cpj0139.pdf

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Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 5, Issue 11 (January 27, 1977)

extracted text
~DD

THE SCORE AT ASH
THE BIG BONUSES ...
Volume 5 Number 11 .
No long term lease

Complete Laundry facilities
Furnished and unfurnished apts available
Earl's Place for snacks, shopping, recreation
and, of course, great Pinball

by Brad Pokorny
When Evergreen President Charles J.
McCann leaves office on June 15 he will
receive a two-year paid leave of absence.
For the first year he will get $43,300, his
current full salary, and for the second year
he will receive half that much, on the condition that he returns to Evergreen and
becomes a member of the faculty. This
leave was arranged with McCann directly
by the Board of Trustees sometime last
year, even before the board knew that
Governor Dan Evans would replace McCann.
President McCann is now under fire
over the leave.
In the last week some faculty and staff
members at Evergreen, and certain members of the state legislature. have lowered
their guns at the Board of Trustees and
McCann. They are highly critical of both
the length and cost of the leave. and the
manner in which it was awarded.
Last Tuesday. January 18, the executive
committee of The Evergreen State College
Federation of Teachers. Local 3421, issued
a press release voicing its opposition to
the leave. They objected to the "high administrative salary . the sidestepping of the
college's own professional leave committee. and the severe under-funding of the
professional leaves for regular faculty."
A MAITER OF POLICY
Perhaps the chief objection to the leave
is the manner in which the Board of Trustees allegedly violated institutional policy.
The Evergreen Administrative Code, the
set of rules and guidelines by which the
college operates, specifies that "The President and Vice Presidents will submit their
applications for professional leave to the
Professional Leaves Committee," after
which the leaves committee will make recommendations to the Board of Trustees.
The code also specifies that leaves will be
granted for a maximum of one year in
any seven-year period (EAC 174-112-

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Earl and Car ol Sc hw artz thank all thoJe who dona/I'd their time
and energy to A Sf! laJt quarter. 'They could never have accompl/Shed everyt hlTlg wIthout your generouJ support.

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800 3a and EAC 174-112-790 2a). McCann's leave did not go through the Leaves
Committee.
McCann says his leave is a termination
leave. not a professional leave. and therefore it does not fall under the guidelines
in the administrative code . ··Sure ." he
says, "if I were taking a sabbatical in the
middle of my term. it would go through
the leaves committee ."
Arnold Doerksen . Director of General
Services and a member of the Professional
Leaves Committee. said that the committee wasn't sure if it was leave or termina·tion pay when they met last week . but
that it seemed the second half of the money ··is professional leave and should have
gone through EAC policy." The committee
is draftingdletter to the Board of Trustees
asking why they did not roule the leave
through them.
THE MONEY
The other big question is one of money :
Is McCann 's leave too much?
Michael Beug. the faculty member who
brought the matter to the attention of the
facu lt y union . said. "In one sense the pay
for the job he's done. compared JO someone in private industry. is very low. But
compared to the lm ager func 'J1g d c~ l ·
lege budgets it seems excessive."
Lee Anderson admitted he was di5tu~bed
about the amount of Ihe leave. 'Tm crit ical of it." he said. "There·s somet hing like
$90.000 for faculty leaves . And that's for
135 faculty. That works out to about enough for each faculty member to take
one quarter's leave every eleven years. "
Some object to the leave because the
budgets for other professional leaves are
so small , but McCann said that the money
for his leave will in no way affect money
for other leaves. or money for academics .
Other four-year colleges around the
state have granted leaves to their presidents in manners similar 10 McCann's, but
Brad Pokorny

rontirlll ed pllge 8

Indian Awareness Week Winds Up

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I.
I

Speeches, films, food, fashions, discussions, entertainment, and arts and crafts
displays have been highlights of Evergreen's Indian Awar~ness Week, which
continues through tomorrow. The program is being presented by the Native
American Student Association at Evergreen under the coordination of student
Tony Olney.
Joe Washington, a Lummi Indian from
Bellingham. spoke yesterday about the
traditions and spiritual ways of the Coast
Indians, Gray-haired and in his seventies,
Washington's talk focused on the Indian's
spiritual quest, the Indian teachings on
ecology. and his own trauma from the
white man's attempts to take away Indian
spiritual traditions.
He spoke of the spirit prophet KhaaIs .
who was "the first translator for the Indians, and who made the world." He compared him to Jesus, and spoke of the similarity of their teachings. "The Indian begins his quest when he achieves humility,
when he believes there is something greater than himself. There is a change that
comes over a person; similar to the way
the Bible describes a change coming over
one in a twinkling of an eye."
Washington spoke for over an hour,
mostly responding to questions from an
audience of about 40 or 50 respectful Evergreeners. He talked in gentle tones,

making broad, descriptive arm motions,
his hands communicating in a subsidiary
language of their own.
"When the white man first came to this
land it was full of natural resources, mil lions of fish and animals. but now the
white man has depleted the resources,"
said Washington. "The Indian people always knew that to take too much of one
thing will cause a chain reaction that will
last for centuries." He spoke of salmon
canneries in the 1930's that threw away
tons of fish, starting just such a chain reaction , and complained of whites blaming
the Indians for the lack of salmon.
When asked about the conflict in his
own life between white and Indian culture, he related a story of going off to
government school on the reservation and
coming home to tell his grandmother that
he no longer wanted to hear her stories of
the traditional ways, that he was a white
man now. "This made her cry," he said.
" But to make it back to traditional Indian
life was very difficult, and I had to go
through many doors."
Finally, Washington spoke of the need
to teach traditional Indian ways in the
schools. He said he had been talking with
a white professor of anthropology about
Indians teaching Indian culture in college.
"The man asked why J should teach what
took him 24 years to learn. and J said,

'Well , who did you learn about the Indians from?'"
Activities for the resl of the week include:
Thursday, January 26
NOON Ramona Bennett. leader of the
Puyallup Tribe and chief organizer of the
Cascadia takeover, speaks on "Cascadia."
2 p.m . Evergreen teacher Cruz Esquivel
speaks on "Our Destiny ."
3 p.m. AIlen Van Avery speaks on "Indians, Medicine, and Food."
7 p.m. "COON CONS COYOTE, " a
comedy based on traditional legends, performed by Red Earth, a Seattle theatre
troupe. Admission is $1 for adults, 75
cents for students, and 50 cents for children under 12.
Friday, January 27
9 a.m . A discussion of Native American
fashion and design. Also, a fashion show .
10 a .m. A talk on "Emphasis Education"
by Evergreen teacher Mary Ellen HilIajre.
2 p.m. Raul Salinas, author of "Trip to
the Mind Jail," reads his poetry. Also, ,a
discussion of "Native American "&..-t, Poems, and Prophecy," by Evergreen teachers Mary Nelson and Cruz Esquivel.
4 p.m. Stone Thomas, director of Evergreen's Third World Coalition, speaks on
"Evergreen and Education for Third World
Students."

6 p.m. A "POW WOW" concludes the
week's events. with singers. dancers, tra ditional Indian foods. and a full four hours
of activities.

2

3

used with cassava starch paste to
make another type of adire cloth.
While in Mbaise, I will continue
learning new styles of headwraps, ways of wrapping clothes,
names of designs, etc. We have
already visited a textile factory
near here, learned the complete
process of textile production, and
made arrangements for purchase
of finished textiles. Aside from
academics, we are spending much
time visiting with people: listening to their stories, living and
learning their way of life, and
sharing cultural values and views.
We are all learning a great deal
about the different people of Nigeria and about ourselves.
,
- Robin
I am Hazel Washington from
Oakland, and I joined the group
while they were in Ibadan. I came
to Africa to investigate the import-export trade and hopefully
will be able to make enough contacts here to set up shop in Oakland, I am in the process of being
enrolled at Evergreen, since I
was unable to visit Olxrnpia before my journey to Nigeria. Boy,
it's an experience of a lifetime.
Except for ttJe LARGE insects
and the bad roads, I have really
been enjoying myself here and
the people all have welcomed us.
They say I look Nigerian and
they are amazed when I speak
with an American accent. The
words that come most often in
meeting people are "WELCOME
HOME I"
P. S. I send greetings from
Mark Schmitt and Micky Satterwhite who are not here to file
their 'reports as they stayed in
Ibadan for the holidays, with the
hopes of visiting some other West
African nations. Also, we all
hope everyone there is doing
well. The last issue we got of the
CPJ was fun to read and very
well done, I thought . .. That's
all for now.
- Fran

Resident
Evans
To the Editor :

DTF
Disappears
PDQ
T n the Editor :
Subject: "What are yOt: smokIng these days 7"
I read with some interest your
lanuary 20, 1977 editorial, which
;eems to want to criticize my appointment of a task force to review the Services and Activities
Fee allocation process , What
made your editorial especially
interesting is the fact that I have
called no such DTF. May I sugges t, therefore,. that you learn to
check your news sources for accuracy.
Dean E. Clabaugh
The Editor replies: Winston
100 Lights, filter-tipped.
When Administrative Vice
President Dean Clabaugh asked
t he Services and Activities Board
for lists of students to serve on
an S&A Disappearing Task
Force, the COOPER POINT
JOURNAL assumed he was planning to call such a DTF. For details see the related article on
page four of this issue.

Try This
On For Sighs
To ,the Editor :
I{ E
THE STAN SHORE
MA TT GROENING EGO RE ·
VIEW , FORMERLY THE CPJ :
What is this garbage 7 First of
.111 MatI. let's mention that it was
l.AST year's CPJ that was deemed
"hest paper," and secondly, let's
nnte that it obviously can't haprt'n again II I'm talking about
SHIT JOURNALISM, Matt, you
kn, )w : trashy reporting! I know
111<' paper just changed hands,
:\n<l I know it takes time to get
rp lling aUer a major change of
h.lnds . but christ , YOU DON'T
h.l\'e 10 Ihrow Ihe fucking paper
t l' Ihe dogs!!! This week's CPJ

I

is reminiscent of BILL HIRSCHMAN days when the most striking feature of the Cooper POINT
Journal was the PAGE NUMBERS! !! !! Articles? None. Info 7'
Too much, Salaries7 Cop-out for
filler. Photos 7 Tacky. Letters 7
Oh, such WITIY headlines MEN . WOMEN. DICK. JANE .
Droll Matt, droll. AND IF I
READ ONE MORE WORD ABOUT DAN EVANS MATT
GROENING, I am going to send
you to y<'lil\r room! ! ! And I HATE
wide co lumns!!! And disguising
wide columns as BORING wide
columns isn't foo ling anyone,
Matt. NOr-ANYONE!!
Matt, please, please PLEASE
improve with age. I'm not asking
you to do it the old way , or my
way, but however you do it. 00- '
IT WELL, because as it is, IT
SUCKS!!! I!! I!!
Respectfully submi tted;
your friend,
Cheryl
P. S. The ads are great.

The
Vulgarian
Border
To the Editor:
The article "Oil-Black Tuxes
and Slick Gowns" last week
prompted me to write this letter.
I found its tone and content to
be bordering on the vulgar.
Now , I'm the last one to support pretentious and snobbish
social gatherings . But there is
such a thing as r~sponsible journalism. I think it 's possible to be
sarcastic without being derogatory and cheap.
Last week someone asked Dan
Evans why the local media and
community seemed so unfavorably disposed towards Evergreen.
All they would have to do is
read an arrogant article like that
to be alienated. Although this is
a student newspaper , there
doesn't seem to be any point in
offending the outlying community,
Janet Woodward

Father Evans
To the Editor :
An open letter to Dan Evans:
Attended your open-mike conference this afternoon, January
19. Some advice. Compared to
your last job, the people you
now control/represent comprise
a much more intimate group. If
you're bullshitting we're going to
smell it right away. So don't
bullshit. Speak directly to the
question. Try to answer "yes" or
"no" when appropriate and don't
apologize if you don't have an
immediate answer, It's assumed
that you'll study the issue dr end
up seeing letters like this in the
community news'. Don't waste
time defending the decisions you
made as Governor. People concerned about that are living in
the past. You have a new role,
Whether you want it or not
you're a Robert Young fatherfigure for most students.
Watch how other faculty and
staff relate to students , Just like
real people. The community is
largely supportive of you, but
we'll feel better about it when
you begin to evidence understanding that this job is not dependent on capricious public
opinion polls.
Sincerely, Bob Sawatzki
P .S, Alisa says:
You have been "Governor;" a
stereotype . You are now entering
into a new type, "President. " I
would rather see you as Dan
Evans, Beware of groovy ness
abounding.

