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Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 12, Issue 7 (November 17, 1983)

extracted text
Volume 12 Issue 7

Weekly newspaper of The Evergreen State College

November 17 , 1983

'The Day After' bombs with advertisers
THURSDAY, 11 / 10

WEDNESDAY, 11 / 16

Fourteen students and four local directors will combine talents to stage Con-

The Wild One and Rebel Without a
Cause are two anti-hero classics of the
'50s. The Wild One at 7 and 10:30
p.m . Rebel Without a Cause at 8:30

"Travels to China and the U.S.S.R.,"
a slideltalk by faculty members John
Aikin and Judith Bayard, will be
presented at 7:30 p.m. in the Recital
Hall of the Communications Building.

Jetti -

p.m. Lee. Hall 1, Thursday Night
Films.

WashPIRG's Toxics Committee meets
at 4 p .m. in Seminar 3142.

An Evening oj One Acts,

beginning at 8 p.m . and continuing a
four-night run in the Recital Hall of
the Communications Building. It is
presented by a newly formed student
group called The Performers
Unlimited. Tickets are $3, on sale now
at the Evergreen Bookstore, Rainy
Day Records and at the door.

TV movie depicts nuclear devastation
By Bradley P. Blum
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Northeastern School of Law of Boston
will visit campus from 10 a.m. to 12
p.m. in LIB 2118. Drop-ins welcome.

The Atkinson Graduate School of
Management from Willamette University visits campus. Presentation at 10
a.m. in LIB 2220, interviews can be
scheduled between I and 3 p .m . and
drop-ins welcome between 3 and 5
p .m.

: Jan Stentz plays piano at the Capitol
; Bar and Grill, 1075 S. Capitol Way.
. $2 cover. Her special guest is TESC
1 philosophy professor and drummer
Will Humphries playing his brand new
vibes. J an Stentz sings regularly at the
CB&G on Saturday nights, as well as
performing at concerts and jazz clubs
~round the Northwest.

"How to Succeed in Business Without
Really Trying" will be presented by
the Abbey Players today and
November 11 and 12 at 8 p.m . with a
5 p.m . performance on the 12th.
General admission is $6 for November
II a nd 12 and $4.50 for November 10
and the 5 p.m. performance. Tickets
are available at Pat's Bookery, Yenney 's, Kirk's Pharmacy and The
Bookstore. The Abbey Theater is
, located on the SI. Martin's Coll ege
campus. For inform at ion ca ll
352-0374.

THURSDAY, 11/17
Thursday Night Films presents Right
On.', a 1971 film featuring The Last
Poets, at 7 and 9:30 p.m.

MONDAY, 11 / 14
Public talk on the history of the International Longshoremen's and
Warehousemen's Union at 7:30 p.m .
in Lec Hall I.

TUESDAY, 11/15
1984 presents Man oj Marble at 4,
7:30 and 10 p.m. in Lee. Hall I. A
Citizen Kane-like reconstruction of the
rise and fall of a working-class hero
during the Stalinist 50s. 1977, Poland .

Barbara Wilson, Seattle author, will
give a reading of her works at 8 p.m .
in the Smithfield Cafe. She is the
author of novels, Ambitious Women
and Walking on the Moon and two
short story collections. She is currently
completing work on a feminist
mystery, Murder in the Collective.
Following the reading, Wilson will
autograph copies of her books .

FRIDAY, 11/11
Heliotroupe will provide mu sic for a
weekend of dancing tonight and Saturday at the 4th Ave~ Tavern. $2.50
cover. Music starts at 9:30 p.m.

WashPIRG's Hanford Committee
meet s at 5 p.m. in the Corner , A
dorm.

The Evergreen Jazz Ensemble and
newly-formed Jazz Combo will hold
their first concert of the year on Tuesday, December 6, at 7:30 p.m. in the
Communications Building Recital
Hall. The Jazz Ensemble Is composed of Evergreen students, local high
school students, faculty members and
community. The group will be performing works from Bill Halmon, Thad
Jones, Samm'y Nestuce and other prominent composers. The Jazz Combo
is a new group which is exploring smaD
group composition and developing improvisation skills_ Several soloists will
be featured in hoth groups. Both
ensembles have been invited to perform at Green River Jazz Festival held
at Green River Community College
and also the March of Dimes Jazz
Festival to be held at the Pantages
Theatre in Tacoma. In addition, both
groups will be performing one or more
concerts each quarter. Admission is
free,

National Day of Protest:
350 March for Peace

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.

Talk entitled "World Peace: A Baha' I
Perspective" by Dr. Peter T. Haug at
8 p .m. in the YMCA Friendship Ha ll.

Johnny Moses of the Tulalip Tribe leads the Tulalip Tribal Coast Pow-wow Dancers
in traditional Native American dances at the rally Saturday.

By Allison C. Green

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All interested students should see:
Mary Ann Wynkoop, Assistant
Director of Admissions
Wednesday, November 16, 1983
9:00 a.m. to 12 noon
Career PlannlRg & Placement



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Demonstrators marched from Sylvester
Park to the Capitol Building to show their
solidarity with the people of Central
America Saturday.
About 350 people me{ in a freezing
drizzle to listen to six speakers and music .
The speakers represented diverse
groups. In a testimony of her experiences
in EI Salvador, Lydia Cruz of The Committee of Christian Salvadoran Refugees
spoke through a translator about attempts
to form a union in her country. She and
her husband were arrested for being involved. When her husband resisted arrest
he was shot in the back of the head.
Patricia Serpas, another woman from
EI Salvador, also spoke with a translator.
She represented The Association of
Salvadoran Women and appeal led to
women everywhere to work for peace and
justice in Central America.
Hal Medrano, a student at Evergreen
who attended the rally and speaks
Spanish, said the translations were accurate and well done.
Veterans were represented by Steve
Clements of Vets for Non-Intervention in
Central America. A Vietnam vet himself,
Clements warned of the similarities bet-

Center
86&6193
Information on Placement, Internships, Curriculum,
Financial Aid and Willamette's Joint Degree program in
law and management available on request

Cooper Point Journal

November 10, 1983

THE EVERGREEN
STATE COLLEGE
OLYMPIA. WA 98505

ween U.S. involvement in EI Salvador
and in Vietnam.
Native Americans
were also
represented. Jane Martin of the Northwest Indian Women's Circle spoke
emotionally about the similarities between
the treatment of indigenous p€;oples of
North America and Central Ame ri ca. In
a wavering and choked voice she described prison conditions in the U.S. that do
not allow Native Americans to practice
their religion .
Robbie Stern of the August 27th Committee and the Rev. Paul Jeffreys of
Agape Community also spoke.
Entertainment was provided by the
Suddenly Naked Arts Collective and the
Three Peace Band. The Tulalip Tribal
Coast Pow-wow Dancers, led by Johnny
Moses, performed mid-way through.
The rally lasted four hours, too long
for a lot of participants . It was peaceful,
opposed only by an older man in a
military hat carrying a large American
flag and a sign that said, "Freedom
through Strength." He stood in Sylvester
Park but disappeared before the march .
The rally was sponsored by the Central
American Action Committee of Thurston
County and emceed by Beth Hartman.

On October 12th, hundreds of Lawrence,
Kansas residents watched their hometown
devastated by the effects of a nuclear
explosion.
What those Kansans, over 1500 of them,
saw was an advance screening of the madefor-television movie, "The Day After," a
vivid portrayal of what life could become in
the northeastern Kansas university town after
a nuclear bomb is exploded on nearby Kansas City.
The film, which is schedu led to air this
Sunday evening at 8 p.m. on ABC, has been
described as "powerful , intense, and
devatating " by those who have seen advance
showings or pirated copies of it.
The movie's powerful emotional content
has generated considerable cont roversy and
apprehension concerning its possible effects
on the American pUblic.
As we go to press, ABC is reported to have
sold only half of the advertising time
avai labl e for the two-hour film. Corporate
sponsors have apparently bought commercial time during the first half of the film, the
build-up to the explosion, but are unwilling
to risk having their products associated with
Armageddon. One T. V. industry joke suggests that the canned food industry would
be the perfect sponsor for the last half of the
movie.
It is rumored that the Reagan administration is putting a great deal o f pressure on
ABC to keep the film off the air . Supporters
of the President's "peace through strength "
policy have charged that th e network ha s
joined t he ca use of the nudear freeLc movement by making a film that "sensationalizes
the bsue m,d jJfomO(CS h y:,t~ri:.l ."
Among those who have already viewed
"T he Day After" is Rev. Jerry f'alwell. In
a n interview thi s past Sunday on CI3S\ "60
Minutes," the Moral Majority leader indicated that he would ask ABC for e4ua l
tim e to rebut what he felt was a case of emotional manipulation. Falwe ll also implied
that spo nsors of the film might be targeted
for sanct io ns by his organization.
Aside from the outrage of some at the
emo ti o n-generating nature of "The Day
After," there is also a st rong concern that
the movie may cause mass feelings of despair
and hopelessness. As a precaution, ABC

plans to preface the broadcast wit h a
disclaimer stating that the movie s hould not
be seen by c hildren under the age of twelve .
Steps have been taken to deal with the
emotional flood expected to follow the film's
airing. Groups around the country have
organized community meetings to bring people togethe r to express their feelings a nd to
sea rch for useful ways to c hannel those
feelings.
Locally, a group called "Olympia Com munity Meeting: The Day Before" will hold
public discuss ion s this Monday evening to
"explore and share" the emotion s felt by
those who view "The Day After" on Sunday. The 7 p.m. dessert pot lu ck will stress
that " it is sti ll the day before and there is
still time to prevent annihilation," according
to the group's literature.
Those atlendin~ the meeting, which wi ll
be held at the Firq \ .I nit pd '''l ethodi.,;
Ch urc h. 1224 E. Legion, " ill h,,:ak into
discussion groups of eight or les,. Accordin)!
to Sman Kingrey, one of the groul"s
orga ni zers. this will insure t hat everyone is
given the opportunity to e-xpress hi s or her
feelin gs.
Kingrey also emphasized the non -[1o litical
nature or th e O lym[1ia Community Meetin g
by say ing, " We arc not affi li ated with the
freeze movement. Our aim is not to tell people what they should do, but to help them
see , in a personal way, how the y fit in wilh
what they see and know is going on in the
world. "

Cooperative Education sponsors
national essay competition
By June Finley Muguire
An expenses paid trip to New Orleans,
Louisiana, is to be awarded the first place
winner in the Cooperative Education
Association Student Essay Competition for
1983-84. The theme for the competition is
"Co-op (Education] Is Education".
In addition to the trip and honor of
presenting your essay to the CEA Conference
in April 1984, a plaque and check for $200
will also be awarded for First Place. The winning article will be submitted to the CEA
Journal Board to be considered for
publication.
A $150 check and an award certificate will
be awarded the Second Place winner. The
Third Place entry will be awarded $100 and
an award certificate.
If this sounds good to you, there is a catch
to it. To be eligibile to enter the competition
you must presently be participating in an institutional Cooperative Education program.AIl persons who have previously participated in such a Cooperative Education
program are also eligible.
Deadline for entries is January 6, 1984.
Winners will be notified by March 19, 1984 .
Manuscripts will not be returned.

