cell is
my name. I sa id "Cary", a nd he began a
approximately eight feet long, six feet
tirade, saying. "I don't give a fuck what
wide and twelve feet in height. There is a
your fucking first name is, whatza matter
bed wit h blanket and bedspread and three
with you?" Ah yes, who says Evergreentowe ls. Prisoners also have a combination
ers never experience the "real world."
toilet / sink and a roll of toilet paper.
We were out after_l0 hours in jail. But
There is not much to do in a cell except
no t before we were finger-print ed and had
to lay in bed (John was not so for~unate,
our mug shots taken (the cop sa id not to
however. as they threw him in the drunk
worry because this was not going on our
tank which was equipped with a hard
records; the prints were taken so they
bench and. no blankets) . . Time is a very
could identify us if we were ever found
nebulous factor in jail. A light shines all
dead by the side of the road). Then,
the time and night and day have no
without "an apology from the po lice, we
meaning. About all one can do is sleep,
were set free, and about a block from
My dreams (I drempt that night of dogs
City Hall, John and I began plotting
and cats that talked and co-existed with
revenge.
ot her animals. I woke up not remembering where I was and finally , for the first . 'iii:;;;~§;;a~11
time, bega n to feel a surge of fearl were I:
interupted by breilkfast. The trustee
brought in inst itu,tiG'nal food consisting of
two fried egp" -~ one with salt and one
' without - unsalted shoestring potatoes
and two soggy pieces of toast. I choked
that down with water and waited, doing
AN APPLE K·N OCKER'S JOURNAL
Fir51 published 10 /17 / 74.
So what does this mean to me? My
time in jail was so short that to have
learned so mething profo und about repression in institutions would be seIfdeceiving. It is evident that without a
drastic change in socie ty and relations
between people, a policing force will
always be around , and when people are
murdered and rap ed everyday. this
policing force is necessary . But until these
police understand their ro le - until our
society's lead ers understan d their role that lS. to help people rather than hara ss
them unnecessa ril y, co nditions will no t
ge t better.
One final note. It wasn't all fun an
games and "an int eres ting experience" for
us. Though we did not have to pay bail
o r a nythin g, John's car was impounded ,
]c,hn 's dog was imprisoned a nd we
received the two "par king tickets. " T ota l
cos t for our breakfasts and free bed was
$35
DO!1 ' t wa lk into a ny houses uninvited .
rorl SALE - sma ll "Id ga lley
, t,'ve s. Sanl oro &. S" n . 2103 E. 4th.
Jtl('rnol l n~ .
by John Dodge
October moves across the Northwest scene, bringing
images of a changing season. October can mean foggy
mornings and rainy afternoons, autumn foliage and Indian
summe r days . garden fresh corn and ripening pumpkins .
And in Central Washington October is synonymo us with
app le harvest time. Johnny Appleseed's odyssey fell short of
Washington soil. But the apple seed arrived and folks , the
app le's here to stay.
Apples are big business in the Evergreen State: Nation wide. Washington consistently ranks first in total apple pro duction. Washington growers, co ncentrating on the popul ar
Red a nd Golden Delicious varieties, produced 887,500 tons
in 1974. Statistics released by the Washington Crop and
Livestock Reporting Service est ima te thi s' year's harvest wi ll
approac h 950.500 tons. an increase of nine percent over
1974.
Da w l1 co III ('5 5lil1killg acr055 th e horizon. thick and grey
at th e edge5 . peelil1g back th e October l1ight. I wake L.p in
"Iy migrant labor cabin . climb out of bed and into my dirly .
5weat- stail1ed work clothes. I stoke Ih e woodstove fire. start
til!' coffee brewillg and stretch my aching, apple-pickil1g
muscles . I stare o ut al1 icy w il1dow Ol1 to a vi5 ta of frozen
apple trees . sll'etclll'l1g pa51 my v ision. The 5un ha5 yet to
ciillib above the East W€11alchee Flat5 . But Elmer the 01'cllardisl i5 already wide awake al1d roaming through his be loved orchard He '5 checking tllermomeler5 5trategically
placed 011 free trul1k5 . Some read twenty-eight degrees ;
other5 Iwel1ty-six degrees. He kl10ws we 'lI ha ve 10 wait ul1til
at lea5t eigl ll o 'clock to 5tart pirkil1g. Apple5 picked while
still fmzen brui5e ea5ily . di5color and suffer cellular breakdo w lI (tum 10 mL.sh). Then who wan ts th em? .
(Apple-Kl1o cker 's Jouma/)
It takes human hands to harvest the crop; lot s of them.
Was hingto n State employment off icia ls estimate 12.000 laborers are at work harvesting the crop. The Central Washington pear a nd app le o rchards rep resen t the northern-most
point on the migrant labor fruit circuit , and the last opportunity at fr uit harvest labor before the citrus fruit ripens in
A rizona and Florida in early winter. Jobs have become increas ingly compe titive in high yield orchards and in recent
years a labor surplus has developed.
The eco nomics of migrant labor work are simple: pay acco rd ing to production. An ex perienced picke r fills approxi mately seve n bins (twenty-five boxes per bin) during a full
day", work. At six doll a rs a bin , the hard-working picker
may make forty dollars a day. There are exceptions; an
Associated Press article last week featured an apple picker
in Wenatchee who is filling up to twenty-one bins per day!
His advice to the amateur seeking to be a master picker is to
"make every move count" and "never stop. "
Bin prices are arbitrary, set by the individual orchardist
and surprisingly stable over the years. While the Teamster's
Union and the United Farm Workers undertake active campaigns to unionize farm labor in California and the Southwest , migrant laborers in Washington orchards remain independent of unionization attempts.
Until the 1970's, apple picking was typically the task of
mobile white migrants , Mexican-American citizens and illegal immigra nts from Mexico. (It is important to distinguish
An apple 1"1"1". bel1ch . ubiquitou5 patch of concrete alld ... a dWl1pster .. . on campU5 .
between the illega l immigrant from sout h of the border and ery bin pjcked by the laborers un der her control. The Mexth e U.S. cit izen of Mexican heritage.) The most notable icanos were discouraged from takin g trips to town for fea r
change in the las t fiv e yea rs has been the influ x of young of running afoul of immigration officia ls or local authori ties.
people from middle class backgrounds who take to the or- They had work but were virtually confined to their migrant
chards for th e expe rience, for economic reasons, or both. labor camps .
The new breed of picker has been well received . by most orTwo weeks ago . the U.S. Immi gration Se rvi ces comp leted
chard owners and fellow pickers. In most cases, the tradi- one of the largest deportation actions in Washington hi sti onal migra nt laborer feels little concern ove r job secu rity. tory. Working in the Nac hes-Yakima region , authorit ie,
Oftentimes, he returns year after year to the same orchard . rounded up 637 Mexican aliens , many of them en tire fam even the same migra nt cabin.
ilies. They were in the valley picking apples.
Ambivalence toward the youthful laborer seems to disapTh e 5 LIPI i5 5lipping bellind the Cashmere Valley ridgelil1 e
pear from the rela tionship between the veteran migra nt la- I'v e jU5t slarted pickil1g my 51xth bil1 of apple5 011 Ihi5 Illd ial1
borer and the Mexican a lien . My personal observations in summer day. A5 th e 5UI1 5et5. row after ro w of apple trees
thO? Cashmere-Wenatchee area point to feelings of racism are rescued fmm the sun '5 glare and placed i'1 cool 5hadows.
and bitterness toward illega l immigrants by many fruit ha r - My swea ty face begill5 to dry. The tractor u5ed to move til e
vesters and certain orchardists.
bi'15 idle5 behi,1d me. In a ' Jeighb orin g orchard . a ladder
For example: Older migrants complain among themselves tonglle clang5 against til e alumil1um rungs . I'm j1l5t beilil1 of the increased migration of Mexican aliens to the Cash- ning to fee l my 5econd wind.
mere Valley. They charge that Mexican aliens should "stay
I'll fi,1ish my sixt h bin mId call it a day . I'll walk ba ck to
down in Yakima Valley where they belong ." Some white my cabil1 , wash the dirt and insec licide5 off my face and
migrant s refuse to work alongside illegal immigrants. Others lrands, climb ill my car and 11 ead fo r low,l. I'll drink a beer
react with di sdain to the idea of "braceros" taking jobs from or two at the Club Tavem arId watch Jim tl1 e w ino engage
U.S. citizens. especia ll y in thi s time of high unemployment.
GU5 the gas statim1 attendant in th eir daily game o f billiards.
Orchardists react in individual ways to. the issue of hiring Tlle'l I'll 5tand I. p to leave . my leg5 moving reluctal1tly fr o m
Mexican aliens. Growers may hire Mexicanos exclusively my initial resling place of the l1ight . walk acro5s tire street
and pay them redu ced bin prices (five dollars instead of six). to b"y m y dinner grocerie5 . retur'l to my cabin and cook a
Certain growers hire aliens on an equal basis with white mi- '50 litary meal.
grants while others, wishing to remain clear of the contro(App le-Kl1 ocker5 Joumal)
versy, refuse to hire illegal aliens_
.
By the end of October, the apple harvest grinds to a halt.
Groups of Mexicanos are brought to Washington from The apples are sorted, packaged and tucked away in con California by middlemen or "contractors ." Two years ago, I trolled atmosphere storage. The mi gra nt laborers cash their
knew of a case in which over one hundred Mexican aliens checks and hit th e road. The growers say a reverent "thank
were working in the Peshastin-Dryden area under the direct you" to Mother Nature for holdin g back the Arctic stor ms
control of one contractor. The contractor found her charges and killer frosts. The trees stand devoid of apples and lea fjobs and housing . In return she received one dollar from ev- less, 10'oking vulnerilble to the encroachment of Winter.
TED BUNDY: 1965
THE ONLY STORE
IN TOWN FEATURING
VINTAGE CLOTHES
Brew Specialties
SUPPLIES for BREWING
natural foods restaurant
Wllch tor our weekly minus posted at E'IergrMn . Try our vegltarlln pizza.
Sat. 6 - 10
LI.e Music
Tuesday - Friday open 11 to 9
Pizza night Sat. 6 - 10
~JOURNAL
..
EDITOR
Ti Locke- FI~ming
MANAGING EDITOR
Gary Plautz
NEWS EDITOR
Chris Carroll
staff
PHOTOGRAPHY
Doug King
Ford Cilbreath
Kathleen Meighan
Louie Balukoff
GRAPHICS ,
Dexter Edge
LADIES & GENTLEMEN
Wine Coffee Herb.
Beer Te8 Spicae
smrrn SOUND CRNTER
Ph_ 4St-8988
PRODUCTION
Danny Spearman
ENTERT AINMENT
Gary Kaufman
NEWS STAFF
,-
Neil Marshall
Gary Kaufman
Bob Herron
John Dodge
Joe Morawski
Rain Capes
Rain Pants
Fenders
BUSINESS MANAGER
Jim Feyk
SECRETARY
Catherine Riddell
ADVERTISING
Nancy Connolly
Dan Kapsner
McLane Fire Department
wants YOU! Applications for student firefighters will be accepted
until Oct. 29th for testing Nov. 1st. Call 8666348 for details.
TYPESETTER _
Billie Cornish
PRINTER
fSf]ourrta1
The Journal news and business offices are located in the College Activities Building (CAB) rm. 306.
News phones: 866-6214. and -6213; advertising and business 866-6080.
.
Ted Bundy, left, with classmAtes in Wilson High Sr:hool in Tacoma_ Photo taken from
the 1965 NOVA, the Wilson High yearbook.
by Bob Herron
Donna Gail Manson disappeared from the campus of The
Evergreen State College the night of Tuesday, March 12,
1974, Her disappearance may be connected to a ser-ies of
murders, all I'lf young women, by a man with the first name
of "Ted_" The following story is not an accusation' that. the
"Ted" mentioned in this story is the same "Ted" that was
responsible for the disappearance of Donna Manson, It is
instead the story of a particular culture, the pressures that
motivate it, and the victims it c1aims_
I was surprised to find on the cover of the morning paper
the picture of a fellow I had vaguely known while in high
schooL There on the front page was Theodore R_ Bundy,
.
one of the mythical heroes of the senior class, a member of
the "In Crowd," whose cool I. a sophomore, had always
admired, arrested in Salt Lake City for kidnapping and
possible murder and a leading suspect in the infamous
"Ted" slayings.
Tum time back to 1965, that pre-flood, pre-hippie, pre protest period bef~re the effects of the social revolution, begun in Mississippi with the freedom riders, -had had time to
reach the backwaters of America in places like Tacoma,
Washington _ The place was Woodrow Wilson High School:
huge, sprawling, impersonal except for the favored few who
were good-looking, intelligent, athletic, wealthy, or in some
other way acceptable members of the "In ,C rowd." 1£ you
were a member you called yourself a " Soc" (short for socia])
and were proud of it. If you weren't, you were either a
"Greaser, " or just one of that gray , seem ingl y o ne-dimensional crowd who filled up the halls and classrooms but had
no school identity.
The competition among members of the ruling clique was
often intense. You had to wear nice clothes and own a car.
the fancier the better. Mike Brotman was cool, his father
bought him a new Thunderbird. Others were un coo!. th ey
walked to school. "Doing your own thing" was unheard of.
You did what you had been taught by your experiences to
do: conform to the accepted mode. Imagine then the frustration of those who wished to be cool and w ished to conform, who may even have had looks or physical prowess.
but whose parents cou ld not afford to buy them a car or to
dress them the way they felt they must.
For women, the efforts to be "in" must have been awesome. even for those already among the Select. For those on
the outside. the efforts to achieve even a foothold mu st
have at times approached sui cidal. I remember women who
drifted in and ou t of the "In Crow,d ," coasting on their
backs, for want of other access. What psychological torments must these trussed-up, garter laden . pre-liberation
women (liberation 1 That's something we did with bombers. )
have experienced? What triumphs? What lasting defeats?
What victims could they have been of the male "Soc" whose
popularity depended on their charm, their looks. what their
father did for a living, or how often they could score?
This article is not an accusation that Ted Bundy was the
same person who is under investigation for the disappearances of linda Ann Healy, Susan Raincourt. Roberta Kathleen Parks, Brenda Ball, Janice Ott, Denise Marie Naslund
and Donna Manson . I am not a detective _ I am. however,
concerned that maladjusted people exist in this society that
are not being helped. Many don't even know how to ask.
