cpj0314.pdf

Media

Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 12, Issue 3 (October 20, 1983)

extracted text
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WashPIRG comes to Everg~,~e!Jm
By Bradley P. Blum and Janet O'Leary

THURSDA Y, 10/13

fRIDAY, 10/14

Multi-media exhibit of creations by AsianAmerican artists from throughout
Washington State remains on view through
December I in Gallery Four, the Evans
Library.

Skank all night to reggae, calypso and
originals with The Arousing Spirit Band
from Eugene, Oregon at the 4th Ave. Tav.
Showtime is 9:30, $3 .00.

The Rainmaker stars Evergreen students and
faculty tonight and Saturday at the Olympia Little Theater, 1925 E. Miller Avenue,
at 8: 15 p.m. Tickets are $4.50 for adults and
$3.00 for students under 18. They are
available at Pat's Bookery, The Bookmark
and at the door when not sold out. Advance
purchase is recommended.
The Olympia Chorale and Light Opera
presents Gilbert and Sullivan's The Gondoliers at the Abbey Theatre, next to St.
Martin's Pavilion, Lacey, tonight and October 15, 20, 21 and 22. Tickets are $6
general, $4.50 students and seniors.
Showtime is 8 p.m.

SATURDAY, lOllS
Women's soccer at Central Washington
University.
Men's soccer against Whitworth College at
Evergreen, I p.m.
Thursday Night Films presents Knock on
Any Door and In a Lonely Place, 7 and 9:30
p.m., Lecture Hall I, $1.50 .

The cross country team races against Pacific
Lutheran University at Fort Steilacoom Park
in Tacoma.

Volleyball, 12: 15 p.m., Red Square
Faculty/ Staff volleyball, noon, Steamplant
gym
Intramural socce r, 4 p.m., athletic fields
Parent support gro up meets, noon, CA B
100.

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Thursday, October

20

The sailing team competes at the University
of Oregon.
International Day of Solidarity with I ndigenous Peoples of the Americas, 1-10
p.m., EI Centro de la Raza , 2524 16th Ave.
S., Seattle, $3 donation. For information call
329-9442, Seattle.

E

The Wanderers is an interesting film from
1979 starring Ken Wahl and Karen Allen. Set
in New York C ity in the early '60s, director
Phillip Kaufman does a beautiful job of
bringing out both the dramati c and the
humorou s side of growing up in a turbulent

v

The Artist's Co-op Gallery, at 524 S.
Washington, features oil painters Dorothy
Curry and Vicki Scott through October 22.
Hours are 10 a.m.-5 p .m . Monday through
Saturday .

SUNDAY, 10/ 16
Women's soccer at Evergreen against UPS,
I p.m.

TUESDAY, 10/ 18
The 1984 Film Series shows The Conformist
at 4, 7:30 and 10 p.m. in Lecture Hall I.

WEDNESDA Y, 10/19
Men's soccer at Judson Baptist Co llege .
Budget writing workshops will be held today
for groups applying for S & A midyear
allocations. These workshops are mandatory
for budget representatives. Two sessions are
offered: 10 a.m.-noon and 1-3 . For further
information contact Ei leen Brady in CAB
305 X6220. Budgets are due at noon on
Wednesday, November 2 in CAB 305.
The 1983 Orientation Series continues with
"Student Life and Campus Services, " a t 7
p.m. in the Corner, A dorm.
The Northwest Chamber Orchestra performs
a program of compositions by Haydn,
Monn, Mozart and Schoenberg under the
direction of Conductor Alun Francis, 8 p.m.,
Capital High School. Cosponsored by the
Evergreen Expressions performing arts series
and Seattle Trust Guest Artists Program.
Tickets are $8 general, $5 st udent s and senior
citizens, discounts for groups of more than
15 by prior arrangement. Call 866-6833 for
reservations.

E

era .
The st ory centers around a high sc hool
ga ng whose member s are nOt violent delinquents, b ut young people with a need to
belong . The camaraderie and defense of each
ot her and the group is refreshing . Character
studies abound as each personality is brought
clearly into focus as the story progresses. T he

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ending leaves one with a desire to see more,
to know more, and to become more intimate
with the lives of these people. Plenty of
laughs, action, nostalgia and food for
thoug ht. Go see it!!

Lee. Hall I, 7:00 & 9:30, $1.50.

If you have an event to publicize that you would like to see included in our
calendar, submit the information to our office, located in Library 3234. All
submissions should be typed double-spaced and turned in no later than 5 p.m.
Monday for publication that week.

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A student group way back in 1976
predicted that the Washington Public Power
Supply System's construction of five nuclear
power plants would prove unnecessary. The
Washington Public Interest Research Group
(WashPIRG), comprised of University of
Washington students, made this prediction
in the first study of energy use in the northwest to be widely read.
WashPIRG now comes to the Evergreen
campus. Il£.~rries on a tradition of research
on issuet"that affect the public welfare.
The first PIRGs began in Michigan, Minnesota and Oregon in 1970 and 1971 as the
fulfillment of an idea Ralph Nader had.
Nader felt that students would be best equipped for the task of researching pertinent
issues, since they had the necessary resources
at their fingertips.
Since their beginning, PIRGs have been
established at colleges in thirty states.
Around 1976, fifteen colleges in the State of
Washington tried to establish WashPIRG
chapters. Only the University of Washington
succeeded.
According to Andy Cahn, state projects
director, many of the organizers on those fifteen campuses acqu ired the necessary
signatures on petitions (fifty percent of the
student body), only to run into a brick wall
when presenting the petitions to school administrators. Western Washington Univer·
sity's president, Paul J. Olscamp, for instance, flatly vetoed the proposal when it
came before him.
University of Washington administrators
were also co!?1 to the notion of a student
organization of this nature. However, strong
support from the faculty, letters of endorsement from Henry Jackson, Warren
Magnuson, Edward Kennedy and Dan
Evans, plus eighteen thousand student
signatures gathered in two months, persuaded them.
Since its inception in 1976, WashPIRG has
made an impressive impact, both in
Washington and nationally. Last year,
WashPIRG conducted a study to determine
the possible ramifications of a Washington
Public Power Supply System (WPPSS)

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WashPIRG members from left to right; Campus coordinators, Annette Newman and Danny Kadden, State PrOjects Director Andy
Cahn, and State Executive Director Kim Nelson.
default on its seven billion dollar debt. The
eastern Washington wou ld be chosen as a
The TESC and University of Washington
study concluded that a default and renegotiadump site for the entire nation's high -level chapters will be working jointl y to d r3w up
radioactive wa, ;~, At lil e ti me, government l egi~ l lI ti o n to block the storage of this waste
tion of the debt would be in the best interest
officials scoffed at the notion. Today, five at Ha nfo rd, since a WashP/ RG study con ·
of Washington citizens. These findings were
published on the front pages of The Seal/Ie
years later , the prediction has gained con- ducted this summer found the site geologically unsuited for such an operation.
Times and Post-Intelligencer and in such siderab le credibility.
Now that Evergreen has its own PIRG
prestigious publications as Newsweek, The
The Evergreen PIRG begins two project s
Wall Street Journal, Business Week, The chapter, concerned students here can get in- this fall. The first is an attempt to locate all
Economist, and The International Hera/d- volved in the Hanford issue, as well as hazardous chemical sites in Thurston County
others . Talk to Danny Kadden , campus and to pass a state-wide "right-to-know" law
Tribune.
As far back as 1978, WashPIRG predicted coordinator, and Annette Newman, coor- concerning such sites. The legislation will
dinator of volunteers.
that the Hanford Nuclear Reservation in
('onlinutd on paj.!f 2

CAB seeks student involvement
By ROD Harrower
With the Environmental Resource Center
(E.R.C.) in a state of limbo, and many student organizations desiring space in the Campus Activities Building (CAB), the need for
student input in the planning process is
crucial. To meet that need, the CAB Use Advisory Board is facilitating several meetings
to discuss the future of the building, and
make recommendations to the Board of
Trustees and the college administration.
The issue of new student office space came
up last spring when the Faculty Staff Lounge
was being planned. After much deliberation,
the E.R.C. was asked to give up their space
in excHange for a promise to locate them in
an equally suitable space. Says Jon Collier,
campus architect, "We a lso obligated
ourselves to finding a permanant location for
the E.R.C." Since that time he has been
working on plans for possible new office
spaces to accomodate the E.R.C. and other
student organizations that would like the central location the CAB provides. The most
likely locations discussed so far are the east
and west wings of the third floor and CAB
306, where the E.R.C. is temporarily housed.
Though discussion has already begun, new
ideas are welcome and needed to achieve an
accurate representation of students' wishes
for the future use of the building. Mike Hall,
Student Activies Director, urges students to

speak up now. "If people have opinions, expressing them to friends is good but it doesn't
get the point to us." To be heard, he suggested that students become members of the
CAB Use Advisory Board, write letters to the
CP J or come to the Advisory Board meetings
with suggestions and criticism .
Besides discussing office space, the board
is open to input on many issues concerning
the building. One possibility is a student pub.
Also important now is how students feel
about designating certain areas nonsmoking. (There is currently no public space
so designated in the CAB .)
Hall is concerned with the lack of student
involvement in college planning activities .
"There's more opportunity for student input [here] than [at] any other college that I've

experienced, yet tl!ere are fewer students being active than [atl any other school." According to Collier, this hasn't always been
the case. In 1978, more than I 00 students involved in four programs descended on the
CAB for a week and refurbished the interior.
They removed the monolithic kiosks, and
replaced them with tables and chairs, couches
and plants . They painted a mural on the wall.
A social space was created out of a corridor.
Collier is hopeful that such student interest
can be generated again to face the present
issues. "It's just a matter of getting our
heads together." So if you want to be one
of the "heads" that decides the future of the
CAB, come to the next meeting of the CAB
Use Advisory Board scheduled for October
26 at 3:30 p.m. in CAB 306.