Spanking
New

Journalism
To the Editor:
What I want to know is this:
why is it that there are so many
smartass articles in your paper7
Paul Sparks calls it New Journalism but it is cheeky and smart-

ass and when I read it, I want to
spank the butt of the writer, and
how,
Boy if there is one thing you
should know, it's that good and
even funny articles can be written without the amount of holierthan-thou's that . seem to infest
this so-called New Journalism.
You would never expect to
hear it from me,
Woody Woodpecker
(ha ha haha)

Here Men
Go Again
To the Editor:
Re: "Music For Women Only,"
by Karrie Jacobs (January 13),
Teresa TrulL Meg Christian,
and Karrie Jacobs are prejudiced .
I have never in my life excluded
women "in order to protect,
assert, and maintain" my "power," even though I do happen to
have X chromosomes in my cells .
H there were ever atE vergreen a
no-women concert, there would
be no nicety nicety articles to
explain it away, only angry
voices complaining about flagrant sexism and "Here men go
again I" It's fine to hate men, for
they don't feel, they can't be
hurt, they are The Oppressors.
The idea that men are only
worthy of this musk if it "seems
necessary" (column two, line 11)
is a debasing continuation of the
idea which for 50 long has oppressed both men and women ,
whites and blacks , It is the idea
that those neat little cubbyholes
into which people are lumped
can actually tell anything of significance about the person .
Yes indeed, Teresa Trull, Meg
Christian, and Karrie Jacobs are
all very fkilled performers; skilled
at hiding their hypocrisy with a
sweet song.
Randall Hunting
(A white male)
P.S . It is perhaps significant
that the offending sign was torn
down, spat upon, and stomped
upon by a woman.

Rooting
Out Ads
To the Editor:

, . .. .

The "Roots" Special, an adaptation of the commendable and
prodigious work by Alex Haley,
would have more continuity and
would be more effectively received by the TV viewers if commercials would be run at the beginning and! or end of each program instead of intermittently.
Other so-called "important
works" or Specials are given
more respectful placement of adtime - so should "Roots I" If
you are annoyed or offended by
the advertising interruptions of
"Roots" I invite and encourage
you to grasp this opportunity to
DO something by telephoning
your local television station and
by writing letters of complaint to
the advertisers, newspapers, and
radio stations. Maybe Media
would be more responsive if
viewing audiences sought prod
ucts other than those rudely
thrust at them. How about if
some of you talented media peo
pie started making "Buyer Be
. ware" public service spots - as
anti-commerical commercials
sort of, but with more depth
Stop licking it up, America .
With Love,
Ajim

Attica Blues
To the Editor:
My name is John Loriol and
I'm presently incarcerated in Attica State Prison for possession
of LSD .
This being my first offense, the
loneliness and tension of prison
life has taxed my self-control to
the limit.
I'm asking help from any students who would correspond
with me and ease a troubled
spirit.
John Loriol 76 A2958
P.O. Box 149
Attica, NY 14011

I think that we should all be
glad that Mayor Evans is . going
to be a resident of Evergreen. He
certainly deserves to be I After
all, his father left us his lovely library, and where would we be
without it? He must have been a
very intelligent man to have read
all those books, and I'm sure
some of it must have rubbed off
on his son.
Mayor Evans sure is a better
choice than that of Dixie Earl
Ray, and he sure was funny on
"Get Smart." Does he still talk in
that funny nasal tone, saying
things like, "Sorry about that,"
and "Would you believe .. ,7"
Maybe he'll put on a show for us
and talk into his shoe.
However, I do have one itsybitsy teeny criticism of Mayor
Evans. Last issue you showed a
photo of him rappeIling down
the clock tower. But what you
didn't show or explain was how
he got up there or what he was
doing up there in the first place.
We all know students aren't al- ·
lowed on the roofs, so what
makes him so special7 Perhaps
you can clear this up in your
next issue.
Well, I certainly enjoy your
paper, and I especially enjoyed
.your article on the Ash Tree
apartments. The picture of the
handsome couple entertaining
all those cute little munchkins
was truly adorable. Bye now!
, ,,. .' " Barhi Be1it

Hot Flash
To the Editor:

To the Editor:

Hi. My name is Lloyd Thackston. You may not remember me,
but then I might not remember
you either, Since you seem to be
having a sixties revival in your
letter column I thought I would
join in the fun and throw up a
. hot flash from the past. Remember Monty Hall? Ever wonder
what's happened to him since
those fab campus uprisings of the
sizzling sixties? Your readers will
be interested to note the answer
to this question: HE HAS BECOME FILTHY RICH II Isn ' t
nostalgia fun? Well, got to run
now.
Lloyd (where's the
action) Thackston

Greetings I Happy holidays
from the African Study Abroad
Program . The group has temporarily moved into the ~ral. area
of Imo State in East Nlgena to
an area called Mbai~. Owerri,
the nearest town, is about 25
miles away, We are now staying
where Jude was born and we
have met his mother and some
of the family. We are going to
spend the Christmas . holiday
here. Life is much easier here,
not convenience-wise, but the
pace is much slower. The people
are more friendly and relaxed
than in the city. My language
studies are proceeding well and I

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EDITOR
Matt Groening
MANAGING EDITOR
Brad Pokorny
FEATURE EDITOR
Stan Shore

BUSINESS MANAGER
David Judd
ADVERTISING
Brock Sutherland
SECRETARY
Kim McCartney

PRODUCTION
Lynda Weinman
Steve Willis
The COOPER POINT JOURNAL Is published weekly lor the students, lacu Ity ,
and stall of The Evergreen State College. Olympia, Washington 98505 . Views expressed are not necessarily those 01 The Evergreen State College. Advertising rnalerlal presented herein does not necessarily Imply endorsement by this newspaper.
Offices are located in the College Activities Building (CAB) 308. News .phones:
868-6213, 868-6214. Advertising and business : 868-6080. Leiters ~IICY . All letters to the editor must be received by noon Tuesday lor thst week. publlcatton.
Leiters must be typed, double-spaced, and 400 words or I"IS. The editors reserve
the right to edit for content and style. Names will be withheld on request.

FORUM
The Sexual Dance
FORUM is a column of commentary on issues of possible int~­
est to the Evergreen community. The column is open t? any individual or group on campus. The opinions expressed m F~R.UM
are solely the author's, and do not necessarily reflect the opInions
of the college or the staff of the COOPER POINT JOURNAL.
Address all correspondence to FORUM, the COOPER POINT
JOURNAL, CAB 306.
by Katrina Calderaro
Who's up; what's down; where's who; what is woman is ma~
is; what is goin' round? New issues, old theme; hu":,an history,
oops, herstory, I mean human-story: I mean what IS gomg on,
and most of all where is the leak (7) of laughter7 Ecch! The heldback smile for what for whom for this is now a ~ew year: 1977.
This is a highly Significant year. Why7. Because It IS a tl~e to continue breaking from tradition, enlarging our perspectIve,. and a
time to create new forms. A time to re-root and become Incre~s­
ingly more natural and wild; a time to reap mo:e fully , more 10tricately the beauty and fertility of our surrounding Puget Sound/
Olympia, and most of all a time to change the way we change, In
circles and cycles we go .
d
I
Where is the place to jump in, to conti~ue the task an scu pting of a wider and more versatile perspechve7 There ~,re 50 man~
issues, concerns, and puzzles to be re-ordered for Ih~ New Age,.
I choose the present sexuality' issue (dance), I call It (parenthetically) a Dance, because that creates for. m~ and. hop~fully for y~~
a freer, more expansive view; a multl-dlm.enslOnahty. I do ,n
choose this dance; rather it chooses me, Simply because It IS a
daily and worldwide issue.
d'
At Evergreen, specifically, much has been going on regar Ing
the woman's music issue. There has beef! a dance around the place
of men in women's concerts . Should men be allowed7 Should they
be asked to be courteous to women's growing a~d ~hanglng nee~s
by not attending concerts 7 Is it fair? What IS right? What diS
wron 1 Or do those questions even pertain any more? Whe:e 0
~ and how do we fulfill eQe.rybody's needs7 These are Just a
:':'~ling of some of the questionsil'l motion, in circles, of peoples
around the community. Where do W~, go, and most Vitally how
can we economize our pride, to be able't~ work, 10 gather,
My passion now is to take the small space h~re and begm to reveal my growing impatience and suspicion wl~h the wa~ we remain closed to a larger perspective, a healthier, more mc\~sl~e
perspective on feminism, as a part of the sexual emergency 0 t e
present.
d
't
What I want to do is take the sexual dance a~ use I as a. way
to start exploring and exploding our present VIews about hf~, I
think the issue goes beyond men and woman and has a larger esson, a lesson in how to view human evoluhon, human beauty,
and vulnerability, and how to enlarge prese~t systems of thought
that have women trying to become men trymg to become women
trying to become men trying to beco~e woman . A ~eadly system
that is not moving quickly enough WIth o~r evolutIOn, a system
stuck, lifelessly in comparison, hierarchy, .elther / or, black / white.
vanilla/chocolate: polar thinking. True ,mmdle~sness., A system of
values that tells me to define my sexuahty stral~t or gay, gay or
straight instead of letting my sexuality unfold, BI-sexuahty or buy
my sex~ality. Again I sing what's up. who's down, where are we
going7 A system of thought/values that denies what I .call the
deeper life pulses common to us all. Our common celebratIOn of
our changes both beyond and within our present forms. We need
a "system" (1) that is at once assuredly more commuOlcallve and
graceful.
We must push a bit harder and more . softly .to create a group
eye that sees the beauty of the dance issue (nollce I am af~ald to
fully give up the word issue), the beauly of woman's nee ~ new
and emerging both inclusive and exclusive (there I am back m ,polarities) of men and women and men and women (I am explormg,
trying with words to move further, to develop new modes of communication).
f
1
h
I envision a more response-able community 0 peop es were
we all must .take part with all of our u~ique, col~rfuL and individual fashions. Bringing forth our ideas In celebratIOn I~ commitment to new forms and more honesty, Playing together In urgency
and vitality, seeing our stake in evolution, learning ~ur task, ~ak­
ing risk. creating con-centric circles of pe~ples talking, dancmg,
writing, swimming with a common notion m our common ocean,
We must. We must all put in some time fmdmg the most fruItful
forms as we dance, This is 1977 and it will only . come once. We
can maximize our time and environment to gIve hfe to the dance,
meaning we have a school with tools and peoples, open and clear
air that is not found elsewhere in the country, What can we learn
about changing the nature of our lives through this issue? What IS
the lesson to be learned?
.
Time is running out. I feel like I am going to lose my thread If I
rush. This is a mere opening; these are just a few seeds scratchmg
the surface. The gro und is moist and fertde and we have more
work to do.

About the author : Katrina Calderaro is a student in the Chautauqua program.

2

3

used with cassava starch paste to
make another type of adire cloth.
While in Mbaise, I will continue
learning new styles of headwraps, ways of wrapping clothes,
names of designs, etc. We have
already visited a textile factory
near here, learned the complete
process of textile production, and
made arrangements for purchase
of finished textiles. Aside from
academics, we are spending much
time visiting with people: listening to their stories, living and
learning their way of life, and
sharing cultural values and views.
We are all learning a great deal
about the different people of Nigeria and about ourselves.
,
- Robin
I am Hazel Washington from
Oakland, and I joined the group
while they were in Ibadan. I came
to Africa to investigate the import-export trade and hopefully
will be able to make enough contacts here to set up shop in Oakland, I am in the process of being
enrolled at Evergreen, since I
was unable to visit Olxrnpia before my journey to Nigeria. Boy,
it's an experience of a lifetime.
Except for ttJe LARGE insects
and the bad roads, I have really
been enjoying myself here and
the people all have welcomed us.
They say I look Nigerian and
they are amazed when I speak
with an American accent. The
words that come most often in
meeting people are "WELCOME
HOME I"
P. S. I send greetings from
Mark Schmitt and Micky Satterwhite who are not here to file
their 'reports as they stayed in
Ibadan for the holidays, with the
hopes of visiting some other West
African nations. Also, we all
hope everyone there is doing
well. The last issue we got of the
CPJ was fun to read and very
well done, I thought . .. That's
all for now.
- Fran

Resident
Evans
To the Editor :

DTF
Disappears
PDQ
T n the Editor :
Subject: "What are yOt: smokIng these days 7"
I read with some interest your
lanuary 20, 1977 editorial, which
;eems to want to criticize my appointment of a task force to review the Services and Activities
Fee allocation process , What
made your editorial especially
interesting is the fact that I have
called no such DTF. May I sugges t, therefore,. that you learn to
check your news sources for accuracy.
Dean E. Clabaugh
The Editor replies: Winston
100 Lights, filter-tipped.
When Administrative Vice
President Dean Clabaugh asked
t he Services and Activities Board
for lists of students to serve on
an S&A Disappearing Task
Force, the COOPER POINT
JOURNAL assumed he was planning to call such a DTF. For details see the related article on
page four of this issue.

Try This
On For Sighs
To ,the Editor :
I{ E
THE STAN SHORE
MA TT GROENING EGO RE ·
VIEW , FORMERLY THE CPJ :
What is this garbage 7 First of
.111 MatI. let's mention that it was
l.AST year's CPJ that was deemed
"hest paper," and secondly, let's
nnte that it obviously can't haprt'n again II I'm talking about
SHIT JOURNALISM, Matt, you
kn, )w : trashy reporting! I know
111<' paper just changed hands,
:\n<l I know it takes time to get
rp lling aUer a major change of
h.lnds . but christ , YOU DON'T
h.l\'e 10 Ihrow Ihe fucking paper
t l' Ihe dogs!!! This week's CPJ

I

is reminiscent of BILL HIRSCHMAN days when the most striking feature of the Cooper POINT
Journal was the PAGE NUMBERS! !! !! Articles? None. Info 7'
Too much, Salaries7 Cop-out for
filler. Photos 7 Tacky. Letters 7
Oh, such WITIY headlines MEN . WOMEN. DICK. JANE .
Droll Matt, droll. AND IF I
READ ONE MORE WORD ABOUT DAN EVANS MATT
GROENING, I am going to send
you to y<'lil\r room! ! ! And I HATE
wide co lumns!!! And disguising
wide columns as BORING wide
columns isn't foo ling anyone,
Matt. NOr-ANYONE!!
Matt, please, please PLEASE
improve with age. I'm not asking
you to do it the old way , or my
way, but however you do it. 00- '
IT WELL, because as it is, IT
SUCKS!!! I!! I!!
Respectfully submi tted;
your friend,
Cheryl
P. S. The ads are great.