And if they ask, how many of us will listen 7 These people
come in a variety of forms, from a variety of backgrounds.
One may even have gone to my alma mater, Woodrow Wilson High School in Tacoma, Washington, been a member of
a much-envied "In Crowd," and conformed to pressures he
could not resist.
Could "Ted" have been Ted Bundy? I don't know. Could
Donna Manson have been you ?
4
'WOMENWHO
MAKE MOVIES'
ENROLLMENT : UNDER
EV"rgrl'l'n's enwllmenl fo r fa ll quarter
i, 2.500. 78 sludents shorl of the predicted
1<111 ljuJrlt'r enro lim ent. Registrar Walker
Allen ,.l id Wednesday . Ocl. 15 .
Thl' tinal enrollment figures are
" .bsla ntiall y more than some people had
predictl'd. As la te as last week. rumors
I ha l Evergreen could be underenrolled by
,1' m..lny as 200 students abounded .
Las l Wednesday . Allen reported that
,'nly 2. 100 students had paid all their
tui!i'ln tees and were officially enrolled.
But an extension of the deadline for
tuition payments and a concerted effort
by the Registrar 's Office to contact people
\\,h., had not paid their fees resulted in a
la st minute rush of student payments late
lilst week .
However . because Evergreen is underenrolled . the school stands to lose part of
its 517(1 . 000 special operating budget
granted by the state through a "Contracted Enrollment " agreement the college
entered int o with the legislature and the
g,' vt'rnC" 'ro. ' .' ; ilgreement. the college
made a committment to have enrolled a
certain number of students for the school
vear . Since the college did not meet its
. en ro l lmen t commitment. part of this
money will be taken away.
Until the state Office of Program
Planning and Fiscal
Management
(OPPFM) receives the final enrollment
figures from Allen Friday and until
OPPFM has time to compute the figure~ ,
the amount of money Evergreen will lose
cannot be determined .
Commenting on the final enrollment
figures, Allen said. "It is not as good as
hoped for and not as bad as some people
feared."
A free, two -day workshop on " Women
Who Make Movies" will be staged October 21 and October 22 at The Evergreen
State College.
Featuring two women film-makers , the
sessions have been designed by Evergreen
faculty and staff women to explore all aspects of film production. Panel discussions. demonstrations of film-making
processes and techniques, explanation of
resources, and ' screening of films by and
about women are all part of the program
which will begin at-l0 a.m. October 21 in
the Evans Library Building, room Lib.
3500.
Allen said that this is the first time
Evergreen has be~n underenrolled .
However, Allen said, the enrollment
figures do not include 94 students who are
auditing classes . That fact and the fact
that eight per cent of Evergreen students
are enrolled only part-time (as contrasted
to a five per cent part-time rate last year)
shows an increased participation at the
college by people from the Olympia
community, said Allen.
SINGLE PARENT
WORKSHOPS
There are 201 part-time students this
year and 89 last year.
Allen said 19 per cent of the students
this year are non-residents of Washington,
which is down from the past years.
LETTERS
T" t he Editor :
To the Editor:
\\'e now knc'w who John WOO
I"
what he looks like, what he
"l'es . what he thinks and where
hl' lives ; but I feel that this is
not enough . My suggestion is to
cll' a supplement to the Cooper
!'"int Journal entitled "The life
and times of John Woo ," in
\\·hich we can learn all there is to
i-.nol\' about Mr. Woo.
Ii in your opinion a supplement is uncalled for, then you
"lVt· it to your reading public to
change the name of your paper
tr,'m The Cooper Point Journal
t" "The Cooper Point Woo ."
Josh T ouster
Ed . No te : Jonathon? Jonatho'l
/" 111'1:,11 ~ )
I
Rilly?
John Woo
To the Editor :
There were a number of letters
that we could not publish this
week because there wasn't enough
room. They will appear in next
week's Journal.
Hey . all you Evergreen people
with time on your hands - take
a few minutes , write to one of
our compatriots in prison and
help alleviate their loneliness.
This small effort could mean one
less moment of misery to one
is o lated. incarcerated human
being in a lonely environment.
(Ed. Note: There 's not enough
room here to publish the names
alld addresses of th e prisoners
who want to correspond with
Ei'ergreell people. We have a list
ill our office and everyone is
wL'icollle to loo k at it . )
~
~ ~-:;>
~Jf--J.·
-- N E·W S FROM .
{~CAREER PLANNING
!I
~
by Molly Wright
1 sa t down at the terminal in the Career Reso urce Center, and for the first time
vperated d compute r. On a three-month trial basis we have a computer terminal
pn'grammed for CIS . Career Information System. After introducing myself, CIS
asked it I was int erested in occupational information , or in the questionnaire.
Still try ing to ident ify exactly what it is I want to do , 1 typed back QUEST, and
then an,wered a series of questi ons relating to my personality . skills and educat ;Ilr. bch an swe r narrowed down the field of occupations potentially available
to ml' . Some of the questions pertained to my ability to work with words , numbl'fs. t" inte rpret facts; do I work well with my hands, do I have an eye for acCllf .I C V. do I want to li ve in a large city, a small town . o r in between? Do I like
I II supervi se u thers. to sell ideas o r prodl'cts. do 1 catch onto things quickly, do I
li ke to ba rgain a nd discuss? Last what was the minimum monthly salary I would
accept? The occupations that correspond to the particular and honest answers I
gave' inc luded : Sawmill-sawing Occupations, Recreat ion Program Director, Law
[nfo rccment Off ice r. Production Superintendent, Registered Nurse , Librarian,
Hot el Manager.
C IS is programmed to give a description of an occu pation, including job du ..
tics, prospec ts. education required, sa lary range. and even the name of a person
who wo uld talk to you about an occupaticn. I'm tempted to try the questionnaire
a sec()nd ti me . no t limit ing myself to a small rural town . The terminal , located in
L. 122 1. is ava il ab le to the Evergreen Community during regular office hours ( E
a. m. - 5 p .m .J. o n a trial basis, Fall Quarter only. I suggest you come down immedi ate ly and inv est igate CIS . How would you answer those questions? What
wou ld the resu lt s indicate about you?
If yo u hav en 't not iced the flyers , the Career Planning and Placement office
n e('d ~ vo lu ntee rs to make sign s. Some graphic ability is desired . Publicizing information a nd spec ial events is vital to our service, can you help? Call or visit me :
Moll v Wri ght , Ca reer Plannin g and Placement Program Assistant , L. 1220, 8666 193. Come see my handwriting , you 'll know we're serious about this!
Mic hell e Mayes. the Career Counselor, has a messa ge for all Seniors: "If
y"u 're pla nning o n attending a graduate school for the academic term 1976-77
1/,' ; 1' i, time to seek ou t the follOWing informati o n: A . Admission application
dl'adlinps - B. Test requ irement s and deadlines - C. Practice Tests given at Evl'r,.: rCl·n - D. Fell o wship. schola rship and financial aid informati o n . Come in
111l"" til see yo ur friendly Career Counselor, located in the Career Planning and
PI.Kl'ment Off ice . L. 1219."
.
. Mi chl' lIe ca n a lso talk with you about how to organize a graduate school
'l'.Hch. how to fill out applications , what graduate school can do for you , and
\V h,l t ", III be expec ted from you.
Thl' U. S Civ il Service Commission has announced job opportunities for Recre ..
.ltilln Specialis t. including : Music, Art , Theatre, Specialists, Therapeutic Recrea.
ti, ' n : y,'u may be rated eligible fo r these positions. Find out now. We have infor ..
111.111. 'n and app li ca ti o ns.
"Changing Family Relationships, Social
Responsibility for Children" is a series of
nine workshops sponsored by Evergreen,
Olympia Vocational Technical Institute,
Thurston County 4C Council and Union
Street Center. The workshops are free and
open to the public . On October 21 Thom
Lufkin. a single father, will co-ordinate a
workshop entitled "Single Fathers With or
Without Their Children ." Thorn's workshop, like all the workshops, will begin
with a brown-bag dinner at 5:30. Parents
may bring their children with them . After
the dinner children and child day care
workers will move on to Driftwood
House, the on-campus daycare center,
where free child care will be provided for
the duration of the workshop.
On October 28th a workshop entitled,
The Single Mother: Options for Support
will b~ presented . Lyda Hunt , single
mother will co-ordinate the program .
For more information on child care
facilities during the workshops contact
Keith Eisner at 866-9147. These two
workshops will be held on the Evergreen
campus in the Activities Building room
108. Additional announcements will
follow during the next few weeks to keep
everyone informed on upcoming workshops.
SOCCER 'rEAM
PARKING LOOPHOLES
"Taiwan: The People, the Place, the
Issue, " will be the topic of a free public
s lide / lecture presentation by Faculty
Member Lynn Struve at The Evergreen
State College October 22 beginning at
7:30 p.m. in room 3400 of the Daniel J.
Evans Library Building.
Dr . Struve, who speaks both Mandarin
Chinese and Japanese languages, conducted her doctoral dissertation research
in both Taipei and in Kyoto, Japan.
She earned her bachelor of arts degree
in Chinese language and literature from
. the University of Washington, and her
master's degree in Chinese area studies
from . the University of Michigan . She
completed her doctorate of philosophy in
history, also from the University of Michigan.
In her free , evening presentation, Dr.
Struve will share her views on the
economy, society, and political future of
Taiwan, an island which she feels constitutes a major stumbling block to normalization of relations between the United
States and the Peoples Republic of China.
Her talk is sponsored by the Olympia
chapter of the U.S .-China People's Friendship Association .
If you are an Evergreen student,
faculty, or staff member and drive a car
to school, you are probably aware of the
newly reinstated parking fee system. All
vehicles parked on campus require a
permit, and unless you live in the dorms,
the mods, or the fire station you pay
twenty-five dollars yearly, or ten dollars
quarterly for this permit (motorcycles
half-price). You also have the option of
paying a daily fee of twenty-five cents.
The money goes to fund an on going
parking operation, prepared to provide a
variety of services ranging from assistance
with vehicle starts, to impoundments
from , emergency tow-away areas, to
turning out lights in parked vehicles.
Without the fees, budgets in other areas
of college operations would have to be
cut to fund these services.
O~ course, as the crafty student at any
school soon learns, there are loopholes in
every system . Some off-campus drivers
have friends in the dorms sign for their
cars, and park free in lot F. Perhaps more
wide's pread is the simple method of
parking in the ASH lot.
In spite of these alternatives to paying
the fee, a walk through the school
parking lots during the day shows that
the majority of vehicle users have
accepted the system, agreeing in practice,
at least, with the concept that they pay
the costs incurred. by their VI' hides .
UTAH REPERTORY
HERE OCT, 20
The Utah Repertory Dance Theater will
offer a free lecture / demonstration October
20 at The Evergreen State College beginning at 9 : 30 a.m. in the main Library
lobby.
DEFAULTS GAME
The Evergreen men's soccer team , due
to an unfortunate mix-up, arrived for
their match with the Lockheed Soccer
Club in Seattle last Sunday 15 minutes
late and were forced to forfeit the game.
Evergreen coach Derek Goldingay lamented , "I guess they don' t run on Evergreen time ."
The Geoducks' next action is Sunday
when they meet Everett Lincoln Mercury
of Seattle on the Evergreen playfield at
1 : 30 p.m. That match will be preceded by
a women's game pitting Evergreen against
Bainbridge Island at 11 : 30 a. m.
NEED INFORM ATION and people
to start a champion juicer coop.
loyce. 8/>6 · 6605 .
STRUVE ON TAIWAN
The following is the schedule for the
Program Lecture series, running next
week :
10 / 20 - Africa and The U.S .. " Afri can Life Before West.rn Influ.nce . "
10 - 12. lounge 2100; Artist Class .
" Beautv and the Beast. " 10 - 12. l. H .
4 : Harmony in the Univ.roe, "Hearjng &
Perception," 1 • 3. Lib . 211/> ; Econo;"ic
Cycles. " Introductory Macro-Economics :" 11 . 11 : SO . Lib 2204; Working in
America . " Monopoly Capitalism: Historical Perspective. " 10·12. l.H . 5;
Caring for Children. "Language Developm.nt" tfilm) . 1 - 5 S.m 412/>.
10 / 21 - Arts Lectur., "Arts Commission ." 1 :30. l.H. 5: Africa & U.S ..
film : "Py~ mies of Africa ." 10 - 12 . l. H.
5 : Am.rican R.volution . " Racism
"gainst Immigrants." 10. l. H . 4: Cultur~.. Id~S!lll~Y. &" S~i al Change. "Con c'pts of Cultur.... 9 :30 - 12, l.H. 2:
Homer to Hemingway, Dant•• " Inf.rnll. " 3 :30 - 4 :30, l.H . 5 : Harmony in
the Universe. Music Thellry. 1 :30·3.
Lib 2118 .
10 / 22 - Homer / Hemingway . Dant•• " Inferno." 3:30 · 5. l.H . 5 ; Good
E.Hth . "Livestock Feeding." 10. l.H . 4 .
'10 123 American Revolution . 10.
L.H . 4: Good Earth. " Impact of Peasantry on Their Enviro nment ." 10. L.H .
2 : Country Music. film: "Holy Ghost
P.opl .. .. 10. l.H. 5: Econ Cycles.
" Macrn · Economics ." 9 - 9:50. 'Lib 2204 .
10 / 24 -
CAMPUS FAITH CENTER
The Campus Faith Center is preparing
for another active year. Last year the
Center sponspored an impressive Spiritual
Symposium . The Symposium lasted four
days and boasted such prestigious
speakers as Governor Dan Evans and
Swami Satchidananda. The Faith Center
is interested in people willing to donate
time and hard work to this years'
symposium.
Peggy Pahl, Faith Center Office Person,
stressed that "each person who becomes
inv.olved with the Center will be able to
directly shape the way things go."
In addition to the planned symposium,
the Center offers several spiritually
oriented workshops, including Yoga, and
spiritual exercises. In the future Sufi
Dance, Conciousness and Meditation, and
Mystit:al Experience will be added.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
.
..
His new album finds BlUce Springsteen
at the peak 01 h is creativity. and is brim full of the street theatri cs that have be come the Springsteen trademark!
Rainy ~ay
Record Co.
.
SOMEWHERE OUT there. creeping
amongst the stainless steel and co n ~
crete. exists the proverbial hungry
arti,t. Opportunity knocks! I Alleviale your hunger - satisfy my need
- exchange calligraphy for bagels
- have cooked for homemade and
homerule for the Irish , Rick Ricks.