Our advertisers are prepared to meet
all your shopping needs.
Look for money saving coupons and
sale Items In this week's CPJ.
Cooper Point Journal

Rul es governing the essay con test are
available from the Cooperative Education
office, Lab. I, Room 1020. Questions or additional information may be obtained by
calling Coop Ed 866-6000 - Ex. 6391.
Originality, organization, devel opment of
theme, spe lling and grammatical accuracy
are the cr iteria governing this yea r' s
competition .

CORRECTION
Last week's front page story, entitled
Draft laws affect student aid was inadvertently presented out of seq uence.
We'd like to apologize to the many
readers who called to inform us of our
error, and to C liff Missen who wrote
the article.
Missen's article deals with an issue
that is affecting a large number of people on this campus and contains
valuable insight and information. For
these reasons we have decided to run
the article again today, this tim e presenting it in its original form. You'll find
Missen's story on page 9.
Thank you for your patience .

NONPROFIT ORG
U.S. POSTAGE
PA tD
OLYMPIA. WA
PERMIT NO 65

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S&A Board: Who's on it and wh

.

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By Ann Seidner
Here is an introduction to the Services and
Activ iti es Board as they hear requests for
mid-year al locat ions.
Ei leen Brady is the Services and Activities
(S&A) Coordinator, which is a studen t/ staff
position. She is not a Board member, but
rather, "A staff member to the Board. I do
a lot of th e behind the scenes work," she
says . Brady facilitates a ll S&A Board
meetings and is responsible for the Board's
orientation and for teaching th e budget
writing process . She does all the paper work
associated wit h money allocation and she
spends much of her time talking with budget
represe nt at ives.
Brady ha s been at Evergreen for three
years, st ud yi ng organ izational development,
theory and management, and gro up
dynamics. She got involved with S&A as a
budget coordina tor last year and moved on
to hecome the Board's coordinator. She and
her seve n-month o ld co-part ner Caitlen
would lik e to see some improvements in S&A
this quarter: namely, "a tighter and less
lengthy allocation process that encourages
team work between budget representatives,
Board members and other interested
students , and improved communication between the Board and budget representatives."
Brady is also a Board member o f the
Olympia Food Coop and a counselor for the
" Thurston County Draft and Military
Co unseling Board."
Michael Hall is the Advisor to the S&A
Board, a job he labels "consuming, demanding, exhilarating, challenging and
frustrating." Hall was an S&A Board
member while a student in the 1973-74 school
year. He brings to his "multi-faceted" position a multi-faceted perspective, not only

spring my friends who were budget coordinators would come from the Spring Allocation bitching," Riener says. "I heard their
problems and their concerns, so 1 went to
some (S&A) meetings to see if any changes
could be made." Now a Board member,
Riener is working toward change. "I want
to clear up the misconceptions about the
Board. Coordinators think that the Board
has a lot of power, but that's not really true.
Decisions are made by consensus."
Jim Hartley has been an Evergreener since
the summer of 1983. H is initial motivation
for becoming a Board member was to represent the housing residents . "Many new
residents are young, and need representation." Hartley is the Housing Activities
Director as well, and so addresses this concern with more than one approach. He is also
a member ex officio of the Production
Clearance Board, and is involved with the
new "Performers Unlimited" group. Hartley
would like to see "the minimum wage [paid
to budget coordinators] made higher." This
would attract more work /stu dy people, he
says , who now get paid more by working
elsewhere.
Jay Saucier is a first year Evergreen stu:
dent. He spent two years at Seattle Central
Community College. Contrasting Seattle
Central with Evergreen, Jay says, "Other
schools train you, this one challenges you,
makes you think." Jay is on the S&A Board
because he wants "to see how the school
works. I want to be active. And somewhere
along the line," he says, "I'll be in a position of having to approach a Board myself,
and I wnat to know how it works."
Prentiss Mapp is a Board Alternate , first
in line to be a Board member if a position
opens. Though involved in S&A for the first
time this quarter, he is already an active participant in all S&A meetings.
Ann Seidner is the minutes-taker for the
S&A Board meetings. A fourth year
Evergreen student, Seidner became involv,ed in S&A this quarter because she knew
herself to be among the majority of students
ignorant about Evergreen's student government, and wanted to change that status. She
enjoys her backstage, but crucial job. "Student lethargy is well worth overcoming," she
says. "I would encourage those still lagging
to join in something, anything, of interest."

Re-entry women find help in support group
By Janet O'Leary

women Tuesday from 12-1 p.m.

Last week's menu for the Re-Entry
Women's Brown Bag Lunch consisted of the
shar ing of campus resources, dissolutionment proceedings and the Affirmative Action Proposal.
As it turned out, the central focus of the
discussion was the fears, goals and ideals of
women returning to education after time
with their families or careers .
Rebecca Wright, Affirm ative Action a ttorney for TESC, led the group of nine

The program began with introductions.
Each woman told what program she was in,
described career goals and discussed whether
the re-ent ry process was easier or harder than
what she had expected.
Often repeated comments were: "I have
no confidence in myself," "I don't have
much confidence in my academic abilities,"
and "School is totally unstructured as compared to the work world, which was easier"
Background information supported this

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Gary Burris

from his early years at Evergreen, but also would like to see less bickering between stufrom hi s work as Coo perative Education dent groups. I would like to make the groups
Counse lor for the past three years, as the -see that too , which would make the S&A
Student Activities Director, Events Coord- process a lot easier and a lot more fun.
nat or on Production Clearance Board, and
Morin says that he is beginning to see a
as a member of both the Co mmunications progression in S&A policy. " Before, th e
and CAB Use Advisory Boards.
policies f1uctuated. Now we're starting to
Hall think s that S & A has an "excellent adhere to some of them. There is starting to
Board" this year, with "good leadership and be an S&A tradi tion, a continuity that will
facilitation." He would like to see better become a basis for S&A in the future."
compensation for Board members. "There
Board member Cath Johnson holds two
is not enough ack nowledgement for the long half-time jobs at Evergreen: Pool Manager
hours they put in," he says .
and Athletics Business Coordinator. She is
Michele Bird is the li aison between S & A a 1981 Evergreen graduate with interests in
and the business office. Her .j,ob, she says, Outdoor Education and Human Developis " the actual moving of money." But she ment. She worked as an Outward Bound indoes much more than accou nting. She is structor for six years, teaching backpacl~ing,
knowledgeable in the hi story of S & A, and whitewater canoeing and rock climbing.
she uses thi s knowledge to assist Board Johnson sees her first quarter with S&A as
members in making decisions. As the two tightly intertwined with her involvement in
year office assistant for Student Activities, athletics. '" value my participation in
Bird is in cha rge of the office and of the of- athletics highly," she says, "and working in
fice of personnel. This year is Bird'g third the recreation office has given me the chance
at Evergreen. She spent her first year as of- to explore my values. My interest in the ethics
fice assista nt for "KEY," the "Keep Enhan- of a thletics at Evergreen has broadened to
c ing Yourself" suppo rt group.
embrace all of Evergreen's ethics, as an inGary Burris was initiated as an S & A stitution and as a community. Being an S&A
Board member in th e spring of last year. He Board member is enhancing my knowledge
has been at Eve rgreen for two yea rs, st udy- of how the school works, and learning the
ing political sc ience and history. He first ap- co nsensus process is valuable to my interest
plied to th e S & A position beca use he was in personal communication."
interested in th e governing process at
Johnson would like to see the S&A forEve rgreen. Burris want s to work toward a mat "standardized, with periodic review, to
personal goa l and a community-minded goal el iminate some frustration the coordinators
of lea rning to work with budgets and help- feel. So far, the format has changed every
ing the Evergreen community to balance year." she explains.
their budget.
Johnson is also the Alumni representative
"The [governing] process works well," he to the Athletic Advisory Board and is involvsays, "but it needs more student involve- ed in a new committee of alums who help
ment." Gary is a member of the Athletic Ad- new students settle into the Evergreen
visory Board, the Communications Board community.
Michael McDonald has made his involveand the Soccor team. He is also the ViceC hairman of Evergreen's new chapter of the ment in S&A part of his effort to "finish up
Washington Student Lobby.
strong." This year is his second and last year
Joe Morin has been an S&A Board . at Evergreen, as he spent twO years at
member since the summer of 1983, and last Tacoma Community College. McDonald
year he served as a budget coordinator. He says, "It's very important to stop talking
has been at Evergreen for four years, st udy- about participation and start participating."
ing political science and environmental Michael works half-time as a Peer Counselor
studies.
in the Veterans' Affairs Office.
As a Board member, Morin tries not to
Karen Riener is a second year Evergreen
pursue only the interests of student groups, student, interested mainly in the natural
but tries to remember the community . "I sciences. She volunteers her time to the
believe strongly in community," he says. "I Organic Farm and the S&A Board. "Last

lack of self-confidence. Some had been away
from school for ten, fifteen and twenty years.
One said, "I can't shake the nagging feeling
that all those years spent cooking, cleaning,
and chauffering might as well have been lost
years." Another said, "My family does not
want me to return [to school]."
The women contrasted their fears with
Evergreen's academic and extra-curricular
st ructure that made re-entry "a marvelous
experience." Said one, "The benefits of a
sma ller college that is geared toward experience is wonderful." Said artother, "The
close-knit groups, the help from the advisors,
teachers, and staff members dissolves alot of
fears. "
Sitting and conversing with a group of
women who have the sarriefears, needs and
desires, appeared to establish a close bond.
The 'take heart. You are not alone' attitude expressed by Wright and Kathie

DuPriest the facilitator of the group, showed
encouragement. They explained that almost
every woman now trying to scale the re-entry
barrier between home, school, and job has
felt exactly the same way. So once did the
thousands of other women who have successfully made the jump. "If you could catch
anyone of them at an honest moment, she
would probably admit that sometime,
somewhere, she was hit with: What am I doing here. " said DuPriest.
This group is an ongoing support group
for adult women students sponsored by the
Women's Center. The center is open in the
early evening Monday and Thursday in addition to daytime hours . They meet every
Tuesday from noon-l p.m . for informal rap
sessions as well as speakers on specific topics .
Join them in Lib 3214 or stop by Lib 3216
and meet women's center co-ordinators
Missy Manoogian and Kathie DuPriest.



ALL WAYS TRAVCL SCRVICe,IItIC.'