The
Vulgarian
Border
To the Editor:
The article "Oil-Black Tuxes
and Slick Gowns" last week
prompted me to write this letter.
I found its tone and content to
be bordering on the vulgar.
Now , I'm the last one to support pretentious and snobbish
social gatherings . But there is
such a thing as r~sponsible journalism. I think it 's possible to be
sarcastic without being derogatory and cheap.
Last week someone asked Dan
Evans why the local media and
community seemed so unfavorably disposed towards Evergreen.
All they would have to do is
read an arrogant article like that
to be alienated. Although this is
a student newspaper , there
doesn't seem to be any point in
offending the outlying community,
Janet Woodward

Father Evans
To the Editor :
An open letter to Dan Evans:
Attended your open-mike conference this afternoon, January
19. Some advice. Compared to
your last job, the people you
now control/represent comprise
a much more intimate group. If
you're bullshitting we're going to
smell it right away. So don't
bullshit. Speak directly to the
question. Try to answer "yes" or
"no" when appropriate and don't
apologize if you don't have an
immediate answer, It's assumed
that you'll study the issue dr end
up seeing letters like this in the
community news'. Don't waste
time defending the decisions you
made as Governor. People concerned about that are living in
the past. You have a new role,
Whether you want it or not
you're a Robert Young fatherfigure for most students.
Watch how other faculty and
staff relate to students , Just like
real people. The community is
largely supportive of you, but
we'll feel better about it when
you begin to evidence understanding that this job is not dependent on capricious public
opinion polls.
Sincerely, Bob Sawatzki
P .S, Alisa says:
You have been "Governor;" a
stereotype . You are now entering
into a new type, "President. " I
would rather see you as Dan
Evans, Beware of groovy ness
abounding.

Spanking
New

Journalism
To the Editor:
What I want to know is this:
why is it that there are so many
smartass articles in your paper7
Paul Sparks calls it New Journalism but it is cheeky and smart-

ass and when I read it, I want to
spank the butt of the writer, and
how,
Boy if there is one thing you
should know, it's that good and
even funny articles can be written without the amount of holierthan-thou's that . seem to infest
this so-called New Journalism.
You would never expect to
hear it from me,
Woody Woodpecker
(ha ha haha)

Here Men
Go Again
To the Editor:
Re: "Music For Women Only,"
by Karrie Jacobs (January 13),
Teresa TrulL Meg Christian,
and Karrie Jacobs are prejudiced .
I have never in my life excluded
women "in order to protect,
assert, and maintain" my "power," even though I do happen to
have X chromosomes in my cells .
H there were ever atE vergreen a
no-women concert, there would
be no nicety nicety articles to
explain it away, only angry
voices complaining about flagrant sexism and "Here men go
again I" It's fine to hate men, for
they don't feel, they can't be
hurt, they are The Oppressors.
The idea that men are only
worthy of this musk if it "seems
necessary" (column two, line 11)
is a debasing continuation of the
idea which for 50 long has oppressed both men and women ,
whites and blacks , It is the idea
that those neat little cubbyholes
into which people are lumped
can actually tell anything of significance about the person .
Yes indeed, Teresa Trull, Meg
Christian, and Karrie Jacobs are
all very fkilled performers; skilled
at hiding their hypocrisy with a
sweet song.
Randall Hunting
(A white male)
P.S . It is perhaps significant
that the offending sign was torn
down, spat upon, and stomped
upon by a woman.

Rooting
Out Ads
To the Editor:

, . .. .

The "Roots" Special, an adaptation of the commendable and
prodigious work by Alex Haley,
would have more continuity and
would be more effectively received by the TV viewers if commercials would be run at the beginning and! or end of each program instead of intermittently.
Other so-called "important
works" or Specials are given
more respectful placement of adtime - so should "Roots I" If
you are annoyed or offended by
the advertising interruptions of
"Roots" I invite and encourage
you to grasp this opportunity to
DO something by telephoning
your local television station and
by writing letters of complaint to
the advertisers, newspapers, and
radio stations. Maybe Media
would be more responsive if
viewing audiences sought prod
ucts other than those rudely
thrust at them. How about if
some of you talented media peo
pie started making "Buyer Be
. ware" public service spots - as
anti-commerical commercials
sort of, but with more depth
Stop licking it up, America .
With Love,
Ajim

Attica Blues
To the Editor:
My name is John Loriol and
I'm presently incarcerated in Attica State Prison for possession
of LSD .
This being my first offense, the
loneliness and tension of prison
life has taxed my self-control to
the limit.
I'm asking help from any students who would correspond
with me and ease a troubled
spirit.
John Loriol 76 A2958
P.O. Box 149
Attica, NY 14011

I think that we should all be
glad that Mayor Evans is . going
to be a resident of Evergreen. He
certainly deserves to be I After
all, his father left us his lovely library, and where would we be
without it? He must have been a
very intelligent man to have read
all those books, and I'm sure
some of it must have rubbed off
on his son.
Mayor Evans sure is a better
choice than that of Dixie Earl
Ray, and he sure was funny on
"Get Smart." Does he still talk in
that funny nasal tone, saying
things like, "Sorry about that,"
and "Would you believe .. ,7"
Maybe he'll put on a show for us
and talk into his shoe.
However, I do have one itsybitsy teeny criticism of Mayor
Evans. Last issue you showed a
photo of him rappeIling down
the clock tower. But what you
didn't show or explain was how
he got up there or what he was
doing up there in the first place.
We all know students aren't al- ·
lowed on the roofs, so what
makes him so special7 Perhaps
you can clear this up in your
next issue.
Well, I certainly enjoy your
paper, and I especially enjoyed
.your article on the Ash Tree
apartments. The picture of the
handsome couple entertaining
all those cute little munchkins
was truly adorable. Bye now!
, ,,. .' " Barhi Be1it

Hot Flash
To the Editor:

To the Editor:

Hi. My name is Lloyd Thackston. You may not remember me,
but then I might not remember
you either, Since you seem to be
having a sixties revival in your
letter column I thought I would
join in the fun and throw up a
. hot flash from the past. Remember Monty Hall? Ever wonder
what's happened to him since
those fab campus uprisings of the
sizzling sixties? Your readers will
be interested to note the answer
to this question: HE HAS BECOME FILTHY RICH II Isn ' t
nostalgia fun? Well, got to run
now.
Lloyd (where's the
action) Thackston

Greetings I Happy holidays
from the African Study Abroad
Program . The group has temporarily moved into the ~ral. area
of Imo State in East Nlgena to
an area called Mbai~. Owerri,
the nearest town, is about 25
miles away, We are now staying
where Jude was born and we
have met his mother and some
of the family. We are going to
spend the Christmas . holiday
here. Life is much easier here,
not convenience-wise, but the
pace is much slower. The people
are more friendly and relaxed
than in the city. My language
studies are proceeding well and I

*

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*

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Slushy • Beer • Wine
• Picnic,
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Income Tax Preparation
Kathy Coombs

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If busy, 352-7539

Real Property Advice

EDITOR
Matt Groening
MANAGING EDITOR
Brad Pokorny
FEATURE EDITOR
Stan Shore

BUSINESS MANAGER
David Judd
ADVERTISING
Brock Sutherland
SECRETARY
Kim McCartney

PRODUCTION
Lynda Weinman
Steve Willis
The COOPER POINT JOURNAL Is published weekly lor the students, lacu Ity ,
and stall of The Evergreen State College. Olympia, Washington 98505 . Views expressed are not necessarily those 01 The Evergreen State College. Advertising rnalerlal presented herein does not necessarily Imply endorsement by this newspaper.
Offices are located in the College Activities Building (CAB) 308. News .phones:
868-6213, 868-6214. Advertising and business : 868-6080. Leiters ~IICY . All letters to the editor must be received by noon Tuesday lor thst week. publlcatton.
Leiters must be typed, double-spaced, and 400 words or I"IS. The editors reserve
the right to edit for content and style. Names will be withheld on request.

FORUM
The Sexual Dance
FORUM is a column of commentary on issues of possible int~­
est to the Evergreen community. The column is open t? any individual or group on campus. The opinions expressed m F~R.UM
are solely the author's, and do not necessarily reflect the opInions
of the college or the staff of the COOPER POINT JOURNAL.
Address all correspondence to FORUM, the COOPER POINT
JOURNAL, CAB 306.
by Katrina Calderaro
Who's up; what's down; where's who; what is woman is ma~
is; what is goin' round? New issues, old theme; hu":,an history,
oops, herstory, I mean human-story: I mean what IS gomg on,
and most of all where is the leak (7) of laughter7 Ecch! The heldback smile for what for whom for this is now a ~ew year: 1977.
This is a highly Significant year. Why7. Because It IS a tl~e to continue breaking from tradition, enlarging our perspectIve,. and a
time to create new forms. A time to re-root and become Incre~s­
ingly more natural and wild; a time to reap mo:e fully , more 10tricately the beauty and fertility of our surrounding Puget Sound/
Olympia, and most of all a time to change the way we change, In
circles and cycles we go .
d
I
Where is the place to jump in, to conti~ue the task an scu pting of a wider and more versatile perspechve7 There ~,re 50 man~
issues, concerns, and puzzles to be re-ordered for Ih~ New Age,.
I choose the present sexuality' issue (dance), I call It (parenthetically) a Dance, because that creates for. m~ and. hop~fully for y~~
a freer, more expansive view; a multl-dlm.enslOnahty. I do ,n
choose this dance; rather it chooses me, Simply because It IS a
daily and worldwide issue.
d'
At Evergreen, specifically, much has been going on regar Ing
the woman's music issue. There has beef! a dance around the place
of men in women's concerts . Should men be allowed7 Should they
be asked to be courteous to women's growing a~d ~hanglng nee~s
by not attending concerts 7 Is it fair? What IS right? What diS
wron 1 Or do those questions even pertain any more? Whe:e 0
~ and how do we fulfill eQe.rybody's needs7 These are Just a
:':'~ling of some of the questionsil'l motion, in circles, of peoples
around the community. Where do W~, go, and most Vitally how
can we economize our pride, to be able't~ work, 10 gather,
My passion now is to take the small space h~re and begm to reveal my growing impatience and suspicion wl~h the wa~ we remain closed to a larger perspective, a healthier, more mc\~sl~e
perspective on feminism, as a part of the sexual emergency 0 t e
present.
d
't
What I want to do is take the sexual dance a~ use I as a. way
to start exploring and exploding our present VIews about hf~, I
think the issue goes beyond men and woman and has a larger esson, a lesson in how to view human evoluhon, human beauty,
and vulnerability, and how to enlarge prese~t systems of thought
that have women trying to become men trymg to become women
trying to become men trying to beco~e woman . A ~eadly system
that is not moving quickly enough WIth o~r evolutIOn, a system
stuck, lifelessly in comparison, hierarchy, .elther / or, black / white.
vanilla/chocolate: polar thinking. True ,mmdle~sness., A system of
values that tells me to define my sexuahty stral~t or gay, gay or
straight instead of letting my sexuality unfold, BI-sexuahty or buy
my sex~ality. Again I sing what's up. who's down, where are we
going7 A system of thought/values that denies what I .call the
deeper life pulses common to us all. Our common celebratIOn of
our changes both beyond and within our present forms. We need
a "system" (1) that is at once assuredly more commuOlcallve and
graceful.
We must push a bit harder and more . softly .to create a group
eye that sees the beauty of the dance issue (nollce I am af~ald to
fully give up the word issue), the beauly of woman's nee ~ new
and emerging both inclusive and exclusive (there I am back m ,polarities) of men and women and men and women (I am explormg,
trying with words to move further, to develop new modes of communication).
f
1
h
I envision a more response-able community 0 peop es were
we all must .take part with all of our u~ique, col~rfuL and individual fashions. Bringing forth our ideas In celebratIOn I~ commitment to new forms and more honesty, Playing together In urgency
and vitality, seeing our stake in evolution, learning ~ur task, ~ak­
ing risk. creating con-centric circles of pe~ples talking, dancmg,
writing, swimming with a common notion m our common ocean,
We must. We must all put in some time fmdmg the most fruItful
forms as we dance, This is 1977 and it will only . come once. We
can maximize our time and environment to gIve hfe to the dance,
meaning we have a school with tools and peoples, open and clear
air that is not found elsewhere in the country, What can we learn
about changing the nature of our lives through this issue? What IS
the lesson to be learned?
.
Time is running out. I feel like I am going to lose my thread If I
rush. This is a mere opening; these are just a few seeds scratchmg
the surface. The gro und is moist and fertde and we have more
work to do.

About the author : Katrina Calderaro is a student in the Chautauqua program.