943 · 20/>6 .
•
•
•
•
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PIZZA
DIRTY DAVE'S GAY 90's
456-1560
Tues. - Thurs. 11 AM - 12 PM
Fri. & Sat. 11 - 1 Sun. 11 - 11
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J
NATURAL HEALING Seminar
November 1
Sat. 6 - 10 p.m.
Conducted by WAYNE TASHEA
SUBJECTS COVERED
•
•
•
•
•
•
Ancient Chinese •
Face Diagnosis
•
Pulse Diagnosis •
Body Diagnosis •
Five Elements
•
Iridology
•
•
diagnosis of
ailments thru the
study of the eye
November 2
Color Diagnosis
Sunday 1 - 5 p.m .
Sound Diagnosis
Clay Healing
The Evergreen State College
Tree Healing
CAB 110 (Lower Level)
Herbel Healing
Basic Acupressure . 60nation: $25.00 1person
Zone Therapy
SpeCial Student price: $12.00
Seminar limited to 50 people
Wa y ne T.shea is a New Age myslic whose life is devoted to teaching others the
natura l h ealin~ mel hods used by metaphysicians for thousands of years. Wayne has
sludied a l Ih e Nor th Am.rican College (\f Acupuncture and studied Chinese Face and
Body Diagnosis with Jerry Canly . author of " Eternal Massage ." Wayne is an ordain.d
Mini slre of Healing and Doclor of Esoteric Healin g. has taughl "Metaphysical Science"
al Ihe C hela Ce nl er in Pompano Beach. Fla . and at the Natural Healing Sc hoo l in
Glendale . Oregnn .
36th and Overhulse
866-1252
10 to 6
Mon. thru FrL
12 to 6
Sat.
BUMP TOES, CREPE SOLES
RICH LEATHER. ALL YOU
COULD
WANT IN A TOUGH ,
.
RUGGED, GOOD LOOKS SHOE
Open Mon. - Fri. till 9
Sun. 12 - 5
Sat. 10 - 6
For reservation form call 357-9470 or 352-8872 .
Sponsored by Cosmic Awareness Communications,
Box 115
pia, Wash. 98507.
1,1:
I
-----------------------------------------------
75 types of cheese
Good, medium-price, hard to find wines and qualified selection advice
Fresh coffee beans
Cosmetic chemists - bath oil, massage oil, body lotions and soap
* Westside Center
i:-;
sponsoring a series of woml' n',
rap groups this quarter. These
groups will meet in the Women 's
Center lounge in lib. 3214 .
• The Oct. 22 meeting of the
Sounding Board will be focused
on the nominating of Moderator
and Secretary. The Moderator is
a 15 hour a week job, paying
$2.33 an hour, the Secretary a 10
hour a week job, at the same
pay . Any community member
may apply through the Financial
Aid Office.
• The Christian Science Organization will be holdin g
meetings on Thursdays at 12 : 00
noon in the lib. 1100B. All are
welcome.
Good things for your body, inside and out
4045 Pacific Ave.
Westside Center
Positively 4th Street
: .:.
students
zational, grammar, composition)
and math for the uninclined .
• Dr. Tom Kerns will hold a
workshop on Spiritual Exercises
with various physical and
meditative diSCiplines, beginning
Oct. 21 , from 8 to 10 pm. A fee
of $15 .00 covers the six week
workshop. For more information
contact the Faith Center, noon to
2 pm, Lib. 3227, or call
866-6108.
• The Mens Center is sponsoring
a movement/body awareness
workshop every Friday from
5: 30 to 7 : 00 in the multipurpose room. Open to all men .
Wear loose clothing or tights.
Call 866-8181.
The Asterisk~
FOR SALE - New and antique
good wood heaters, cook stoves,
funky junk. iceboxes. oak furniture .
Go to the garage sales firs!. then
come here - BETTER BUYS!! and
more of it. Sanford &. Son. 2103 E.
41h - 491-4131 - afternoons.
Evergreen Environment ,
film on natural histo ry . 10 - 12. L. H . 2;
Harm«ny in the Universe. Cos mology .
9:30, L.H. 4.
~ecause Evergreen can be a very lonely
pice, the center's aim is to help people
deal with that lonliness by encouraging
-authentic exploration of self.
The
backbone of this exploration is the weekly
. sack lunch meetings on Thursdays in the • Theatre of the Unemployed is
F;!;th Center.
pleased to announce two perIf you would like more information or formances of "Interview: A
are interested in being involved with the "Fugue for Eight Actors," by
Campus Faith Center, call 866-6108 or Jean-Claude van ltallie, and an
stop by Lib 3227 between 12 and 2 original . production
called
weekdays.
"College Sweepstakes" , Oct. 19
at YWCA Friendship Hall, and
S&A BOARD
Oct. 25 at Olympia Community
For those students who signed
Center, at 8 pm. $1.50 donation
up on the Voluntary Services List
at the doo.r. Theatre of the
to be on the Services and
Unemployed i~ a non-profit
Activities Fees Review Board, or
organization of the Olympia area
for anyone else who is interested,
residents.
a meeting will be held Friday,
• The Learning Services Center
Oct. 17 at 10 :00 am in CAB 108,
will conduct the following
in which Brent Ingram, Executive
activities for academic deSecretary to the Board will discuss
velopment, open for all faculty
the selection of new members . In
and students, in the belief that
particular, Ingram is expected to
students and faculty should be
explain the computer list from
enriched
together:
typing
which members are taken, and the
classes; external credit workinterview process .
shops; spelling classes (open to
Any student may volunteer to
• The SPLU labs new hours are
serve on the S&A Board by
Mon .-Thurs. 8 :30 am to 9:00
signing up on the Voluntary
pm, Friday, 8 :30 am to 4:00
Services List in the Information
pm, and Saturday, 9 :00 am to
Center in the Activities Building,
4:
00 pm . The SPLU lab is
or with Ingram in the Activities
located
in the Lab building.
Office in the same building (see
• Co-Recreational
volleyball
October 9 issue of CPJ) . 50 names
begins Oct . 13, and continues
of those interested in serving on
every Monday from 7:00 to
the Board are taken from the
8
: 30 pm in the Steam Plant. Call
Voluntary Services. List and fed
866-6530.
into a computer which will
• Womens slow conditioning
scramble and list them in random
running program will be held
order . On Monday, Oct. 20,
every
Monday from 12: 00 to
Ingram will begin interviewing the
1: 00 pm, in the Steam Plant.
first twenty people on the list. As
• HEBREW
soon as nine qualified students
Wanted: people who speak Hehave been interviewed, Ingram is
brew on an ' intermediate level
supposed to select six regular
who
want to learn more. Call
members , who will have decision
866-7609.
making power on the Board, and
three alternates. It is anticipated
that Ingram will describe the
criteria he plans to use in the
selection of new members.
The names of new members will
be announced sometime in the
next two weeks .
SOUTH SOUND CENTER
4
'WOMENWHO
MAKE MOVIES'
ENROLLMENT : UNDER
EV"rgrl'l'n's enwllmenl fo r fa ll quarter
i, 2.500. 78 sludents shorl of the predicted
1<111 ljuJrlt'r enro lim ent. Registrar Walker
Allen ,.l id Wednesday . Ocl. 15 .
Thl' tinal enrollment figures are
" .bsla ntiall y more than some people had
predictl'd. As la te as last week. rumors
I ha l Evergreen could be underenrolled by
,1' m..lny as 200 students abounded .
Las l Wednesday . Allen reported that
,'nly 2. 100 students had paid all their
tui!i'ln tees and were officially enrolled.
But an extension of the deadline for
tuition payments and a concerted effort
by the Registrar 's Office to contact people
\\,h., had not paid their fees resulted in a
la st minute rush of student payments late
lilst week .
However . because Evergreen is underenrolled . the school stands to lose part of
its 517(1 . 000 special operating budget
granted by the state through a "Contracted Enrollment " agreement the college
entered int o with the legislature and the
g,' vt'rnC" 'ro. ' .' ; ilgreement. the college
made a committment to have enrolled a
certain number of students for the school
vear . Since the college did not meet its
. en ro l lmen t commitment. part of this
money will be taken away.
Until the state Office of Program
Planning and Fiscal
Management
(OPPFM) receives the final enrollment
figures from Allen Friday and until
OPPFM has time to compute the figure~ ,
the amount of money Evergreen will lose
cannot be determined .
Commenting on the final enrollment
figures, Allen said. "It is not as good as
hoped for and not as bad as some people
feared."
A free, two -day workshop on " Women
Who Make Movies" will be staged October 21 and October 22 at The Evergreen
State College.
Featuring two women film-makers , the
sessions have been designed by Evergreen
faculty and staff women to explore all aspects of film production. Panel discussions. demonstrations of film-making
processes and techniques, explanation of
resources, and ' screening of films by and
about women are all part of the program
which will begin at-l0 a.m. October 21 in
the Evans Library Building, room Lib.
3500.
Allen said that this is the first time
Evergreen has be~n underenrolled .
However, Allen said, the enrollment
figures do not include 94 students who are
auditing classes . That fact and the fact
that eight per cent of Evergreen students
are enrolled only part-time (as contrasted
to a five per cent part-time rate last year)
shows an increased participation at the
college by people from the Olympia
community, said Allen.
SINGLE PARENT
WORKSHOPS
There are 201 part-time students this
year and 89 last year.
Allen said 19 per cent of the students
this year are non-residents of Washington,
which is down from the past years.
LETTERS
T" t he Editor :
To the Editor:
\\'e now knc'w who John WOO
I"
what he looks like, what he
"l'es . what he thinks and where
hl' lives ; but I feel that this is
not enough . My suggestion is to
cll' a supplement to the Cooper
!'"int Journal entitled "The life
and times of John Woo ," in
\\·hich we can learn all there is to
i-.nol\' about Mr. Woo.
Ii in your opinion a supplement is uncalled for, then you
"lVt· it to your reading public to
change the name of your paper
tr,'m The Cooper Point Journal
t" "The Cooper Point Woo ."
Josh T ouster
Ed . No te : Jonathon? Jonatho'l
/" 111'1:,11 ~ )
I
Rilly?
John Woo
To the Editor :
There were a number of letters
that we could not publish this
week because there wasn't enough
room. They will appear in next
week's Journal.
Hey . all you Evergreen people
with time on your hands - take
a few minutes , write to one of
our compatriots in prison and
help alleviate their loneliness.
This small effort could mean one
less moment of misery to one
is o lated. incarcerated human
being in a lonely environment.
(Ed. Note: There 's not enough
room here to publish the names
alld addresses of th e prisoners
who want to correspond with
Ei'ergreell people. We have a list
ill our office and everyone is
wL'icollle to loo k at it . )
~
~ ~-:;>
~Jf--J.·
-- N E·W S FROM .
{~CAREER PLANNING
!I
~
by Molly Wright
1 sa t down at the terminal in the Career Reso urce Center, and for the first time
vperated d compute r. On a three-month trial basis we have a computer terminal
pn'grammed for CIS . Career Information System. After introducing myself, CIS
asked it I was int erested in occupational information , or in the questionnaire.
Still try ing to ident ify exactly what it is I want to do , 1 typed back QUEST, and
then an,wered a series of questi ons relating to my personality . skills and educat ;Ilr. bch an swe r narrowed down the field of occupations potentially available
to ml' . Some of the questions pertained to my ability to work with words , numbl'fs. t" inte rpret facts; do I work well with my hands, do I have an eye for acCllf .I C V. do I want to li ve in a large city, a small town . o r in between? Do I like
I II supervi se u thers. to sell ideas o r prodl'cts. do 1 catch onto things quickly, do I
li ke to ba rgain a nd discuss? Last what was the minimum monthly salary I would
accept? The occupations that correspond to the particular and honest answers I
gave' inc luded : Sawmill-sawing Occupations, Recreat ion Program Director, Law
[nfo rccment Off ice r. Production Superintendent, Registered Nurse , Librarian,
Hot el Manager.
C IS is programmed to give a description of an occu pation, including job du ..
tics, prospec ts. education required, sa lary range. and even the name of a person
who wo uld talk to you about an occupaticn. I'm tempted to try the questionnaire
a sec()nd ti me . no t limit ing myself to a small rural town . The terminal , located in
L. 122 1. is ava il ab le to the Evergreen Community during regular office hours ( E
a. m. - 5 p .m .J. o n a trial basis, Fall Quarter only. I suggest you come down immedi ate ly and inv est igate CIS . How would you answer those questions? What
wou ld the resu lt s indicate about you?
If yo u hav en 't not iced the flyers , the Career Planning and Placement office
n e('d ~ vo lu ntee rs to make sign s. Some graphic ability is desired . Publicizing information a nd spec ial events is vital to our service, can you help? Call or visit me :
Moll v Wri ght , Ca reer Plannin g and Placement Program Assistant , L. 1220, 8666 193. Come see my handwriting , you 'll know we're serious about this!
Mic hell e Mayes. the Career Counselor, has a messa ge for all Seniors: "If
y"u 're pla nning o n attending a graduate school for the academic term 1976-77
1/,' ; 1' i, time to seek ou t the follOWing informati o n: A . Admission application
dl'adlinps - B. Test requ irement s and deadlines - C. Practice Tests given at Evl'r,.: rCl·n - D. Fell o wship. schola rship and financial aid informati o n . Come in
111l"" til see yo ur friendly Career Counselor, located in the Career Planning and
PI.Kl'ment Off ice . L. 1219."
.
. Mi chl' lIe ca n a lso talk with you about how to organize a graduate school
'l'.Hch. how to fill out applications , what graduate school can do for you , and
\V h,l t ", III be expec ted from you.
Thl' U. S Civ il Service Commission has announced job opportunities for Recre ..
.ltilln Specialis t. including : Music, Art , Theatre, Specialists, Therapeutic Recrea.
ti, ' n : y,'u may be rated eligible fo r these positions. Find out now. We have infor ..
111.111. 'n and app li ca ti o ns.
"Changing Family Relationships, Social
Responsibility for Children" is a series of
nine workshops sponsored by Evergreen,
Olympia Vocational Technical Institute,
Thurston County 4C Council and Union
Street Center. The workshops are free and
open to the public . On October 21 Thom
Lufkin. a single father, will co-ordinate a
workshop entitled "Single Fathers With or
Without Their Children ." Thorn's workshop, like all the workshops, will begin
with a brown-bag dinner at 5:30. Parents
may bring their children with them . After
the dinner children and child day care
workers will move on to Driftwood
House, the on-campus daycare center,
where free child care will be provided for
the duration of the workshop.