"

Low Power Television (LPTV) is the firs~
new broadcast medium to be authorized by
the Federal Communications Commission
(FCC) in over twenty years. As with cable
television, LPTV was created as a retransmitter of broadcast signals for the fledgling
television industry . First developed in
Oregon in 1948, it has survived in
geographically isolated communities from
Alaska to upstate New York. Recent FCC
deregulation, however, has thrust LPTV into the telecommunications limelight as a way
to not only serve rural areas and small
neighborhoods, but specialized audiences in
urban areas with programming ranging from
minority issues to experimental applications.
And if a group of local businessmen are successful, the Olympia area may see its first
LPTV station by 1985.
The Capital Development Company
(CDC), developers of South Sound Mall, has
applied to the FCC for a license to install an
LPTV station in Lacey. John Donaldson, .
Senior Vice President for CDC, says that
they have also applied for licenses in Aberdeen and Centralia, hoping to eventually
develop a regional Southwest Washington
network that will share programming of
common interest. Limited to only 1/ IOOth
the maximum power available to standard
UHF stations, Donaldson anticipates that
CDC's LPTV station will have a broadcast
radius of up to 15 miles, depending on

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Lynn Garner in her new shop on O/y's Westside .
By Allison C. Green
Rich corduroys in earthtones, raw silks in
burgundy and deep purple, imported coltons
of dusky orange with blue and lavender
stripes : this fantasy is the reality of Lady
Lynn's Natural Fiber Fabrics.
Lynn Garner, ex-Evergreen student and on
leave from her position as Director of Student Activities, opened the sewing store in
July, the only Olympia shop that emphasizes
natural fabrics.
It was Garner's lifetime fantasy. "I've got
enough fabric at home to have started a
business a long time ago," she says.
The store, at 335 Division on the Westside,
offers notions, patterns, fabrics and an
alterations service. So far the sales of fabric
aren't as brisk as Garner would like them to
be . But the alterations and sewing service is
so busy her mother has been helping out a
couple days a week.
Garner came to Evergreen as a student in
1972. After graduating in 1974 she began
working in the student activities office, eventually becoming Director of Student Activities. Mike Hall now holds her position as
she takes a year leave of absence to explore
the viability of living out her fantasy.
Having spent most of her working life in
education, including at Ft. Steilacoom Community College and Franklin Pierce High
School, Garner took a big ri sk entering
business for the first time last summer .
She misses the contact with students and

co-workers but enjoys the peacefulness of
working alone in her small shop, ~ew ing
clothes, l1elping customers and being surrounded by fabrics. "It's a very calm space
to work in," she says .
Students may remember Ze, her three year
old son who worked with her at Evergreen
his first year. (Ze means Joe in Portuguese.)
He has stayed in daycare so his life can remain somewhat stable while she adjusts to
the risks and responsibilities of her own
business. He sometimes spends an afternoon
at the shop, playing in the children's section,
and Garner hopes he will think of it as his
space, too, as he grows older.
In an effort to offer specifically natural
fabrics, Garner will be phasing out her
polyester blends and bringing in Indian
gauzes, more cottons and silks, and wool
plaids in earthtones this January .
By that time she will also be ready to
decide whether to continue her business or
return to Evergreen.
In the midst of her fantasy world, Garner
has no time to sew for herselr. But -she has
picked a pattern and material for a dress to
wear to a C hamber of Commerce banquet
comi ng up. She has been making an effort
to establish a relationship with the Olympia
business community by goin g to meetings
lik e these.
If colors like "Dusty Lilac" don't entice
you in, maybe you'd at least like to see
another Greener making good in Olympia.

&
24F

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transmitter and geographical features ."
While potentially offering service to much
of the metropolitan area, such a station could'
also benefit parts of rural Thurston County
not currently served by cable.
LPTV enjoys few Federal regulations. '
There is no minimum l]umber of broadcasting hours, no restriction on program
sources, no signal quality standards, and so
on. While the actual amount of programming on CDC's station will be " limited by
advertising revenues," Donaldson suggests
the station will offer " local sports events,
municipal coverage, public-access programming, interviews, rebroadcasting of existing
signals, and leased programs, such as
movies." The extent of local programming,
however, may be the key factor in the station's success and survival.
One issue before the Olympia City Council as it revises its cable television ordinance
is a requirement that cable operators carry
LPTV stations that offer a certain percentage of local programming. In the words of
Donaldson, "cablization [of our signal] is extremely important from a marketing standpoint." Yet as the City moves ahead with its
own plans to assist in the development of a
community cable-access facility , the question
is raised of whether enough is actually happening in Thurston County to support two
separate channels devoted to local programming. While Donaldson states that "we're
' involved in the Olympia area, it's our home,
and we think we have an idea of the local
programming needs," he admits that "I
don't think in a free-enterprise situation that
. two stations could exist."
Only time will determine the best method
of serving the community's telecommunications needs. While LPTV offers access to
isolated parts of the county, and freedom
from the regulatory uncertainty concerning
municipal control of cable programming, its
management would remain in private hands.
j A community cable-access facility, while
potentially more responsive to the needs of
local community organizations, could be
subject to pending Federal legislation, and
would certainly require an extensive and ongoing commitment of time and energy from
all of those involved. For the time being,
however, CDC must wait for the FCC to address their application, a process not expected for at least another two years. In the
words of Donaldson, "[LPTV] is not a n infant industry, it' s a pregnant one. It's not
even been born."

HOUSE OF ROSES

.