4

5

ood Readin
Clabaugh
Surprises
SandA

Rexford Across the USA
Most people want fame and
prestige, but Peter Rexford is on
hi s way to achieving it. The second- year Evergreen student presently works as the studio production director for Evergreen's
KAO S- FM radio station. More
importantl y, he is about to beco me a na ti o nall y -syndicated
radio perso nality .
Rexford is producing and narrating a series of six radio news
specials which will be nationally
syndicated on the Inter-Collegiate Broadcasting Systems, a
distribution service for college
and non-commercial radio stations . Up to 2,000 radio stations
in the United States and 30 abroad could select to air Rexford's Within RadioVision series.
The news specials; lasting from
five to 15 minutes each, will be
topical : Alcoholism, Commercial
Fraud, the Kennedy Assassinations , Child Abuse, War Criminals, and North American Indians . Rexford, who came to Evergreen in the fall from Goddard
College, relies mainly on outside
ex perts for his information, interviewing them and studying the
scripts of other successful media
presentations.
All the production work for

the six shows will be done entirely at KAOS , where he is a
member of a group contract in
Radio headed by Lee Chambers,
Rexford remains ambivalent about Evergreen and its ability to
prepare him for his eventual
goal: to be a television actor.
"Spring is going to be my last
quarter here, " he explains. ''I'm
going to head for L. A. after that
and join the American Academy
of Dramatic Arts in Pasadena .
They have courses in television
acting there. . . Evergreen just
doesn't have the access to radio
and television that the brochure
said. In the field of communications and media it advertised
more than it had."
Rexford did praise RadioVision, but said, "There's no
possible way to get into the tele- .
vision studio without going
through a year and a half of red
tape ."
And television is clearly Rexford 's goal. When opening a
script from a 60 Minutes special
on child abuse, he paused to
stare at the corporate insignia on
the cover. "Isn't that beautiful,"
he said, "CBS. I love it. I almost
want to cut it out and put it on
my door j't looks so fine."

In a move that surpri<;ed the
Service and Activities Fees Review Board (S&A), Administrative Vice President Dean Clabaugh announced tha! he is not
going to call a Disappearing Task
Force to study S&A allocation
procedures.
"I was thinking about it," Clabaugh admitted. "But I will not
call one - at least not in the next
month or so. "
This came as a surprise to all
the Board members since Cla baugh had requested that a list
of students recommended by the
Board to serve on the DTF be
turned into his office by January
19 at 5 p.m.
After much discussion during
S&A meetings about allocation
procedures, the Board hoped that
the DTF would come up with a
system that could be used in the
annual spring allocation meetings.
ALLOCATION
The S&A Board allocation
procedure outlined in the Evergreen Administrative Code has
not been used in over a year, according to Director of Recreation
and Campus Activities Pete Steilberg. Last spring the S&A Board
adopted a system first proposed
by Erskine White, a board member at the time.
Instead of allowing only board
members to vote, the board decided to allow anyone who had
sat through the entire allocation
procedure a vote. This was considered more democratic and
participatory .
"I would like it if everyone
who came to the meeting could
vote," S&A Executive Secretary

Constance Palaia explained "I
think it' s important that the
groups requesting money know
what is going on. . . so they
don't see the final decision as
something just handed down
from the top by the board. This
system has given people an
awareness of the rr. )ney in volved."
The board's procedural problems were further complicated
when the Voluntary Service List,
from which S&A board members
are usually chosen, was inadvertently not mailed out to students
fall quarter. The result : a threeweek delay in the beginning of
fall which ended when everyone
who applied was chosen to be on
the board.
The fall allocation meeting,
held in December, lasted for ten
hours, until 7 p.m. At that meeting it was decided to close the
Recreation Center on weekday
mornings.

Gach and
the Law(II)
Michael Gach, the acupressurist who ran afoul of the state's
professional licensing department, met with the Washington
assistant attorney general on Friday, January 21, and discovered
that his proposed acupressure
workshop would violate not three
but four separate statutes. Still,
Gach was able to go ahead with
a "self-acupressure" workshop
last weekend without violating
any laws .
"It's ironic," he Said, "to have
wound up in the state capital at
a state college .. . It's been a real
learning experience."
Gach, who came up to Olympia just to give a few workshops,
plans to return to the Bay Area
in California soon.

Macs Corner Restaurant

If you wake up bleary-eyed on Sunday, you might as well stay that ~ay:

Photo Special
In recognition of the high level
of photographic achievement at
Evergreen, the COOPER POINT
JOURNAL is planning to print a
special photography supplement
on fine white paper (Budget willing) in our February 24th issue.
Submissions should be cameraready, not larger than 8 by 10,
with the photographer's name
and address written on the back
of each print. The deadline for
submissions is February 18. Address all correspondence to the
COOPER POINT JOURNAL,
CAB 306.

Mod Quad
In contradiction of long-standing college policy, at least five
students have taken only modules and received full-time academic credit for their efforts.
Over the last two quarters, the
students each took four modules
unc/er the guidance of a faculty
sponsor.
Dean Will Humphreys denied
that this was the start of a trend.
"We're not going to let this become a common thing . Module
studies were not designed for
that ... All of the students who
took four modules had to have a
dean's signature and the contracts
were clJrefully scrutinized. All of
them were for students either
transferring or going on to graduate school. They needed the
m~d~~~ t9 c~ffiPJ~t~..~~~qfiS ,~~c
quirements: sill:ijects (,ke Ta,nc
guage, math and sciente: i
.
The taking of four modules
has been forbidden at Evergreen
for a long time because it too
closely resembles the taking of
unrelated courses, which is so
common at traditional schools.

Meeting Set
Faculty Members Al Wiedemann and Steve Herman are inviting students interested in ecology or natural history to attend
an information meeting on their
new spring and summer quarter
' program, Evergreen Environment, The introductory meeting
is set for February 3, beginning
at noon in LAB I, room 2007.
Persons who have already signed
up for the two-quarter program
need not attend.
Wiedemann says EE will offer
students the chance to develop
basic identification skills ; to
study "landscape units" as part
of a $tudent team; and to become familiar with the environment and natural history of
Washington and Oregon through
extensive field trips to the Oreegon coast, southeast and central
Oregon and Washington and the
Olympic Peninsula, San Juan IsaJ
lands and upper Puget Sound .
iil
a.
EE also promises readings on
...,
o
the
lives and work of past and
7C
o
present
naturalists and requires a
3
'<
" strong personal interest and
Students were greeted Monday morning, January 24, by a red paint- commitment to the study of natspattered drawn outline of a person with the message, '~KILL RAPISTS" ural history," Wiedemann says.
If you're interested , attend
scrawled across It. A dummy was also placed near the clock tower with
the same message. Both have now been removed. The messages' effec- Thursday's meeting or contact
tiveness was apparently diminished by the illegibility of the words_ A Wiedemann at 866-6707.
woman reported to the COOPER POINT JOURNAL that the signs read,
The 211 darkroom has ne~
"KILL BAPTISTS."
hours: Sunday, 12: 30 - 9 :-30
p.m . ; Monday, 12 :30 - 10 p.m . ;
Tuesday-Wednesday noon - 6:30
p.m . ; Thursday noon-6:30
Does your car or truck run
FOR SALE: Complete SCUBA
p.m . This darkroom is open to
smoothly and economically 7 If it
gear; tank, regulator, B. C. ,
students and community memdoesn 't, help is near. Whether the
weight belt, and MORE : 1 yr.
bers. There is a small usage fee.
problem be starts or brakes, the
old, excellent equipment. Also :
SPARK IN TIME man, located
I ;.!,et
·
s .~. ,fA
,,,11' rh.,(, ",H~·'"
< .:t:
.size
., .~.
CORRECfION
at ASH Apartment 113, can help
; macrame belt - size 32 - ,
last
week's list of the classified
you
sit
in
the
driver's
seat
with
$3. Call 866-8880 [ASH) and
staff salaries indicated that Jo
greater peace of mind, and at less
leave message for Gleim.
Ann Woodall makes $616.00 as
expense than the big names! Stop
a half-time retail clerk. She actuby 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. for an ap'Fine Cakes for occasions that
ally makes $308.00 a month for
pointment, whether your annoydeserve something special. Fen! ,
her part-time job as a retail clerk.
ance be domestic or foreign.
357- 7344 .

Classified Ads

~

The

as

ALL YOU CAN EAT
9 a.m. - 3 p .m.

GOOD READING is a column listing books and articles which membln of
the COOPER POINT JOURNAL stall have found especially useful, entertainIng, or important. From time to time GOOD READING will feature short commentaries and items on literary matters . We welcome suggestions and Ideas
for this column from our readers . Cave quid dlell, qUlndo, et cui :' (" Beware
what you say, when, and to whom .")
GUESS WHO DEPARTMENT
In Its latest Issue, Esquire has published an unsigned short story, claiming , "We are not entirely sure who the
author Is." But the narrative style 01
For Rupert - with No Proml ... leaves
IItlie doubt as to Its author, and the
story represents his first published
wor1< In twelve years, since a brief story
in the N_ Vol'ller.
The story is narrated by a New England recluse writer named Buddy. It is
an open letter to his ex-radio actor
brother "Smithy," urging him not to
kill one of his own sons . There are references to an older brother : "Seymour,
are you smiling now , dear dead brother,
master 01 ceremonies in all my deliberations? " and several references are
made to a promise to a young lady 01
13 or 14 in Devon, England during the
War, a promise to write a squalid slory
("To Esme - With Love and Squalor") .
The slory is a good one, but It ends
on the mystic side. One can't help but
wonder If J .D. Salinger hasn't gone a
litlle bananas alter living elone all
these years In the Vermont woods. Esquire, February, 1977, page 83.
PERIODICALS DEPART¥ENT

The Myth 01 an Adversary Press, by
Tom Bethell. The Media with a capital
M can now be considered an arm of
the government, not its adversary .
Bethell compares the New Vol'll Timet'
decision to print the Pentagon Papers
to a high level government decision to
declassify certain top secret documents, claiming that the TImes Editorial board acted exactly as Ihe President's cabinet might have. He writes 01
the power some Journalists have, polntIng out that they are the only ones that
stay on in Washington as the administrations come and go, and Bethell
pOints to the Media's apparent selfcontradiction when they fight against
secrecy In the government while de- '
mending that they be allowed the 88crecy of their sources. Whether or not
you agree, his pOints make good food
for thought while you chew over John
Chancellor. Harper'., January 1977 ,
page 33.
The Arm. Boom and How to Stop It,
by Emma Rothschild. Rothschild dlscusses the post-Vietnam development
of the U.S. arms eKport business, notIng one technique of loaning money to
Third World nations so that they can

tum around and buy weapons Irom us.
She writes about the dangers of this
policy, and proposes some methods of
taking our economy off a military base,
citing some things Sweden has been
doing to operate Its economy on a civilian level. The N_ Vol'll Revi_ 01
Books, January 20, 1977.
1 011 Spill •. This editorial In Science
indicates Ihe press may have exaggerated claims that the oil spill off Nantucket Island by the Argo Mercl\ent
was an ecological disaster. The brief
essay discusses some 01 the oceanographic and biological systems that
quickly break down and dissipate an
all spill on the open ocean , making
things not nearly as bad as they may
seem . It is Interesting reading In the
wake 01 Governor Ray's belief that all
spills are not as bad as the press
makes out. But the article does not
pretend that a spill in an encl osed area
(the Puget Sound, maybe) would not
be catastrophi C. January 14 , l1J77,
page 137.

The same issue of Science also has
a short article about a report released
by Alvin Weinberg, a long-lime advocate of nuclear power who has now
changed his stripes . Weinberg says
that the U.S. could afford as much as
a 3O-year moratorium on nuclear power,
because his figures, which are "essentially identi,cal to the 1974 low-growth
scenarios of the Ford Foundation's Energy Policy Project," Indicate that fulure energy demand will grow much
more slowly than antiCipated , Volume
195, Science, page t 56.
Bnlln'. opiate. at wol'll In Acupunclure? Acupuncture made rational.
B'ruce Pomerane, a professor of Neurobiology at the University of Toronlo,
suggests that the Insertion of acupuncture needies trips nerve Impulses that
stimulate the pituitary gland's productlon of "endophlns," a natural, morphine-like substance manufactured by
the body . This natural opiate In turn
produces the anesthetic effect 01 acupuncture. Especially convincing is the
evidence that acupuncture analgesia Is
not Induced Immediately upon Insertion
of the needles, but rather comes 20
mlnute~ later, Indicating that the body
must have time to produce the endophlns. N_ Sclentllt, January 6, 1977,
page 12.

Address all correspondence relating to the GOOD READING column to Ar·
biter EleganUarum, COOPER POINT JOURNAL, CAB 306, The Evergreen State
Coli e, 98505 .

~CoJonyCJnnc51lpartnJt::r4

Tree

1818 EVERGREEN PARK DRIVE • OLYMPIA. WA 88502 e (2081 843.7330

NEW ADDRESS: Harrison & Division
Olympia, Washington

$4.25

Dave Wilson's

Los
Hermano

943-8700

1 Room
2 Rooms
4 Rooms

good thru
Feb.3rd .