On October 28th a workshop entitled,
The Single Mother: Options for Support
will b~ presented . Lyda Hunt , single
mother will co-ordinate the program .
For more information on child care
facilities during the workshops contact
Keith Eisner at 866-9147. These two
workshops will be held on the Evergreen
campus in the Activities Building room
108. Additional announcements will
follow during the next few weeks to keep
everyone informed on upcoming workshops.
SOCCER 'rEAM
PARKING LOOPHOLES
"Taiwan: The People, the Place, the
Issue, " will be the topic of a free public
s lide / lecture presentation by Faculty
Member Lynn Struve at The Evergreen
State College October 22 beginning at
7:30 p.m. in room 3400 of the Daniel J.
Evans Library Building.
Dr . Struve, who speaks both Mandarin
Chinese and Japanese languages, conducted her doctoral dissertation research
in both Taipei and in Kyoto, Japan.
She earned her bachelor of arts degree
in Chinese language and literature from
. the University of Washington, and her
master's degree in Chinese area studies
from . the University of Michigan . She
completed her doctorate of philosophy in
history, also from the University of Michigan.
In her free , evening presentation, Dr.
Struve will share her views on the
economy, society, and political future of
Taiwan, an island which she feels constitutes a major stumbling block to normalization of relations between the United
States and the Peoples Republic of China.
Her talk is sponsored by the Olympia
chapter of the U.S .-China People's Friendship Association .
If you are an Evergreen student,
faculty, or staff member and drive a car
to school, you are probably aware of the
newly reinstated parking fee system. All
vehicles parked on campus require a
permit, and unless you live in the dorms,
the mods, or the fire station you pay
twenty-five dollars yearly, or ten dollars
quarterly for this permit (motorcycles
half-price). You also have the option of
paying a daily fee of twenty-five cents.
The money goes to fund an on going
parking operation, prepared to provide a
variety of services ranging from assistance
with vehicle starts, to impoundments
from , emergency tow-away areas, to
turning out lights in parked vehicles.
Without the fees, budgets in other areas
of college operations would have to be
cut to fund these services.
O~ course, as the crafty student at any
school soon learns, there are loopholes in
every system . Some off-campus drivers
have friends in the dorms sign for their
cars, and park free in lot F. Perhaps more
wide's pread is the simple method of
parking in the ASH lot.
In spite of these alternatives to paying
the fee, a walk through the school
parking lots during the day shows that
the majority of vehicle users have
accepted the system, agreeing in practice,
at least, with the concept that they pay
the costs incurred. by their VI' hides .
UTAH REPERTORY
HERE OCT, 20
The Utah Repertory Dance Theater will
offer a free lecture / demonstration October
20 at The Evergreen State College beginning at 9 : 30 a.m. in the main Library
lobby.
DEFAULTS GAME
The Evergreen men's soccer team , due
to an unfortunate mix-up, arrived for
their match with the Lockheed Soccer
Club in Seattle last Sunday 15 minutes
late and were forced to forfeit the game.
Evergreen coach Derek Goldingay lamented , "I guess they don' t run on Evergreen time ."
The Geoducks' next action is Sunday
when they meet Everett Lincoln Mercury
of Seattle on the Evergreen playfield at
1 : 30 p.m. That match will be preceded by
a women's game pitting Evergreen against
Bainbridge Island at 11 : 30 a. m.
NEED INFORM ATION and people
to start a champion juicer coop.
loyce. 8/>6 · 6605 .
STRUVE ON TAIWAN
The following is the schedule for the
Program Lecture series, running next
week :
10 / 20 - Africa and The U.S .. " Afri can Life Before West.rn Influ.nce . "
10 - 12. lounge 2100; Artist Class .
" Beautv and the Beast. " 10 - 12. l. H .
4 : Harmony in the Univ.roe, "Hearjng &
Perception," 1 • 3. Lib . 211/> ; Econo;"ic
Cycles. " Introductory Macro-Economics :" 11 . 11 : SO . Lib 2204; Working in
America . " Monopoly Capitalism: Historical Perspective. " 10·12. l.H . 5;
Caring for Children. "Language Developm.nt" tfilm) . 1 - 5 S.m 412/>.
10 / 21 - Arts Lectur., "Arts Commission ." 1 :30. l.H. 5: Africa & U.S ..
film : "Py~ mies of Africa ." 10 - 12 . l. H.
5 : Am.rican R.volution . " Racism
"gainst Immigrants." 10. l. H . 4: Cultur~.. Id~S!lll~Y. &" S~i al Change. "Con c'pts of Cultur.... 9 :30 - 12, l.H. 2:
Homer to Hemingway, Dant•• " Inf.rnll. " 3 :30 - 4 :30, l.H . 5 : Harmony in
the Universe. Music Thellry. 1 :30·3.
Lib 2118 .
10 / 22 - Homer / Hemingway . Dant•• " Inferno." 3:30 · 5. l.H . 5 ; Good
E.Hth . "Livestock Feeding." 10. l.H . 4 .
'10 123 American Revolution . 10.
L.H . 4: Good Earth. " Impact of Peasantry on Their Enviro nment ." 10. L.H .
2 : Country Music. film: "Holy Ghost
P.opl .. .. 10. l.H. 5: Econ Cycles.
" Macrn · Economics ." 9 - 9:50. 'Lib 2204 .
10 / 24 -
CAMPUS FAITH CENTER
The Campus Faith Center is preparing
for another active year. Last year the
Center sponspored an impressive Spiritual
Symposium . The Symposium lasted four
days and boasted such prestigious
speakers as Governor Dan Evans and
Swami Satchidananda. The Faith Center
is interested in people willing to donate
time and hard work to this years'
symposium.
Peggy Pahl, Faith Center Office Person,
stressed that "each person who becomes
inv.olved with the Center will be able to
directly shape the way things go."
In addition to the planned symposium,
the Center offers several spiritually
oriented workshops, including Yoga, and
spiritual exercises. In the future Sufi
Dance, Conciousness and Meditation, and
Mystit:al Experience will be added.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
.
..
His new album finds BlUce Springsteen
at the peak 01 h is creativity. and is brim full of the street theatri cs that have be come the Springsteen trademark!
Rainy ~ay
Record Co.
.
SOMEWHERE OUT there. creeping
amongst the stainless steel and co n ~
crete. exists the proverbial hungry
arti,t. Opportunity knocks! I Alleviale your hunger - satisfy my need
- exchange calligraphy for bagels
- have cooked for homemade and
homerule for the Irish , Rick Ricks.
943 · 20/>6 .
•
•
•
•
This material is designed to be used as a research aid only.
RESEARCH PAPERS
THOUSANDS ON FILE
Send for your up-to·date, 160-page, mail order catalog of
5,500 topics. Enclose $1.00 to cover postage and handling.
COLLEGIATE RESEARCH
1720 PONTIUS AVE., SUITE 201
LOS ANGELES, CALI F. 90025
1----------------------------------------------------.,
1
I
I
~~
!
I
Address
City _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
'
1
I
I
Zip
State
Monday - Saturday 11 - 7
357-7573
....................................,............................................ ...................................
':"
50 cents off 1
35 cents off
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GIANT
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MED.
i ANY REG.
....................................&. •••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• A .................................... .
PIZZA
DIRTY DAVE'S GAY 90's
456-1560
Tues. - Thurs. 11 AM - 12 PM
Fri. & Sat. 11 - 1 Sun. 11 - 11
Closed Monday
Clip this coupon (expires 10/23/75)
J
NATURAL HEALING Seminar
November 1
Sat. 6 - 10 p.m.
Conducted by WAYNE TASHEA
SUBJECTS COVERED
•
•
•
•
•
•
Ancient Chinese •
Face Diagnosis
•
Pulse Diagnosis •
Body Diagnosis •
Five Elements
•
Iridology
•
•
diagnosis of
ailments thru the
study of the eye
November 2
Color Diagnosis
Sunday 1 - 5 p.m .
Sound Diagnosis
Clay Healing
The Evergreen State College
Tree Healing
CAB 110 (Lower Level)
Herbel Healing
Basic Acupressure . 60nation: $25.00 1person
Zone Therapy
SpeCial Student price: $12.00
Seminar limited to 50 people
Wa y ne T.shea is a New Age myslic whose life is devoted to teaching others the
natura l h ealin~ mel hods used by metaphysicians for thousands of years. Wayne has
sludied a l Ih e Nor th Am.rican College (\f Acupuncture and studied Chinese Face and
Body Diagnosis with Jerry Canly . author of " Eternal Massage ." Wayne is an ordain.d
Mini slre of Healing and Doclor of Esoteric Healin g. has taughl "Metaphysical Science"
al Ihe C hela Ce nl er in Pompano Beach. Fla . and at the Natural Healing Sc hoo l in
Glendale . Oregnn .
36th and Overhulse
866-1252
10 to 6
Mon. thru FrL
12 to 6
Sat.
BUMP TOES, CREPE SOLES
RICH LEATHER. ALL YOU
COULD
WANT IN A TOUGH ,
.
RUGGED, GOOD LOOKS SHOE
Open Mon. - Fri. till 9
Sun. 12 - 5
Sat. 10 - 6
For reservation form call 357-9470 or 352-8872 .
Sponsored by Cosmic Awareness Communications,
Box 115
pia, Wash. 98507.
1,1:
I
-----------------------------------------------
75 types of cheese
Good, medium-price, hard to find wines and qualified selection advice
Fresh coffee beans
Cosmetic chemists - bath oil, massage oil, body lotions and soap
* Westside Center
i:-;
sponsoring a series of woml' n',
rap groups this quarter. These
groups will meet in the Women 's
Center lounge in lib. 3214 .
• The Oct. 22 meeting of the
Sounding Board will be focused
on the nominating of Moderator
and Secretary. The Moderator is
a 15 hour a week job, paying
$2.33 an hour, the Secretary a 10
hour a week job, at the same
pay . Any community member
may apply through the Financial
Aid Office.
• The Christian Science Organization will be holdin g
meetings on Thursdays at 12 : 00
noon in the lib. 1100B. All are
welcome.
Good things for your body, inside and out
4045 Pacific Ave.
Westside Center
Positively 4th Street
: .:.
students
zational, grammar, composition)
and math for the uninclined .
• Dr. Tom Kerns will hold a
workshop on Spiritual Exercises
with various physical and
meditative diSCiplines, beginning
Oct. 21 , from 8 to 10 pm. A fee
of $15 .00 covers the six week
workshop. For more information
contact the Faith Center, noon to
2 pm, Lib. 3227, or call
866-6108.
• The Mens Center is sponsoring
a movement/body awareness
workshop every Friday from
5: 30 to 7 : 00 in the multipurpose room. Open to all men .
Wear loose clothing or tights.
Call 866-8181.
The Asterisk~
FOR SALE - New and antique
good wood heaters, cook stoves,
funky junk. iceboxes. oak furniture .
Go to the garage sales firs!. then
come here - BETTER BUYS!! and
more of it. Sanford &. Son. 2103 E.
41h - 491-4131 - afternoons.
Evergreen Environment ,
film on natural histo ry . 10 - 12. L. H . 2;
Harm«ny in the Universe. Cos mology .
9:30, L.H. 4.
~ecause Evergreen can be a very lonely
pice, the center's aim is to help people
deal with that lonliness by encouraging
-authentic exploration of self.
The
backbone of this exploration is the weekly
. sack lunch meetings on Thursdays in the • Theatre of the Unemployed is
F;!;th Center.
pleased to announce two perIf you would like more information or formances of "Interview: A
are interested in being involved with the "Fugue for Eight Actors," by
Campus Faith Center, call 866-6108 or Jean-Claude van ltallie, and an
stop by Lib 3227 between 12 and 2 original . production
called
weekdays.
"College Sweepstakes" , Oct. 19
at YWCA Friendship Hall, and
S&A BOARD
Oct. 25 at Olympia Community
For those students who signed
Center, at 8 pm. $1.50 donation
up on the Voluntary Services List
at the doo.r. Theatre of the
to be on the Services and
Unemployed i~ a non-profit
Activities Fees Review Board, or
organization of the Olympia area
for anyone else who is interested,
residents.
a meeting will be held Friday,
• The Learning Services Center
Oct. 17 at 10 :00 am in CAB 108,
will conduct the following
in which Brent Ingram, Executive
activities for academic deSecretary to the Board will discuss
velopment, open for all faculty
the selection of new members . In
and students, in the belief that
particular, Ingram is expected to
students and faculty should be
explain the computer list from
enriched
together:
typing
which members are taken, and the
classes; external credit workinterview process .
shops; spelling classes (open to
Any student may volunteer to
• The SPLU labs new hours are
serve on the S&A Board by
Mon .-Thurs. 8 :30 am to 9:00
signing up on the Voluntary
pm, Friday, 8 :30 am to 4:00
Services List in the Information
pm, and Saturday, 9 :00 am to
Center in the Activities Building,
4:
00 pm . The SPLU lab is
or with Ingram in the Activities
located
in the Lab building.
Office in the same building (see
• Co-Recreational
volleyball
October 9 issue of CPJ) . 50 names
begins Oct . 13, and continues
of those interested in serving on
every Monday from 7:00 to
the Board are taken from the
8
: 30 pm in the Steam Plant. Call
Voluntary Services. List and fed
866-6530.
into a computer which will
• Womens slow conditioning
scramble and list them in random
running program will be held
order . On Monday, Oct. 20,
every
Monday from 12: 00 to
Ingram will begin interviewing the
1: 00 pm, in the Steam Plant.
first twenty people on the list. As
• HEBREW
soon as nine qualified students
Wanted: people who speak Hehave been interviewed, Ingram is
brew on an ' intermediate level
supposed to select six regular
who
want to learn more. Call
members , who will have decision
866-7609.
making power on the Board, and
three alternates. It is anticipated
that Ingram will describe the
criteria he plans to use in the
selection of new members.
The names of new members will
be announced sometime in the
next two weeks .