M

(made with 1 doz. long stemmed roses) $15.00

~~~~----_-------_---.e 3••~8.7~0~O-..~
Cooper
Point
Jour""
November 17,1113
.. .
. .. . , ..
'

M

~~:.:.:.~ cable-t~h,,~,~~!i':~;d.~?"~ Garner,
ex;.greener,
t ·In 0 I y
se WS I· Up

I
Joseph Morin

o

Master Charge & Visa orders accepted by phone .

CLASSIFIEDS
EVERGREEN COINS
BUYING DOLLARS
Silver Coins,Gold,Sterling,
Diamonds, Goldrings, DentalGold,Rare Coins,ETC.
Harrison Ave 352-8848
AAA TYPING. Reasonable rates
Fast, reliable. Term papers,
leHers,evaluations, ETC.
Westside Oly, 357-4157

WHY RENT? Self-contained
18ft TraUer. Dual system
(Elect.lPropane).
Cozy $750.00 426-4841
HOUSEKEEPER WANTED:
Trade for Room and Board
3 Bdrm 2 Bath House
Country home North of college.
For Information Call Anita
426-3031 9am till 9pm

RAINBOW RESTAURANT
Welcomes you to Olympia!
Breakfast Mon-Sun 8:30am-110m
Lunch & Dinner Il.30am-12pm
Look for Mimi's Specials
The Best Pizza in Town
Music 7 Nights a Week
New Lo!(o Contest
Page 3

,-

(

.y OUR

I

NFORMATION

)

Granny returns to school
herl:!usband, Frank, live in the Hicks Lake
area of Lacey in a home he had built. Frank
is retired from the State Highway Department. Now that Irene's four children and
Frank's son Wayne are grown,Irene has time
to devote to enhancing herself by returning
to college.
During her busy lifetime, Irene' has worked as a secretary, reporter, magazine writer,
office manager for a ~ounseling firm and a
free lance writer while daughter Chieron was
small. At the University of Washington Irene
was studying Spanish. She said, with a smile,
that Chieron's capabilities in the French,
Spanish and Japanese languages might have
developed because Chieron went to school
'before she was born.' Chieron is living in
Japan at present.
Laurie is a Registered Nurse who works
three days a week at St. Peters Hospital and
attends classes at Evergreen as well. Being
a wife, and mother of two children, Sean,
age 18 and Erin, age 16, and holding down
a job kept Laurie too busy to spend much
time just for herself. Her husband David and
her children are all cooperating to help
Laurie return to school.
Laurie received her nursing diploma in a
three-year course while working in a hospital.
That was over 20 years ago. Since she did
not graduate from an 'accredited' educational institution, Laurie is seeking her BA
in the Upside Down Degree program at
Evergreen. "It is important that the family
help with tasks and chores around the home
or it would be impossible for me to go to
school," said Laurie.

By Llldy Leprechulln
the board, comprised of 26 members, including nine Thurston County residents.
Newly elected to serve with Olson are officers: Vice Chairman John Murray, president of Murray Publishing Company in Seattle; Secretary James Fowler, president of
James F. Fowler and Associates, a Vancouver, Washington, public relations firm;
and Treasurer David ' Wagoner, a Seattle
attorney.
Newly appointed to that board for threeyear terms are U.S. Senator and former
Evergreen President Dan Evans of Olympia,
former Evergreen trustee and Aberdeen
engineer Wes Berglund, and Lacey contractor Lewis Jones.
Last year the Foundation raised more than
$225,000 in private donations, grants and
gifts-in-kind to support scholarships, student
and faculty research and other needs at
Evergreen

The Central American Action Committee of
Thurston County is sponsoring the second
annual "WORK-A-DA Y FOR El Slilvador"
on November 29, 1983. This year local
citizens concerned about the on-going war
will give a day's wages to a group called
"New EI Salvador Today" (NEST). Interested persons are encouraged to phone in
their pledges to Tom Nogler at 352-3614.
NEST provides us with. the opportunity to
give humanitarian and economic aid to the
people of El Salvador. The Thurston County group has plans to fund a production proposal for planting eight manzanas (13.6
acres) of corn and the purchase of 100
swarm s of bees.
In an appeal on behalf of the people of
El Salvador , Gus Newport, Mayor of
Berkeley, Californ ia st~ ted that giv ing to
NEST "deepens the bonds of friendship,
understanding and cooperation between us
and the people of El Salvador. ....
For more in formation on the fundraising
eve nt please write The Cen tral American Action Committee, P.O. Box 7454, Olympia,
WA 98507.
Notice to all students:
You have two weeks to claim all belongings kept in the CRC locker room from
spring 1983 and summer 1983. After
November 28th, items will be sent to security.
Timberland libraries in five counties (Grays
Harbor, Lewis, Mason, Pacific and
Thurston) will be closed Thursday ,
November 24, and Friday, November 25,
1983 in observance of Thanksgiving.
All libraries will resume their regularly
scheduled hours on Saturday, November 26,
1983 .
On Exhibit: Two-dimensional works
by 21 Asian American Artists from
Washington state, Gallery Four;
Faculty Art Exhibit, Nov. 19 - Jan. 10,
Gallery Two.

Two hours of award-winners from the
Eleventh Annulil Northwest Film and
Video Festival will be presented
Wednesday, November 23 beginning
at 7:30 p.m. in the Recital Hall of the
Communications Building at The
Evergreen State College.
Sponsored by The Olympia Media
,Exchange, the eight-part showing offers an unusual blend of light comedy,
social commmentary and visual experimentation, including an intimate
documentary on the lives of ten Vietnam veterans filmed by Clayton Rye
of Pocatello, Idaho.
Also featured will be a 14-minute
first-place winning video by Evergreen
student Guy Guillet of Spokane and
campus electronic media producer
Peter Randlette. Their work, entitled
"Creation File," combines unique

visual imagery generated by video with
a narrative about a man who seems to
create himself through manipulations
of his computer.
Also shown will be short films by
artists from Oregon, Washington, and
British Columbia. Their efforts range
from a four-minute comic animation
by Kim Singhrs of Pullman to a
16-minute documentary by Vancouver
filmmaker Jan Martell on the life of
a doctor who spent the majority of her
career in China, then immigrated to
Canada where she was not allowed to
practice.
Tickets to the Wednesday night film
program cost $1.50 for students and
$2 for the general public. Tickets go
on sale at 7 p.m. Wednesday at the
door of Evergreen's Communicaions
Building.

Compositions by four major figures in the
history of music will comprise "Austria
Through the Ages," a program to be performed Saturday, November 19, by the Northwest Chllmber Orchestra beginning at 8
p.m. at Capital High School.
Conducted by Alun Francis, now in his
fourth season as musical director of the Orchestra, the concert will spotlight the talents
of principal cellist Page Smith-Weaver in the
opening concerto by G.M . Monn .
Sponsored by the Seattle Trust Guest Artists Program, the concert is the fourth production of the Fall Quarter Evergreen Expressions Performing Arts Series .
Tickets are on sale at Yenney's Music, The
Bookmark and The Evergreen Bookstore.
Tickets will also be sold at the door of
Capital High School's cafetorium beginning
at 7 p.m . Saturday for $8 general admission
or $5 for students, senior citizens and
members of the Evergreen Alumni Association. A ten percent ticket discount may be
arranged for groups of 15 or more by calling Evergreen's ticket office, 866-6833,
weekdays between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.

THE
STUDENT
CONSERVATION
PROGRAM
-NATIONAL PARKS & FORESTS
-FISH & WILDLIFE AREAS
-OTHER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
AGENCIES

Robert Olson, president of South Sound National Bank in Lacey, has been elected chliirman of the BOllrd of Governors for The
Evergreen State College Foundation, which
raises privated financial support for the
college.
Three other officers have been elected to

EXPENSE PAID INTERNSHIPS

We
Representative on Campus:

Stop & See us!

3-5 in Career Planning & Placement
For more Information Contact Evonne McMillan
Cooperative Education 866-6000 Ext.6391
Page 4

3 mIle. We.t of Evergreen

Madrona Beach Rd
Mudd Bay Exit 101

Cooper Point Journal

\

Peer counselors Dens Williams , Hisami Yoshida' and Yahya Ali Bahar.

By Gretchan Mattila
The Third World Coalition has announced the beginning of a Third World peer support group. It will serve as a bridge and communication point between the services offered by the Third World Coalition and the
Counseling Center. It is currently staffed by
three paraprofessional Third World students:
Hisami Yoshida, Yahya Bahar, and Dens
Williams; with one opening left for an interested work study student. These three will
be providing outreach and support to
TESC's Third World and International student
community.
Some Third World students feel they are
not able to find the support they need at
TESC's counseling center. Both counseling
center staff and Third World staff say that
many Caucasians and people of color have
not been exposed to each other's differences
enough to work together comfortably.
Richard Rowan of the Counseling Center
commented that "For some Caucasian
counselors there is not a lot of awareness
about cultural di versity."
April West-Baker, Third world Coalition
Coordinator, agrees with Rowan 's statement
saying, "Counselors are trained to work
without addressing cultural differences.
Training in counseling people of different
cultures might help."
The Third World Peer Support Group will
assist students with:
Alcohol/substance abuse support
-Academic problems
-Interpersonal relationships
-Personal finances
-Problem solving
-Anxiety
-Loneliness
-Frustration
-Depression
-Campus orientation
-Activities information
-Crisis Intervention

This list of internships is provided by
Cooperative Education LAB I, Room 1000,
ext.6391. They are available for any quarter.
For a complete list, see Coop Ed .
Teacher Aide, Reading Disability:
Work at the direction of the Reading
Specialist listening to students read and
checking on their progress . Prefer student
with an interest in education, particularly
learning disabilities, and/or social work;
ability to work well with adults. 1,2,3
quarters, 4 hours a week, volunteer. In
Olympia.

Laurie and Irene

Administrative Assistant in Public Administration/Health Services:
Assist in operation of Home Care program
for terminally ill, including office practice,
monitering and participating in volunteer
recruitment and public relations. Prefer student with an interest and willingness to learn.
1,2,3 quarters, hours negotiable, volunteer.
Vancouver, Washington .

THE HARTFORD

Teacher Aide, Employment Orientation in
Education:
Work with physically handicapped and
developmentally disabled adults in the
sheltered workshop setting. Prefer student
with interest in education and training of
developmentally disabled'. 1,2,3 quarters,
hours to be arranged, volunteer. Olympia.

To: Students enrolled under The Hartfordl
The Evergreen State College Plan SHM 2277

Counselor/ Activity Leader in Outdoor
Education:
Live with students, take ecology hikes,
help with games and programs, share in work
chores. Prefer student with experience and
a love for kids, as well as the outdoor world.
Experience with resident camping also
useful. I quarter, live-in, paid room and
board. Maple City, Michigan.

RESTAURANT

Williams and Bahar will be on call for
weekends and after hours . Williams can be
reached at 866-9279 and Bahar can be reached at 866-8982. If not at home they can be
reached through Security. Call 866-6000
ex.6140.

LSIT • MCAT • GRE
GRE PSYCH· GRE BID
MAT • GlUT· OAT
OCAT • PCAT • VAT
SSAT • PSIT • ACIIEYEMEIITS
SAT • ACT • TOEFL· MSIP
un MEO BOS • ECFMG

Si nce 1938
l ;_

Any expenses incurred as a result of mental
and nervous disorders unless approved in
advance by an authorized professional staH
member of the College's counseling or health
services department .

&

., '..,'

...

\~.,

."

. .







,",

P,p

Fresh Ground Peanut Butter
Reg. 1.471b
S'ale 1.251b
10 % off all Frozen Vegetable s
15 % off all Paired Tapered Candles

Olympia Food Co-op
A comptete grocery store offering choices bel ween
organic or nonorganlc . processed or whole fpods. bulk
dispensing or prepackaging . and locally grown foods
when available . Everyone welcome ask aboul
member benefits I

921 N.Rogers-open dai!y 10·7
Olympia 754·7666

866.·8213
November 17, 1983

f'

SPECIAL THIS WEEK:

The Hartford policy is available to all degreeseeking registered students who are registered
for at least eight (8) credit hours. For more
information, please contact Student Accounts
at 866-6000 ext. 6447

WINE

. l(j,n

(206)632-0634

..... has been removed from the policy
in its entirety.

BEER

November 17, 1983

Yahya Bahar
The Corner A-Dorm
Mondays 5:00-7:00pm
Tuesdays 5:00-7:00pm
Wednesdays 5:00-7:00pm
Thursdays 5:00-8:00pm
Fridays 5:00-7:00pm

Tnt Prep.r.llon Spec l.h,U

in Olympia
14 Different Kinds

THE PLACE

Dens Williams
The Corner A-Dorm
Tuesdays 3:00-5:00pm
Wednesdays 4:00-6:00pm
Fridays 3 :00-5 :OOpm
Sat urdays 3:00-5:00pm
Sundays 3:00-5:00pm

EDUCATIONAl CENTER

Greatest Omelet

Mon-Thur 6am-8pm
Frl-Sat 6am-9pm
Sun 8am-8pm

Bahar and Williams will staff a drop-in
center in the Corner of A-Dorm for Ash and
campus residents . The hours and locations
of support group staff are as follows:
Hisami Yoshida
Library 3236
drop-in hours:
Monday I :OO-3:00pm .
Tuesdays 4:00-6:00pm
Thursdays 4:00-6:00pm
Fridays II :OOam-1 :OOpm

FW • YQ( • IIDB • RN BDS
CN • SPUD READING
~-+lMPUIN

The following exclusion (n):

The wise eat at The Place
others do other wise.
Anytime
Serve
Breakfast

Try our Weekday
Breakfast, Lunch &
Dinner Specials.

Thursday November 29th
Noon- 1 in CAB 306-ERC

Career Planning and Placement is offering