4520 Pacific

STEAK

All Utilities Paid

Social Rooma

FuUy FumI.....d

F.... TV Cable

O LD FASHIONED SMOKED PORK CHOPS
NISQUALL Y TRIBAL
TRADING POST

EXOTI C FRESH FRUITS, MELONS
EG GS , TOAST , HASHBROWNS

Laundry Facility

- Wall-to-Wall Ca.petlng

Mon thru Sat 7 - 9
Sun 9 - 5

GERMAN STYLE SAUSAGE

- Easy ecce•• to "-way & City Can...

CHAMPAGNE
MAC'S CORN ER RESTAURANT
119 Cota St. She lton 426-3461

LUNCH & DINNER BUFFET
THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY

O pen 24 Hours Except Sunday

-----'

ALL WAYS TRAVEL SERVICE, INC.

3138 Overhulse Road
Olympia, Wash.
Phone : (206) 357-8870

Sunday Champagne Brunch

lr

Candy, Gifts
Indian Arts & Crafts
. Turquoise Jewelry
Squaxin Island Oysters
Salmon, Smoked & Fresh
Cigarettes - $4.00 carton
LOCATED ON ¥ELM HIGHWAY

-

City

buSing to front door

4

5

ood Readin
Clabaugh
Surprises
SandA

Rexford Across the USA
Most people want fame and
prestige, but Peter Rexford is on
hi s way to achieving it. The second- year Evergreen student presently works as the studio production director for Evergreen's
KAO S- FM radio station. More
importantl y, he is about to beco me a na ti o nall y -syndicated
radio perso nality .
Rexford is producing and narrating a series of six radio news
specials which will be nationally
syndicated on the Inter-Collegiate Broadcasting Systems, a
distribution service for college
and non-commercial radio stations . Up to 2,000 radio stations
in the United States and 30 abroad could select to air Rexford's Within RadioVision series.
The news specials; lasting from
five to 15 minutes each, will be
topical : Alcoholism, Commercial
Fraud, the Kennedy Assassinations , Child Abuse, War Criminals, and North American Indians . Rexford, who came to Evergreen in the fall from Goddard
College, relies mainly on outside
ex perts for his information, interviewing them and studying the
scripts of other successful media
presentations.
All the production work for

the six shows will be done entirely at KAOS , where he is a
member of a group contract in
Radio headed by Lee Chambers,
Rexford remains ambivalent about Evergreen and its ability to
prepare him for his eventual
goal: to be a television actor.
"Spring is going to be my last
quarter here, " he explains. ''I'm
going to head for L. A. after that
and join the American Academy
of Dramatic Arts in Pasadena .
They have courses in television
acting there. . . Evergreen just
doesn't have the access to radio
and television that the brochure
said. In the field of communications and media it advertised
more than it had."
Rexford did praise RadioVision, but said, "There's no
possible way to get into the tele- .
vision studio without going
through a year and a half of red
tape ."
And television is clearly Rexford 's goal. When opening a
script from a 60 Minutes special
on child abuse, he paused to
stare at the corporate insignia on
the cover. "Isn't that beautiful,"
he said, "CBS. I love it. I almost
want to cut it out and put it on
my door j't looks so fine."

In a move that surpri<;ed the
Service and Activities Fees Review Board (S&A), Administrative Vice President Dean Clabaugh announced tha! he is not
going to call a Disappearing Task
Force to study S&A allocation
procedures.
"I was thinking about it," Clabaugh admitted. "But I will not
call one - at least not in the next
month or so. "
This came as a surprise to all
the Board members since Cla baugh had requested that a list
of students recommended by the
Board to serve on the DTF be
turned into his office by January
19 at 5 p.m.
After much discussion during
S&A meetings about allocation
procedures, the Board hoped that
the DTF would come up with a
system that could be used in the
annual spring allocation meetings.
ALLOCATION
The S&A Board allocation
procedure outlined in the Evergreen Administrative Code has
not been used in over a year, according to Director of Recreation
and Campus Activities Pete Steilberg. Last spring the S&A Board
adopted a system first proposed
by Erskine White, a board member at the time.
Instead of allowing only board
members to vote, the board decided to allow anyone who had
sat through the entire allocation
procedure a vote. This was considered more democratic and
participatory .
"I would like it if everyone
who came to the meeting could
vote," S&A Executive Secretary

Constance Palaia explained "I
think it' s important that the
groups requesting money know
what is going on. . . so they
don't see the final decision as
something just handed down
from the top by the board. This
system has given people an
awareness of the rr. )ney in volved."
The board's procedural problems were further complicated
when the Voluntary Service List,
from which S&A board members
are usually chosen, was inadvertently not mailed out to students
fall quarter. The result : a threeweek delay in the beginning of
fall which ended when everyone
who applied was chosen to be on
the board.
The fall allocation meeting,
held in December, lasted for ten
hours, until 7 p.m. At that meeting it was decided to close the
Recreation Center on weekday
mornings.

Gach and
the Law(II)
Michael Gach, the acupressurist who ran afoul of the state's
professional licensing department, met with the Washington
assistant attorney general on Friday, January 21, and discovered
that his proposed acupressure
workshop would violate not three
but four separate statutes. Still,
Gach was able to go ahead with
a "self-acupressure" workshop
last weekend without violating
any laws .
"It's ironic," he Said, "to have
wound up in the state capital at
a state college .. . It's been a real
learning experience."
Gach, who came up to Olympia just to give a few workshops,
plans to return to the Bay Area
in California soon.

Macs Corner Restaurant

If you wake up bleary-eyed on Sunday, you might as well stay that ~ay:

Photo Special
In recognition of the high level
of photographic achievement at
Evergreen, the COOPER POINT
JOURNAL is planning to print a
special photography supplement
on fine white paper (Budget willing) in our February 24th issue.
Submissions should be cameraready, not larger than 8 by 10,
with the photographer's name
and address written on the back
of each print. The deadline for
submissions is February 18. Address all correspondence to the
COOPER POINT JOURNAL,
CAB 306.

Mod Quad
In contradiction of long-standing college policy, at least five
students have taken only modules and received full-time academic credit for their efforts.
Over the last two quarters, the
students each took four modules
unc/er the guidance of a faculty
sponsor.
Dean Will Humphreys denied
that this was the start of a trend.
"We're not going to let this become a common thing . Module
studies were not designed for
that ... All of the students who
took four modules had to have a
dean's signature and the contracts
were clJrefully scrutinized. All of
them were for students either
transferring or going on to graduate school. They needed the
m~d~~~ t9 c~ffiPJ~t~..~~~qfiS ,~~c
quirements: sill:ijects (,ke Ta,nc
guage, math and sciente: i
.
The taking of four modules
has been forbidden at Evergreen
for a long time because it too
closely resembles the taking of
unrelated courses, which is so
common at traditional schools.

Meeting Set
Faculty Members Al Wiedemann and Steve Herman are inviting students interested in ecology or natural history to attend
an information meeting on their
new spring and summer quarter
' program, Evergreen Environment, The introductory meeting
is set for February 3, beginning
at noon in LAB I, room 2007.
Persons who have already signed
up for the two-quarter program
need not attend.
Wiedemann says EE will offer
students the chance to develop
basic identification skills ; to
study "landscape units" as part
of a $tudent team; and to become familiar with the environment and natural history of
Washington and Oregon through
extensive field trips to the Oreegon coast, southeast and central
Oregon and Washington and the
Olympic Peninsula, San Juan IsaJ
lands and upper Puget Sound .
iil
a.
EE also promises readings on
...,
o
the
lives and work of past and
7C
o
present
naturalists and requires a
3
'<
" strong personal interest and
Students were greeted Monday morning, January 24, by a red paint- commitment to the study of natspattered drawn outline of a person with the message, '~KILL RAPISTS" ural history," Wiedemann says.
If you're interested , attend
scrawled across It. A dummy was also placed near the clock tower with
the same message. Both have now been removed. The messages' effec- Thursday's meeting or contact
tiveness was apparently diminished by the illegibility of the words_ A Wiedemann at 866-6707.
woman reported to the COOPER POINT JOURNAL that the signs read,
The 211 darkroom has ne~
"KILL BAPTISTS."
hours: Sunday, 12: 30 - 9 :-30
p.m . ; Monday, 12 :30 - 10 p.m . ;
Tuesday-Wednesday noon - 6:30
p.m . ; Thursday noon-6:30
Does your car or truck run
FOR SALE: Complete SCUBA
p.m . This darkroom is open to
smoothly and economically 7 If it
gear; tank, regulator, B. C. ,
students and community memdoesn 't, help is near. Whether the
weight belt, and MORE : 1 yr.
bers. There is a small usage fee.
problem be starts or brakes, the
old, excellent equipment. Also :
SPARK IN TIME man, located
I ;.!,et
·
s .~. ,fA
,,,11' rh.,(, ",H~·'"
< .:t:
.size
., .~.
CORRECfION
at ASH Apartment 113, can help
; macrame belt - size 32 - ,
last
week's list of the classified
you
sit
in
the
driver's
seat
with
$3. Call 866-8880 [ASH) and
staff salaries indicated that Jo
greater peace of mind, and at less
leave message for Gleim.
Ann Woodall makes $616.00 as
expense than the big names! Stop
a half-time retail clerk. She actuby 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. for an ap'Fine Cakes for occasions that
ally makes $308.00 a month for
pointment, whether your annoydeserve something special. Fen! ,
her part-time job as a retail clerk.
ance be domestic or foreign.
357- 7344 .

Classified Ads

~

The

as

ALL YOU CAN EAT
9 a.m. - 3 p .m.

GOOD READING is a column listing books and articles which membln of
the COOPER POINT JOURNAL stall have found especially useful, entertainIng, or important. From time to time GOOD READING will feature short commentaries and items on literary matters . We welcome suggestions and Ideas
for this column from our readers . Cave quid dlell, qUlndo, et cui :' (" Beware
what you say, when, and to whom .")
GUESS WHO DEPARTMENT
In Its latest Issue, Esquire has published an unsigned short story, claiming , "We are not entirely sure who the
author Is." But the narrative style 01
For Rupert - with No Proml ... leaves
IItlie doubt as to Its author, and the
story represents his first published
wor1< In twelve years, since a brief story
in the N_ Vol'ller.
The story is narrated by a New England recluse writer named Buddy. It is
an open letter to his ex-radio actor
brother "Smithy," urging him not to
kill one of his own sons . There are references to an older brother : "Seymour,
are you smiling now , dear dead brother,
master 01 ceremonies in all my deliberations? " and several references are
made to a promise to a young lady 01
13 or 14 in Devon, England during the
War, a promise to write a squalid slory
("To Esme - With Love and Squalor") .
The slory is a good one, but It ends
on the mystic side. One can't help but
wonder If J .D. Salinger hasn't gone a
litlle bananas alter living elone all
these years In the Vermont woods. Esquire, February, 1977, page 83.
PERIODICALS DEPART¥ENT

The Myth 01 an Adversary Press, by
Tom Bethell. The Media with a capital
M can now be considered an arm of
the government, not its adversary .
Bethell compares the New Vol'll Timet'
decision to print the Pentagon Papers
to a high level government decision to
declassify certain top secret documents, claiming that the TImes Editorial board acted exactly as Ihe President's cabinet might have. He writes 01
the power some Journalists have, polntIng out that they are the only ones that
stay on in Washington as the administrations come and go, and Bethell
pOints to the Media's apparent selfcontradiction when they fight against
secrecy In the government while de- '
mending that they be allowed the 88crecy of their sources. Whether or not
you agree, his pOints make good food
for thought while you chew over John
Chancellor. Harper'., January 1977 ,
page 33.
The Arm. Boom and How to Stop It,
by Emma Rothschild. Rothschild dlscusses the post-Vietnam development
of the U.S. arms eKport business, notIng one technique of loaning money to
Third World nations so that they can

tum around and buy weapons Irom us.
She writes about the dangers of this
policy, and proposes some methods of
taking our economy off a military base,
citing some things Sweden has been
doing to operate Its economy on a civilian level. The N_ Vol'll Revi_ 01
Books, January 20, 1977.
1 011 Spill •. This editorial In Science
indicates Ihe press may have exaggerated claims that the oil spill off Nantucket Island by the Argo Mercl\ent
was an ecological disaster. The brief
essay discusses some 01 the oceanographic and biological systems that
quickly break down and dissipate an
all spill on the open ocean , making
things not nearly as bad as they may
seem . It is Interesting reading In the
wake 01 Governor Ray's belief that all
spills are not as bad as the press
makes out. But the article does not
pretend that a spill in an encl osed area
(the Puget Sound, maybe) would not
be catastrophi C. January 14 , l1J77,
page 137.

The same issue of Science also has
a short article about a report released
by Alvin Weinberg, a long-lime advocate of nuclear power who has now
changed his stripes . Weinberg says
that the U.S. could afford as much as
a 3O-year moratorium on nuclear power,
because his figures, which are "essentially identi,cal to the 1974 low-growth
scenarios of the Ford Foundation's Energy Policy Project," Indicate that fulure energy demand will grow much
more slowly than antiCipated , Volume
195, Science, page t 56.
Bnlln'. opiate. at wol'll In Acupunclure? Acupuncture made rational.
B'ruce Pomerane, a professor of Neurobiology at the University of Toronlo,
suggests that the Insertion of acupuncture needies trips nerve Impulses that
stimulate the pituitary gland's productlon of "endophlns," a natural, morphine-like substance manufactured by
the body . This natural opiate In turn
produces the anesthetic effect 01 acupuncture. Especially convincing is the
evidence that acupuncture analgesia Is
not Induced Immediately upon Insertion
of the needles, but rather comes 20
mlnute~ later, Indicating that the body
must have time to produce the endophlns. N_ Sclentllt, January 6, 1977,
page 12.