SOUTH SOUND CENTER
7
ENTERTAINMENT
"
h\·
l.M\·
K,lufmiln
a ((' neer ' t n .1t11
\I"rk T" " il1 ei lher Ih~ ~ nlt'rt ;lln
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rRI()A) , OCTOBER 17:
\ I,k " ,," d L,' rn.. :. IcCIeII.Jn ,
!,dir'lr: till' l1bl' h 'e:-. a ... The ~\' l1 rld ·.;
i .l l.....:. t."·. 1 T \\' t) Per"'l' n Ft..,lk Fes ti "Ii "iii h ,11 :\rple'ilill . l'd ik e
,,,,.1 I . ' m,' h,1\'l' !i" e d in Haw,l ii ,
I!ll 1,1' 1 ' ,1, In C l',lst ' and the
\ \ t., ...
,11 ", \1 .1'-. 11 " l \ '1 ,1 ~ 1 \ ,1nd rJ.J\'
1
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l't thl)~ t} dn.... tl ~ In thej'r
-:,1.-,
S" Ul1li, gl",d . T he
~l\,.\ : l ' I' I'n ... ,11 8. D ()natiIJn 51 .00.
SATl ' lmA) , OCTO BER 18:
\1".1 ",
I,
,·" .. Ih "'(lred
:i-t, : " 11' t-ri c Schllenhrrg , 1111"
':
( \)unt n ' ~
:bl
h'I" . .
\.1
{)Itl
It>dding cxro-
r tl~tdlle 1l111.:.ic tra n -
-, """.1 :" ~ ui t .H ,,-il l be "iv ing
. . \ , l' : ,1: t rt. '\' {'l' n ce rt ~ in the 01 vm-
:'1,' ,:' ,., ,11"\ I\'il l be 5tar tin ~ at
\ 1'1'1.- ,lin H" ,1ppea rill1CeS are
-i','""
1(',\ h EYE - S. Fnll owing
_"I' -\;' 1,11' 1,1111 !; ig Sc h oen h erg
,";: h· ,' ; F\, f'r~ reL'll l'n l\ !o l1day ,
\ :l't'l ' l 21.." ,l ! 8 p.n" It', be 101 ".\(,d [" . ,lI- , 1pr~ariln c e In t he
'Iu lk nl l'n"~n RlItid ing ,at Sl.
d,,,~in , CIllleg" nn October 21
1: ~'. JL' p . 1l1 .
~~ i:()l' nbQrg i'-t re cog ni zed a~ an
',",Ii l'n t [(,II.. and blue, guitar ist ,
" hi I' n(ltcd [ 1'1' hi, bea ut i[ ul ar.t n .,.' 111 e 11 t, 1'1 ': Ia ss i c ragt i 111 I.'
' 1l'< , .... T h l '~e l)1 VO U who tllnk
1-" ,lli"i c(' ,1nd went to s~" Steve
'11',',ler ,1 ; :'IrpiC'ja l11 last week ,
h"lI :,1 t.1kc nr: advice agai n and
I'V -; , h,'en berg. " Di sappointed "
,, :1 ,w i be one of the words
, 'LI:! U,,' tl) tE'11 those friend s
, 11<' )\'LTl' lo" li sh enou gh to sta y
l)Ill" ,Ib"llt t he event . Whatever
C'rt ,'r l11 ,1nce vn u dec ide to go 10,
l' t 11,('rl' ea r l\' . It wil l be
r 1..... \ \ ... 11',1
Tl'I-SDAY , OCTOBER 21:
1,' h l1 C IE'a re , m"oun ta in ee r (
: ,'t "" r ..q"l her, will present a free
uhlll ta lk , accompanied by film
WWlng.; o f so me of his work s
7 :3l' p. m _ in Lec ture Hall Five
Everg reen.
Sj1(lnsored b y Eve rgreen and
(' Su nri se M o unlaineering Club
Olympl~. Cleare is wel l
10wn for his work as the chief
1010grapher of Ih e Internat iona l
o llnt Eve re s l Ex pedition in
'ot!. H e ha s also filmed "The
Id \1an of the Hoy, " a docu~ ntary on Ihe climb of a 1,000
nl ,ea pinnacle off the norlhern
ast <1f Irelan d. C1eare's most
: en; work, the fi lm ing of "The
,er Sanct io n ." was shot o n 10t i(ln at th e Eigerwand in the
I i,s Alps. Considered to be
,e of t he m ost d a n ge rou s
m bs in the world, the Eiger-
\\'and which tran sl ates in English
I" "T Ilt' Ogre" has been apt ly
n,lll1l'd. It yo u're into climbing,
l' r I,)r Ih,lt matter photograph y ,
pl ,,'e hi s pre se ntation. He
k nlll \'> photography a nd he
knl'"'' c limbing.
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26:
ll rute Springs tee n , poet / gu ita r i,t 'i nger . tabbed by many entert,linmem t cr it ics a, 3 potenti al
g l·'.'ill \\'i ll Iw bringing his E stree l
13,1nd tl' l'a r.Jmount Northwest a t
8
t he hig hly pict o rial fa sci niltions
of a sli c k sci-fi my stery, That's
the info the Film Se ries gave me
a nd that 's what I'm giving you _
Your "uess is as good as mine ; it
jll,1 might be good , who knows,
MONDAY , OCTOBER 20:
EPIC Film / Speaker Se ri es prese nl s " Emerg ing ,Women " In
Lecture Hall One a t 7: 30 p .m .
T he re wi ll be a discussion on
women's hi story and oppression
as wel l. It 's a good way to se t
the loca l stage fo r NOW 's upco ming " Alice Doesn ' t Anymo re"
na tional wo men's str ike q n the
291h ,
TUESDA Y, OCTOBER 21:
Facu l l y Fi lm se ri es pres e nl s
I'ei tr o Germi's " Seduced a nd
Abandoned." It 's an Italia n flik
reflectin g on Sicilian family li fe
a nd sexua l mores _ If you en j.o yed
the famous "D iv o rc e Italian
Style" go see "Seduced ," If you
didn't, go see this one anyway.
It con tain s none of the shortcomings " Divorc!," was riddled with.
Showings are at 2 a nd 7: 30 in
Lec ture Hall One. They 're free.
Tim e flies like an arrow;
flies like a banana.
fruit
TRUCK & chain saw 4 hire - eco nnmiCll l
ge t 3 or 4 cords a da y.
loe Gd. ASH E4S .
p. 111 .
.-\ "l'n,1I11i(' peri ormer , Spr ing ,I('l'n lu,e; ~treet roe tr y with Ih e
blm" and P"P of Ihe 50's ilnd
bO'" th(' large pe rcussion-crazy
I'I-" d uct il)n, "I Phi! Specto r ; and
urban rh v thm a nd b lues . He ha s
been her a lded as ~ the " rock ilnd
rllil l ul ure ' bv Rollin g Stone rev iewer lo hn Ld ndau and "th e
ma jor American fig ure of the
d ec ild (' '' by S teve Simels of
St e ren Rev iew.
Springs teen 's E street Band include, C larence C le mons on sax.
Rn)' Rittan dnd Dan ny Federici
,ln keyb ,),Hd s, bas isl Gary Tallent. drumme r Max W. Weinbe rg
,Incl gu itari s l Sieve Van Zandt.
Ticket> I,)r the concert arc on
, d ie a t the Bnn Marc he a nd Nher
>" burb,1n (l Lltlel,. Eve rything I've
heard aboul him SilyS he's great.
I li slened Itl ,I co up le 01 cuts off
his new Jlbul11 " Born to Run "
and they 're glllld . They 're not
great ye t. bul giw him tim e.
Th ey w ill be' .
And here are the Fliks:
OCTOBER 16 - 19,
The Ro se Bud Movie Pala ce
l'n t he corner o f Third a nd
Washington in Sean le (that's o n
Pioneer S qu a re) , is s howing
lame, Stewart in " Mr. Smit h
Goe" tn Washin g t on" (a s in
D.C.). It '; a 1939 flik directed by
the now famous Frank Capra ,
The promo blurb ca ll s it a mod ern morality play about a small
town U. S, Senalor attacking corruption in the ca pital city. Jean
Arthur and Claude Ra ins pro vide an excellen t supporting cast
for this mo re often fu nn y than
not look at American politics
and democracy (t he Iwo are not
necessari ly related). The number
to call for more info is 682-1187.
Go see it if you can ge t there.
It 's a good fi lm , It also gives you
a reaso n to get out of O ly,
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17:
The Friday Night Film Series is
showing " A lpha ville " a t 7 and
9 : 30 in Lecture Hall One. Ad mi ss ion is 50 cents . It 's a French
film directed by Jean-Luc Godard that ostens ibly combi nes the
amus ing agita tions of a character
on the order of James Bond and
CHANGE THE SYMBOL OF AMERICA FROM
THE EAGLE TO THE BUFFALO
bv Ca ry Kaufman
Dr . Firesign 's Theatre of Mystery , a
two-ma n stage show of comedy routines
and takeoffs on vintage radio characterizations, will be appearing at Evergreen
Sat urda y, Oct. 18 , a t 8 pm in the main
Library lobby, Admission is $3,50.
Featuring Phillip Austin and David
Ossman. the Firesign Theatre includes
so ngs , poems, comedy routines and
characterizations of such famous radio
personali ti es a " Nick Danger" and
"Geo rge Tirebiter" a s well as ample
opportunity for aud ience participation.
Austin, a playwright. aclor , d irec tor,
s in ger. hum or is t and. human from
Holl ywood, teamed up with Ossman ,
writer, poet and radi o producer almost
ten years ago when both worked for a
Los Angeles rad io station as perform e rs
and directors in rad io plays, comedy
shows and marathon radio sessions. Their
newes t album , "In the Next World You 're
on Your Own ." is, in their own words, an
a lbum about sex and viole nce in wh ich
the true nature of both is "to g ive up. "
Violence, as Austin and Ossman see it ,
has it s tru e nature in partners a lte rnatel y
giv ing up.
"Next World " is part of a large work
that wi ll encompass most of their present
ideologies. Included among them is the
belief that words work or don' t work as a
direct function of their ability to flow
rhythmica lly from one into the next. The
dedication on their new a lbum directly
reflects that p hil osophy. In dedicating the
album to Borges and Chand ler, two
twentieth century writers, Ossman and
Austin are recognizing fine writers who
work with words to make them flow into
one another. Austin and Ossman feel at
home in the company of Borges '
Labyrinths. because of the web he
weaves, the complex mirror images he
creates and the mysteries that arise out of
them.
I had the opportunity to listen to a
taped interview by Bill Hirschman Austin
and Ossman and discovered for the first
time the serious nature with which they
approach their work . They see themselves
as improvisatory writers whose inspirations are primarily poetic. As actors
they perform characters, and fall into
patterns and repetitions of what is said as
COMMUNITY
~~~~
by Joe Murphy
it 's 8 p.m , on a Monday night before Tuesday afternoon deadline and as the
rl'tngerator's drone a nd a third pot of tea compete for my attention I feel the first
wave of journa li stic procrastination_
Writing again for public consumption I am more conscious of what I don't
want to say than how to say what I do . A back brain voice cautions me on the
weight of words while the voice of deadline screams, "Jesus Christ, Murphy, this
am t no Nobel prize acceptance, spi t it out will ya7"
My concern in writing is community, Community is one of those words that
was nailed to the cross of sixties rhetoric and is yet to be fully restored to ac~urate usage . Sl!~p.ly s,tated, Webster holds as one definition of community; A
group 01 people liVing In the same locality and under the same government, This
means you and I; student, teacher, logger, lawyer, bureaucrat, and brewery
worker all share a common stake in the community if by nothing else, by virtue
,,1 (Iur locale and government.
Ii this definition comes across without an accompanying flash of revelation
Cl'n~ider for a mO,ment 'y our relationship to the loc.. le of Thurston County. Are
Y"ll .J partiCipant In the flow of affairs or a reporter to your personal chronicle of
opposed to how it is said. The words are
the impo rtant med ium and it is the
inte ract ion s of words w ith the audience
thai they stress. The creation of the
rou ti ne is done as a co ll ective effort and
the energy put into it by the individuals
involved then , accord in g to Austin and
O ssman, give the piece of life of its own.
It becomes a living ent it y that exists
o utside of the people participating in it.
The source of information for many of
their works come out of the mass media ,
whose present ro le they see as fi lling the
public wit h a myth of entertainmen t and
disallusionment. Austin and Ossman see
the media as being "people knowing
they 're being watched ... it is the same as
religion . Peop le knew Cod was watching
th e m as so they behaved .a certain way, "
T he people involved know they are be ing
watched and proceed from there. One of
the positive things the media has done,
a nd Aust in and Ossman see themse lves as
an active part of it is to show the public
they 've been lied to for the past two
hundred years . It ha s, according to them ,
given th e people the realiza ti on that the
American symbols have to be c hanged.
The way the media can he lp America
re-o rient it s symbols and values is simply,
"to be honest rather th an spew the -slick
co ll ege-educated upper-middle-class form
of dishonesty" that no one sees through
until its too late.
A ll thi s came from the lips of the same
me n Ihat bring the voices of comic figures
like Nick Danger. listening to the tape of
the interview wh ich was run by KAOS
an d done, as previous ly mentioned. by
Bill Hirschman , I was infected by the
enthusiasm with which Phillip Austin a nd
Dav id Ossman approached their work
a nd couldn't help reflecting how much
more infected I wou ld be w hen I sa t in
the audience a nd was forced by the power
rhythm and speed wit h which the words
sw irl around, to respond to them . I was
awed and pleased to hear the words that
were being used to discuss the works
Firesign's Theatre is involved in. As I
listened, I realized they were talking
about their work as more than entertair.ment; they were talking about Art
and about art form s and abou t the
responsibility of performers and writers to
the audience to provide a groundwork for
thoug ht.
life? PartiCipation need not be directed action as much as simple acknowledgement of where you are, I got a ride to work the other day with a brewery work er. Dunng the course of what do you do type conversation I told him I had been
a student at Evergreen, this seemed to interest him and after a few moments he
sa id. "You know that schoo l seems a ll right to me, but eve ry time I give one of
th ose kid s a fide they don 't have a thing to say." I am reminded of Martin Bu ber's th ought that only throug h our personal relationships with life can we ga in a
truly accu rate picture of the hi storical ( life processes around us. Without -partici patIOn , assim ilation is at least 50 % mental dead weight.
Aga in I co nsider the weight of words , Perhaps more< than ever we are a people
lookmg 10 words to counter the actions of others. With the advent of investiga live emphaS IS m the press a new sense of reciprocal influence is being felt beIween government and media , Chief Justice Warren Burger issued a sta tement last
week calling the press, "A fourth branch of government." Images of a government. bound and buffeted by an expose' oriented press are being offered with increas mg frequency by both government and media, and as people in the middle
of any antagonism, we suffer from lack of information concerning the actual affairs of state.