This photo of the CAB, taken a few years back, shows what it used to look like before
improvements were made. The CAB is planning to make some additional changes
later this year.

Fall enrollment
up over 1982
Final Fall Quarter enrollment figures at
The Evergreen State College reflect the third
highest count in the school's 13-year history.
As of October 7, 2,714 students were
enrolled, compared to 2611 last fall at the
same time. The new fall count included a 17
percent increase in the number of new
students, and a five percent increase in the
number of continuing students who chose to
reenroll at Evergreen this quarter.
"The increased enrollment in our entering class - those who are new to Evergreen
- is unprecedented at any of the other public
universities," according to Steve Hunter ,
Evergreen's director of institutional research.
"That increase is the result of a 15 per cent jump in the number of new students
enrolling directly from high schools and an
18 percent hike in the number of new twoand four-year transfer student s."
Hunter sa id those increases are also
reflected in a higher full-time enrollment.
which is up 133 Students over last year's
talley. Part-time enrollment is down slight ly, by 5 percent compared to last yea r.
In-state students comprise 85 percent of
Evergreen's fall enrollment, Hunter sa id,
wh ile the percentage of out-of-state students
has dropped by I percent this year which, he
added, " is directly attributab le to th e
substantially higher out-of-state tuition
rates. "

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THE EVERGREEN

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NONPRm'1T ORG.
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PAID

STATE COLLEGE
OLYMPIA, WA 98505

OLYMPIA, WA

Towers project unItes
communities

PERMIT NO. 6S

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Counseling offers relief
from films' bleakness

The 1984 Film Series (Tuesday~ at 4, 7 :30
and 10 p.m.) is gaining in recognition as the
quarter progresses; this is evident from the
number of people who are attending this excellent series of films which addresses a
number of social and human dilemmas.
These films may cause any number of
emotional or mental reactions for the viewer.
Common reactions include such emotions as
despair, depression, frustration, anger, or
sometimes hope, and such mental quandaries
as a confus ing flood of unstructured ideas
and an ambivalence toward how to so lve
these elusive yet pervasive dilemmas in the
human condition. [t is as if prejudice, oppression, elitism, injustice, nuclear war,
freedom, and equal ity (among others) are a
group of mice scurrying about in a dark basement. One wants to grab hold or their tails,
clutch them firmly, run out into the light of
day, and cry out, "Ha! You little rascals, [
have you now!" Unfortunately, many of us
have trouble just "catching" or comprehending the dilemmas or the world. Even if we
get hold of one or two, they are so fiesty and
uncooperative, what is to be done with them?
[t seems hopeless, so we throw them back into the basement, lock the door, and try not
to notice the incessant pitter-patter of the
mice - and human surfering. The reelings
and thoughts represented by this analogy are
natural and appropriate responses to the
overwhelming immensity of the dilemmas
presented in the 1984 film series.
We encourage individuals or groups to feel
free to come into the Counseling Center,
Seminar Bldg. 2109, to address their concerns which are sparked by these films. Folks
can walk in to the center and talk with a
counselor for firteen or twenty minutes on
the days following the films, and if they want
10 set up regular counseling, this can be done
at the center as well. [n addition, a sign-up
sheet will be posted outside the door of the
center for those interested in setting up
discussion groups with other 1984 film goers.
The Counseling Center is available to you.
We want to emphasize it is not unusual for

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soup or
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Stop & see us!
3 miles West of Evergreen
Madrona Beach Rd
Mudd Bay Exit 101

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Innerplace to sponsor a series
on subject of"world hunger

Innerplace, the center f~~ spiritUal exploration at Evergreen, has announced the first
of a series of events this quarter aimed at
raising awareness of the issues of world
"C
:r hunger in the Evergreen comm unity.
o
This Tuesday, October 25th, Oscar
o Bolioti,
Director of the Carribbean and Latin
C'
'<
American
office of Chu rch World Service
oo
(CWS), will be on campus to discuss the
"III issues surrounding world hunger. Bolioli has
U!
en recently returned from Central America
where he evaluated se lf-help development
projects in Nicaragua and Honduras, coordinated by indigenous agencies which CWS
helps fund with money raised throughout the
United States and Canada .
Bolioli has first-hand knowledge of how
the people there are provided with education
in homemaking and infant nutrition as well
as training and resources for organizing small
professional counselor- Richard Rowan
farming and livestock cooperatives.
If you want to learn more about what's
The Counseling Center offers the
being done to contend with the suffering
following groups free for students and
caused by hunger in our world, Bolioli will
at a small fee ror non-students.
be in Lib. 2219, from noon until 1 p.m. for
Assertiveness Training: Learn and pracinformal discussion. He will also give a
tice communication skills to improve
presentation at 7:30 p.m. at First United
your confidence, stand up for your
Methodist in Olympia.
rights, better handle conflicts and learn
Oscar Bolioli is a radical Christian who has
the difference between passive, agcontinuously risked his life in Latin America.
gressive and assertive behavior. Meets
He's coming to Evergreen because he wants
Tuesday 2:30-4 p.m.
to share hi s experience and enthusiasm with
Eliminating Self-Defeating Behavior:
other people who are concerned and ready
This workshop will help you eliminate
to take action.
habits, fears about yourself or others
The event is being coordinated by loe
and inefficient ways of acting that preKlein who is a hunger issues advocate with
vent you from being the person you
really are and from reaching your
potential. Meets Wednesday 12 noon-I
p.m.
Men's Group:The purpose of this group
Continued from page 1
is to provide a safe and supportive place
likely require that the information be made
ror men to explore their issues and conavailable to fire and public safety departcerns. Meets Thursday 4:30-6 p.m.
ments and to residents and workers who may
For information call 866-6000 X6800
be exposed to these substances.
or drop by The Counseling Cen ter ;
The TESC chapter is also planning a teSeminar Bldg., first floor.
nant's rights handbook for people renting
houses and apartments in this area. the handbook will explain the laws regarding
landlord-tenant relations and how prospec·
tive renters can avoid problems .
At this point, these are the only two projects
Kadden and Newman have definitely
6:00am-9:30am
decided upon. However, both or them stressed the fact that an important part of the
WashPI RG philosophy is that any student
Sat. & Sun. Dinner Special
wishing to investigate an issue shou ld feel
people to have a number of emotional and
mental reactions to these films and we offer
a facilitative environment where these reactions can be addressed.

II)

"Portraits," a new program in expressive
arts, will be taught by Lynn Patterson this
winter and spring quarters.
Students will explore "the portrait" in any
medium in which they can demonstrate
reasonable control including writing, painting, performance, film and video. Students
will be expected to design an individual six·
month's work plan and be prepared to show
work and interact with project members
regularly.
Gallery 2 is reserved for a work-inprogress show March 3-18 and students will
be involved in identifying an off-campus
space for a final show in late May.
All students will participate in the weekly
Expressive Arts symposium. Additional information may be found in the Evergreen
Artists' -in-Residence brochure available
through Registration.
Interviews for the project will be held on
Thursday, November 17, from 9 a.m . to 5
p.m. Students may drop by Patterson's office, Comm 308E, or call X6056 for
15-minute interview appointments.
Complete Evergreen portfolios with
evaluations of previous work and examples
of work to demonstrate competence in at
least one medium must be brought to
interviews.



free to come in and share the idea. They also'
expressed a desire to see as many students
and interested community members participating in WashPIRG as possible, either
thorugh internships or on a volunteer basis.

Evergreen PIRG is funded by a $2.50 fee
from each student. The fee is automatically
collected with tuition. Those who want
refunds can be reimbursed this week and next
week at tables set up in th e CAB and library
lobby. The CAB table will be open from II
a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Friday. The
library table's hours are 5 10 7 p.m . Tuesday through Thursday.
The Evergreen P[RG office is in Seminar
Bldg. 3152, X6064.

