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Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 12, Issue 18 (March 15, 1984)
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Volume 12 Issue 18
. The weekly student newspaper of The Evergreen State College
. March 15, 1984
Impressive
candidates
visit campus
'.
;~
J.
By Allison C. Green
Two impressive candidates for
Evergreen Presidency visited campus last
week. Joan Wadlow, Dean of the College
of Arts & Sciences at the University of
Wyoming talked with the campus community March 4 and 5 and Patrick Callan,
Director of the Post Secondary Education
System in California was here March 7 and
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As Dean, Wadlow
oversees
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departments and such diverse aspects as the
observatory, the marching band and
cheerleaders, and the glassbower. She commands a larger budget and group of faculty
than all of Evergreen.
Looking a little tired, as all the candidates ha\'e on such rigorous schedules,
Wadlow addressed students, faculty and
staff, with a sense of humor and an openness to concerns. She often defined each
question before answering, almost as
students learn to define terms in seminar.
Asked about her understanding of interdisciplinary study she said, "I feel very
comfortable with the academic programs
Evergreen offers." She cited several
departments she helped organize at the
University of Wyoming including
Women's Studies and American Studies.
These studies are somew hat similar to
studies at Evergreen.
A student asked what was Wadlow's
commitment to incorporating cultural
diversity into cu rriculum. Wadlow
answered, "Thi s is not going to be done
overnight. It is somewhat comparable to
eHorts to incorporate women's iss ues
throughout the curriculum." First the
faculty must be involved in setting goals
and priorities of curriculum. She illustrated
ways the University has worked toward
diversifying its curriculum . The University used external grants for retreats and
weekend workshops for faculty. Temporary lecture budgets were more frequently used to bring in speakers that would promote these goals. And administrators
established a requirement for students to
take a non-western culture course befor e
g radua ting . She ca lled these steps temporary solutions until non-western curriculum is integrated throughout studies.
On the political side, Wadlow says she
knows how to work a legislature. "I don't
mind using the right type of evidence to
support my position," She added, "There
are effective ways to sell your case."
Her first two months as president would
put her on the road in a "systematic effort
to identify constituencies."
In Olympia she would immediately join
the Chamber of Commerce "Obviously the
Rotarions won't accept me .. [though]
they'll like me as a luncheon speaker."
More people turned out to see Wadlow
than for all the previous candidates,
presumably to see the one woman
candidate.
Less showed up on Friday to see Patrick
Callan, the next applicant. Callan, Director of the Post Secondary Education
System of Californaia, also oversees a
larger organization then Evergeen: 134
public colleges and universities .
Olympia is familiar to Callan. He spent
three years here as Director of the Co un cil for Post Secondary Education.
THE EVERGREEN
STATE COLLEGE
Otympia. WA 98505
"Sandino lives in the jight against Yankee imperialism" reads the wall behind this Nicaragua" youth.
Evergreen st udent Diane Wiatr went to Nicaragua this past January, to travel arollnd the country a nd docum ent her experiences throug
writing and photography. While in Nicaragua, Wiatr worked in the cotton field s and in daycare .:enters, spo ke with dozens or peop
espousing different viewpoints and educated herself on several issues confronting the Sanctinista governmc nt a nd it's peopl e.
Wiatr's account of her trip to Nicaragua can be found on pages 2 and 3.
Wearing a brown suit and paisley tie,
Ca llan moved in front of the table to address his audience at close range. He said
his first experience in Olympia was looking for an apartment. At one place, the
landlord volunteered, apparently to in·
dicate the high quality of the apartment,
that he didn't rent to Evergreen students.
Callan said he supports Evergreen's style
of education. "The evaluation is part of
the learning process and I like that ... It's
a good respo nsibilit y for studen ts [to
have]. "
But Callan does sense problems here .
"Evergreen is no more immune to rigidi ty, to pulling the wagons into a circle, than
any other organization." He added, "As
much as I'm attracted to this place I don't
think the answers have been found yet."
One of thc more informal candidates,
Callan generated a lot of discussion . At the
end of the session he asked questions of his
audience. He wanted to know their concerns and worries. People responded with
fears about growth and change, about
faculty burnout , about how Evergreen can
maintain a fresh approach.
These questions have been surfacing
again and again as people have been Joan Wadlow, above, and Patrick Callan
right, 5peak with students, jaculty and staff
meeting the applicants .