evening hours Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, 5-7 p.m. for students who are unable
to use its services during the normal working hours . It will continue to offer evening
hours until Dec. 9, the last day of fall
quarter. (Evening hours for winter quarter
are contingent on the amount of users this
quarter.)
The Career Resource Library has :
graduate school information, occupational
fields and job descriptions, periodicals, the
Washington Occupational Information
SyS1!8m, job announcements, and job market
information. All Evergreen students are invited to workshops, induding Introduction
to Resume Writing, Planning for Work,
Senior Employment Seminars and After
Evergreen. Stop by the office for a complete
list of workshops. Career and employment
counselors are available for drop-in advising. Phone: X6193. Location: LIB 1214.

A student, dubbing herself •A Greener
Granny,' was quick to offer information
about persons returning to school after extended absences. "Delighted with your column - there's more than one of us at
TESC," Irene's note read.
"I'm in. my second year at Evergreen, a
56-year-old granny and loving it. My friend
[Laurie] is 40, in the upside down program.
This is her last Quarter."
. Irene said she met Laurie in the Coordinated Studies program 'Ways of Knowing'
during Fall Quarter 1982. This fall they
decided to register together in the' American
Culture History - 1830-1865' so they could
continue their friendship.
Both women said they returned to higher
education for the luxury of doing something
for themselves - it was a necessity . "I really needed to do something for myself - to
start and complete one project," said Laurie.
Irene said "I hadn't had time to think
about things in depth." She had been too
busy raising two sons (J ohn and Scott) and
two daughters (Teresa and <::;hieron). A
homemaker, wffe and mother, Irene dropped out of the University of Washington
when she was carrying Chieron . "I stayed
in school until I couldn't fit into the student
chairs with their curved arms," she said.
That was 22 years ago.
This is Irene's second year at Evergreen
and she is going for her B.A . in the
Humanities. After having been a single
parent for 10 years, she remarried. Irene and

-3rd world counselors
bridge gap

Cooper Point Journal
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• 1,'10 '- I

<
LETTERS
Reader questions
speakers credentials
To the Editor:
The rally on Tuesday, Nov. I st, raised
some questions in my mind about the
qualifications of the speakers and the effect
of rallies upon our gov~rnment.
Speakers at the rally claimed to have
studied the government of Grenada but how
many of them studied the government of
Bishop's assassins? Even faced with the prospect of losing their tuition and not being
able to attend medical school in the United
States, how many students complained about
being rescued?
Hopefully, we all agree that invasion of
a sovereign nation is wrong, but so is taking
hostages and that is what those students
would have been.
1 do not think that any of us here at
Evergreen, are naive enough to think that the
United States is perfect, but it is way in front
of second. Someone like Eldridge Cleaver
can confirm that fact.
Please let's work together (0 build a better America not to tear it apart .
Thank you
Ken Clark
To the Editor:
I wish to th ank the Cooper Point Journal
and all its staff for their unbiased, balanced
journalism through (he past Senate race.
I would also like to take this opportunity
to thank the many volunteers who contr ibuted a great deal of time and energy to
the Mike Lowry for Senate campaign here
at Evergreen. We all did an excellent job:
distributing Oyers and making posters, inviting Mike to camp us to speak to the
sudents and faculty, and holding a successful
pre-election day rally. Although the results
on November 8th indicated Mike's election
loss, we certainly made a very reasonable
showing.
However, it is st ill important that we continue to be involved with our democratic
system, our policy makers, and the issues
facing us today. It is especially important
that we become even more aware of how Dan
Evans votes, which will determine the
political and economic direction of this state
and the country.
Again, thank you all for the great show
of support and devotion to this Senate
campaign.
Sincerely,
Janine M. Thome
Chair
Greeners for Lowry Campaign

o

F

R

M

Comparable Worth arbitrary?
To the EdItor:
Your Cooper Point Journal article is the
·only one I've read that presents what] call
the "other s·ide" of the comparable worth
matter.
Much has been written about jobs traditionally held by women. In this context, I
think traditionally must mean whatever one
wishes for the following are some jobs that
have been either exclusively or predominately
male: typist, stenographer, secretary, bank
teller, bookkeeper, the latter going back in
history at least to the time of Bob Cratchet
in Dicken's The Christmas Carol.
Even well before the so-called women's
movement which stressed equality, women
had largely - in some cases such as bank
teller - nearly exclusively replaced men .
There were several reasons for this, including
necessity during World War II, but the
predominate one was simply that women
work for less . But don't think for a minute
that men got rich on those jobs. Bank tellers
have traditionally been one of the most
underpaid of all white collar jobs.
I've read that the official definition of
"predominately" in this matter has to do
with any type of state employment in which
70 percent or more of the incumbents are
women. I've not read an explanation of how
this percentage was arrived at. To me, if we
go this general route, 50 percent would make
more sense. But once we select a percentage,
if we must indeed use this method of defining job discrimination against women in
terms of pay, then it does follow, as I think
it well could be argued, that whenever the
percentage falls below that [established]
percentage there is no longer discrimination
and so any addit ional monies for such jobs
should cease to be given . Of more importance, however, as mentioned, is that 70 percent figure .
Once it is determined that regardless of
any other factor except the foregoing that
women in certain job categories should be
paid more, then I'm not sure I see the
desirability of going to such a bother to
justify, by means of a job classification
method of any kind, that fact and the
amount they should get. Just give it to them;
no justification is needed regarding
methodology once it is determined that the
money is owing.
As regards methodology in classifying
jobs, there are a rather large number of
systems, all based on the classifier's judgement - an art, if you will, when properly
and competently done. It was outside my experience when I was classifying jobs during
state employment, but had anyone asked me
to put together a classification method point system or whatever - that would
achieve a predetermined result, I could have
done so, not that I would have for I'd have
resigned first. I do not mean to say that this
is what was done in this case but the method
used was a radical departure from the
methods used by the classifiers employed by
all governmental agencies and private

Cooper Point Journal
Senior Editor Francisco A. Chateaub ri and
Managing Editor A llison 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'Lea ry, Ron Harrower, June Maguire, Gary Wessels
Graph ics: Carol Smith
Th~ Cooper Point Journal is published weekly for rhe srudents , sraff and faculty of
The Evergreen Srare College. Views expressed are nor necessprily those of rhe college
or of rhe Journal's sraff. Advertising marerial con rained herein does not imply endorseme'" by rhe Journal. 0ffice.l· are located in the library building, Room 3232. Phone:
866-6000 X6213. All annollncemenrs should be double-spaced, lis red by category, and
suhmirred no larer rhan 5 p.lII. on MondayJor that week's publicalion. All lerrers to
rhe ediror mUSI be Iyped, double-spaced and signed and need to include a daytime phone
!/lImber where Ihe author can be reached/or consultation on editing for libel and obscenity. The ediror reserves rhe right to reject any material, and to edit any conrributions
for length, conlent and slyle. Lerrers and display advertising must be received no later
than 5 p. m . on Tuesday for that week's publication. Contributions will be considered
for publication subjecr to the above-mentioned stipulations.

Page 6

·u

employers that I knew of or read about in
the extensive literature on classification and
in our professional journals.
And indeed, The State Department of Personnel classified and continues to classify its
jobs on a se·x-blind basis as well as with its
eyes closed as to race, creed, color, etc. An·y
classifier one talks with will tell you that he
classifies the job irrespective of who is in it
and how well or poorly the job is being done,
such things being matters to be attended to
by other means, such as, for example, merit
pay. Whether one believes women in certain
job categories should be paid more should
be decided by some means other than prostituting the art of job (in our language,
"Position," for we classify vacant positions
as well as filled ones) classification.
But the major curiosity I have has to do
with the Washington State Federation of
State, County, and Municipal Employees,
which filed the .. . suit. That is the outfit that
wrote the State's merit law and got it passed
by means of initiative in 1960 after successive
legislatures refused to civil service legislation.
That initiative, No. 207, then mandated, and
still does, that wages be set based on prevailing rates as determined by surveys of both
private and public employers. The Federation, over the years, conducted many of its
own salary surveys to help get more money
for its membership and they argued
numerous individual and class action increases for selected job classes before the
Personnel Board. Now, however, it
repudiates its own methodology and law in
order to correct what it says is an inequity,
one, if it does in fact exist, is a result of its
own doing. Why? It may be that, because
membership has fallen off as more women
less inclined to be a part of organized labor
join the labor force, the Federation hopes to
buy them, so to speak, by means of comparable worth, but this is just speculation.
I could perhaps expound on this subject
at greater length but will mention just one
more aspect of it: if salaries of certain classes
are to be increased by the 20 percent I read
about, or even by as little as 10 percent, then
they will equal or exceed that of their immediate supervisors. What is to be done
then? Raise the pay of the supervisor commensurately and his pay will then equal or
exceed that of his boss and so on ad infinitum. Beyond that, the various classification systems group similar classes into one,
not because this is necessarily good practice,
but because it is a practical necessity, otherwise the present 2000 job classes in the state
system would increase beyond the point that
any rational salary system could be used . (I
speak here of job families such as account
clerk, bookkeeper, accountant, auditor,
bank examiner and so on.) There are already
too many classes in such families. But at
least, until this Federation suit, they not only have been generally accepted by employees
but, indeed, any attempt to remove one or
two classes from a family and give it its own
salary identity was generally vigorously opposed by the Federation, among others, if
the salary went up or down as a result, on
the ground that "an historic relationship"
was being done [harm].
I n addition to the reasons listed in your
article, comparable worth, so called, suffers
from other failings. I'll not list them, for that
would be unnecessary . Rather I suggest that
if we wish to maintain the race, sex , religion,
etc . blind nature of classification
methodology, we could go to a pure
qualifications method. By this method, a ll
jobs requiring, say, a high school diploma
or its equivalent, would have the same salary
sca le. Admittedly, this would not solve the
problem of prevailing rate inequities, if there
is indeed such, inherent in surveyi ng salaries
paid by other employers so lon g as such
employers use the market approach in paying its employees, not that much of that in
a pure form exists in these days of pervasive
unionization. But no matter - to me at least;
I could accept even an arbitrary system,
whereby the state says it has only X dollars
for salaries. that the base sa lary for thl! class
with th e lowest qualifications will be $Y, the
top salary $Z, with all others falling in between in either an arbitrary or negotiated
manner .
Apologies for the length of this .
Yours truly ,

(E

)

Tree removal from
OrganiC Farm feared
To the Editor:
It has recently come to my attention that
there is a proposal for "Tree Removal from,
and the subsequent management of, the twoacre area south of the Main Gardens at the
TESC Organic Farm." The proposal states
that some ninety-one trees be cut (seventyfive large Douglas Firs included) in order to
allow more sunlight to reach the gardens and
to provide an agroforestry research and
development area. At first glance the proposal seems reasonable. However, the long
range projections of both management of the
cleared area and funding for the project are
sketchy at best. Apparently, the proposal has
been in the works for almost a year though
most of the campus knows nothing about it.
Several questioos come to mind:
- Is this the best way to allow more sunlight
to the gardens?
- In addition to the $2000.00 needed to
fence the 2-acres, what expenses (short and