$4 9 9


soup & full salad bar
homemade bread
choice of potato or vegy

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.Towers attern t to brid
By Francisco A. Chateaubriaod

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Communication.
Evergreen's entire philosophy is built on
the premise that clear commuriication leads
to better understanding. While the college
has been quite successful within its own student/faculty community, efforts toward bettering understanding with the Olympia community have not been particulary effective.
Jean Mandeberg hopes to chan~e that.
Mandeberg, a member of the arts faculty
at TESC, is heading a two quarter program
called "Large scale Sculpture." She and the
fourteen students in her class are building '
what Mandeberg calls "Communications
Towers." The two towers, to be constructed
of aluminum, will be be located at the college and in downtown Olympia in an effort
to stimulate discussion between the two
communities.
Mandeberg says the idea of putting public
art in Olympia came to her after she realized that the visual arts programs had not attempted to integrate themselves into the local
community.
"We need to lay a foundation for interest
and commitment to public art, especially
with the environment that exists here at
Evergreen," said Mandeberg. "We want
both communities to thrive through discussion of public art. It's important to recognize
visual art and its role in the community."
Joe Tougas, an eleven year resident of
Olympia, is one of Mandeberg's students. He
says bridging the gap that currently exists
between the two communities is important.
finance the project. The students are working with her this quarter in designing the two
"It's not an empty gap," says Tougas, '
sculptures, a process that involves extensive
"it's an ongoing relationship; Evergreen concritiques and will continue until early
tributes certain things, Olympia contributes
December. In addition, the students are takcertain things. The relationship is sensitive
ing welding classes at Olympia Technical
to what each side puts into it. If someone
Community College (O.T .C.C.) to prepare
from Olympia has a contribution to make
to Evergreen, there's opportunity and them for the co nstruction phase of the
Towers Project, scheduled to begin Winter
eagerness to receive that contribution, and
quarter.
Several committees have also been
the opposite should also be true. It makes
formed , each one expected to tackle a difa big di fference in how the college is
ferent aspect of the project.
perceived. "
Teresa Luke is working on public relations
The two towers will each be between ten for the Towers Project. She says the various
and twenty-five reet high, however they will committees will be working on technical connot be identical structures. Mandeberg and sultation, site research, material gathering
her class feel that the relationship they are and the education of the community as to
trying to establish should be reflected in the the role and intent of public art.
Luke feels getting people involved is the
images of the two towers and at the same
time they should be harmonious with the en- key to the project's success: "The way we
deal with these two communities will be difvironment they are placed in.
A great deal of preparation and planning ferent because they are separate enhas gone into the Towers Project. Last sum- vironments. One of the ways we want to inmer, Mandeberg secured an initial grant volve Olympia is through education and
from the Evergreen Foundation to help public information regarding visual art. With

Evergreen, we want to get people participating by asking them to help us select an
appropriate site on campus to put our
tower. "
If all goes as planned, the towers will be
unveiled in the early spring. Neither or them
will remain permanantly, but Mandeberg
says that's not the intent of the project
anyway.
"This is an important educational experience for the faculty and students here at

Evergreen . We're interested in large scale
public art. [At the same time] the content of
the work is important; it must be publicly
relevant .... The pieces are meant to generate
a dialogue between the two communities, a
dialogue about art and the future of [public]
art. "

So. while the towers will be only temporary, Mandeberg and her class hope the
lines of communication they establish will be
permanent.

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

!TOWERS PROJECT!
•:
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:

We need your artistic opinions!!!
Where on campus would YOU like to see
public sculpture?

&

866-8213

:

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ALL WAYS TRAveL seRVIC£,IIIC.·

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The Mike Lowry and Dan Evans debate, scheduled for the 24th of October in the
Tacoma Dome, has been postponed indefinitely.
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Page 3

Uniting Olympia and Evergreen

Innerplace. For further information on this
and future events, call Innerplace at x6145
or contact loe Klein at 866-1391.

WashPIRG arrives

The wise eat at The Place
others do other wise.
Try Our Breakfast Special $2.49
Daily Luncheon Special

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WILDERNESS FIELD STUDIES
EARN COLLEGE CREDIT
Natural history, field
ecology, wilderness history
ond management, wilderness
instructors school. Courses
for 1984 in the Pacific NW,
Sierra Nevada, Utah, Hawaii .
Spring/Summer/Fall quarters.
For information, write or call:
Sierra Institute, Box C
Carriage House .
UNIVERSIfY OF CALIFORNIA
SANTA CRUZ, CA 95064

~

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Basic Scuba Class $75.00

357-4128

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Olympia, Wo 98501

BILL'S CAPITOL
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943·8701

OLYMPIA. WASHINGTON

943-8700

PUBLIC HEARING
ON

RAINBOW RESTAURANT
Welcomes you to Olympia!
STARTING OCT. 24
Serving Breakfast 7am-llam
Lunch 6- Dinner 11.30am-12pm
Look for Mimi's Specials
The Best Pizza in Town
Music 7 Nights a Week
. New La 0 Contest

EVERGREEN'S NEW
AFFIRMATIVE ACTION POLICY
BOARD OF TRUSTEES' MEETING
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21
1 :4Sp.m. BOARD ROOM
FOR INFORMATION CONTACT REBECCA WRIGHT
L.3238 ext. 6361

Page 4

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NFORMATION

Rhetoric III, Evergreen's literary magazine,
is accepting submissions of poetry, prose and
fiction. The deadline is November I st. Submissions should be sent to CAB 305, Arts
Resource Center, c/o the S&A office. For
further information call Clare at 866-0690 or
Craig at 866-6000 X6420.
Stop the heat from escaping out those windows this winter. A Ihree part series will be
held at the YWCA, 220 E . Union, beginning October 10, Monday, from 7-8:30 p.m.
Over half the heat lost in your home can be
going out those windows, through the single
pane glass, around cracks in the frame, and
reflected from that hot woodstove out into
the cold night air.
Part I Caulking and Weatherstripping, Oclober 10
Part II Building Storm Windows, October 17
Part III Insulating Shades and Shutters, October 24
For information call The Energy Outreach
Center, 943-4595.
The Olympia Media Exchange will be having its real first meeting on Monday, the
24th, at 4 p.m. in the 3200 lounge of the
Library . Students and community members
interested in Visual Media are welcome to
come discuss visiting artists, screenings of national touring shows, an Evergreen video archives, the status of cable television refran ch ising in Olympia, a big regional media
festival in the spring, and much more. For
information, ca ll Peter and Jeffrey at
866-6000 X600 I.

The Organic Farm, Lewis Rd., wants bags
o f leave~ , no brush . Call X6160 or X6161.

Career Planning and Placement is presenting
a week lon g se ries of work shops entitled
"Planning for Wo rk. " II's a bring your
lum:h affair intended 10 help prepare you for
lire after Evergrecn. Join them October
24-.28.12-1:30 daily, LIB 1213.

BOATS FOR SALE
CLASSIC 28ft CUSTOM

You can now take St. Peter Hospital's new
healthy lifestyle program, Positive Pulse, at
the YMCA on Thursday, November 3 from
7 to 10 p.m . The program covers changing
li festyle habits, nutrition and weight control,
aerobic exercise, stress management, quitting
smoking, and alcohol and drug use. All class
participants will receive a free coupon for the
Y's fitness evaluatin test. Tuition for the class
is $10 per person. Register at the YMCA.

The Downtown Gallery, 925 Court C,
Tacoma, announces its October exhibit ion
which will feature works by Michael Elenko,
Michi Osaka, William Rades, Daniel Sowa
and Mark Thomson. The exhibit ion will
open on Friday, October 21, and close on
Friday, November 18. For further information call 1-272-3844.

The Olympia Area YMCA is offering a
Women's Weight Training Class 011
Tuesdays and Thursdays from 10 to j I a.m.
This class is designed to provide women with
a thorough workout which includes muscle
toning and body contouring exercises, along
with an aerobic workout. The cost is free for
members, $15 for limited members. The class
begins November 1st and runs through
November 29th. For information call
357-6609.

The Olympia Area YMCA is offering Starter
Fitness Classes. These classes are designed
to help the "out of shape" get in shape by
providi ng stre tching and muscular
strengthening exercises, along with an
aerobic workout. For fu rther information
contact the "Y" at 357-6609.

Nuclear weapons in Europe are the focus of
a film showing Friday, October 21,7:30 p.m.
at the YWCA Friendship Hall on Union
Street. The evening will feature an academy
award-winning BBC film, The War Game,
a newly released film by the Union of Concerned Scientists called No-First- Use, and a
talk by Helena Knapp, co-chair of the National Committee of the Nuclear Weapons
Freeze Campaign. Open to the public free
of charge. Sponsored by the Thurston County Freeze Campaign .

)
The Olympia City Council will hold a 'series
of public meetings to discuss the 1984
budget. Meetings are scattered in locations
throughout Olympia. New expenditures proposed next year include: Within Public
Works, a twenty year master plan for city
facilities and a storm drainage program;
, Funds to develop a firing range to train local
law enforcement officers; Consultant services to assist in renegotiating the cable TV
franchise; Adding three firefighters; A community events program to cover city support
of functions such as Harbor Days and
Lakefair; Within the Planning Department,
initiating a historic marker program to identify significant older buildings .
The hearings will take place as follows:
- Thursday, Oct. 20 at 7 p.m.
Community Center 1314 E. 4th
Overview - 1984 Revenue Estimates
Program Budgeting - How it Works
- Thursday, Oct. 27 at 7 p.m.
Westside Fire Station, Garfield and Perry
Police Dept. Budget
Fire Dept. Budget
Parks and Recreations Dept. Budget
- Thursday, Nov. 3 at 7 p.m.
Lincoln Elementary School, 213 e. 21st
City Manager's Office Budget:
Executive, Personnel, Risk Management
Finance Dept. Budget
Planning Dept. Budget
- Thursday, Nov. 10 at 7 p.m .
Pioneer Elementary School, 1655 Carlyon
Community Development Budget
Public Works Dept. Budget

From rock to classical, R&B to Gospel,
cOunlry to comedy, drama to dance and
variety, the American Collegiate Talent
Showcase (ACTS, formerly known as the
All-American Collegiate Talent Search) offers opportunities to talented college students
in every area of performing arts. Participating students become eligible for cash
and scholarship prizes, live performances,
television appearances, showcases, overseas
tours and auditions. Entries are being accepted through February 24, 1984. The National Finals will take place on April 7, 1984.
Campus organizations and faculty/staff
members also have the opportunity to obtain scholarship money for their departments
by becoming involved. For more information contact: ACTS, Box 3ACT, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, New Mexico, 88003, 505-646-4413.