~articip'ation demands the exchange '~f information; subsequently the extent to
which we pa,rhclpate determines what force we possess in bending the shape of,
our community. Plato thought that the size of a community should be limited to
the r~nge of a public speaker's voice, Raising our voices in participation can help
~ffe~tlvely reduce the radius of this Widely divergent community, Without partic IpatIOn In the cycle of community affairs we are in danger of becoming like
Kafka'~ man who in eating the droppings from his table manages for a time to
stuff himself f~lIer than the others, until he forgets how to eat from the table,
and the droppmgs cease to faiL
In the weeks to come this column will deal with the people and affairs of this
community, from the justice system to health care, the schools to the factories, It
will deal with your participation and ideas or lack of. Hopefully it will give us a
better grounding in where we are.
THE SECOND SCULPTURAL CERAMICS SHOW: NEAR MISS
by Doug WalJower
The new show in the Library art gallery is entitled The
Second Sculptural Ceramics Show. For my taste, blow most
of the pieces up to two feet in size, add a few plastic
flamingoes and ducks, and you could call it The
Mid-America Lawn Art Show. I feel the craft deserves
credit. but the imagery represented there, for me, is the
worst American art has to offer. Sight gags are fine for one
shot, but I fail to see why anyone would want to spend vast
amounts of time creating something t hat can be dismissed
after one or two close looks, This is not to say that the
ceramics show isn't worth going to see; it's good for a few
laughs a t lunchtime, and much of the glazing is excellent ,
but by the time you've finished your coffee, you' ll have
forgo tten most of what you've seen .
The pa intings Fred Kline however, are a whole different
matter and deserve a lot more time and attention. Mr.
Line's mastery of technique with ac ry lic on a varie ty of
medium and his use of sub tle color, combined with simple
but effect ive imagery , make for one of the finest shows of
painting I've seen in a long time. I was able to go back time
and time again and see something I hadn't seen before, The
power of his works attract the v iewer at any distance - I
wa s able to stand on a chai r at the o th er end of the library
and st ill be attracted to his paintings , If you've got half an
hour to kill , go see the exhibitio n - and give the paintings
twent -five minutes .
~~'
\
The "Second Sculptural Ceramics Exhibition", featuring more than a dozen ceramists from the Seattle area, opened
bctober 12th in the main Library Gallery, The exhibit, which will remain on display through October 31st, includes
the ceramic sculpture of Professor Howard Kittler, nationally known ceramic artist, and more than three dozen pieces
by his present and graduated students in the University of Washington Graduate Ceramics Program ,
Howard Kottler is recognized throughout the country as an innovator of a new type of ceramic art - one which
~ombines clay forms with political and social commentary, fantasy, and humor , He is viewed by the San
IFrancisco-based Currant art magazine as one of the two major ceramic scu lptors on the west coast. Kottler w ill
discuss "West Coast Ceramic Sculpture, 1965-1975", in a free, public address October 22, beginning at 7:00 pm in
Lecture Hall Four.
The most recent acrylic paintings of Professor Fred Kline, from Portland State University, are displayed in the
outer galJery until October 31st.
~.-
Hey folks! The Demiurge w ill ~~~
happen, There's sti ll room for I~·
co ntri butions! Bring them in,
35 meg; Not bad
One of the more unusua l creations at the Scu lptura l Ceramics Show ,
for a luxury car.
The Peugeol 504 diese l is one
l uxury c~r that c an
money.
R~~id cs
~c(ua ll y
san! you
th~
highway and 27 mpg in rhe ci IY.* it
ne ve r
nc c J ~
I
luxury you ge t in a Peugeot. Ou r
4-whcc l independent sus pensio n
SOJk s up bumps so yo u get
get! in g y; mpg on
ma jor tunc-up:-.. You
don' t have to rep lace poi nts . p lu g ~ . o r
conde nse r s b~l.."au:-.c it d(lL':-.I1' t
U:-'C
i.m y .
(We do recommcnJ yo u L" han gc the
engine oi l every 1 50U mik~ .)
What's more . Ihe 504 W ill" '
with spec ially buill ,hod ab,orbers.
And Miche lin S1cel·belted r"dial s
Iha l will faroullasl ord inary bias ply
tires.
Funclional luxuries.
But greal economy isn't Ihe on ly
• NEEDED: a fe m ale volunteer
at least 21 years of age with sailing / boatin g experience to work
w ith girls between 13 and 18
years of age in ,a Seascout pro gram, T hey meet once a week
(Wednesday evenings) in the
VFW Hall (2904' ; Martin Way ).
If interested . please contact Mr.
Finnigan at 943-6632 between
3 :30 and 5 p ,m. weekdays. Seascouts will ·offer training to the
volunteer.
J.
smoolh ride _And our full y reclining front bucket Sl.!a{s adjuq so
Ihe sl1100lh ride you ge l is also
comfortable.
The Peugeol diese l also gives
you
th~
l uxuril.! s o f a spaciou s in -
le rior and 20e ubi(' fccI of Irunk
spacc.'4-w hcel power disc brokcs.
r3ck-a nd -p inion steer in g. a sunroof.
ch ild·proo f rear door locks, and an
c iCCI ric clock, All slandard.
Plus Ihe grea le" luxury of ilii.
The lu xury of driving a comfortable_
well·built ('ar Ihal doesn'l cosl a
fortune to own.
MASSOTH
Shelley and Susie happily invite you cJ;~~
to participate in celebrating the
opening of their mercantile,
Saturday, October eighteenth
ten o'clock a.m, - seven o'clock p,m, ~~
~ ~!c~;!tJ~~,e!
Auto Parts
&
MACHINE
SHOP
2521 East 4th Ave ,
943-1190
Engine Rebuilders
Best Equipped Machine
Shop in Olympia
?- -=S
-~q
= 0.
,
Join us in giving a toast to the
birth of our new store
The Coachman Mazda Peugeot
3216 Pacific Ave. Oly.
352-8558
Open Sun. 11 - 5
Mon. thru Sat. 8 - 7
<CHorJfllR 10 197J EPA Fn/l'fal TntJ _At ',wi lIlIl"IIKI' e/. 'pe 'IIJ,\ 011 II'/'c'r(' Utili/lUll I OU dril. ' .,,,d
o,I,,'r l'f/rillh/c',I ,
Plant
FANTAsnc FILM ON CAMPUS!
e
Pottery
Fertilizer
Insecticides
Macrame
Gro-lighta
JESUS:
66A THIEF IN THE NIGHT"
Thursday, Oct. 23
7:30 p.m.
Lecture Hall 5
M - F 10 - 9
Sat 10 - 6
Sun 12 • 5~.,.
FREE
7
ENTERTAINMENT
"
h\·
l.M\·
K,lufmiln
a ((' neer ' t n .1t11
\I"rk T" " il1 ei lher Ih~ ~ nlt'rt ;lln
l11<'nl " " Ij,( k "I' ,I i,n I. Here 5
b,)IT,)\,'
T il
l\
t
h ~l t ...
hdr'rl'n lll ~
.1 r t.'und
(l~\\.·n
h.1~ ! ... n t
rRI()A) , OCTOBER 17:
\ I,k " ,," d L,' rn.. :. IcCIeII.Jn ,
!,dir'lr: till' l1bl' h 'e:-. a ... The ~\' l1 rld ·.;
i .l l.....:. t."·. 1 T \\' t) Per"'l' n Ft..,lk Fes ti "Ii "iii h ,11 :\rple'ilill . l'd ik e
,,,,.1 I . ' m,' h,1\'l' !i" e d in Haw,l ii ,
I!ll 1,1' 1 ' ,1, In C l',lst ' and the
\ \ t., ...
,11 ", \1 .1'-. 11 " l \ '1 ,1 ~ 1 \ ,1nd rJ.J\'
1
':H
!'"
';'t. .... :\.
,L
l't thl)~ t} dn.... tl ~ In thej'r
-:,1.-,
S" Ul1li, gl",d . T he
~l\,.\ : l ' I' I'n ... ,11 8. D ()natiIJn 51 .00.
SATl ' lmA) , OCTO BER 18:
\1".1 ",
I,
,·" .. Ih "'(lred
:i-t, : " 11' t-ri c Schllenhrrg , 1111"
':
( \)unt n ' ~
:bl
h'I" . .
\.1
{)Itl
It>dding cxro-
r tl~tdlle 1l111.:.ic tra n -
-, """.1 :" ~ ui t .H ,,-il l be "iv ing
. . \ , l' : ,1: t rt. '\' {'l' n ce rt ~ in the 01 vm-
:'1,' ,:' ,., ,11"\ I\'il l be 5tar tin ~ at
\ 1'1'1.- ,lin H" ,1ppea rill1CeS are
-i','""
1(',\ h EYE - S. Fnll owing
_"I' -\;' 1,11' 1,1111 !; ig Sc h oen h erg
,";: h· ,' ; F\, f'r~ reL'll l'n l\ !o l1day ,
\ :l't'l ' l 21.." ,l ! 8 p.n" It', be 101 ".\(,d [" . ,lI- , 1pr~ariln c e In t he
'Iu lk nl l'n"~n RlItid ing ,at Sl.
d,,,~in , CIllleg" nn October 21
1: ~'. JL' p . 1l1 .
~~ i:()l' nbQrg i'-t re cog ni zed a~ an
',",Ii l'n t [(,II.. and blue, guitar ist ,
" hi I' n(ltcd [ 1'1' hi, bea ut i[ ul ar.t n .,.' 111 e 11 t, 1'1 ': Ia ss i c ragt i 111 I.'
' 1l'< , .... T h l '~e l)1 VO U who tllnk
1-" ,lli"i c(' ,1nd went to s~" Steve
'11',',ler ,1 ; :'IrpiC'ja l11 last week ,
h"lI :,1 t.1kc nr: advice agai n and
I'V -; , h,'en berg. " Di sappointed "
,, :1 ,w i be one of the words
, 'LI:! U,,' tl) tE'11 those friend s
, 11<' )\'LTl' lo" li sh enou gh to sta y
l)Ill" ,Ib"llt t he event . Whatever
C'rt ,'r l11 ,1nce vn u dec ide to go 10,
l' t 11,('rl' ea r l\' . It wil l be
r 1..... \ \ ... 11',1
Tl'I-SDAY , OCTOBER 21:
1,' h l1 C IE'a re , m"oun ta in ee r (
: ,'t "" r ..q"l her, will present a free
uhlll ta lk , accompanied by film
WWlng.; o f so me of his work s
7 :3l' p. m _ in Lec ture Hall Five
Everg reen.
Sj1(lnsored b y Eve rgreen and
(' Su nri se M o unlaineering Club
Olympl~. Cleare is wel l
10wn for his work as the chief
1010grapher of Ih e Internat iona l
o llnt Eve re s l Ex pedition in
'ot!. H e ha s also filmed "The
Id \1an of the Hoy, " a docu~ ntary on Ihe climb of a 1,000
nl ,ea pinnacle off the norlhern
ast <1f Irelan d. C1eare's most
: en; work, the fi lm ing of "The
,er Sanct io n ." was shot o n 10t i(ln at th e Eigerwand in the
I i,s Alps. Considered to be
,e of t he m ost d a n ge rou s
m bs in the world, the Eiger-
\\'and which tran sl ates in English
I" "T Ilt' Ogre" has been apt ly
n,lll1l'd. It yo u're into climbing,
l' r I,)r Ih,lt matter photograph y ,
pl ,,'e hi s pre se ntation. He
k nlll \'> photography a nd he
knl'"'' c limbing.
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26:
ll rute Springs tee n , poet / gu ita r i,t 'i nger . tabbed by many entert,linmem t cr it ics a, 3 potenti al
g l·'.'ill \\'i ll Iw bringing his E stree l
13,1nd tl' l'a r.Jmount Northwest a t
8
t he hig hly pict o rial fa sci niltions
of a sli c k sci-fi my stery, That's
the info the Film Se ries gave me
a nd that 's what I'm giving you _
Your "uess is as good as mine ; it
jll,1 might be good , who knows,
MONDAY , OCTOBER 20:
EPIC Film / Speaker Se ri es prese nl s " Emerg ing ,Women " In
Lecture Hall One a t 7: 30 p .m .
T he re wi ll be a discussion on
women's hi story and oppression
as wel l. It 's a good way to se t
the loca l stage fo r NOW 's upco ming " Alice Doesn ' t Anymo re"
na tional wo men's str ike q n the
291h ,
TUESDA Y, OCTOBER 21:
Facu l l y Fi lm se ri es pres e nl s
I'ei tr o Germi's " Seduced a nd
Abandoned." It 's an Italia n flik
reflectin g on Sicilian family li fe
a nd sexua l mores _ If you en j.o yed
the famous "D iv o rc e Italian
Style" go see "Seduced ," If you
didn't, go see this one anyway.
It con tain s none of the shortcomings " Divorc!," was riddled with.
Showings are at 2 a nd 7: 30 in
Lec ture Hall One. They 're free.
Tim e flies like an arrow;
flies like a banana.
fruit
TRUCK & chain saw 4 hire - eco nnmiCll l
ge t 3 or 4 cords a da y.
loe Gd. ASH E4S .
p. 111 .
.-\ "l'n,1I11i(' peri ormer , Spr ing ,I('l'n lu,e; ~treet roe tr y with Ih e
blm" and P"P of Ihe 50's ilnd
bO'" th(' large pe rcussion-crazy
I'I-" d uct il)n, "I Phi! Specto r ; and
urban rh v thm a nd b lues . He ha s
been her a lded as ~ the " rock ilnd
rllil l ul ure ' bv Rollin g Stone rev iewer lo hn Ld ndau and "th e
ma jor American fig ure of the
d ec ild (' '' by S teve Simels of
St e ren Rev iew.
Springs teen 's E street Band include, C larence C le mons on sax.
Rn)' Rittan dnd Dan ny Federici
,ln keyb ,),Hd s, bas isl Gary Tallent. drumme r Max W. Weinbe rg
,Incl gu itari s l Sieve Van Zandt.
Ticket> I,)r the concert arc on
, d ie a t the Bnn Marc he a nd Nher
>" burb,1n (l Lltlel,. Eve rything I've
heard aboul him SilyS he's great.