long range) will be incurred managing the additional 2-acres?
- Can the Farm with its present budget
limitations seriously consider such an undertaking at this time?
- Will this newly clear-cut area (the stumps
will be left in the ground) be an eye sore for
years?
- Might the energy involved in such an
endeavor be used more beneficially to
beautify and enhance The Organic Farm at
its present size?
These are only a few of the questions that
need answering be/ore the first tree is cut.
It was stated in the Campus Land Use Plan
that:
Probably the greatest social demand
from the student perspective is to leave
the campus in a natural state. A
wilderness environment offers an
esthetically pleasing atmosphere which
provides relief from the urban-type environment offered by the main campus core. Under pressures of increasing urbanization in the Cooper Point
area, the Evergreen campus will
become increasingly important as a
wildlife refuge.
It is with all this in mind that I write the
CP J. The time has come (and not a moment
too soon, the Timber Fallers are close) for
the campus and community to become aware
of this proposal and be informed of the
details and options . Maybe the CP J could
run an extensive report in the next issue? I
for one, want to be absolutely sure that we
are doing the right thing before even one tree
is cut.
Sincerely,
T' c

Erickson

P .S. I have been a community gardener at
the Farm for 2 '12 years, the Farm's bee
keeper and am presently serving as Com,munity Rep on the Farm Board.

To the Editor:
The members of the 1984 program would
like to publicly exp ress our thanks to the entire Evergreen community for the help and
cooperation extended to us prior to, and during our all-campus production of Wednesday Wizardry, held November 2.
This day featured seminars, films, lectures,
and other less definable events, none of
which would have been possible without a
cons iderable amount of support from faculty, staff and students. The Offices of Security, Custodial Services, and Facilities were of
particular assistance. Their willingness to
work with us and to overlook some unique
occurences deserves a heartfelt thanks from
all who participated in the act ivities of
Wednesday Wizardry.
The 1984 program's next Wednesday
Wizardry is scheduled for January II, 1984.
We invite everyone to participate in our
planned events concentrating on George
Orwell's book 1984.

Wesley Karney
Retired

Cooper Point Journal

November 17, 1983

D

I

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Is U.S. foreign policy good or evil
Cou n tries
grateful for
American
intervention
By David Quackenbush
As American troops withdraw from a
liberated and grateful Grenada, and preparations are made for free elections, some reflections on these and other events around the
world are in order. The most striking conclusion to be drawn from events in Argentina, Lebanon, and Grenada, and their
responses here in America, is the almost total
lack of enthusiasm, from the prophets of
compassion, for the once-hallowed concepts
of elections and negotiations. It seems that
nothing disillusions those who claim to speak
for the rights of peasants and other oppressed folks quite so much as the prospect that
they might actually get the chance to vote for
themselves.
In Argentina, a major landmark has been
passed, with the successful election of a
civilian government and the likelihood of a
speedy transition from military rule. Those
who are so quick to criticize the United States
for its support of "acceptable" dictators
simply cannot come to grips with this event,
because it illustrates that there is a difference
between authoritarian governments, however
repressive, and the totalitarian revolutionary
governments who claim to speak for the peopie. The fact is that military governments do
sometimes give up their power, while Cubanstyle governments never have or will . As a
result, when elections do occur in Argentina,
the silence here is deafening.
Regarding Lebanon, the Geneva conference is underway, although temporarily
on hold. The outcome of this conference is
doubtful, but the sincerity of the participants
is unquestioned. The frantic, and largely
unmentioned, United States diplomatic activity which was essential to arrange this conference of the internal actors may yet enable
the crisis in Lebanon to be resolved without
an all-out war. ] would expect that those
critics of United States policy in the region
who so loudly insist on negotiated solutions
without the use of American Marines would
be loudly encouraging the conferees. Instead,
it is the "militaristic" use of Marines as
peacekeepers which is under attack.
The sight of warring factions actually attempting of talk things out is sobering. It is
a test of whether sincerity and communication can prevail in an atmosphere of violence
and hatred - and those who condemn the
presence of the U.S. Marines who are attempting to maintain order in Lebanon during this crucial time do well to focus instead
on Geneva. They would also do well to consider the motivation of the Iranian, Libyan
and Syrian attempts to disrupt those talks .
Henry Kissinger has said that the success of
the Geneva negotiations will depend on
whether the balance of forces on the ground
in Lebanon can be maintained; whether the
Syrians and their foster-parents in Moscow
can be convinced that they cannot outwait
the commitment of the Multinational Force.
As the suicide bombings mount, it will
become clear in the weeks ahead, for those
to whom it is not already clear, who really
supports the idea of peaceful resolutions; and
who does not.
Finally, and most obvious, is Grenada .
There was a time when people from both
sides of the political spectrum could agree
that free, internationally supervised elections
were the highest goal of the foreign affairs
of honorable countries. The Soviet Union
showed its position on the matter in Eastern
Europe after World War II, among many
other times. Soon we will have such elections
in Grenada . Those who wish to let the people speak will have their wish .
I don't think, however, that any elections
in Grenada will satisfy the critics of the
American invasion. Self-determination is a
great goal, it appears, until it is delivered to
people who were denied it by the priesthood
of social engineering - at which point it
seems to become boring. The most recent example of this phenomenon was the
Salvadoran elections: internationally supervised and participated in by every Salvadoran
who wasn't .successfully intimidated by the
November 17, 1983

guerillas. Once completed, they dropped immediately into the abyss of non-existence.
The government of EI Salvador is routinely
referred to as a dictatorship, as if the
painstaking and embryonic democratic process in that country simply didn't exist. ] expect that even if Mr. Duarte wins the
presidential race the government of EI
Salvador will still be referred to as a dictatorship, until it capitulates to the would-be
Marxist dictators who will set up a
Nicaraguan-style dictatorship which will
thenceforth be referred to as a liberation
government. Doublespeak indeed!
As poor, naive Maurice Bishop said, while
he still could, "we will have no elections,
because the people have chosen their leader."
The reception afforded by Grenadians to the
U.S. Marines showed what the Grenadians
really wished to choose - freedom and selfdetermination. And they clearly recognize
liberators when they see them . It is time for
the left to stop pretending that freedom,
economic or otherwise, can exist apart from
democracy. Messrs . Ortega, Castro, and
their progressive buddies in other slave-states
understand the importance of elections,
that's why they don't have any . Argentina
and Lebanon are still a long way from home,
but the people of Grenada now have a
powerful friend, and it will be enough. Them
that have eyes, let them watch Grenada, as
freedom returns to a liberated people.

David Quackenbush is a student at The
Evergreen State College.

Grenada; An
unspeakable
evil
By David L Hitchens
Grenada bothers me on many levels - and
the swirling debates over our correctness of
action reveal only the tip of the iceberg. Any
Grenada-style military action gives me a
heightened sense of danger, and prepares
public opinion for increased military spending which hones our military instruments
to stilleto-sharp "readiness ." The moral,
legal, philosophic, and actual questions
about such action are vital, real, and immediate - and I do not intend my ruminations as a way of down-playing their importance - BUT, there is something else afoot
which bothers, even frightens me beyond the
present debates. Behind the immediate, strident claims and counter -claims about our action [ sense a foulness which gives me coldsweats and chills; a prosaic, mundane evil
of such magnitude and simplicity it is extremely easy to overlook its presence . It is
something Beryl Crowe (TESC faculty

member) likes to call sur-Evil.
Consider, for a moment, the relationship
in time between the Beirut bombing and the
Grenada invasion. Consider the outrage and
anger of the American people over the
slaughter of the Marines in Lebanon be/ore
the Grenada invasion . Now consider the sudden lack of anger and outrage about Beirut
in the aftermath of the Grenada operation.
The psychic, emotional intensity which
greeted the awful news from Beirut has been
suddenly transformed into popular acclaim
and near joy by the landings in Grenada.
While the bodies are still being pieced
together and identified in Beirut, fourteen
U.S. Congressmen return from Grenada and
tell us they love us in the Caribbean. Even
more stunning, a large percentage of the
American popUlation sides with the official
position which kept the press and media out
of Grenada for the first few days. Ronald
Reagan flies to Japan, Nancy Reagan shops
for Christmas gifts while there - quietly, the
body count from Beirut mounts.
Friends, the Grenada Invasion (yes, let's
put the event in capital letters now) was a
masterstroke of such psychic, emotional, evil
magnitude it boggles my mind. Ronald
Reagan alone is just not sinart enough, not
cynical enough, not tough-minded enough to
think this one up on his own. BUT,
SOMEBODY close to him is .... Somebody
seized on the timing, the moment, the possible impact, and the malleable potential in the
Beirut outrage and saw how to turn it away,
and make it work for other ends. One of
those advisors recognized the opportunity
Beirut afforded, and capitalized upon it.
Whoever thought up Grenada knew how to
turn the best instincts of the American peo- ·
pie against themselves - the shock, horror,
outrage, sadness, sickness, empathy, willpower, determination, anger and power inherent in this national consciousness have
been channeled and manipulated in such a
way to stun, or at least blunt, their natural,
normal outlet. We have been had, but had
in a way which clouds the essential, vital issue
behind the relationship between these events.
I shudder to think of the prestige and influence now in the hands of whoever thought
up the Grenada action. Even worse, what if
the insight was not the work of one individual? What if the event were the brainchild of a sudden, collective inspiration by
the entire National Security Council?
My mind pleads for a vacation when I
think of THAT possibility.
One more consideration: within a short
forty-eight hour period the emotional
response to the murder of over two hundred
men on a peace-keeping mission was redirected to supporting an act of war. Friends,
that is sur-evil in its most staid, conservative,
three-piece-suited, reasonable guise - which
makes it foul beyond acceptance; evil beyond
belief.

David L. Hitchens is a faculty member at
The Evergreen Stare College.

Greyhound bus strike: put
yourself in their shoes
working hours. In fact I need a raise not a
cut in salary.
As one of the many Evergreeners who
My fellow union members and I voted to
planned to go home by bus for the str ike for what we felt was right for us.
Thanksgiving holiday, I'm st randed unl ess Greyhound countered by suspending health
the Greyhound bus strike ends soon. Home benefits and payments to 2,200 retirees from
for me is in Port Angeles on the Olympic the welfare trust fund. They've also threatenPeninsula. Without bus or car transport a- ed to cut off benefits to 4,000 more
tion, I can't get there from here .
employees if we d0n't give in to pressure and
Trailways buses travel south but not east, sign our contract.
About 50,000 persons applied for our
north or west. Where does that leave anyone
who can't a fford to hop a flight and who jobs. If a ll striki ng unionized employees are
doesn't own or drive a car? The choices are replaced (fired), about 13,000 people will be
limited to hitching a ride, carpooling or stay- hired out of that number. It's a game of
ing in the Sound Sound area for the holiday . musical breadlines and unemployment lines
At first, [ was irritated at the possibility for those of us who have the jobs with an
of being away from home on Thanksgiving. equal number of persons who want our jobs .
Now I'm not. All it took was to envision
I'm one frightened person, wondering
myself as a Greyhound employee ou t on what to do. We're all worried over losing our
strike.
jobs and present income. What will happen
What if 1 had laid my job and livlihood to our families. How will we feed, clothe and
on the line in protest against a company de- house them and what will happen if sickness
mand I could not or would not meet? threatens us?
Greyhound demands that its union
Greyhound made about $234 million duremployees accept a 9.5 percent cut in wages. ing the last fiscal year with unionized