Cedar on Oak Frames
Make offer

30ft MINI-TUG H.M.S.
Be in Next Years Races
$8000.00

26ft FAIRLINER EXPRESS

The Contraceptive Sponge is not only a
new topic of conversation at family planning cocktail parties, it's an easy-to-use, safe,
convenient and effective method of birth
control available to Washington consumers
since July. The Sponge is marketed under the
brand name TODAY and is currently
available at the TESC Women's Health
Clinic as well as at area drugstores and pharmacies. ($.75 ea. at TESC vs. $1.00-$1.25 ea.
locally.)
TODAY is a small polyurethane sponge
made of the same material used for artificial
heart componertts and blood vessels. It is impregnated with a common spermicide called
N-9 and works both by killing sperm and by
trapping them in its fibers. One uses it by
moistening with a small amount of water
then placing it over the cervix, much like a
diaphragm. In England and Switzerland,
where the Sponge has been in use since 1975,
it can be left in place for up to 48 hours. The
FDA, however, has approved it for only 24
in the U.S. The Sponge can be inserted up
to 24 hours before intercourse and may be
left in place 24 hours after. Repeated acts of
intercourse during that time do not require
further applications of spermicide.
Unlike the diaphragm, IUD and birth con-

Washington's Vietnam veterans, unsure of
the extent they were exposed to dioxin - the
by-product of the herbicide Agent Orange may have the answer at their fingertips.
"All they need to do is call our TOLLFREE HOTLINE and we'll take it from
there," said Randy Fisher, Washington State
Department of Veterans Affairs director.
The department is now in possession of the
Vietnam Map Book, a compilation of data
gleaned from more than 6,500 "Operation
Ranch Hand" herbicide spray missions
flown in South Vietnam from 1965-1971.
Together with detailed maps (I :250,000
scale), the department can plot the actual
spray missions, Fisher said.
"The book is actually the HERBS tape
document, computerized information compiled by the Military Assistance Command,
Vietnam. (MACV) and released by the
Department of Defense in 1971," Fisher explained. The maps and the method used for
plotting each mission, were added by the
Agent Orange Advisory Committee and
Winter Soldier Archive; a non-profit
historical organization and publisher of the
book.
When the veterans call in on the
HOTLINE (1-800-562-2308), Fisher explained, department staff members will take-down
information on the vet's area of operations
in Vietnam, his dates of service in-country

trol pills, the Sponge is non-prescriptive and
does not have to be fitted or dispensed by
a doctor. The Sponge may provide some protection against STDs' (Sexually Transmitted
Diseases) and may be hostile to the organism
suspecteq of causing Toxic Shock Syndrome,
although use during menstruation is not
recommended. TODAY appears to be comfortable for partners although a small
population (2 percent) of the women involved in the testing of the product discontinued
use due to irritation or allergy to the
spermicide.
.
Because it is newly introduced to the
general public, accurate effectiveness rates
are not yet established though extensive premarketing testing by the FDA estimates the
rate to be commensurate with the diaphragm
(about 93 percent vs. 97 percent for the IUD
and 98 percent for the pill). As with any new
contraceptive device, there are many questions and concerns women and their partners
may have. Further information and sponges
are available at Women's Clinic/Health
Services.
This is a regular fealUre of the CPJ. Questions and comments can be sent to The
Cooper Point Journal, Lib 3232 or dropped
off in person.

and any other pertinent information. The
plotters will then go to work matching dates,
places and missions.
"Owing to the number of missions flown
and the gallons of the herbicide sprayed from
the DMZ to the South China Sea, it is very
likely the veteran was exposed either directly or indirectly," said Fisher. "The map will
tell us how much and how many times."
A letter will then be sent to the veteran
outlining the missions flown and the number
of gallons sprayed. The veteran will be enco uraged to report to one of the state's five
Veterans Administration Medical Centers for
the free Agent Orange screening examina·
tion. Aside from determining the health of
the individual veteran, the exam results are
considered invaluable to current Agent
Orange studies.
"The bottom line, however, is that the exam is currently the only game in town,"
Fisher said, "and we want to make sure our
veterans are taking advantage of everything
available to them and their families."
The HOTLINE - 1-800-562-2308 - is
open Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5
p.m .

REFUNDS AVAILABLE OCTOBER 17

Ariac Yacht Brokers
611 N.Columbia

352-2517

Lady
Leprechaun
---,
tells .her story
When I w~s born men jumped off tall
buildings. Banks failed. An entire nation was
in despair.
Not that I was the cause of these disasters.
It was the year of the Great Depression 1929. I was born into an era of flivvers, flappers, floozies and Flatfeet.
What ever possessed a 53-year-old woman
who graduated from high school in 1947 to
imagine she could com\1ete with today's
youth? I can't say. Or I should say I couldn't
have told anyone before now.
After having spent Spring and Summer
Quarter at TESC, a course seems to have
been charted for me. Mass Media has always
fascinated me above all else. A "book
worm" has turned.
A marriage of over ,thirty years ended
amicably. Two daughters were grown, mar·
ried and on their own. It left me without
direction or purpose to my life.
Fast·failing health forced me into retiring
from a 22Y, year career with the National
Park Service . No longer could I work an
eight hour day. Finally, three cardiac arrests
wrote finis to a busy, interesting life.
"I give up! "I screamed at an impossible
world. Resentful at the medical teams that
resuscitated my heart, I hated being alive.
Since my father had died of the same heart
disease and all four of my living sisters have
it too, it was no surprise to me. What could
a sick, broken mess like me contr ibut e to today's world? Nothing!
How wrong I was! Mary, a long-time coworker at Olympic National Park and my
best friend, read me the riot act.
"But Mary, I don't have anything len to
write about."
"Anybody who has lived in two cemeteries
and died three times has plenty to write
about," she informed me.
Then I finally saw the funny side of life
as I had lived it. Laughing at Ollr foibles is

The $2.50 WashPIRG fee is refundable to those who
choose not to support PIRG at Evergreen.
Refunds will be available for two weeks to
those students who have paid the fee this quarter
and who provide the'ir nume and student ID number

FEATURING

CLASSIFIEDS

TINO
& THE CRUISERS

AAA TYPING. Rc;.sonable rates. Fast,
reliable. Term papers, lellers, evaluations, etc.
WestsIde Olympia. 357-4157.

(R&Bl

Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.
Oct. 19th-21 st
9:30-1 :00

Pool TiIIles, PiabiIl, Video !iDes & Food
210 E 4th

786-1444

Olympia's newest full -serv ice
music store'






Band Instruments
Combo Instruments
Sound Reinforcement
Stage Lighting
Rental Plans

352-8051
lIS E. 5th Ave .

BODYMlND INTEGRATION .Individual !jeSsions combining massage,polarity and dreamwork with movement awareness:Wendy
Schofield,Licensed Massage Therapist/Laban
Movement Analyst.Fees negotiable. 8664666.

WOMEN'S MISTRESS OF THE FULL
MOON A full moon ritual for
women,Fri,Nov .18th, 7pm
thru
Sun,Nov.24th,4pm. Breitenbush Retreat
Center, Ore. Facilitators Louise Bode, Jungian
Analyst,Seattle,and Wendy Schofield, Laban
Movement Analyst,Olympia. See nyers on
campus.

Earn 5500 or more each school year. Flexible
hours. Monthly payment for placing posters
on campus. Bonus hased on results. Prizes
awarded as well. 800 -526~883.

MILKING GOAT named Jenny needs
love. Great pel.Offers encouraged,will trade.
call 866-2044.

HELP WANTED. Typist, 40wpm or
more.lO hours a week. 53.60 an hour.
Must be student. Call 866-6000 x62I3.

A CLASSIFIED AD IN THE CPJ CAN
BRING RESUL TS.53.00 for 30 words.
Call 866-6054 or 6213 for details.

CAB
Monday-Friday 11 :00 am to 2:00pm

LIBRARY LOBBY
Tuesday-Thursday 5:00pm to 7:00pm
FOR INFORMATION CALL
SEMINAR BUILDING 3152 ex 6064

The W..hinaton Public Interest Rete.reh Group

SECOND HAND GIFTS
lots of old clothes
for everyday wear
and Halloween.
106 'I. E 4th Ave

OLYMPIA
943-5025

Mylar Balloon
With every 'eg .(Ii
Balloon Bouquet on
Halloween.
Costume Delivery Included

GREETING'S OLYMPIA!
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good for anyone. It keeps grim life and death
matters in their proper perspective.
Of all the things I have learned here at
Evergreen, perhaps the most important thing
is if you need help holler. Help will be forthcoming from all sides. The trick is to learn
to admit you need help from everyone. Then
just go out and ask for it.
When my oldest daughter, Susie, was
about II years old, she drew a sketch of a
leprechaun. When I asked her what her
leprechaun's name was, she said "Lord
Leprechaun. "
"Susie, why did you draw a picture of a
leprechaun?" I asked.
"Because he looks like my daddy," she
answered.
"If this is Lord Leprechaun, that would
make me Lady Leprechaun," I told my
youngster. "I f I ever do become a full-time
writer like I've always wanted to be, I'll ca ll
myself Lady Leprechaun," I promised her .
After 38 years of having my scribblings
published, I am keeping that promise to my
daughter. Come what may, I will not quit,
With a whole new world out there for me to
learn about I refuse to give up.
After losing an old love, I've found a new
one - a word processor. It may not be able
to warm my feet on a cold night but it will
keep me young and alive.