I li slened Itl ,I co up le 01 cuts off
his new Jlbul11 " Born to Run "
and they 're glllld . They 're not
great ye t. bul giw him tim e.
Th ey w ill be' .
And here are the Fliks:
OCTOBER 16 - 19,
The Ro se Bud Movie Pala ce
l'n t he corner o f Third a nd
Washington in Sean le (that's o n
Pioneer S qu a re) , is s howing
lame, Stewart in " Mr. Smit h
Goe" tn Washin g t on" (a s in
D.C.). It '; a 1939 flik directed by
the now famous Frank Capra ,
The promo blurb ca ll s it a mod ern morality play about a small
town U. S, Senalor attacking corruption in the ca pital city. Jean
Arthur and Claude Ra ins pro vide an excellen t supporting cast
for this mo re often fu nn y than
not look at American politics
and democracy (t he Iwo are not
necessari ly related). The number
to call for more info is 682-1187.
Go see it if you can ge t there.
It 's a good fi lm , It also gives you
a reaso n to get out of O ly,
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17:
The Friday Night Film Series is
showing " A lpha ville " a t 7 and
9 : 30 in Lecture Hall One. Ad mi ss ion is 50 cents . It 's a French
film directed by Jean-Luc Godard that ostens ibly combi nes the
amus ing agita tions of a character
on the order of James Bond and
CHANGE THE SYMBOL OF AMERICA FROM
THE EAGLE TO THE BUFFALO
bv Ca ry Kaufman
Dr . Firesign 's Theatre of Mystery , a
two-ma n stage show of comedy routines
and takeoffs on vintage radio characterizations, will be appearing at Evergreen
Sat urda y, Oct. 18 , a t 8 pm in the main
Library lobby, Admission is $3,50.
Featuring Phillip Austin and David
Ossman. the Firesign Theatre includes
so ngs , poems, comedy routines and
characterizations of such famous radio
personali ti es a " Nick Danger" and
"Geo rge Tirebiter" a s well as ample
opportunity for aud ience participation.
Austin, a playwright. aclor , d irec tor,
s in ger. hum or is t and. human from
Holl ywood, teamed up with Ossman ,
writer, poet and radi o producer almost
ten years ago when both worked for a
Los Angeles rad io station as perform e rs
and directors in rad io plays, comedy
shows and marathon radio sessions. Their
newes t album , "In the Next World You 're
on Your Own ." is, in their own words, an
a lbum about sex and viole nce in wh ich
the true nature of both is "to g ive up. "
Violence, as Austin and Ossman see it ,
has it s tru e nature in partners a lte rnatel y
giv ing up.
"Next World " is part of a large work
that wi ll encompass most of their present
ideologies. Included among them is the
belief that words work or don' t work as a
direct function of their ability to flow
rhythmica lly from one into the next. The
dedication on their new a lbum directly
reflects that p hil osophy. In dedicating the
album to Borges and Chand ler, two
twentieth century writers, Ossman and
Austin are recognizing fine writers who
work with words to make them flow into
one another. Austin and Ossman feel at
home in the company of Borges '
Labyrinths. because of the web he
weaves, the complex mirror images he
creates and the mysteries that arise out of
them.
I had the opportunity to listen to a
taped interview by Bill Hirschman Austin
and Ossman and discovered for the first
time the serious nature with which they
approach their work . They see themselves
as improvisatory writers whose inspirations are primarily poetic. As actors
they perform characters, and fall into
patterns and repetitions of what is said as
COMMUNITY
~~~~
by Joe Murphy
it 's 8 p.m , on a Monday night before Tuesday afternoon deadline and as the
rl'tngerator's drone a nd a third pot of tea compete for my attention I feel the first
wave of journa li stic procrastination_
Writing again for public consumption I am more conscious of what I don't
want to say than how to say what I do . A back brain voice cautions me on the
weight of words while the voice of deadline screams, "Jesus Christ, Murphy, this
am t no Nobel prize acceptance, spi t it out will ya7"
My concern in writing is community, Community is one of those words that
was nailed to the cross of sixties rhetoric and is yet to be fully restored to ac~urate usage . Sl!~p.ly s,tated, Webster holds as one definition of community; A
group 01 people liVing In the same locality and under the same government, This
means you and I; student, teacher, logger, lawyer, bureaucrat, and brewery
worker all share a common stake in the community if by nothing else, by virtue
,,1 (Iur locale and government.
Ii this definition comes across without an accompanying flash of revelation
Cl'n~ider for a mO,ment 'y our relationship to the loc.. le of Thurston County. Are
Y"ll .J partiCipant In the flow of affairs or a reporter to your personal chronicle of
opposed to how it is said. The words are
the impo rtant med ium and it is the
inte ract ion s of words w ith the audience
thai they stress. The creation of the
rou ti ne is done as a co ll ective effort and
the energy put into it by the individuals
involved then , accord in g to Austin and
O ssman, give the piece of life of its own.
It becomes a living ent it y that exists
o utside of the people participating in it.
The source of information for many of
their works come out of the mass media ,
whose present ro le they see as fi lling the
public wit h a myth of entertainmen t and
disallusionment. Austin and Ossman see
the media as being "people knowing
they 're being watched ... it is the same as
religion . Peop le knew Cod was watching
th e m as so they behaved .a certain way, "
T he people involved know they are be ing
watched and proceed from there. One of
the positive things the media has done,
a nd Aust in and Ossman see themse lves as
an active part of it is to show the public
they 've been lied to for the past two
hundred years . It ha s, according to them ,
given th e people the realiza ti on that the
American symbols have to be c hanged.
The way the media can he lp America
re-o rient it s symbols and values is simply,
"to be honest rather th an spew the -slick
co ll ege-educated upper-middle-class form
of dishonesty" that no one sees through
until its too late.
A ll thi s came from the lips of the same
me n Ihat bring the voices of comic figures
like Nick Danger. listening to the tape of
the interview wh ich was run by KAOS
an d done, as previous ly mentioned. by
Bill Hirschman , I was infected by the
enthusiasm with which Phillip Austin a nd
Dav id Ossman approached their work
a nd couldn't help reflecting how much
more infected I wou ld be w hen I sa t in
the audience a nd was forced by the power
rhythm and speed wit h which the words
sw irl around, to respond to them . I was
awed and pleased to hear the words that
were being used to discuss the works
Firesign's Theatre is involved in. As I
listened, I realized they were talking
about their work as more than entertair.ment; they were talking about Art
and about art form s and abou t the
responsibility of performers and writers to
the audience to provide a groundwork for
thoug ht.
life? PartiCipation need not be directed action as much as simple acknowledgement of where you are, I got a ride to work the other day with a brewery work er. Dunng the course of what do you do type conversation I told him I had been
a student at Evergreen, this seemed to interest him and after a few moments he
sa id. "You know that schoo l seems a ll right to me, but eve ry time I give one of
th ose kid s a fide they don 't have a thing to say." I am reminded of Martin Bu ber's th ought that only throug h our personal relationships with life can we ga in a
truly accu rate picture of the hi storical ( life processes around us. Without -partici patIOn , assim ilation is at least 50 % mental dead weight.
Aga in I co nsider the weight of words , Perhaps more< than ever we are a people
lookmg 10 words to counter the actions of others. With the advent of investiga live emphaS IS m the press a new sense of reciprocal influence is being felt beIween government and media , Chief Justice Warren Burger issued a sta tement last
week calling the press, "A fourth branch of government." Images of a government. bound and buffeted by an expose' oriented press are being offered with increas mg frequency by both government and media, and as people in the middle
of any antagonism, we suffer from lack of information concerning the actual affairs of state.
~articip'ation demands the exchange '~f information; subsequently the extent to
which we pa,rhclpate determines what force we possess in bending the shape of,
our community. Plato thought that the size of a community should be limited to
the r~nge of a public speaker's voice, Raising our voices in participation can help
~ffe~tlvely reduce the radius of this Widely divergent community, Without partic IpatIOn In the cycle of community affairs we are in danger of becoming like
Kafka'~ man who in eating the droppings from his table manages for a time to
stuff himself f~lIer than the others, until he forgets how to eat from the table,
and the droppmgs cease to faiL
In the weeks to come this column will deal with the people and affairs of this
community, from the justice system to health care, the schools to the factories, It
will deal with your participation and ideas or lack of. Hopefully it will give us a
better grounding in where we are.
THE SECOND SCULPTURAL CERAMICS SHOW: NEAR MISS
by Doug WalJower
The new show in the Library art gallery is entitled The
Second Sculptural Ceramics Show. For my taste, blow most
of the pieces up to two feet in size, add a few plastic
flamingoes and ducks, and you could call it The
Mid-America Lawn Art Show. I feel the craft deserves
credit. but the imagery represented there, for me, is the
worst American art has to offer. Sight gags are fine for one
shot, but I fail to see why anyone would want to spend vast
amounts of time creating something t hat can be dismissed
after one or two close looks, This is not to say that the
ceramics show isn't worth going to see; it's good for a few
laughs a t lunchtime, and much of the glazing is excellent ,
but by the time you've finished your coffee, you' ll have
forgo tten most of what you've seen .
The pa intings Fred Kline however, are a whole different
matter and deserve a lot more time and attention. Mr.
Line's mastery of technique with ac ry lic on a varie ty of
medium and his use of sub tle color, combined with simple
but effect ive imagery , make for one of the finest shows of
painting I've seen in a long time. I was able to go back time
and time again and see something I hadn't seen before, The
power of his works attract the v iewer at any distance - I
wa s able to stand on a chai r at the o th er end of the library
and st ill be attracted to his paintings , If you've got half an
hour to kill , go see the exhibitio n - and give the paintings
twent -five minutes .
~~'
\
The "Second Sculptural Ceramics Exhibition", featuring more than a dozen ceramists from the Seattle area, opened
bctober 12th in the main Library Gallery, The exhibit, which will remain on display through October 31st, includes
the ceramic sculpture of Professor Howard Kittler, nationally known ceramic artist, and more than three dozen pieces
by his present and graduated students in the University of Washington Graduate Ceramics Program ,
Howard Kottler is recognized throughout the country as an innovator of a new type of ceramic art - one which
~ombines clay forms with political and social commentary, fantasy, and humor , He is viewed by the San
IFrancisco-based Currant art magazine as one of the two major ceramic scu lptors on the west coast. Kottler w ill
discuss "West Coast Ceramic Sculpture, 1965-1975", in a free, public address October 22, beginning at 7:00 pm in
Lecture Hall Four.
The most recent acrylic paintings of Professor Fred Kline, from Portland State University, are displayed in the
outer galJery until October 31st.
~.-
Hey folks! The Demiurge w ill ~~~
happen, There's sti ll room for I~·
co ntri butions! Bring them in,
35 meg; Not bad
One of the more unusua l creations at the Scu lptura l Ceramics Show ,
for a luxury car.
The Peugeol 504 diese l is one
l uxury c~r that c an
money.
R~~id cs
~c(ua ll y
san! you
th~
highway and 27 mpg in rhe ci IY.* it
ne ve r
nc c J ~
I
luxury you ge t in a Peugeot. Ou r
4-whcc l independent sus pensio n
SOJk s up bumps so yo u get
get! in g y; mpg on
ma jor tunc-up:-.. You
don' t have to rep lace poi nts . p lu g ~ . o r
conde nse r s b~l.."au:-.c it d(lL':-.I1' t
U:-'C
i.m y .
(We do recommcnJ yo u L" han gc the
engine oi l every 1 50U mik~ .)
What's more . Ihe 504 W ill" '
with spec ially buill ,hod ab,orbers.
And Miche lin S1cel·belted r"dial s
Iha l will faroullasl ord inary bias ply
tires.
Funclional luxuries.
But greal economy isn't Ihe on ly
• NEEDED: a fe m ale volunteer
at least 21 years of age with sailing / boatin g experience to work
w ith girls between 13 and 18
years of age in ,a Seascout pro gram, T hey meet once a week
(Wednesday evenings) in the
VFW Hall (2904' ; Martin Way ).
If interested . please contact Mr.
Finnigan at 943-6632 between
3 :30 and 5 p ,m. weekdays. Seascouts will ·offer training to the
volunteer.
J.
smoolh ride _And our full y reclining front bucket Sl.!a{s adjuq so
Ihe sl1100lh ride you ge l is also
comfortable.
The Peugeol diese l also gives
you
th~
l uxuril.! s o f a spaciou s in -
le rior and 20e ubi(' fccI of Irunk
spacc.'4-w hcel power disc brokcs.
r3ck-a nd -p inion steer in g. a sunroof.
ch ild·proo f rear door locks, and an
c iCCI ric clock, All slandard.
Plus Ihe grea le" luxury of ilii.
The lu xury of driving a comfortable_
well·built ('ar Ihal doesn'l cosl a
fortune to own.
MASSOTH
Shelley and Susie happily invite you cJ;~~
to participate in celebrating the
opening of their mercantile,
Saturday, October eighteenth
ten o'clock a.m, - seven o'clock p,m, ~~
~ ~!c~;!tJ~~,e!
Auto Parts
&
MACHINE
SHOP
2521 East 4th Ave ,
943-1190
Engine Rebuilders
Best Equipped Machine
Shop in Olympia
?- -=S
-~q
= 0.
,
Join us in giving a toast to the
birth of our new store
The Coachman Mazda Peugeot
3216 Pacific Ave. Oly.
352-8558
Open Sun. 11 - 5
Mon. thru Sat. 8 - 7
<CHorJfllR 10 197J EPA Fn/l'fal TntJ _At ',wi lIlIl"IIKI' e/. 'pe 'IIJ,\ 011 II'/'c'r(' Utili/lUll I OU dril. ' .,,,d
o,I,,'r l'f/rillh/c',I ,
Plant
FANTAsnc FILM ON CAMPUS!
e
Pottery
Fertilizer
Insecticides
Macrame
Gro-lighta
JESUS:
66A THIEF IN THE NIGHT"
Thursday, Oct. 23
7:30 p.m.
Lecture Hall 5
M - F 10 - 9
Sat 10 - 6
Sun 12 • 5~.,.
FREE
the
URNAL
evergreen
state
college
Olympia , Waslwlgton 98505
Volume IV Number 4
October 16, 1975
CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATES ON CAMPUS
by Ga ry P la tz and Rick Skadan
Fleetwood Mac
on Warner Bros. /
reprise records
ALBUMS
&
Tape
Eco n om ics a nd e n e rgy were th e s ubj ects
th a t dom inated di sc ussio n a t th e s pecial
Co n g r ess io n a l For um - fea tu r ing a ll
seve n o f Was hin g t o n ' s Co n g re ssio na l
d e lega tes held Wedn esday ni g h t at
Eve r gree n in th e mai n lobby of th e
libra r y.