With a soaring cost of living, I can't afford employees bringing in most of the revenue.
to take less money for the same number of The company claims our wages are costing
Cooper Point Journal
By June Finley Maguire

too much . Management can't afford such a
loss.
Newspapers display large half-price sale
ads for potential customers who 'Go
Greyhound.' Management promises the
public that Greyhound buses wi ll be runn ing . My fellow employees and [ wonder
which set of employees will be working them (new employees) or us. Either way it's
a case of 'can't win for losing.'
I f we give in to a wage cut to save our jobs
we lose more than part of our income. I f we
refuse to bow to management's demands we
lose all of our income but gain a measure of
self-respect. Either way all employees of
Greyhound may be having an Unhappy
Thanksgivin g.
Putting myself in the shoes of a st riking
Greyhou nd employee was thought provoking and chilling. As an Evergreen student I have the opportunity to have an enjoyable holiday even if [ can't go home for
Thanksgiving. My job is not at stake. My
family's welfare is not in jeopardy. I hope
next Thanksgiving will be a happier one for
everyone.

Page 7

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America in psychotherapy: Zippy meets Freud
By Allison C. Green

reports. It has a basement of out-of-date information and embarassing experiences
unpleasant to remember. There are boxes in
it labeled "Rejection" and "Cruelty to
Spiders."
, My favorite part of the book is the story
of "Brian and Sheila in Psychotherapy,
featuring their loyal dog Lumpy." Brian (a
garbled "brain"?) represents the irrational
id. "Sheila, have you seen the Butane Torch?
I want to scare the mailman when he
comes." Sheila is alternately sarcastic and
sincere, upset with his antics. Their relationship appears on the rocks. After
psychotherapy, though, they come up with
a good solution. I won't give it away, but
it has something to do with Lumpy's brain.
Jim Blashfield and Gideon Bosker both
live in Portland. Blashfield, the illustrator
and co-author, is art director of the Clinton
Street Quarterly, an award winning
periodical published in the Northwest. His
blobby people seem just right as caretakers
of the organ I always thought looked like
macaroni and cheese in grade school science.
Blashfield spent two months standing at his
~awing board illustrating the book. He says,
You know a person can get a little strange
after spending two months alone in a room
talking to himself about how brains work."
Bosker, co-author, came up with the idea
while looking at clouds. "All of a sudden
they began to turn into giant floating brains.
That was the beginning of Brainstorm."
Bosker is an emergency room physician who
transports himself from place to place in a
battered 1966 International Harvester pickup truck. He is co-author of The Global Kitchen, a book about cooking ethnically with
natural foods, and a writer on popular
culture for Portland's Wi/lamette Week
newspaper.
If you're racking your brains for
Christmas presents, this might be what
you're looking for.

Brainstorm

By Jim Blashfield and Gideon Bosker
$4.95
Marble Press, 101 N. W. Maywood Drive
Portland, OR 97210
What's the most important part of the
body? The brain, of course. And who decided that the brain is the most important part?
This self-same organ: the brain. You have
to wonder at the egotism involved .
These thoughts are stolen from Tom Robbins' brain, out of his book Even Cowgirls
Get the Blues. They seem appropriately
revived now at the publication of
Brainstorm. Remember B. Kliban's cat
books? And all the tacky copies done in the
same format (A Hundred Ways to 'Kill a
Good Joke)? A couple of brains called Jim
Blashfield and Gideon Bosker have come out
with one that is truly funny .
The cover of Brainstorm shows a family
sitting down to pink, rubbery-looking
chicken at tv trays, while bubblegum-colored
brains splat against the window. It's black
humor: Zippy the Pinhead from a Freudian
perspective.
Zippy the Pinhead is an underground comic by Bill Griffith that laughs at American
materialism. It comes to mind in Brainstorm
when a brain entices an early cave human
with, "You could invent styrofoam." Or on
the third page where a simple life form says,
"Chee-tos. Got to eat them now!" The more
advanced life form says, "Eat some now, eat
some in August."
Right off the book becomes mostly concerned with psychology. It appeals to the ir·
rational, emotional right brain side of all of
us and pokes fun at the left brain guilt we
feel about it.
In "How the Brain Works" the brain is
described as an office with files of incident
Excerpts from Brainstorm,

CPJ plans Draft counseling a·vailable
winter
paper:
Come to

organizational
meeting
-<

By Cliff Missen

The Cooper Point Journal is looking for writers, photographers, artists, cartoonists and production people to work on the paper winter
quarter. We can offer you numerous
opportunities to express yourself
while at the same time provide training in all the aspects of journalism.
Credit is available to those interested,
but you don't have to take credits to
contribute.
If you'd like to learn more about
the CPJ, where we're going, how you
can fit in and what's required, come
to our organizational meeting
Wednesday, December 7th, 1 p.m. at
the CP J offices, located on the 3rd
floor of the Library, Room 3234.
We'll give you a rundown on our
operation and answer any questions.
See you there!

The Thurston County Draft Counseling
Center (TCDC), founded in 1980, is a nonprofit group which offers non-political information to all concerning draft registration, the draft, and the military. Glen Anderson, the president of the board and a
counselor for the TCDC, described its role
this way: "The idea of draft counseling is to
help folks think through this process. To
supply them the facility to investigate the options. It lets people know the background of
the draft and their full range of
choices ... . We're here to facilitate, not
influence. "
Although the TCDC is currently training
three additional counselors, they are not as
busy now as they were in 1980 when more
people were feeling affected by the reinstitution of draft registration and the threat of
the draft. Anderson feels that people all
around the country are avoiding the issue.
He explained how a single order to a com-

puter center in Illinois could have draft letters sent to the potential indyctees within 24
hours, with people actually being inducted
in two weeks time. "People could get drafted
suddenly and be in the Army very quickly
without knowing their rights."
Anderson stressed that those wanting to
, make a hardship, medical, or conscientious
objector claim need to be ready by taking
steps to do so today. He explained that high
school and college counselors, parents, attorneys, etc., need to be aware of the new
laws and regulations which are very different
from those in effect ten years ago. "Parents
need to explain to their children what their
options are, and do so from an informed
position." He reflected, "Being drafted is a
scary experience."
While draft registration is designed to
facilitate the implementation of the draft
should it become national policy, many feel
that the present registration will not improve
the Selective Service System's response time .
Last year, the Government Accounting Of-

fice issued a report which criticizes the present registration system because a large
number of the addresses, social security
numbers, and other pieces of information
that are needed have become obsolete or
have never been accurate to begin with.
Anderson pointed out that the government
has always underestimated the number of
non-registrants, at one time claiming less
than 200,000 resisters while issuing a report
which cited end of the year warning letters
being sent to 675,000 non-registrants. "It
was a common practice, when registration
was first required, for resisters to file under
the wrong address or social security
number," he added.
Anderson contends that few do not
register because they don't know that they
should. Instead, most of today's nonregistrants are conscientious objectors .
Glen Anderson and the Thurston County
Draft Counseling Center can be reached at
491·9093 .

DRAFT
COUNSELINC:r

Join the CPJ
Staff: Meeting
Dec. 7
FEATURING

Draft laws affect student aid: Take 2

KOOKS
Reggie

Fri &Sat
Nov 18th & 19th
9:30-1:00

Our Kitcben is NOW OPEN
Nacbos, Pizza, Sandwicbes.
210 E 4th

786-1444

J una Hazad (above)

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Lydia Lunch (right) in Vort8IC. two reca:lt film DOir
DlCIIta-pleces wlll be shown Thursday. Deamber 1st.
cd 7:00 cmd 9:30 p.m. in Lecture HaU l. Some
"coof' Mancini-revisited soundtraclcs co:ompcmy
thaletwo to~private-ey&Ithro~ thed«k world
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Cooper PoInt Journal


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Wednesday, November 30th
7:30 - 9:30 p.m. The Recital Hall
The Evergreen State College

General - $2.00
•• For more information contact OME 866-6000 x6001

Midnight films; Friday and Saturday $



\ NORTHWEST
FILM &: VIDEO
FESTIVAL ~£.RS

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"

November 17, 1983

By Cliff Missen

Since the Solomon Amendment was put
into effect, hundreds of TESC students have
been put in the positon of having to certify
that they have registered for the draft before
being allowed to received financial aid. Many
have done so and are now receiving their
money. Some others have not and are now
needing to "go it alone" or drop out of
school. This has spawned a major conflict
between some students and community
members, who think that TESG should be
doing more to help these non-registrants and
protest the law, and some TESC administrators, who feel they are doing all they
can for what seems to them to be a very small
number of students.
TESC was notified in June that the school
would need to comply with the federal decisions to verify student compliance with the
Solomon Amendment. At that time the
Financial Aid office had already made most
of the financial aid awards for this fall, so
the computer was coded to hold the awards
for students until they returned a letter of
compliance. A letter was sent to all students
which Fovided them with a checklist by
which -to show that they had registered or
that they did not need to for certain official
reasons - being female or out of the age
range, for example. Conscientious objector
status was not listed. A follow-up letter was
sent July 8th to 124 persons who had not yet
responded, and the list dwindled down to 46
by mid-September.
Today, according to Georgette Chun,
Director of Financial Aid at TESC, there are
but seven who have not returned their compliance forms. Three are not coming to
school, two are attending but are paying their
own way, and two are officially on-leave.
"This registration requirement hasn't affected our students," says Chun. "I would
expect a much larger group [of nonregistrants) considering this school."
But Chun does point out that the statistics

November 17, 1113

might not show the whole picture since of students applying for financial aid to the
students usually do not explain to the finan- Selective Service, "The College is not going
cial aid office why they drop out of the finan- to keep information to pass on to the Seleccial aid application process . This is tive Service, because, like the students, the
demonstrated by the testimony of one finan· institution is protesting this requirement."
cial aid employee who described an incident Stenberg refers to a letter from the Presiwherein a student tore up his financial aid dent's Cabinet to Washington State Senators
award letter in protest of the registration re- and the Olympia area Representative which
quirements . "He just showed up as being outlines the objections of the TESC ad'cancelled'."
ministration to this situation. "We felt that
Pat McCann, director of Innerplace at we should make a statement about serving
TESC, has spoken with several students who as the policing agent of the Selective Sera,.re either not going to school this year or are vice," explained Stenberg. "This college
having a difficult time doing so because they should not be put in the role of policing the
did not receive financial aid due to the student's Selective Service registration."
registration requirements. "Of all the years Stenberg also pointed out that national
I've been here, I've never met anyone who education groups, like the National Associawould say that they registered for the draft." tion of Financial Aid Administrators, have
One reason for this discrepancy is that also protested the Solomon Amendment.
many students here at Evergreen and
NOCARD, the New Olympia Committee
elsewhere have simply not applied for finan- Against Registration and t.he Draft, is a local
cial aid, fearing complicity between their anti-draft group which is composed of TESC
school's financial aid office and the Selec· student and concerned community members.
tive Service. One TESC student put it this They have complained of a lack of sensitivi way: "I'd rather have my name on as few ty on the part of the school and the finanlists as possible." Since the Justice Depart- cial aid office. They wrote a letter to the
ment has already indicted-14 young men for President's Cabinet, along with Innerplace
refusing to register, and all of those were and other local groups, in August to ask that
public non-registrants, this seelns a valid the school try and identify non-registrants
fear.
more accurately and help fund those who
Two students who preferred to remain need aid. This apparently led the President's