FREE

The Veterans column is a weekly feature
of the Cooper Point Journal. If you have any
questions concerning the rights of veterans,
or if you'd like to comment on any issues
concerning veterans, write to Gary Wessels,
CPJ Lib. 3232, Oly, Wa. 98505.

WASIIPIllG

Possible Live-A-Board
$7500.00 or Offer

Page 5

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Bugs - $34.95
Buses to 71 - $34.95
Buses 72 up - $44.95
Rabbits - $44.95

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• •••••••••• COU PON •••••••••• .=

Page 6

CPJ

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o

King gets his day
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate accorded Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. the nation's supreme honor yesterday (October
19th) as it passed a bill establishing a national
holiday in the name of the slain civil rights
leader. The vote was 78-22.
King's widow, Coretta Scott King, and son
Martin Luther King III watched from the
senate gallery as Vice President George
Bush's gavel concluded the roll call and
sounded the triumph they had sought for
years.
Joseph Lowry, who now heads the
Southern Christian Leadership Conference
which King founded; NAACP President
Benjamin Hooks; entertainers Stevie
Wonder and Dick Gregory, and other Black
leaders watched intently.
"We don't want the day to become a day
of fun and games," King's widow said later.
"we want it to be a day to reflect on the man
and his principles."
Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., told the
Senate that King "deserves the place which
this legislation gives him beside Washington
and Columbus. In a very real sense, he was
the second father of our country, the second
founder of a new world that is not only a
place, a piece of geography, but a noble set
of ideals."

Cable TV in Olympia: Legality vs. Reality
evitable, the ubiquitous TV set may soon
become more of a necessity than a luxury.
What role should municipalities play in the
application of cable television? The outcome
of this debate will drastically effect the
possibilities for local programming in communities throughout the country, including
Olympia.
Nationwide, cities have been demanding
access channels. locally originated programming and regulated cable services based on
the view that cable companies function as
"common carriers," utilizing public airwaves
and State and local rights of way. The cable
companies have portrayed themselves as
"electronic publishers," with First Amendment rights guarding their services. While
many cities have been extracting elaborate
promises from cable companies, such as ex7he pending reJranchising oj cable television panded channel capacity, two-way services,
in Olympia has sparked renewed communi- 10l:al origination and access, many cable
Iy inlerest in local cable programming . In this companies have reneged on their contract
third oj Jour articles. we will examine the obligations, arguing against "overlegal war currenlly being waged bel ween regulation" and the appropriation of access
cable operators and municipalilies. and how
il eJJecls Ihe potenlial Jor local programming in our community.

Oy Hal Medrano and Peter Moulton

America's economy is rapidly evolving
away from its traditional industrial base to
one dominated by services and information .
Information-related occupations account for
more than half of the American labor force,
with the newspaper industry already the
U.S.'s largest single employer. We are by far
the most media-sat urated country in the
world, with an average of two TV sets per
home. More Americans have televisions than
bathrooms or telephones. Control over the
production and distribution of information,
especially through the mass media, will profoundly effect our collective judgments and
actions in the future.
For the most part, American media are
privately owned, profit-making enterprises.
While so me government regulation exists.
espec iall y when the media utilize public
resources or affect the public welfare, the
role of the media has traditionally been
limited on ly by the power of the
marketplace. The FCC, with the underlying
belief that the public owns the airwaves, has
a legal obligation to ensure that broadcast
media operate for the "public interest, conven ience and necessity." Recently, however,
this concept ha s been su bject to intense
debate. Broadcasters, encouraged by the current government climate of deregulation, are
arguing that regulation of their services constit utes a restriction of their First Amendment rights to free speech. Central to this
debate is the on-going war being waged in
the courts and State and Federal legislatures
between the cable companies and municipal
authorities concerning the rights of
munidpalities to control cab le operations in
their communities . Thomas Wheeler, president of the National Cable Television
Association, the industry's lobhy, maintains
that "we are telepublishers, we put electrons
on t he screen insted of ink on paper, but our
function and our rights are parallel to [those
of] the more traditional publishers." Acting
on this belief, Sen. Barry Goldwater has introduced a bill which would severely limit the
ability of cities to regulate cable. Already
passed by the Senate, it awaits an uncertain
future in the House.
Les Brown, editor-in-chief of Channels
magazine, counters that "cable is uniquely
equipped, among all media, to advance the
ideal of free speech and create an open
marketplace of ideas. And yet it is doing its
utmost to be spared having to provide outlets
for free speech, and doing it shamelessly in
the name of the First Amendment." Only
cities, it is argued, can uphold the cultural
and political integrity of their communities.
With technological advances in cable as a
communications medium seemingly in-

" 'Cable is uniquely equipped, among all media, 10 advance the ideal of free
speech .. _' "
channels as unreasonable restraints of commerce. While cable companies are often
telecommunication monopolies in any given
area of operation, they contend they are only
one form of the information and entertainment services available in a community. But
cable companies have increasingly merged
with larger media conglomerates, and the
FCC has placed ceilings on the franchise fees
cities can charge in order to effectively
regulate cable service., Without regulation of
some sort, cities fear cable's profit incentive
may come to overshadow its responsibilities
to the public. Cable operators argue that
since they compete for the leisure dollar and
are not essential utilities, their responsibilities
to the public are fulfilled, and rates and services should be subject only to the whims of
the marketplace. Clearly, a major difference
lies simply in the way the issues are viewed
by each side.
"Diversity of programming options" is a
major slogan touted by the cities in the cable
debate. To quote a National Federation of
Loca l Cable Programmers newsletter ,
"Diversity of communication sources is
essential to First Amendment principles of
Freedom of Speech, and a citizen's right to
originate (non-profit) programming
supercedes any telecommunication enterprise
rights to originate programming." Local
community programming is being hailed as
a guaranteer of "the public's right to know."
And while fierce competition between cable
companies has led them to make many concessions to cities, such as local access
facilities, they have continued to debate
municipal rights in court.
Local programming is actually divided into several types; leased access by which cable
time is sold on a contractual basis, local
origination programming which is produced by the cable companies, and access. Access itself breaks down into municipal,
educational and public applications. Examples of municipal access include coverage
of city council meetings, police department
crime-prevention films, annoucements of
road closures and public works projects, and
much more. Educational access programming includes accredited "telecourses",
videotaped lectures, student-tutor training
films, or any informational program from
a geological survey of Washington State to
a
history
of
the
diesel
engine. Public access covers the wide range
of programs generated by artists and arts
organizations, senior citizens, religious
groups, the disabled, advocates of diverse
political and. social causes, ethnic and
linguistic minorities, public service organizations - people of aU descriptions. It operates
on a first-come, first-served ba'lis, and is sub-

ject only to restrictions against commercial
purposes, lotteries and obscene or offensive
material : How can local origination or public
access programming be used in Olympia?
With Olympia's cable system expanding
from 13 to 23 channels, provisions for one
access channel are almost certain . What remains to be negotiated is whether or not
there is a need for more . If the need could
be demonstrated, a possible scenario might
involve having one channel for municipal
and educational programming, and one for
public access programs. There are many administrative forms and funding strategies
possible for sustaining such channels.
In many larger cities, cable companies are
required to administer and produce programming as part of franchise agreements . While
this may seem the most immediate solution
to programming demands, the control over
what is actually aired remains in the hands
of the cable companies, many of whom are
strongly opposed to requests for such local
origination programming. Hank Sexton,
Southwest Washington Area Manager for
Nation Wide Cablevision, maintains that
cable is but a • 'transporation mode of entertainment." He would "rather see access"
than have Nation Wide become involved in
cable program production. Many other cities
are successfully managing access channels by
themselves', but in the words of Nancy Dombrowski, Assistant to the Olympia City
Manager, such an overtaking "would take
years of research and planning."
The most common, and often most successful, model for access in communities the
size of Olympia involves a hybrid of city and
cable company resources . Cable companies
are asked to provide both access channels
and a substantial amount of initial funding
for studio construction and equipment purchases. While estimates vary, the costs of
providing Olympia with a rudimentary
studio, and field production and editing
equipment will be approximately $100,000.
Cities then cover the on-going maintenance,
salary and production costs through fran chise fees, surcharges on monthly cable service bills, and/or sales of local advertising
over the access channels. A realistic estimate
for the revenues needed is upwards of
$10,000 monthly. This would include salaries
for probably two full-time employees, whose
responsibilities would include coordination,
outreach and the training of citizen producers . Administration and regulation of actual programming would be overseen by a
non-profit community organization with
broad representation of civic, religious, arts,
minority and other groups, as well as both
the city and cable operator. Carol Burns,
Coordinator of the year-old grassroots advocacy group Capital Area Citizen's for

Community Television, is one of a number
of community leaders currently trying to
organize such a non-profit entity. According
to Burns, "the strongest access organizations
in the long haul are those that are managed
by non-profit community organizations that
anyone can join, with a Board elected to set
policy and control hiring."
While the above scenario might be described as ideal for Olympia's diverse popUlation
and strong sense of community, Dombrowski has stated that her initial priority "is
to see that access programming happens,
regardless of the specifics involved."
Although many communities attempt to induce concessions on the part of the cable
companies by opening franchises to competitive bidding, Dombrowski maintains that
such a decision in Olympia, with its limited
market strength, would "not be economically feasible, though rate regulation and local
programming are the two major areas of
contention" during Olympia's refranchising
process.