The event , co-spllnsored by Evergree n
and t h e Thur·, t un Co unty l eag ue of
Women Vo ters , a ttra c te d a large c r o wd
th a t inclu de d seve ra l s tate o ffi cia ls a nd
repre,e nt a ti ves and ot h er loca l po li ti ca l
fig u res T h e Evergreen ap p eara n ces was
th e fo ur th Si0 P by t he Co n g ressmen o n
th e ir l our-dav t o ur throu g h Wash in gto n
.1nd is the <l nl y pu b lic for um in cluded in
Ihl' ir e ig h t- c it y visit th roug h th e s t a te.
,\ Iter in tilldu c tor y rema rks b y Everg rL'l'n prc<; ici ent ChMles McCa nn , Re p, '
I), 'n I~,' nker , the new est member o f the '
llln)!re<;'"> io n ..1i delq;Ll ti n n and represe ntatrv(' Ir olm thl' Thi rd Di,trict of w hi ch
l )Ivrnp r..l i, ..l p..lrl , 'Ll id tne purpose of the
I,'rum ,md " I Ihl' tnur wa<; tn " hea r what
" "ll 111ll' I' l'''I,!ct h ..lVe to ~ay a n d a nswer
" 'lll ljUl"t!l'n~ .
Illlnke r sa id th e Co n hrl','r1l l'll '''-'..Inted to dev tlt l' mnst of th eir
11111,· 1" ,111,,,'I' n ng Cj ll l'sl i,'n s a nd th at th"y
,1,,1
rNmGY, ECONOMICS DOMINATE
l PnLl' rn \l Vl'r thl' '"> tat t' 0 1 th e econ omy
.I ill I tlw C llng re" i"n il l res pon se to thi s
l)r,,['I,'n) w .." d L'ml1 nQra ted several times
h,' I1ll ' lllbel' " I t lw ..lUdi e n ce. Ma n y
qlll', II, ' n , were ..Iddr e~se d t l' Hr ock
:\d.1 Il)' (h,lIrman " I th e p owe rful H o u se
Il ud gl' t (tlmml t lee.
1," 1 1,1 I'1:.;lrl
.\ 1,'," /'
357-4755
Positively 4th St.
I1I<tllt"i
(I.'Ilke MC~""Il1(k . Ols ll' lel -1 : DOli BOllker, Dist ric t 3; LIn ,lit I
~
,\dam, m ..lde CleM Iris d,,,at ,s fac ti on
\\,Ith : hl' r'ort! aclll1ill,.,tr ..1ti(lIl ' ~ hJndl ing 01
Ihl' L'(()nllmi( ~i l ll,ltilll) a nd sa id he did
11 (It IlkL' th ,> ,,'ay t he ('cOIll)mv h as bee n
nl.ln,lgl'd .."n n' 10 70 and Ih a l hI' wantl'd
1(1 Il'turn t" Ihe I'rmplOrily "I Ihe 10 60 's."
l\dar1l " a Deillocral , d ~ are all the
dt'll'g,ltl" PXll'pt lOl' l f'r itc h,lrd . .,d id hl'
"'l"
tlw lalk "I dlc(lrd between Congres',
.Intl l're~ ldl'll t F.'rd ..1' t i,t' mdjor <,t umblini!
blnl k prr'vl'nlin~~ IlH',lI1ingtul economic
1".)1(\' ulmin)' ,'ut "I tht' gove rnmen l. Hl'
"(lid
Il·g l .... l~ll ll ln
IlIl
co ns ide ri n g provi ding fin a ncia l s upport
for m o n ey -tr oub led New ' Yo rk C it y, but
did n ot ru le o ut th e po ss ibi l it y of
pro vid in g s u c h s upport in the futu re after
a n .i nves tiga ti o n of th e c ity's pro bl e m s.
Re p. Ll oyd Meeds fr om Ev e r e tt s t resse d
th e n ee d for crea ting pu b li c se r vice job, to
he lp ~ t imul a l e t he econ o m y, b'.I1 s a id
muc h m ore th a n t ha i is need ed to solve
eCllnomic p rob le m s.
'' In a ddition 10 th e crea t ion of public
.,e r viet? jobs, we need to s timulate th e
eco n omy ," Meeds said. " In thi s type L) I
eco n e)m y, t he pr iva te sector mus t bea r a
large b urde n in pr clV iding jobs."
O n e idea Meeds has t o h e lp the
econ(lmy i ~ b y s p onso rin g a bi ll - alo ng
w ith S en. H enr y Jack son
th at wo u ld
c r e<lle a Yo un g Adul t s Co n serva tion
Co rp s. Thi~ latte r -day version 01 the old
Civil ia n Co nserv ation Cnrrs 01 the 1930's
wou ld prov id e yea r-rou nd jobs for men
and women betwee n the ages 0 1 19 dnd
23.
Rep ub lican Prit c ha rd sta ted tha t the
most impo rt a n t prob lem facing t he n at ion
i<; th at of inllation .
''Not hin g ca n b e so lved witho u t ge t t ing
a ha n d le o n in fla ti o n ," sa id Prit c h ard , and
wen l on to say that con cern wi t h soc ia l
legis la t io n has to ta k e a b ac k seat to th e
in fl at ion p rob le m . H is fe ll ow d e lega tes
co n c u r red wi t h h im o n thi s s ubject.
McCORMACK ON ENERGY
Mu d e r a t or Macleod i n form e d th ~
a ud ience th at Bonker h as a n noun ced he is
co -s po nsorin g a bi ll th a t wou ld prov ide a
('Li.lnnmic
nl(lttl'rr.;
i..,
,,'II,tllutlnnallv Ihe re~pI1n'ibrli l y of
( (\ "~rL'" ,Jnd Ih"t h1rd I, hin dering rather
th"n helpln)' I1ldttl'r'.
III ,1n"vt'r II' ,1I1(>lher qUl' <; l lll n , Ad a Ill ~
~ ,lId th,11 Congress is not al thi., tim e
l ive-yea r mor ..It o riu m on the canst ru c t iun
o i nu c lear puwer pIJnt <; , an J nnouncell'1l'nt I h at wa~ gree ted by c hecr; from
a udience . 13,'n~ er s<l i cI, " Th e ball ,..,
necc".,ary until Wt' all s wer <II I tIl('
qUl's l iun<, a buut Ihe II UlkM planh ."
I~t'p . M ik e McCormack. c h a ir man p(
t he Lner~y R e~eJ rc h J nd Devl' lopmpn t
l\dmini<;tr<Jl illn subcomil) ittec a nd out<; pnk en pr ('ponct 01 nu clear enlrgy
d"d grl'l' d With l3l'nkl'l <; , t.lIld ,Ind do,h.~'d
him to jl11 1l till' re q "I Ihe VVas hington
dl'll'g ..1tlnn In their suppl1rt (11 nucll'dr
1,1 ,1l1h.
~1( l llrm..lck demono,tr.ltl'd hi, I",perti,l'
(In the ,u bjl' Ll when he dc'livl'red ,1
1 5~m inllt(' 'pI 'l'c h in dl'len~(' 01 nu c ll ',ll"
pUIA/ t'r.
T h e lL1JirJilll ha , cha n ged its face again. hom
d
Lefl 10 RIF: II I : Brock Ada"l s. Dist ric t 7; Fl oyd Hicks , D rst rlct 6· To m Fo/ f'Y·
Dlstrld 5
H l' began by pni n t in g ou t th a t th e
wo rl d hd ~ pa ssed l rom the e r a of
"db und a n l a nd c h eap lu e!> to a n era 0 1
s h or ta ge a nd high pF ices," Becau se of thi s,
hp s;:I id , a lt e rna ti ve S'1 UITes of e ne rgy
must b e found a nd , in h is o pinion ,
nu clea r e n l' r gy is th e o il l y prac ti cal
<ll tern<1 ti vc.
MILITARY SPEND IN G AND OTHER
ITEMS
Rep. Floyd Hicks , a memher of the
Armed Serv ice Comm i Lce , said t h e
bud ge t for t he m ilit a r y " may be cu t a
little bi t moP! , b ut not s ubs t an tia ll y." He
said th at th e military budgel cou ld have
t he eff ect e)1 increas ing in,tab ilit y in the
M iddl e E.lst.
"We' re t rying tn do till' lw'i we can to
hrin g SLll1)l' 'iemblancc ul st dbiht y tll the
Midd le Ed, t ,' said Hi ck.,.
13 0nke r ,1 1" , agreed e'n Ihe imp ortance
"I kl'l'p ing PCd(l' III Ihe ~1i dd)P Ed,!.
<;dvin g , " It i., imp"rt..lnt t o main tai n a
billame u l p,'wL' r' III thl' Middle East. .
Dl)nkn h"wl'ver . IV,]., ,1t a lo'iS tor
word<; e,H I in in the p r ugra m . \;\' hl'n
queslilllll'd ,1~ til whethe r h e wou ld
suppll rl ..I bill intruduced by New York
r epre~entativl' Bel la Abzug providing
equal ri gh ts Il'r Gay p('()pic , a lt er ,llille
hesi tatilill he rt'p li l'd that he wou ldn ' t , ..I
reS pl'n Sl' th<lt received sC Jttered app la u se
t rnlll the ,llIdl enct?
A Inp ic Ihdt .,urp ri ~ i llgly d id n ot (ome
up un til nea r the e nd o f t he larum was
th at o f th e A lp ine LCl kes Wilderlle~s Area
c ontrover sy. Meeds received app lause
w hen he said it was essen tial to preserve
that a r ea
01 ten known a~ the
"W;]shing t on Alps"
locJted be tween
S teven s a nd Sn llqu a lmi e pa sses, H e sa id
he hopecl a bill on the s ubj ec t cou ld b e
Int rod uced thi s ye.J r and if Wils hin g lon's
c ()ngrl'ssillnal de !ega tl lln co uld reach an
unanimous decisi L'n nn the delai ls a bou t
the pmposed Mea ', ~ I Le, the b ill cou ld
pro babl y gn thrllu gh Congre'i'i easilv .
:v1c( orma c k re'l p l' nded bv saying he
IdVll!"' ..I slightly sma ller , izl' IlIr the
wilderJw<,<; area ,/I"l d ex prp'i',ed hi , COn(l'rn
,1bllut the potent i,, 1 I,,, , ot j(1b, in the
timher' indu,try " 1\1el,d< version III Ih('
wildl'rIle'i'i MP,I bill gill Ihrnu g h Longrt.'o;<,
II L,wcvl'r, h e did SJY he s upported the
idea 0 1 c rea t ing a wi lderness a rea: he ju st
wa llt s it to be s m a ller ,
W he n asked why Co n g l es~ ha., nol
tJke n a more asse r tive sta nd e)n the issue
0 1 Indi an fi s h ing rig ht s, Meed s replied
th a t Con gress has little or no Juthorrty 10
..le t in that matter , thai interpretation of
tr e,Jt i e~ i, the r espo n s ibili ty l't the
judi c ia ry . He .,aid though , that t he
Cn llgre s,men wou ld be meel in g '\'Ith
ti ~ herm en , :'<Jalive-American s and repre'L' n ta ti vc', u l the sta t£' Dcpartmen l ., "l
Fis lll'ries and Gamp Fnda~, On , 17 tn
d i sLu~" Ihl' prub lem ,lnd tl' d isc us., ",hat
Lan bL' d"ne tn rcli('\,(' thl' cha,,' In till'
li,l1l'rieo, ill the PaCi fic :-\"rth\\'c,t .
!\ ., I J I' d ., any ,) n e I... n 0 IV , U r ( ,1 n
rl'lllL'mbl'r, thl' I, the Ilr't tlllll' ,1Ii cd
\'\ ,..,h'llgt()n' l lIngrl''';Il!],11 dl'le g, I: ,'"
h,I \:I' (,,'l'r ,I" il" ,1r.yth , ni: IlkI' thl' IC1l,' ,lI,
ullprc' Ll, dentL' d l'ven!
fhdl il"" :'111),
o, lI r pri,ing "',1 ' ',IILI i.lq IIl ghl pLT h.JI"
duc"n ' t 111,1It('(" II, 'ill' thi1ught ri',ll
l {lllnt ...
mimeographed s heet ca lled the " Weakl y (D )/{ag " w ith th e headline, " Newspaper, Need~
W New"" Il) a live-co lumn tab lo id cal led "T he Paper" to the magazine-fo rmat (pony-tab) Cooper Poilit lormlal , th e paper h as come a lm os t
o
«
U.
>
>
W
Z
W
:I
t-
lull c ircle with thi ., w('ek'~ re turn to tabloid format. (Next week , we m ay become a mimeogr<lphed s heet .. )
Money , or rJ t her the I.llk ot money , prompted the sw it c h . It costs th l' I(Jl/mal (and ,tudenh, ~ince we are p..lrtially lunaI'd through
S& A m ('nie~) between 523 a nd 526 ex tra every week to have the paper p r inted · tr immed in the ma gaz in e formal. Thai works out to $100
.J month , 5300 a quar te r and $900 a year III addition to the regular press cha rges, However , true to Parkin son 's law ("the bill, a lway.,
l'xc('eci the incoming revenm'''), th e money wi ll be qu ickly dbso r bed by bills ,
Td[, form"t <1l so a ll ows grea t versa tilit y In la you t. Th e five -co lumn standard layo ut can be easi ly a ltered tll become four. three or t wo
co lumn s thelt ca n be mixed t oget her in innumerab le comb inations . And , because of the larger pa ges, photos and drawi ngs can be run big
eno ugh to do them jus t ice. W hen th e q ual it y pi grap hi c reproduct ion on new sprint is taken into cons ideration , th at's no mean advantage.
I Iowever, ,ume aspect s of Ihe o ld fo rm at. fir~ t adopted because it was innova ti ve, n eater, and a t that time , c heap have been retained .
The "cnver" mode , alo n g with a fl'aturis ti c news s tyle , have been retained.
Re ad on .
CONTENTS
O lvmpia Jar!
Apples
Ted Gundy
letters
Ca reer P lanning
[llll'ltdillllll'nl
Commulllty
Scu lpture
pg
pg
pg
pg
PY.
pg
pg
pg
2
J
3
>1
4
6
6
7