anonymous said that they were presented no Cabinet to issue the aforementioned statealternatives by the financial aid office except ment. But, as Pat McCann of Innerplace
to register or lose their awards. "Their tone laments, "The feedback and support from
was always threatening," said one.
members of the administration has been very
Chun described one situation wherein a positive .. . but the financial aid office has
student came to her office to say he didn't been mysteriously unhelpfuL"
want to register and wanted to know his
As of yet, there has been no public adveralternatives. "I said, 'Go home and think tisement that TESC will not supply names
about it, go and register tomorrow, then of students applying for financial aid to the
bring the receipt to me.' " Chun explained Selective Service, or that TESC is trying to
that she could not have accepted the signed provide alternative aid to those normally
compliance form in that situation because elegible for fmancial aid. NOCARD has proshe felt that she was required to verify the tested this policy and, although it is too late
student's honesty.
for some who have already made plans
TESC Dean Larry Stenberg is quick to elsewhere, is trying to contact students to let
assure that Evergreen will not pass on names them know.
Cooper Point Journal

Larry Stenberg defended this policy by explaining that the number of students known
to be in the situation of losing their aid for
non·registration was relatively few, thus the
school tried to reach the "hard cores" by
phone to offer the state and school aid.
"They've identified to us who they are .. .so
publicity is not a critical issue." Stenberg
feels that returning students should have
already made this contact with the financial
aid office and know better than to worry
about them turning names over to I he Selective Service. "I think that's a smokescreen
response." he says in reply to students who
claim suspicion of a Financial Aid/Selective
Service connection.
Stenberg points out that a lot of student
anger toward the draft registration is being
misprojected towards the Financial Aid office, " I don't know anyone more sensitive
and responsible than the people here in the
Financial Aid office . We all oppose it (the
Solomon Amendment} ... we think it is inappropriate." He continues to say, "We really
hope this is found to be unconstitutional. As
it is, we become adversaries to our own
students.
Stenberg a lso pointed out that TESC is a
relatively new school without the large endowments and scholarship funds that other
schools have, which makes even more difficult the task of finding alternative aid for
non-registrants. He stated that if the
Solomon Amendment is not found unconstitutional the school will have to find
some other forms of financial aid for
resisters.
For the time being, non-registrants who
would normally be eligible for aid should
visit the financial aid office. Students seeking spiritual counseling or general information can contact Innerplace. And all students
interested in helping to oppose the draft or
helping non-registrants are invited to attend
a NOCARD meeting on the first and third
Wednesday of each month . NOCARD can
be reached at 352-2597.
page 9

I"

(s P
Sports wrap:

0

Booters end season
By Karen Denman
Sailing:
WWU sponsored the TlMM ANGSTEN
Eliminations in Bellingham, . Saturday,
November 5. Between a 3 hour calm, V. inch
hail stones, and squalls sporting 30 knot
winds' the Geoducks Sailing team only
managed a seventh place finish out of nine
places. The Greeners in their practice sessions
have not had the experience of sailing in
heavy breezes as they experienced Saturday
in Bellingham Bay.
While the major portion of the team was
in Bellingham, the Soling, a 27' racing sloop,
was placing first in a local race. The Soling
logged a 44 second winning margin over the
10Yz mile course.

Cross Country:
On the field of competition the Harriers
outdid themselves. Katie Brown and Brant
McManigal had outstanding times with 22: 19
and 31: 19, a PR (personal record), respectively . Dave Kucera had the fastest time of
all the Geoducks with a clocking of 31: II.
The cross-country team now turns to the
running club and begins training for local
competition.

Men's Soccer:
The Greeners journeyed to Pacific
Lutheran Boxer country, Wednesday,
November 2, for what proved to be a colorful game. The field conditions were
treacherous as skies dumped heavy rains on
the Portland area. The muddy field conditions and unskilled Boxer team made for a
very physical game. Tempers flared from the
onset of the match until the final whistle terminated the paly .
The first half of play resulted in constant
pressure being applied by the Geoducks to
the Pacific goalie. Although a relatively small
number of serious shots on goal were taken
the half ended in a 0-0 tie,
At half time Coach Arno Zoske implored
his charges to •• forget the poor play by your
opponents . Let ' s play our game and work
on spreading out the offense to stop you
bunching. "
With the opening of the second half the
Greeners got their mud together, taking
Coach Zoske's direction, spreading their
game out. This resulted in their first goal,
scored by Walt Johnson, 15 minutes into
play . The score was a misdirected off-speed
shot that rolled into the net as the Boxer
goalie lost his footing in the mud and fell
helplessly away from the play.
Although the one goal would have been
enough to win the contest, the Geoducks
finished the Boxers off, punching in a perfect
header. The goal by Jim Ritchie was scored
off a lovely cross from Stan Johnson. The
Pacific goalie was preparing a mid-air catch
when the leaping Evergreen forward beat
him to the ball.
The Boxer frustration was escalated and
the referee whistled himself breathless issuing yellow and red cards in an attempt to
keep the game under control. Before the time
ran out, five players were ejected; three were

)
Trot for your turkey
R

T

-I

More than 100 competitors are expected
to enter the thirteenth annual Turkey Trot
hosted Saturday, November 19, by the
Athletic Department at Evergreen.
The 2.7 mile run on a generally flat pavement or soft cinder shoulder course, begins
at 11 a.m. Saturday. Thanksgiving turkeys
will be awarded to men and women winners
in eight age divisions: 0-7, 8-12,13-19,20-29,
30-39, 40-49, 50-59 and 60 and over.
Registration starts at 9:30 a.m. in front of

The Evergreen Sailing team competed
against seven other colleges this past
weekend. The races were held on Budd Inlet just south of Olympia Shoal. John Filmer
and crew provided the Seawulff for a boat
rotation base during the regatta, and Bill
Sheldon of the South Sound Sailing Society
provided his boat Imposition as a spectator
craft. Coach Lou Powers and his race committee, Leanne Manns and Lome Pogue ran
nine races in IS to 20 mph winds. A couple
of capsizes added to the excitement as the
boats planed on the off-wind legs . This kept
the chase boat with Karen Erickson and Gary
Cantrel on their toes.
Sunday morning's skipper's meeting at
Fiddlehead Marina found the competitors
huddled on the dock looking out at steady
20 mph winds with higher gusts. The race
committee made the decision to hold the
day's racing in the more protected inner harbor. The course was set when wind began
gusting to 35 mph and the bay turned into
a mass of whitecapped waves. (Winds were
later reported at 53 mph.) A few boats had

M-F 10-8, Sat.l0-6, Sun.12-5
352-8988

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the Evans Library and costs $4 to cover cost
of awards, which also include chickens for
second place winners, Cornish game hens for
third, and a dozen eggs for those who cross
the tape fourth in their division. All competitors will take home at least a survivor's
ribbon.
Further information on the race can be obtained by calling the Campus Recreation
Center at 866-6000 X6530.

1 Notch
6 Scram
10 Sore cover
14 Shack
15 Luau dance
16 Therapy
17 The end
18 Jacob's
brother
19 Impulse
20 Contribute
22 Great Lake
24 Wild animal
26 Lower
27 Sound
31 Rob 32 N.Y. city
33 Ultra 35 Combine
38 Grasslands
39 Made pies
40 Venture
41 Flight
42 Oregon city
43 Color
44 Big - , Cal.
45 Company VIP
47 Black eyes
51 Layer
52 - bacon

59

61
62
63

64

65
66
67

punch
Black
Valetta's land
Ratline
All roads lead
to Habitual
Parasitic
eggs
Goulash
Game birds

DOWN
Not bare~oot
Italian lake
Bakery unit
Fineries
5 High spirits
6 Pronoun
7 Tobacco
chaws
8 Vocally
9 Meddled
10 Move quickly
11 Eve, Marie or
Pierre
12 Toronto
foot bailers
13 Beverages
1
2
3
4

21 Time period
23 Epic verse
25 Maritime
27 Drumbeat
28 Athena
29 Squad
30 Enjoyed
34 Forgive
35 Remain
36 Hence
37 Wapiti's kin
39 Obstacles
40 Lessen

42 Appealed
43 Stein
44 Rattraps
46 Split
47 Contemn
48 Asian capital
49 Clumsy
50 Clog
53 Alaska city
55 Chimney
56 Greek letters
57 Rhonchus
60 Original

Sail team takes 1 st

ItSl Village Cooper PI Ad-Harrison

:

'

Women's Soccer:

STARBUCK'S COFFEES
BEER MAKING SUPPLIES

BILL'S CAPITOL
SCUBA

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This week's crossword

ACROSS

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107 East State St .
Olympia, Wa 98501

M

E

5

Solution can be found on back page.

Wine Shop & Deli
pive School- An Experience
Basic Scuba Class $75.00
357-- 4128

S

wearing green.
The men went on to entenain Whitman College here Saturday.
The 1983 men's soccer team played like
winners all year and finished the season with
a 3-0 win over Whitman College.
The heavy rains of the last few games
didn't seem to slow the powerful Geoducks
down. They played as if the weather was 70
degrees and sunny.
Finishing their season with a 7-3-4 record,
Coach Zoske was very pleased with his
players. "They played as a team, talking and
helping each other. The players were very
versatile playing different positions," he
said.
The 3-0 score over the Whitman team was
not indicative of the domination of the
Geoducks play. They totally controlled the
tempo of Saturday'S match in a fashion that
has come to be a trade mark of the Greener
game. With the intensity they played with on
Saturday the score could easily have been
6-0. The men finished their season with a
superlative 7-3-4 record. Congrats!

The finale of the 1983 intercollegiate soccer season at TESC could be equated to the
finale of a firewoiKs--d1Splay, the best is
always saved for the last.
The lovely day of soccer started with 2
games beginning at 9 a.m .; TESC vs . WWU,
while PLU and UPS squared off at one
another. The winners of the 9 a.m. games
were to advance to the final of the Division
I NAIA Women's Regional finals.
Both morning games proved to be
showcases for an excellent brand of soccer.
The UPS, PLU contest went into over time,
with the Lady Lutes finally coming out on
top with a 3-2 victory. The game could have
gone either way as the momentum swung
back and forth between the evenly matched
clubs .
At the same time TESC women were
becoming respectable with by far their best
game of the season. The defense was
awesome. WWU would blast down the field
on the attack only to have a fired up defensive Geoduck strip them of the ball. The
Greener's offense began to click providing
a number of good runs on the Vikings goalie.
The first period ended in a 0-0 knot.
At half time the team was spurred on by
a spirited Coach Tamar Chotzen, "Now you
know you can play soccer, you are still in this
contest. Show them you have heart, play
them tight on defense and continue to
pressure that goalie."
The Greener's took the field for the second
half kick off more mindful of their worth as
a soccer team . They clawed and kicked their
way over the superbly conditioned fields
grudgingly giving up one goal. The intensity of the Evergreen women continued up to
the ending whistle. The 1-0 score was the
lowest of the season for the high-powered
WWU team. The final season ledger found
the Geoducks at 3-8-1.

(

117 N. Washington, Olympia, WA. 98501

943-1997 & 943-1114

ventured out of the marina and capsized
before reaching the race course. The race
committee then cancelled the races for the
day, basing the final results on Saturday's
races.
Sailing for TESC in the A-fleet was team
captain Gordon Smith and crew Mark
Royhans with the help of middle crew Peter
Lindsey (winners of last week's race in the
Soling Class Sloop). Smith and Royhans sailed very consistently throughout the regatta,
never finishing below 4th. The B-fleet consisted of Barry Brown as skipper with crew
Andrew McDonald and alternate David
Born. Brown sailed a very competitive race,
his lowest finish being a third . The results
are as follows:
I. TESC
2. Western W A
3. U.Washington
4. U.Oregon
5. Reed College
6. Seattle U.
7. Simon Frasier
8. Skagit Valley

1"17 ANo'-'-f~P. -'At-L '1()<A CAN ~A7" PI2ZA NIGH"--" PP.Aw5 ( 0
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RAFTING THE GRAND
CANYON
By popular demand,
WOMANTREK has arranged
a 14 day all women's trip on
the Colorado River, In 14
days we'll cover 225 miles
of river thru exquisite
canyonland. Take advantage
of this opportunity to join
women from all over the USA
IN experiencing what we
consider to be the most special
of the "Seven Wonders"
of the Earth.

DATE: SEPT. 10-23, 1984
COST: $1350.00 Advance
Deposit of $150.00 due
DEC. 30,.1983!!
Write: WOMANTREK,
P.O. Box 1765, Olympia,
WA. 98507. 357-4477.

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November 17. 1183

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Good th,.ough 11-3o-B3

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November 17. 1183

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Page 11
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