Address all correspondence relating to the GOOD READING column to Ar·
biter EleganUarum, COOPER POINT JOURNAL, CAB 306, The Evergreen State
Coli e, 98505 .

~CoJonyCJnnc51lpartnJt::r4

Tree

1818 EVERGREEN PARK DRIVE • OLYMPIA. WA 88502 e (2081 843.7330

NEW ADDRESS: Harrison & Division
Olympia, Washington

$4.25

Dave Wilson's

Los
Hermano

943-8700

1 Room
2 Rooms
4 Rooms

good thru
Feb.3rd .

4520 Pacific

STEAK

All Utilities Paid

Social Rooma

FuUy FumI.....d

F.... TV Cable

O LD FASHIONED SMOKED PORK CHOPS
NISQUALL Y TRIBAL
TRADING POST

EXOTI C FRESH FRUITS, MELONS
EG GS , TOAST , HASHBROWNS

Laundry Facility

- Wall-to-Wall Ca.petlng

Mon thru Sat 7 - 9
Sun 9 - 5

GERMAN STYLE SAUSAGE

- Easy ecce•• to "-way & City Can...

CHAMPAGNE
MAC'S CORN ER RESTAURANT
119 Cota St. She lton 426-3461

LUNCH & DINNER BUFFET
THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY

O pen 24 Hours Except Sunday

-----'

ALL WAYS TRAVEL SERVICE, INC.

3138 Overhulse Road
Olympia, Wash.
Phone : (206) 357-8870

Sunday Champagne Brunch

lr

Candy, Gifts
Indian Arts & Crafts
. Turquoise Jewelry
Squaxin Island Oysters
Salmon, Smoked & Fresh
Cigarettes - $4.00 carton
LOCATED ON ¥ELM HIGHWAY

-

City

buSing to front door

7

A Disgruntled

New & Used Records
Tapes
Concert Tickets

Westside Center 357· 4755

Rest of This Week

f3AI312I~L
Next Week
31st THRU 5th

J()~~ti~§ Wti~L~
Feb 9th thru 12th

Jl!.

(:~[)ILL~(:

--

....~

Vegeta~ian's

that could slice them like that.
Shakey's black. olive and mushroom pizza will cure hunger
pangs, and it can be accompanied by salad and "mojo" potatoes.
Dirty Dave's in Lacey has a
good reputation in.olympia pizza
eating circles. Their vegetarian
pizza consists of any five of the
non-meat items on the menu and
is an aesthetic delight, and rates
three black olives, or gold stars,
on my non-existent ~tinS system.

by Kame Jacobs
Yes, the idea of eating
out, a pastime of gods and college students alike, is definitely
appealing, so I proceed to rack
my mental directory of Olympia's resources to determine just
how I can satisfy the demands of
my stomach. I guess that it would
be simple to go out to Eagan's
for a burger and fries, but 1don't
eat meat, or fish, so it becomes
more complicated. Being a vt'getarian in Olympia offers many
possibilities, not necessarily thrilling, but possibilities all the same.
I should start out close to the
homes, and hearts, of many Evergreeners: Saga foods. Saga has
been known to be kind to vegetarians on occasion. They now
have a salad bar, and vegetarian
casseroles, which are sometimes
good, too often rely heavily on
mistreated stringbeans. Their
vegey veg, cream of potato, and
cream of broccoli soups are usually tasty, but Saga is too deeply
entrenched in the salt/pepper/
paprika cooking ethic to make a
memorable soup.
Its snack bar offers cheese
sandwiches, which are often grillmates to grease-spitting burgers.
They are invariably made with
that epicurian classic, American
Cheez. At night and on weekends, bagels and cream cheese
are available, but be sure to
order your bagel toasted. Chilly
bagels just don't cut it.
Saga also makes pizza at lunch
and at night. It's okay if your
pizza cravings are rendering you
non-functional, but the price is a
little steep for all but emergency
purposes.
Speaking of pizza, I might as
well go through Olympia's pizza
possibilities.
Olympia has two Shakey's, a
nationwide chain whose pizza
has a number of obvious faults.
The tomato sauce exists merely
as a stain on crust as thick as a
cracker. The mushrooms are
sliced literally paper-thin. They
are brittle to the touch, and it
staggers the imagination to think
of a tool short of a laser device

EntertainmentmIIDLk®IrLk(IDllIIDIO]

Guide to Olympia
Right across the street from the
Mode is the Rainbow Deli, whose
melted cheese and vegey sandwich stands as a monument in
the field of artistic san.dwichery.
Their potato salad sparkles, the
coffee is fresh-ground, and the
only word for the carrot cake is
addictive.
Ah; yes. I have just reached .
sacred ground in the Olympia
cafe world, the Brown Derby.
The main word at the Derby for
the meatless set is soup, specifically cream of potato, mushroom, or tomato. There is also
salad, homemade bread, fries,
and our old friend the grilled
cheese sandwich (once again,
fried on a suspiciously greasy

.fl.I.fa

ON CAMPUS
Thursday. January 27
THE YET ANOTHER FILM SERIES
will be presenting films during the
rest of the school year on Thursday
nlghls. They have a grab bag of
films from lhe school 's and the
slate's collections thal they are
able to get for free . Tonight an hour
and lifty minules of films about
artists: Charles Burchlleld, Kenojauk. Marc Chagall and Francis
Bacon . Free in the coileehouse CAB
at 8 : 30 p.m.

grill).

DOGOWNIDBY
VEGETARIAN

AFTER TWO MONTHS
ON CELERY DIET
Jo Mama's is your typical quasi-organic hippie pizzeria, complete with whole wheat crusts
and sprouts on the pies. Their
pizza is the best in town, but you
pay for it. Sometimes you pay
for what you don't get. The last
time that I was there, the waitress fai1~ to mention that they
were out of sprouts, and still
tried to charge us for them.
Moreno's Mexican restaurant,
. on the Westside, . stars guacamole
as its vegetarian entree. I'd stay
away from the refried beans because they are traditionally made
with lard.
If you find the prospect of
having a whole menu to choose
from without lard paranoia, you
should scoot on over to Oly's
one and only vegetarian restaurant, The Artichoke Mode.Their
food isn't >fattcy; . 6il( It " "tastes
good, is reasonably priced, and
comes complete with friendly
service and comfortable atmosphere. The Artichoke Mode offers reassurance, comfort, and a
variety of foods to the confused
vegetarian .

When Mom and Dad come to
visit, and t.hey want to show you
a good time, . let them take you
to the Melting Pot, if only because they have such an amusing
wine list. Don't be dismayed by
the meatiness (or fishiness) of the
menu. Just order a salad, the artichoke heart appetizer, and the
stuffed baked · potato. You'll do
fine. I know that it's not a protein-complimentary meal, but it
tastes good and it's filling.
The last on my list of Olympia
favorites is the Spar. ·The possibilities for a vegetarian repast are
sparse, but you can always convince yourself that it's the ambience that counts, and settle for
an egg salad sandwich and a
chocolate malt .
If you are desperate and have
a car, Chefs Family Kitchen in
the Market Square shopping mall
just across from Sow Sow Center
(sic] in Lacey, has a respectable
salad bar, and Sambo's has waffles.
There are numerous little cafes
in Olympia where the only meatJess item&. · arei ~ ()salad .'.sa",ct..
'wiches and Fr'enth fries •.The 'only
rules of thumb . I can offer on
eating out vegey style in"a meatoriented community are:
1.when in doubt, order breakfast food.
2. If you don't eat dairy products either, stay home.



mOVle
reVlew

Hell, It's Sunday Mass
by Rick Speer
Editor', note: "So'aU Change"
is currently playing ilt the Varsity
Theater in Seattle.
In Francois Truffaut's last film,
The Story of Adele H., he explored the consuming passion of
a young woman's first love. In
his latest film, Small Change, we
are shown instead a passion of
Monsieur Truffaut's - his love
of children. Small Change is a
plotless film, a series of vignettes
really •..wearing i.t! and ,.out of the ,
liw5"'of'>a T grdUp of,dtl1dren in a ··
small village in France. The children range in age from 18 months
to 14 years, in situation from adored offspring to an abused,
battered child. Through a variety
of incidents, T ruHaut illustrates
his thesis; that children live in a
, state of grace that shelters them
and allows them to grow.
The film is heavy with little
ironies. For example, we see a
child provoke his teacher into
expelling him from class, which
allows him to go through the
pockets of his classmates' jackets. Another child tells his friends
the way to please one's parents
vis-a-vis haircuts - "Irs best
when they can't tell you've been
(to the barber)." In a third scene
we see just a child's legs, as he
deliberately sticks his feet into
the way of oncoming traffic. In
reaction we see the wheels and
sides of three cars swerve aside
screechingly and drive on. The

PETERSONS
Shelton'S

WESTSIDE CENTER
e Open every day e

TAYEIM

WITNESS FOR THE PROSECUTION (1958 ; 114 minutes) Directed '
by Billy Wilder. Starring Marlene
Dietrich. Tyrone Power and Charles
Laughton . A superb' courtroom .
drama with a whopper of a surprise
ending . Adapted Irom an Agatha
Christie play . At the Cinema . 943 5914 .

10·7 Sunday
9-9

LIVE MUSIC

child has made them obey his will
grudgingly, and he keeps playing
his game until he tires of it.
But it is the interactions among
the children themselves that give
this film its magic moments. The

"Film critics
can fault
pins for
. 'beIng·too
sharp."
idle dialog between children
waiting for the schoolday to
start, one accusing the other of
having been born in a garbage
can; the barely-contained laughter of one of the main characters,
as he tells his peers a dirty joke;
two young brothers' self-made
Sunday breakfast, slamming off
the TV in an instant with the
disgusted exclamation, "Hell, it's
Sunday Mass." Truffaut has won
the trust of the children, and so
has been .able to capture for us
the world they hide from adults.
Occasionally Truffaut oversteps the border between polemics and analogy, as when he has
a kind school teacher make a
speech to his class (but mostly to
us) on the rights of children.

More often, though, the director's statements are very subtle.
For instance, many times throughout the film we see the handicapped father of one of the main
characters. Not only is he wheel-chair-bound but also apparently
has so little strength in. his arms
that he uses a special device to
tum the pages of books as he
reads. We see his son' obligingly
bringing him his meals, doing the
shopping for him. I think the director is saying very quietly,
"What if it were you · in that
chair1" And then, by implication, "This is how restricted children often are. Would we not
free the man if we could1 Why
should we not also free children,
to live unhampered lives?"
The film is far from being all
politics. For the bulk of the time
it's just incidents concerning children (all of which, by the way,
Truffaut insists really happened) .
In fact, most of the incidents are
so amusing that Pauline Kael accused Truffaut of selling out, of
showing "an adult's fantasy of
normalcy," and of being overly
sentimental. This is true to some
extent. But film critics can fault
pins for being too sharp. The
point here is a film that succeeds
very well - it makes important
statements in a highly pleasant
manner and is guaranteed to be
seen by millions of parents,
teachers, and others in authority
over children . Any film that
achieves this can be forgiven a
few excesses of sentiment.

TWO MINUTE WARNING (976) .
The movie theatre audience is only
given two minute'S warning before
a 13 year Old. hidden somewhere
behind the screen , begins shoot ing
spit wads with deadly accuracy . At
the Olympic . 357-3422 .
NEVER A DULL MOMENT . Dull.
At the Capllol Theatre. 357-7161 .

Friday, January 28
SHERLOCK, JR . Sherlock Holmes
falls asleep in a cocaine space-out
and wakes up as Buster Keaton .
This funny silent film shares ·lhe
bill with a funny talkie : I'M ALL
RIGHT. JACK (1960) starring Peter
Sellers . This sequel to lhe book I'm
OK, You're OK pokes fun at labor
and management of a unionized
factory . Nol for Marxists. Also :
BULLETEERS, a 40' s Superman
cartoon in living black and while.
Complete showings at 3. 7 and 8
p.m . Also. Keaton only at 10 p .m.
Presented by Ihe Friday Nile Film
Series. LH One. 75 cenls.

RADIO AND TELEVISION
ROOTS continues each night this
week until Stlnday. January 30.
Some may lhink the show is melodramatiC, slanted. and inaccurale.
Melodramalic - yes. But it does
portray blacks as morally superior
to whites during slavery . . wh ich is
as il should be .
Saturday , January 29
THE All NIGHT JAM The Northwest's only radio program that
showcases "live" local talenl on a
regular baSis. will fealure a special
midnight concert by Evergreen pianist MICHAEL MICHELETTI. 10
p.m. - 4 a.m . on 89.3 KAOS- FM .

Saturday, January 29
DARK STAR (a Sci-FI film) and
3 MARX BROTHERS SHORTS act
out the plot line of 0.1 IUIpltll lor
KAOS-FM, which Is giving this
benellt show. LH One, $1, al 7 and
10 p.m.