\;"\.

I

To the Editor:
We are very disappointed with the
coverage the CP J chose to !;ive to the "Rock
Against Reagan" Rally. In fact, we wonder
how long the reporter was there, and if he
knew why he was there. Several points come
to mind.
I) The concert permit originally allowed the rally to run until 6 p.m. The permit
was then changed by the city two days before
the rally limiting it to 4 p.m. The concert then
ran until 4:20, when the police ordered if shut
down. It did not "begin to break up at 5:30"
as the article reported.
2) Only 4 bands played, not 6 as stated
in the CP J story. The Endangered Flakes had
the plug pulled on them after their first song.
The Vagabond Poet was also not allowed to
use the P.A.
3) Why does the reporter "wonder if the
promotors felt" a certain way? The promoters were accessible the entire time.
4) An editorial should not be written by
the same person that is supposedly writing
a hard news story. It was hard to tell them
apart.

5) Why compare a crowd of 5,000 in
N.Y. (where all of WA State's population
could fit into the 5 Burroughs) to an Olympia crowd of "100" in a city of 30,000. We
personally counted 200 and News 52 also
reported 200 people. The crowd was called
"meager" but statistically, we had a better
turnout than N.Y.! (7 million vs. 30,(00)
This is not the type of coverage that
demonstrated investigative reporting.
Without speaking to organizers, speakers, or
band members it is certain that only personal
viewpoints are left to report . The Olympian
chose not to cover this event. Considering
the number of students attending and the
diversity of the crowd and performers,
stronger coverage by the CP J was definitely
in order. We sincerely hope that Bank
rumors do not continue to make headlines
at Evergreen.
Thanks,
Erin Kenny
John Kersting

u

M

To the Editor:
Senator Dan Evans, the former Governor
of the State of Washington and past President of The Evergreen State College, is run-'
ning for the Senate seat vacated by the death
of the late, highly respected, Senator Henry
M. Jackson. Sen. Evans gave TESC unwavering support while governor and while
president of TESC his work helped the college to gain national prominence. The
general election is just a few short weeks
away on Nov. 8, 1983 . I urge you in
Evergreen tradition to take this opportunity
to become involved and further your education through practical experience by supporting Sen. Evans in the coming election .
Students, faculty, staff and members of the
community are needed to help in the
Senator's campaign and can do so by contacting Thurston County Campaign Headquarters and offering their services. They are
located at 411 4th Ave. Olympia and the
phone number is 786-1200.
Let's send a respected, rational leader to
represent the state of Washington in the
United States Senate.
Marc A. Avery
Committee For Greeners For Senator Dan
Evans

)

To the Editor:
While reading Allison C. Green's
presumptuously titled article" Pornography
Degrades Us All" (CP J, Oct 13) we feel compelled to respond.
Ms. Green states "the First Amendment
is a tricky one." There's nothing tricky about
it, Allison. It states plainly that the right to
a free press is guaranteed. Pornography is
part of that free press. Period. Where's the
trick, Allison?
The trick seems to be making allusions to
the Nazis using pornography as a tool.
Another tool the Nazis used was censorship.
To us, censorship is just another form of
dominance, (male or otherwise.) Trick or
treat, Allison?
Ms. Green also asserts "society has a right
to protect its members from dangerous inf1uences." What dangerous influences,
Allison? Cigarettes? Alcohol? Communists?
Zealots? Where does this right come from?
It's not in the Constitution. Does it come
from God? The Feminist Manifesto? Allison
C. Green herself? Or is it just a trick?
Though it's become hip in some circles to
draw a straight line from Calvin Klein jeans
to snuff films, the intolerance of pornography and erotica (the difference is a
matter of opinion) reinforces the idea that
people are incapable of making moral deci sions for themselves and need someone like
the Rev. Jerry Falwell, or in this case, a
group of feminist zealots, to make moral
choices for them. Ah ha, the real trick?
Ms . Green also draws a .curious correlation between the inability of children to protect themselves against porn and the inability of women to protect themselves. Women
are not children, as Ms. Green intimates.
Women are adults, and don't need some Big
Nanny to protect them. Or is that what
you're suggesting, Allison? Tricky .
When you cut through all the harangue
and propaganda, the issue comes down to
three words: Freedom of choice.

To the Editor:
I believe The Evergreen State College
could add to the quality of our lives and a
heightening of our awareness by simply
establishing several strategically-located exercise stations all around the campus.
In different parts of the country courses
of this type are known by different names :
in California they are called Par Courses, in
Florida they're Vita Cours<!s, the Shelton,
Washington High School has one called the
Huff and Puff, and in near-by O.T.C.C. it' s
called simply the Nature Trail.
At each stop along the way a different exercise and facilities to do them, along with The Resistance:
instructions on how to properly execute them Thomas Cary Walton
Jennifer A. Jaech
is included.
The U.S . Army in their Basic Training
Dear Editor,
have what is called the Obstacle Course
I have been on Death Row for five years
which they order new recruits through every
and have lost contact with all my family and
day and by the time the eight weeks are over
friends, so I was wondering if you would run
even the overweight sloths are stronger,
this in your campus newspaper.
healthier and happier.
I am a Death Row prisoner, caucasian
What happens is that by following the set
male, age 37, who desires correspondence
routines you get your body producing its own
with either male or female college students.
morphine-like drug, your endophrins.
I want to form some kind of friendly type
You've probably experienced a runner 's
relationship and more or less' exchange past
high or similar feelings of well-being by playexperiences and ideas . You can write to me,
ing an organized game like volley ball or
Jim Jeffers, BoxB-38604, Florence, AZ .
perhaps after jogging or dancing.
85232.
In lieu of such a set exercise course on
Thank you for your consideration
campus I've found the best way to get my
sincerely, Jim Jeffers
own endophrins going is to go to the Rec.
Building and go through several sets on the All letters to the editor must be typed,
Universal Machines. It is hard work, but double-spaced and signed and include a
definitely worth the price. Try it, you'll like phone number where the author may be
reached for consultation on editing for libel
it.

and obscenity. The editor reserves the right
to reject any material, and to edit any contributions for length, content or style. Names
wi/I not be withheld unless extenuating circumstances can be shown.

Richard L. Hennessy

COOPER POINT JOURNAL

11"-'- .-- :::_ -';

LETTERS

"Cable companies (are) arguing against ___ the appropriation of access channels as
unreasonable restraints of
commerce. "
Rate regulation, currently absent in Olympia, has been Thurston County's main
bargaining tool in negotiations over the five
franchises it currently has assigned to cable
operators . In exchange for a 30 percent rate
increase request by Nation Wide early this
Fall, the County has asked for good faith efforts in the extension of cable to more areas,
the establishment of common expiration
dates for the franchises, and the development
of local programming. Nation Wide has yet
to agree to the County's requests to, in the
words of Commissioner Karen Fraser,
"achieve a compromise between the desires
of Thurston County citizens and company
interests . " As the ' County and its
municipalities continue to expand, interest
in cable and the need for it as a communications medium will also grow. Dombrowski
believes that "at some point we'll get to common administration of cable in the county.
One person, or one office, for cable companies to deal with." As stated in Yakima's
Community Television Plan, "through lively
communication among the people, the community as a whole will benefit and each
member will become a more active part of
the whole."

Sens. Slade Gorton and Dan Evans of
Washington state voted in favor of the
holiday .
The vote sets aside the third monday in
January beginning in 1986 as a day for
Americans to pause and reflect on the years
when King led thousands through the streets
of southern cities in non-violent protest
against segregation of the races. King's actual birthdate was January 15th, 1929.

R

CPJ Page 7

, ,

"Dammit, man, get with it! It's a media-crazy world out there!"

Who says no one wraps their
garbage in the radio? It happens
everyday. But no one wraps
their garbage In the Cooper
Point Journal. Read the Journal,
and wrap your garbage
elsewhere.

Senior Editor
Francisco A. Chateaubriand
Managing Editor Allison C. Green
Production Manager Kevin Olson
Graphic Editor
Eric Martin
Photo Editor
Don Bates
Business Manager Margaret Morgan
Advertising Manager Glenn Hollinger
Advisor
Mary Ellen McKain

Reporters: Don Bates, Gretchan Mattila, Brian Dixon, Bob Weaver, Bradley P. Blum,

Janet O'Leary, Ron Harrower, June Maguire
Graphics: Carol Smith
Contributors: Gary Wessels, Hal Medrano, Peter Moulton, Richard Rowan, Tom

Diamond, Karen Denman
Special Thanks to: Shirley Greene, Judy McNickle, Photo Services and Health

Services/Women's Clinic

Page 8 CPJ

(

E NT E RTA I N MENT

CPJ

)

American Pictures explores racism in U.S.
The highly acclaimed multi-media
documentary, American Pictures, returns to
Evergreen on Wednesday, October 26th,
with showings at 9 a.m. and at 7 p.m., in
Lecture Hall l.

the show has been running in a permanent
theatre for more than five years.
The program made its American debut last
year with Evergreen being one of only six col.
leges in the nation to show it.
American Pictures is administered through
the American Pictures Foundation, a nonprofit organization which opened its first
American office in San Francisco last year.
The organization conducts racism workshops
and lectures as well as showing the presentation. All proceeds and revenue are sent to

Africa where it has been used to build
hospitals, aid food programs and purchase
livestock.
Media minded persons may be interested
to note that the presentation incorporates the
use of four slide projectors, five computers
and separate audio components. The soundtrack is both tasteful and moving, featuring
the likes of Sly Stone, Judy Collins, Roberta F[ack, Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young,
Aretha Frank[in and Bob Marley.
American Pictures will be accompanied by

two racism workshops conducted by Tony
Harris, a representative of the American Pictures Foundation. The workshops are
scheduled for CAB 110 on Wednesday, October 26th, at 1:30 p.m., and Thursday, October 27th, at 9:00 a.m_
There will be no admissiom charge for the
multi-media presentations or the workshops .
American Pictures is being sponsored by
Affirmative Action Office with support by
Key Special Services, and the Third World
Coalition.

The window has been painted shut.
Used to be difficult to force it closed,
The ropes would get caught up in the pulleys
Sometimes so tied up thaI we lej, it open all night
And toyed with in the morning.

Zelig gets great reviews
Yet another review of Woody Allen's
newest film ZELIG. By now [ imagined most
had at least heard of it. Still, outside the
Capital Mall Cinemas I overheard a couple
wondering what ZELIG was about, and at
the ticket booth a woman with three children
was asking if it was a kid's movie . It is not.
It is a movie of special effects, but I'm
afraid any of you ultraeventual interplanetary-other / outer-worldly oriented

American Pictures is an explosive and provocative presentation that documents the
travels of Jacob Holdt, a you ng man from
Denmark who spent 5 yea rs hitchhiking
throughout America. During this period he
vis ited 48 states, took 15,000 photographs
and exposed himself to an incredible array
of people, places and events.
From these experiences Holdt created a
program which examines from a European
perspective, the poverty, racism and oppressio n of our soc iety . He takes the viewer on
an odyssey that start s in the gritty povertyst ricken areas of the deep South and works
its way into the inner urban jungle of the
East and West. KKK rallies, Wounded Knee,
and modern day slave labor camps are seen
and experienced. The end res ult is a sweeping analysis of American soc iety which is
both shocking in its visual content and disturbing in its implications .
American Pictures has enjoyed wide audiences in Europe where it has been
translated into five languages and has been
used as an educational tool. In Copenhagen,

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The moon cast an eerie glow on the water.
Sun of the night, golden orb, moonlight for
vision at night shine on. Each night the
shadows are strewn on the ground from a
different source. Tonight the light is made
ominous by the passing clouds. The lake is
beautiful in a cold powerfUl way. A drop of
rain falls forming aureate circles on the lake.
A tear from heaven alights on the earth .
The lofty peaks, the hills, the plains, all the
earth, how many snowflakes fall on the
peaks, how much hail on the plains, infinite
the drops that hammer the sea, the earth endures it all. Does a tear alight, or plunge as
a rock, maybe plop like a pebble, no from
heaven Ihe rain must alight . Beautiful rain,
slides from empyrean, and as it gets harsher
from the firmament, then the abrasive and
abusive crashes from the sky. Tears from
heaven, perhaps a sigh of the distress we
must cause the crealor, crying weeping, or
just a drop from a dying nimbus.
The lake comforts me. Glittering like a
black diamond, the dark cold surface reflects
the light of the moon leaving mUle rlre depth
and coldness of the still waters. There is
solace in its gently rippled surface, no
shadows for man or beast to hide in. I, Ihe
mighty man, Kenneth Clark, am not afraid
of the dark, just what 1 can not see in it .
Just a drop has fallen on my lake. A single
drop of rain, where has it been, how did il
get here, that drop, that very drop may have
been used by Caesar to wash his hands. Tire
lake isfllll drops, rain, rain , and more rain,
full to overflowing deep, cold, and clear.
This drop has fallen from above to where?
Tire drop does nOI know that it has started
a journey thaI never ends. What forms will
il have in the next ten years, what forms has
it had in the lasl one hundred years? Drop
of rain fall upon my lake.
Concentric rings expand endlessly, gro wing outward. Circles one inside another, why
does a single drop of rai.r create these Iralos
of moonlight gold, as a stone heaved toward
the center, the rings from a single drop of
rain enjoy the same physics. Growing aimosl
as if consuming Ihe lake, the rings march on
ever widening, expanding, increasing, onward
and outward, forever?
The lake must beckon the rain . Come in,
come in. And you and 1 will forget all our
ways when we reach the heart of our mother
the sea. Tears of god or just a drop of rain,
are they both not water, and is life possible
with out water, let it rain. Fill the lakes of
all the lands, so there can be lush green
valleys everywhere, lakes to quench the thirst
of man and beast. HopefUlly there will
always be drops of rain falling to form rings
on olher lakes too.

We opened the wil/dow each suppertime,
The outdoor smells went well with our tablecloth,
Sometimes lace, sometimes the everyday.
Afler dinner was orange sunsel breeze,
Coffees spiced with cinnamon evening's scents.

folks may be disappointed. In fact, ZELIG
takes us strangely back in time, to the years
between 1928 and World War Two, with
original and mock newsreel footage and
home movies. It is a cinematic masterpiece
of matte effects and reprinting techniques,
the realization of any historian's dream.
There is Leonard Zelig (Woody Allen) up to
bat after Babe Ruth , now he's a Nazi soldier
behind Der Fuhrer. So skillful are the effects
that at times the film becomes a "find the
hidden Zelig/ Allen in the picture" game.

Jennifer Rose

Tears of Joy to perform at
Evergreen this weekend.
International folklore will come to life Octobe r 21 at TESC in a performance by the
Tears of Joy Puppet Theatre. T he troupe
from Vancouver, Washington, will perform
at 8 p.m. in the Recital Hall of the Communications Building.
Shadow puppets and large Bunkraku-style
puppets will tell a tall tale about a Sumo
wrestler who learns from two women how
to become a true champion. "Lessons for a
Sumo" has earned Tears of Joy a reputation
as one of the foremost puppet theaters in the
western United States.
A Mexican folk story, "Onion Skin
Soup", contrasts the lives of a poor woman
who begs for food and a rich woman who
loves to eal. Whether young or young-atheart, the audience will be treated to a large
helping of laughter over the dilemma of a
rich woman who grows thinner the more she
The demand for their performances takes
eats.
Tears of Joy PupPet Theatre began in 1971 the puppeteers from their home in Vanwhen Reg Bradley created a puppet show to . couver to art centers, universities, schools
teach four-year-o[ds the value of caring for and festivals throughout all the Western
others. Now a staff of seven entertains more States . Tears of Joy Theatre plays for more
than 300 performances each year, most of
than 120,000 persons each year.
Reg Bradley explained to an audience in which are in Oregon and Washington. ExHono[u[u over 10 years previously that he tensive touring takes the company into
was having trouble with some of his puppet Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Colcharacters. Children would touch and han- orado and Utah.
Tickets to the Tears of Joy Evergreen perdle the puppets to learn how they worked.
This less-t han-gentle handling was ruining formance are $2 for children under 12; $3 .50
for students and senior citizens and $4
the paper mache figures.
One helpful member of his audience sug- general admission. Advance tickets may be
purchased at Yenney's Music, The
gested he make the heads of fiberglass.
About 200 fiberglas heads have been created, Bookmark or The Evergreen Bookstore.
solving the problem of rough handling by Tickets will also be available at the door of
the Communications Building beginning at
small kids .
7 p.m. October 21.

ZELIG is, in form, a documentary about
Leonard Ze[ig, a lone[y man pathologically
obsessed with fitting in and belonging; so
obsessed, he physically transforms, adapting
to his surroundings. Next to fat people he
becomes fat; around black people he
becomes black. The chameleon Zelig knows
no racial or ethnic boundries . Captured as
a Chinese in an opium den, he is hospitalized and put in care of psychiatrist Eudora
Fletcher (Mia Farrow), whose claim to fame
could very well be the curing of this Guinness book oddity. Under hypnosis, Zelig confesses his strong desire to be liked, his love
for Dr. F[etcher, and his hatred of her
pancakes.
Meanwhile, news of this lizard man
spreads across the country and becomes the
latest cultural sensation. Leonard Ze[ig dolls
with racially interchangable heads, clocks
and assorted knicknacks flood the market.
Songs are composed, jokes made up, and
even the Chameleon Dance becomes all the
rage. (Can you imagine the grotesquerie of
an E.T. dance!?)
Behind this documentary charade beams
Woody Allen, for no matter how convincing it all seems (and it's very convincing), it 's
not Leonard Zelig but Woody Allen we see:
Woody /Leo nard
the-elephant-man
Zelig/ Allen. Strangely comforting in an
urban-Ione[y-sing[e-neurotic-crippling-i-can_
relate way. It's really a lot of fun, the movie
that is. And besides, it got great reviews.