~
Friday, January 28
LINDA WATERFALL, the line
'slnger-composer-muslclan . and
WILL ACKERMAN , both perform at
the Applejam in what Is billed as
"one of Applelam's best ever." Two
shows: 7:30 and 9 : 30 p.m. Admission Is $1 for either show.

Monday, January 31
AT EIGHT OR NINE IN THE
MORNING (23 minutes). A Felix.
Greene documentary about educalion In the People's Republic 01
China. Followed by a panel discussion by Pacific Northwest teachers
from alternative schools. Presented
by the Evergreen Polilical Information Center (EPIC). LH One, noon
and 7: 30. Free .

AftI

ON CAMPUS
RECENT WORKS BY BILL AADES
continues In the Library Art Gallery
through January 30.

Tuesday, February 1
MEN'S LIVES An award-winning
documentary detailing the mundane
day-to-day problems of confused
wor1dng males. Presented by tbe
Multi-EthniC Counseling and Hu"
man Growth Center. Noon , In the
CAB colleehouse. Free.

200 YEARS OF ROYAL COPENHAGEN PORCELAIN Is the perfect
cure for people who are tired of
muddy brown "organic" ceramics.
The show runs through February
20. at the Volunteer Park Sea1tle
Art Museum.

Wednesday, February 2
8·.... (1963) Directed by Fed3rlco
Fellin!. This rllm - which is about
making a film - was made alter
Felllni had mada seven films and
co-directed one other. II Is thus his
8 '12th film. An eKtraordinarlly wellmade movla Ihat marked Felllnl's
emergence as a master 01 cinema.
In Italian wllh English subtitles.
Presented by the Academic Film
Sarles . LH One. 1:30 and 7 : 30 p.m .
Free.

STUFFED ALBINO SQUIRRELS
FOR WOMEN ONLY This week ' the
Thurston County All-Women Stuffed
Albino Squirrel Travelling Taxidermy
and Guerilla Theatre Shock Squad
will present an all-new, updated,
feminist re-interpretatlon of Shakespeare's Othello. Ms. Batbara
Stubbs, a thunder.trlking Ireshwoman from Centralia, takes I he
litle role, which she prepared lor.
In her words, "By running around
In the rain and yelling a lot. " In a
surprise switch at the end of the
play, Desdemona will rise Irom the
dead and lead women In the audi ence In a unified attack 01) the men
stupid enough to have insisted on
being present at the performance.
Josephine Bemis Memorial Gallery.
open 24 hours.

IN OLYMPIA
SILVER STREAK starring Gene
Wilder continues at the State, 3574010.

Friday & Saturday
~o

Appearing through February 12
(Tuesday throug h Saturd ay )
Top 4 0 So und.

please yourself *

Olympia

COVER

Fish Market
426-3020

109 S. 2nd

No Dope

ID Please

Wilmette, Illinois
a series on

Third program of

KAOS

o

4 p.m . Jan 31st

o

3rd Program
"The Family : Foundation tor Unity"

o
o

Inlormal discussions
evary Saturday 8 p.m .

Faculty or Student Reps

Sell Summer
Tours

L OWE ST pOS Sibl e a ir f are ~
LOWES T poss d)le ra il fare s
LOWEST pOSS ibl e a ccoll l lllori a t l OIl raW ,
HI G H ES T p OS Sibl e COIllIllI SSIO Il S I

GReeoU)oot>=====.J
2300 Evergreen Park Drive,

Ion Olympia. 943-4000 ,

to EUROPE

Call toll free (800) 225-4580, '"" '". [
[1, ,.... ' d. ' Hnl 1()I'... I H ') 1\ J\) . ~,
l "()~l I

"11 1 'J'· .·'.'d· ~ I·

: " ""

T () l IH~)

do)'"()",,. , ~"l, 0 .,' 1,;',

Martin VVayo943'5914

P.O. Box 982, Olympia 98507
866-3883 or 352-3436
I .

ET YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS A

4th St at Padfic & ......,.""

bringing you very fresh
seafood from the best
of local sources.

WITNESS FOR THE PROSECUTION

HENDRICKS
'\<~\

---. .."
' ,j '

.~.

.'1;'.

~
~.. --- .........

DRUGS
WESTSIDE CENTER
943-3311

"The Melting Pot ,dining ..,.,..nee it 0",8 you ere IU,. to find
very pIeeIing.
~ Aa..1OASS NIIH SALMON . . . .. . . . ... .. . . ... . '.10
• SLOWIOAI.,PIIMI • .. . . . .. .. .. . : ......... . 1.10


Lon &t Pat Hogue
208 W. 4th
357-6762

By far the best of the Agatha Christie movies. This is a pure
delight to watch as Marlene Dietrich, Charles Laughton and
Tyrone Power try to find out - or hide who did kill the
old lady. Directed by Billy Wilder. Showtimes 7:00, 9:15.

~an1OP1III.OIN .

4."

.. ... .... . . . . . . . .. ... . . I."

..

• 1IA. . . . .lIW ..... . . ' ... . . .. .. . .. .. . . .... .

~

, 1th. Cepltol - Olympia - R8HrYMione 943'()928

7

A Disgruntled

New & Used Records
Tapes
Concert Tickets

Westside Center 357· 4755

Rest of This Week

f3AI312I~L
Next Week
31st THRU 5th

J()~~ti~§ Wti~L~
Feb 9th thru 12th

Jl!.

(:~[)ILL~(:

--

....~

Vegeta~ian's

that could slice them like that.
Shakey's black. olive and mushroom pizza will cure hunger
pangs, and it can be accompanied by salad and "mojo" potatoes.
Dirty Dave's in Lacey has a
good reputation in.olympia pizza
eating circles. Their vegetarian
pizza consists of any five of the
non-meat items on the menu and
is an aesthetic delight, and rates
three black olives, or gold stars,
on my non-existent ~tinS system.

by Kame Jacobs
Yes, the idea of eating
out, a pastime of gods and college students alike, is definitely
appealing, so I proceed to rack
my mental directory of Olympia's resources to determine just
how I can satisfy the demands of
my stomach. I guess that it would
be simple to go out to Eagan's
for a burger and fries, but 1don't
eat meat, or fish, so it becomes
more complicated. Being a vt'getarian in Olympia offers many
possibilities, not necessarily thrilling, but possibilities all the same.
I should start out close to the
homes, and hearts, of many Evergreeners: Saga foods. Saga has
been known to be kind to vegetarians on occasion. They now
have a salad bar, and vegetarian
casseroles, which are sometimes
good, too often rely heavily on
mistreated stringbeans. Their
vegey veg, cream of potato, and
cream of broccoli soups are usually tasty, but Saga is too deeply
entrenched in the salt/pepper/
paprika cooking ethic to make a
memorable soup.
Its snack bar offers cheese
sandwiches, which are often grillmates to grease-spitting burgers.
They are invariably made with
that epicurian classic, American
Cheez. At night and on weekends, bagels and cream cheese
are available, but be sure to
order your bagel toasted. Chilly
bagels just don't cut it.
Saga also makes pizza at lunch
and at night. It's okay if your
pizza cravings are rendering you
non-functional, but the price is a
little steep for all but emergency
purposes.
Speaking of pizza, I might as
well go through Olympia's pizza
possibilities.
Olympia has two Shakey's, a
nationwide chain whose pizza
has a number of obvious faults.
The tomato sauce exists merely
as a stain on crust as thick as a
cracker. The mushrooms are
sliced literally paper-thin. They
are brittle to the touch, and it
staggers the imagination to think
of a tool short of a laser device

EntertainmentmIIDLk®IrLk(IDllIIDIO]

Guide to Olympia
Right across the street from the
Mode is the Rainbow Deli, whose
melted cheese and vegey sandwich stands as a monument in
the field of artistic san.dwichery.
Their potato salad sparkles, the
coffee is fresh-ground, and the
only word for the carrot cake is
addictive.
Ah; yes. I have just reached .
sacred ground in the Olympia
cafe world, the Brown Derby.
The main word at the Derby for
the meatless set is soup, specifically cream of potato, mushroom, or tomato. There is also
salad, homemade bread, fries,
and our old friend the grilled
cheese sandwich (once again,
fried on a suspiciously greasy

.fl.I.fa

ON CAMPUS
Thursday. January 27
THE YET ANOTHER FILM SERIES
will be presenting films during the
rest of the school year on Thursday
nlghls. They have a grab bag of
films from lhe school 's and the
slate's collections thal they are
able to get for free . Tonight an hour
and lifty minules of films about
artists: Charles Burchlleld, Kenojauk. Marc Chagall and Francis
Bacon . Free in the coileehouse CAB
at 8 : 30 p.m.

grill).

DOGOWNIDBY
VEGETARIAN

AFTER TWO MONTHS
ON CELERY DIET
Jo Mama's is your typical quasi-organic hippie pizzeria, complete with whole wheat crusts
and sprouts on the pies. Their
pizza is the best in town, but you
pay for it. Sometimes you pay
for what you don't get. The last
time that I was there, the waitress fai1~ to mention that they
were out of sprouts, and still
tried to charge us for them.
Moreno's Mexican restaurant,
. on the Westside, . stars guacamole
as its vegetarian entree. I'd stay
away from the refried beans because they are traditionally made
with lard.
If you find the prospect of
having a whole menu to choose
from without lard paranoia, you
should scoot on over to Oly's
one and only vegetarian restaurant, The Artichoke Mode.Their
food isn't >fattcy; . 6il( It " "tastes
good, is reasonably priced, and
comes complete with friendly
service and comfortable atmosphere. The Artichoke Mode offers reassurance, comfort, and a
variety of foods to the confused
vegetarian .

When Mom and Dad come to
visit, and t.hey want to show you
a good time, . let them take you
to the Melting Pot, if only because they have such an amusing
wine list. Don't be dismayed by
the meatiness (or fishiness) of the
menu. Just order a salad, the artichoke heart appetizer, and the
stuffed baked · potato. You'll do
fine. I know that it's not a protein-complimentary meal, but it
tastes good and it's filling.
The last on my list of Olympia
favorites is the Spar. ·The possibilities for a vegetarian repast are
sparse, but you can always convince yourself that it's the ambience that counts, and settle for
an egg salad sandwich and a
chocolate malt .
If you are desperate and have
a car, Chefs Family Kitchen in
the Market Square shopping mall
just across from Sow Sow Center
(sic] in Lacey, has a respectable
salad bar, and Sambo's has waffles.
There are numerous little cafes
in Olympia where the only meatJess item&. · arei ~ ()salad .'.sa",ct..
'wiches and Fr'enth fries •.The 'only
rules of thumb . I can offer on
eating out vegey style in"a meatoriented community are:
1.when in doubt, order breakfast food.
2. If you don't eat dairy products either, stay home.



mOVle
reVlew

Hell, It's Sunday Mass
by Rick Speer
Editor', note: "So'aU Change"
is currently playing ilt the Varsity
Theater in Seattle.
In Francois Truffaut's last film,
The Story of Adele H., he explored the consuming passion of
a young woman's first love. In
his latest film, Small Change, we
are shown instead a passion of
Monsieur Truffaut's - his love
of children. Small Change is a
plotless film, a series of vignettes
really •..wearing i.t! and ,.out of the ,
liw5"'of'>a T grdUp of,dtl1dren in a ··
small village in France. The children range in age from 18 months
to 14 years, in situation from adored offspring to an abused,
battered child. Through a variety
of incidents, T ruHaut illustrates
his thesis; that children live in a
, state of grace that shelters them
and allows them to grow.
The film is heavy with little
ironies. For example, we see a
child provoke his teacher into
expelling him from class, which
allows him to go through the
pockets of his classmates' jackets. Another child tells his friends
the way to please one's parents
vis-a-vis haircuts - "Irs best
when they can't tell you've been
(to the barber)." In a third scene
we see just a child's legs, as he
deliberately sticks his feet into
the way of oncoming traffic. In
reaction we see the wheels and
sides of three cars swerve aside
screechingly and drive on. The

PETERSONS
Shelton'S

WESTSIDE CENTER
e Open every day e

TAYEIM

WITNESS FOR THE PROSECUTION (1958 ; 114 minutes) Directed '
by Billy Wilder. Starring Marlene
Dietrich. Tyrone Power and Charles
Laughton . A superb' courtroom .
drama with a whopper of a surprise
ending . Adapted Irom an Agatha
Christie play . At the Cinema . 943 5914 .

10·7 Sunday
9-9

LIVE MUSIC

child has made them obey his will
grudgingly, and he keeps playing
his game until he tires of it.
But it is the interactions among
the children themselves that give
this film its magic moments. The

"Film critics
can fault
pins for
. 'beIng·too
sharp."
idle dialog between children
waiting for the schoolday to
start, one accusing the other of
having been born in a garbage
can; the barely-contained laughter of one of the main characters,
as he tells his peers a dirty joke;
two young brothers' self-made
Sunday breakfast, slamming off
the TV in an instant with the
disgusted exclamation, "Hell, it's
Sunday Mass." Truffaut has won
the trust of the children, and so
has been .able to capture for us
the world they hide from adults.
Occasionally Truffaut oversteps the border between polemics and analogy, as when he has
a kind school teacher make a
speech to his class (but mostly to
us) on the rights of children.