AIM HIGH

sifting through the sharp marsh grass
the broken icons of faint frost
umbra of mist clings to
the cowls of creeping,
changeling trees
among the waters of mystic war
objectives float, drift, swim,
are moved, or caught
in unset snares
exhalalions guide Ihe path
that leads purgatory to pathos

Echo
1 hear a voice
my voice
"I love you"
love you
love you?

Kenneth Clark

1 feel
the pressure
of my open hand
Against your chest
my elbow is not benl.
Jennifer Rose

where does the stray soul go
when it lies behind the darkest,
ink-swallowed pearl
of mislaid moon?
Sam Hain

Want more
than a desk job?

F.E.T.
13 .22
12.62
13.37

Who Seeks Refuge Here?

Looking for an excit-i-ng and challenging career? Where each day is different? Many Air Force people have
such a career as pilots and
navigators. Maybe you can join them.
Find out if you qualify. See an Air
Force recrl,Jiter today.

Going No Where
How do you like that
one mile from the gas station
got a flat
Full tank
no spare
Wayne Eklund

APPLICATION PERIOD NOW OPEN
MSgt RICK CAREY at (206) .... 2-1307 CAll COLLECT

A great way of lite

\

Typed, double-spaced submissions may be left in the poetry envelope outside the CPJ
offices, LIB 3234. Faculty, staff and students are invited to submit their original poetry,
prose and photographs for this page. Submissions cannot be returned.

Page 9

Page 10

CPJ

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5

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0

R

T

S

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)

The Geoduck men, meanwhile, played a
good game against a very strong Whitworth
team, tying 2-2. Coach Arno Zoske said,"
We were ready to play and we played a
strong defensive game, with the usual steady
performances from our fullbacks and
mid fielders . "
The defensive effort was excellent with
Carlos Valencia, Darrell Saxton, John
Purteman and Jim Ritchie all contributing
to the cause.
"We are playing good soccer," says Coach
Zoske, "and still have a great opportunity to

improve our mental game."
With the tie against Whitworth, the
Geoduck men raised their season ledger to
4-2-2.
EXCITING NEWS!!!
The cross country clams finally scored in
team standings, at the PLU Invitational,
Saturday at Ft. Steilacoom Park with a score
of 517. This is the first meet where both the
men's and women's teams had enough entrants, a minimum of five people each, to
qualify for team status .

E

M

This week's crossword

Greener teams keep improving
The Evergreen Women's soccer team left
last Friday for Ellensberg, prepared for a
tougp match against the Central Washington
Wildcats. The event was scheduled in conjunction with CWU's homecoming weekend. Aft\!!" it was over, the 'Cats were longing for the road.
A hungry Geoduck team took all the fight
out of the Wildcats with total domination of
play during the first half. Although no goals
were scored during the first half, the
Greeners left no doubt who would win as
they scored just minutes into the second half
and rolled to a 2"{) victory.
The Geoduck goals were scored by Tristin
Brown and Jane Culliton.
The team returned home the following day
filled with anticipation of a I p.m. Sunday
match with the Lady Loggers of UPS. The
Loggers had beaten Evergreen 7"{) earlier in
the season so the 'Ducks were out for
revenge.
Coach Tamar Chotzen altered her regular
line-up in an effort to field a more defensive·
minded team. The change nearly paid off for
the Geoducks as they lost a tough 2-0 decision to UPS.
After a scoreless first half the Greener
women became a bit sluggish and the Loggers took advantage by scoring two quick
goals to open the second half. That was all
they needed as Evergreen was unable to
mount a consistent attack.
Coach Chotzen saw the game as a "wellplayed defensive effort" by her team. "We
wanted to make-up for the loss we took at
UPS earlier this season," said player Karen
Denman . "We worked very hard to be competitive and this weekend we played well as

5

. Dave Portnoff, competing in his third
cross country (XC) meet, reduced his 8,000
meter time by 1:13. Dave Kucera, running
in his first race, was the "Big Clam" coming across the finish line first for the
Geoducks with a time of 30:04. The first
woman finisher was Holly Goodwin with a
time of 21 :24, for the 5,000 meters . In addition, Gisken Southall reduced her best time
by 24 seconds.
The team's next competition will be 22 October, at Central Washington State in
Ellensberg.

Greener sail team gets own sloop
File Photo

I

N

ACROSS
1 Spurt
5 Up and about
10 Head area
14 Counter
15 Summary
16 Dalai17 Pair: var.
18 Metric unit
20 Scatter
22 Aberdeen's
river
23 Continuing
24 Subalterns
26 Aril
27 Gave rise to
30 Top dog
34 Swamp
35 Trick
36 Palm leaf:
var.
37 On the road
38 Sow
40 Baby buggy
41 Revolter:
sl.
42 Decree
43 Weak

45
47
48

49

antiseptic
Auditions
Displayed
garments
Manipulate
Burdens

)

R

A
50
53
54
58
61

CPJ

Page 11

PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOLVED

III-will
Obtain
Ch~stise

Further •
State
62 Jacob's
brother
63 Soother
64 Shine
65 Shan't's kin
66 Abrasive
67 Letters
DOWN
1 Gets around
2 Component
3 Asterisk
4 Retreat
5 Curve
6 Gardened
7 Skin
problems
8 "Kiss
Me - "
9 Upon: pref . .
10 Some
whiskies
11 Tempo
12 Augury
13 District
19 - Jaw,
Sask.
21 Victories
25 Although
26 Letterdrop

27 Spruce
28 Potency
29 "Sheik

30
31
32

33
35
39
40
42
44

of - "
Roll
Lesson
Having
wings
Called
Blackguard
The: Sp.
Goo.d name
Large
match
Poems

46 Production
47 Importance
49 Heckle
50 Eject
51 N. Amer.
coin
52 OPEC
nation
53 A Mariana
55 Jelly 56 Truancy
57 Mauls
59 Golf gadget
60 Ending for
arch or art

A-rl-A5-r .. ,
1
FR&E • .. FR£6 • .

a unit."

The women, with a record of 2-4-1, are
looking forward to this weekend as they attempt to sweep the two Oregon schools they
play on their final road trip of the season.
With the added experience of this last
weekend and good practice sessions this
week, there is a general feeling that the team
can come home with two victories under their
belts .

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10-7 Sundays

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The Evergreen sail team now has their own sloop, thanks to Sandy Mackay, and they will be racing it

Sunday, October 16th was a big day for
the Evergreen Sail Team as they represented
the school in the South Sound Sailing'
Societies fall series in their own boat.
The Evergreen crew, Skipper Rick
Baldwin, Foredeck Karen Erickson and MiddleCrew Ralph Naess, sailed a 27 foot Soling sloop donated to the college by Sandy
Mackay.
The sail team plans to enter the boat in·the
three remaining races of the fall series and

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This week's Special:
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compete in the winter and spring series as
well. Each of the series is a best of five with
one throw-out race. Scoring is done by the
racing fleet method which uses performance
handicaps to determine final standings.
Because of this system, the results of last
weeks race won't be known until sometime
next week.
The evergreen sail team will be attending
the Northwest Intercollegiate Yacht Racing
Association Kick Orf Regatta at the University of Washington on October 22nd and
23rd. Last year TESC finished in 4th place

t~is

weekend up in Seattle.

out of fifteen colleges and went on to compete in the National Regatta at Long Beach,
California.
On November 12th and 13th, the sail team
will sponsor the Evergreen Invitational
Regatta on Budd Inlet. Six other colleges will
pit their skills against the home team in their
own boat, water and weather. Spectators are
welcome to spectate.
If you're interested in getting involved with
the sail team you can contact coach Lou
Powers through the athletic department at
TESC.

TESC run Saturday
Men and women runners from throughout
the Puget Sound area can test their endurance in one of two "Lost Horizon Hills
Runs" that begin at 10 a.m. Saturday, October 22nd, at The Evergreen State College.
The runs, which are eight or thirteen miles
in length, take a challenging path through
the hills and trails around Evergreen,
through the Delphi Valley and into the Black
Hills.
Registration for the runs begins at 8:30

EDUCAT IONAL CENTER

Test Preparation Specia li sts

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PLAYING NOW

NAT'L MED BoS
ECFMG • FLEX. VQE
NOB. NPB I • NLE

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a.m. Saturday in front of the Evans Library
and costs $8. All runners will receive a fivecolor, long-sleeved T-shirt as a memento of
their participation - and a warm shower and
free use of Evergreen's Recreation Center for
the rest of the day.
The event is sponsored by Evergreen's
Running Club. Further information is
available through the Campus Recreation
Center, 866-6000 ext.6530.

: Midnight films; Friday and Saturday $3.50

LSAT· MCAT • GRE
GRE PSYCH· GRE BID
GMAT • OAT· OCAT • PCAT
VAT· MAT· SAT

S;nce 1938

HALLOWEEN PARTY
Monday Oct.31 Noon
Don't Forget To Wear
Your Costumes.

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SrlLL NOT TOO LATE
TO BUY SCRIP
S-T-R-E-T-C-H YOUR DOLLARS

$45.00 will get you $50.00
worth of food!
The Evergreen State College Food Services

3210 Cooper Point Road NW

866-3999

OCTOBERFEST BEER SPECIAL
$3.296pk.
KAISERDOM
$3.99 6pk.
DORTMUNDER
PAULANER
$1.29 16.9oz.
OCTOBERFEST