More often, though, the director's statements are very subtle.
For instance, many times throughout the film we see the handicapped father of one of the main
characters. Not only is he wheel-chair-bound but also apparently
has so little strength in. his arms
that he uses a special device to
tum the pages of books as he
reads. We see his son' obligingly
bringing him his meals, doing the
shopping for him. I think the director is saying very quietly,
"What if it were you · in that
chair1" And then, by implication, "This is how restricted children often are. Would we not
free the man if we could1 Why
should we not also free children,
to live unhampered lives?"
The film is far from being all
politics. For the bulk of the time
it's just incidents concerning children (all of which, by the way,
Truffaut insists really happened) .
In fact, most of the incidents are
so amusing that Pauline Kael accused Truffaut of selling out, of
showing "an adult's fantasy of
normalcy," and of being overly
sentimental. This is true to some
extent. But film critics can fault
pins for being too sharp. The
point here is a film that succeeds
very well - it makes important
statements in a highly pleasant
manner and is guaranteed to be
seen by millions of parents,
teachers, and others in authority
over children . Any film that
achieves this can be forgiven a
few excesses of sentiment.

TWO MINUTE WARNING (976) .
The movie theatre audience is only
given two minute'S warning before
a 13 year Old. hidden somewhere
behind the screen , begins shoot ing
spit wads with deadly accuracy . At
the Olympic . 357-3422 .
NEVER A DULL MOMENT . Dull.
At the Capllol Theatre. 357-7161 .

Friday, January 28
SHERLOCK, JR . Sherlock Holmes
falls asleep in a cocaine space-out
and wakes up as Buster Keaton .
This funny silent film shares ·lhe
bill with a funny talkie : I'M ALL
RIGHT. JACK (1960) starring Peter
Sellers . This sequel to lhe book I'm
OK, You're OK pokes fun at labor
and management of a unionized
factory . Nol for Marxists. Also :
BULLETEERS, a 40' s Superman
cartoon in living black and while.
Complete showings at 3. 7 and 8
p.m . Also. Keaton only at 10 p .m.
Presented by Ihe Friday Nile Film
Series. LH One. 75 cenls.

RADIO AND TELEVISION
ROOTS continues each night this
week until Stlnday. January 30.
Some may lhink the show is melodramatiC, slanted. and inaccurale.
Melodramalic - yes. But it does
portray blacks as morally superior
to whites during slavery . . wh ich is
as il should be .
Saturday , January 29
THE All NIGHT JAM The Northwest's only radio program that
showcases "live" local talenl on a
regular baSis. will fealure a special
midnight concert by Evergreen pianist MICHAEL MICHELETTI. 10
p.m. - 4 a.m . on 89.3 KAOS- FM .

Saturday, January 29
DARK STAR (a Sci-FI film) and
3 MARX BROTHERS SHORTS act
out the plot line of 0.1 IUIpltll lor
KAOS-FM, which Is giving this
benellt show. LH One, $1, al 7 and
10 p.m.

~
Friday, January 28
LINDA WATERFALL, the line
'slnger-composer-muslclan . and
WILL ACKERMAN , both perform at
the Applejam in what Is billed as
"one of Applelam's best ever." Two
shows: 7:30 and 9 : 30 p.m. Admission Is $1 for either show.

Monday, January 31
AT EIGHT OR NINE IN THE
MORNING (23 minutes). A Felix.
Greene documentary about educalion In the People's Republic 01
China. Followed by a panel discussion by Pacific Northwest teachers
from alternative schools. Presented
by the Evergreen Polilical Information Center (EPIC). LH One, noon
and 7: 30. Free .

AftI

ON CAMPUS
RECENT WORKS BY BILL AADES
continues In the Library Art Gallery
through January 30.

Tuesday, February 1
MEN'S LIVES An award-winning
documentary detailing the mundane
day-to-day problems of confused
wor1dng males. Presented by tbe
Multi-EthniC Counseling and Hu"
man Growth Center. Noon , In the
CAB colleehouse. Free.

200 YEARS OF ROYAL COPENHAGEN PORCELAIN Is the perfect
cure for people who are tired of
muddy brown "organic" ceramics.
The show runs through February
20. at the Volunteer Park Sea1tle
Art Museum.

Wednesday, February 2
8·.... (1963) Directed by Fed3rlco
Fellin!. This rllm - which is about
making a film - was made alter
Felllni had mada seven films and
co-directed one other. II Is thus his
8 '12th film. An eKtraordinarlly wellmade movla Ihat marked Felllnl's
emergence as a master 01 cinema.
In Italian wllh English subtitles.
Presented by the Academic Film
Sarles . LH One. 1:30 and 7 : 30 p.m .
Free.

STUFFED ALBINO SQUIRRELS
FOR WOMEN ONLY This week ' the
Thurston County All-Women Stuffed
Albino Squirrel Travelling Taxidermy
and Guerilla Theatre Shock Squad
will present an all-new, updated,
feminist re-interpretatlon of Shakespeare's Othello. Ms. Batbara
Stubbs, a thunder.trlking Ireshwoman from Centralia, takes I he
litle role, which she prepared lor.
In her words, "By running around
In the rain and yelling a lot. " In a
surprise switch at the end of the
play, Desdemona will rise Irom the
dead and lead women In the audi ence In a unified attack 01) the men
stupid enough to have insisted on
being present at the performance.
Josephine Bemis Memorial Gallery.
open 24 hours.

IN OLYMPIA
SILVER STREAK starring Gene
Wilder continues at the State, 3574010.

Friday & Saturday
~o

Appearing through February 12
(Tuesday throug h Saturd ay )
Top 4 0 So und.

please yourself *

Olympia

COVER

Fish Market
426-3020

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No Dope

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Wilmette, Illinois
a series on

Third program of

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o

4 p.m . Jan 31st

o

3rd Program
"The Family : Foundation tor Unity"

o
o

Inlormal discussions
evary Saturday 8 p.m .

Faculty or Student Reps

Sell Summer
Tours

L OWE ST pOS Sibl e a ir f are ~
LOWES T poss d)le ra il fare s
LOWEST pOSS ibl e a ccoll l lllori a t l OIl raW ,
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866-3883 or 352-3436
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ET YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS A

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208 W. 4th
357-6762

By far the best of the Agatha Christie movies. This is a pure
delight to watch as Marlene Dietrich, Charles Laughton and
Tyrone Power try to find out - or hide who did kill the
old lady. Directed by Billy Wilder. Showtimes 7:00, 9:15.

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THE SCORE AT ASH
THE BIG BONUSES ...
Volume 5 Number 11 .
No long term lease

Complete Laundry facilities
Furnished and unfurnished apts available
Earl's Place for snacks, shopping, recreation
and, of course, great Pinball

by Brad Pokorny
When Evergreen President Charles J.
McCann leaves office on June 15 he will
receive a two-year paid leave of absence.
For the first year he will get $43,300, his
current full salary, and for the second year
he will receive half that much, on the condition that he returns to Evergreen and
becomes a member of the faculty. This
leave was arranged with McCann directly
by the Board of Trustees sometime last
year, even before the board knew that
Governor Dan Evans would replace McCann.
President McCann is now under fire
over the leave.
In the last week some faculty and staff
members at Evergreen, and certain members of the state legislature. have lowered
their guns at the Board of Trustees and
McCann. They are highly critical of both
the length and cost of the leave. and the
manner in which it was awarded.
Last Tuesday. January 18, the executive
committee of The Evergreen State College
Federation of Teachers. Local 3421, issued
a press release voicing its opposition to
the leave. They objected to the "high administrative salary . the sidestepping of the
college's own professional leave committee. and the severe under-funding of the
professional leaves for regular faculty."
A MAITER OF POLICY
Perhaps the chief objection to the leave
is the manner in which the Board of Trustees allegedly violated institutional policy.
The Evergreen Administrative Code, the
set of rules and guidelines by which the
college operates, specifies that "The President and Vice Presidents will submit their
applications for professional leave to the
Professional Leaves Committee," after
which the leaves committee will make recommendations to the Board of Trustees.
The code also specifies that leaves will be
granted for a maximum of one year in
any seven-year period (EAC 174-112-

3138 Overhulse Rd .
866-8181
Earl and Car ol Sc hw artz thank all thoJe who dona/I'd their time
and energy to A Sf! laJt quarter. 'They could never have accompl/Shed everyt hlTlg wIthout your generouJ support.

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800 3a and EAC 174-112-790 2a). McCann's leave did not go through the Leaves
Committee.
McCann says his leave is a termination
leave. not a professional leave. and therefore it does not fall under the guidelines
in the administrative code . ··Sure ." he
says, "if I were taking a sabbatical in the
middle of my term. it would go through
the leaves committee ."
Arnold Doerksen . Director of General
Services and a member of the Professional
Leaves Committee. said that the committee wasn't sure if it was leave or termina·tion pay when they met last week . but
that it seemed the second half of the money ··is professional leave and should have
gone through EAC policy." The committee
is draftingdletter to the Board of Trustees
asking why they did not roule the leave
through them.
THE MONEY
The other big question is one of money :
Is McCann 's leave too much?
Michael Beug. the faculty member who
brought the matter to the attention of the
facu lt y union . said. "In one sense the pay
for the job he's done. compared JO someone in private industry. is very low. But
compared to the lm ager func 'J1g d c~ l ·
lege budgets it seems excessive."
Lee Anderson admitted he was di5tu~bed
about the amount of Ihe leave. 'Tm crit ical of it." he said. "There·s somet hing like
$90.000 for faculty leaves . And that's for
135 faculty. That works out to about enough for each faculty member to take
one quarter's leave every eleven years. "
Some object to the leave because the
budgets for other professional leaves are
so small , but McCann said that the money
for his leave will in no way affect money
for other leaves. or money for academics .
Other four-year colleges around the
state have granted leaves to their presidents in manners similar 10 McCann's, but
Brad Pokorny

rontirlll ed pllge 8

Indian Awareness Week Winds Up

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They Won't Leave
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The Evergreen State College

I.
I

Speeches, films, food, fashions, discussions, entertainment, and arts and crafts
displays have been highlights of Evergreen's Indian Awar~ness Week, which
continues through tomorrow. The program is being presented by the Native
American Student Association at Evergreen under the coordination of student
Tony Olney.
Joe Washington, a Lummi Indian from
Bellingham. spoke yesterday about the
traditions and spiritual ways of the Coast
Indians, Gray-haired and in his seventies,
Washington's talk focused on the Indian's
spiritual quest, the Indian teachings on
ecology. and his own trauma from the
white man's attempts to take away Indian
spiritual traditions.
He spoke of the spirit prophet KhaaIs .
who was "the first translator for the Indians, and who made the world." He compared him to Jesus, and spoke of the similarity of their teachings. "The Indian begins his quest when he achieves humility,
when he believes there is something greater than himself. There is a change that
comes over a person; similar to the way
the Bible describes a change coming over
one in a twinkling of an eye."
Washington spoke for over an hour,
mostly responding to questions from an
audience of about 40 or 50 respectful Evergreeners. He talked in gentle tones,

making broad, descriptive arm motions,
his hands communicating in a subsidiary
language of their own.
"When the white man first came to this
land it was full of natural resources, mil lions of fish and animals. but now the
white man has depleted the resources,"
said Washington. "The Indian people always knew that to take too much of one
thing will cause a chain reaction that will
last for centuries." He spoke of salmon
canneries in the 1930's that threw away
tons of fish, starting just such a chain reaction , and complained of whites blaming
the Indians for the lack of salmon.
When asked about the conflict in his
own life between white and Indian culture, he related a story of going off to
government school on the reservation and
coming home to tell his grandmother that
he no longer wanted to hear her stories of
the traditional ways, that he was a white
man now. "This made her cry," he said.
" But to make it back to traditional Indian
life was very difficult, and I had to go
through many doors."
Finally, Washington spoke of the need
to teach traditional Indian ways in the
schools. He said he had been talking with
a white professor of anthropology about
Indians teaching Indian culture in college.
"The man asked why J should teach what
took him 24 years to learn. and J said,

'Well , who did you learn about the Indians from?'"
Activities for the resl of the week include:
Thursday, January 26
NOON Ramona Bennett. leader of the
Puyallup Tribe and chief organizer of the
Cascadia takeover, speaks on "Cascadia."
2 p.m . Evergreen teacher Cruz Esquivel
speaks on "Our Destiny ."
3 p.m. AIlen Van Avery speaks on "Indians, Medicine, and Food."
7 p.m. "COON CONS COYOTE, " a
comedy based on traditional legends, performed by Red Earth, a Seattle theatre
troupe. Admission is $1 for adults, 75
cents for students, and 50 cents for children under 12.
Friday, January 27
9 a.m . A discussion of Native American
fashion and design. Also, a fashion show .
10 a .m. A talk on "Emphasis Education"
by Evergreen teacher Mary Ellen HilIajre.
2 p.m. Raul Salinas, author of "Trip to
the Mind Jail," reads his poetry. Also, ,a
discussion of "Native American "&..-t, Poems, and Prophecy," by Evergreen teachers Mary Nelson and Cruz Esquivel.
4 p.m. Stone Thomas, director of Evergreen's Third World Coalition, speaks on
"Evergreen and Education for Third World
Students."

6 p.m. A "POW WOW" concludes the
week's events. with singers. dancers, tra ditional Indian foods. and a full four hours
of activities.