The next presidential candidate, Murray as they visit campus.
DePillars, speaks to the college community Friday, March 16 at I in CAB 108. He
is the only black candidate.
CPJ
•
IS
PHOTOS BY ALLISON GREEN
taking a break too
The iss ue of the CPJ you currently hold in your hands is the final one of the winter
quarter. We too are leavi ng for a few weeks to regroup and prepare for the spring.
The next issue will be published on April 12,1984. This means that th e deadline will
be Monday, April 9. So, Here's your chance to write that letter you've becn putting off.
In th e meantime, have a good break.
'\
NONPROFIT ORG .
U.S. POSTAGE
PAID
OLYMPtA. WA
PERMtT NO. 65
A plea/rom Nicaragua: "Will you please tell
your president to,stop murdering my people'"
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The Embargo
The battle being fought from the Reagan
administration is not only a military one
but also economic. The U.S. refuses to give
loans or lines of credit to Nicaragua to purchase medicine or healthcare equ ipment.
The U.S. trade embargo has severel y
hampered Nicaragua's efforts to rebuild
it's economy. Nicaragua is nonindustrialized and the fourth poorest na tion in this hemisphere. For years
Nicaragua was depe ndent on the U.S. for
many of their material goods. Now it is a
la nd of sca reit y. The product s we consider
necess ities are hard to come by and expensive. For th e two mOnlh s I was there, only
one shipload of toothpaste came in from
Bulgaria. It was tasty stuff but after t he
si ng le tube each family was entitled to was
used up, thaI wa, it. The trade embargo
has left many types of eq uipment and
machinery di sabled because new part s a re
unavailable. On the hacienda where I pick-
ll's pre/emilie
10 die a rehl'l,
than li\'(' a sla ve.
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FOlll1der of Ih(' revolution
La Campesilla de A IROdoll; A pascali,
Chill (,lIde!!,a
ed cotton t here were 36 broken cotton
harvest ing machines bearing the labels
John Deere and IH (i'nternational
Harvester). There were only 10 function-.
ing machines left on the farm. Cotton is
the main export crop of Nicaragua so their
influx of desperatley needed money is
decreased because they are unable to clean
all the fields.
The middle class is also targeted in thi s
trade embargo in the hopes that they will
revolt against the FSLN because so many
. consume r goods are unavailable. I found
il to be true that the middle class had their
identity tied up in their consumerism and
that they were irritated at the inavailablity
of both necessi ties and luxury items. They
would complain to me about how difficult
it is now to find Christian Dior perfume
or Adidas tenni s shoes as a result of the
revolution. I found it hard 10 sympat hi ze
knowing that someo ne else in their country now was able to eat every day.
Life during wartime
An effective means of weakening the
Sandinista government, being purs ued by
the U.S, is tht undermining of the
economy of Nicaragua by forcing it to fight
the contras. The developillent of every
social se rvice would be more easily accomplished if Nicaragua didn't have to
sink the majority of its finances into
defe nse. Economic disruption of a country is more subtle and insidious than a large
scale invasion of tanks a nd bombs, and the
U.S. is able to get away wilh it more easily because we don't see U.S. boys returning home dead. As Paulino Castellon who
works at MINSA (Ministry of Health) said,
"The U.S. is not threatened by Nicaragua
because of military strength. Nicaragua
doesn'l even have an armed jet that could
make it to the U .S ... or a ship that could
ge t farther than C uba. Nicaragua is a
Ihreat because it is an example. The structure of thi s soc iety has changed, the production relations have changed, and the
spread of thi s exa illple is con lagious. The
Hondurans will say,' my God, why should
I have to pay for school when it's free in
Nicaragua!' ,
Two of the greatest accomplishments of
the revolution have been in improved
health care and the education/ literacy campaigns. The progress they've made in combating diseases through nationwide vaccination days are astounding . Because of
t his, medical workers and popular
EI nino sin ropa; Monimbo, Masaya
educators are targeted by the contras. In
1983 ,64 popular educators (those who go
to rural areas to maintain adult literacy)
were murdered, and 16 health clinics were
burned to the ground. In the northern
border areas go ing to classes is a
clandestine activity. The Reagan administration continues to be relentless
about crushing the Sanddanistas, by
whatever mean s possible because it must
show and maintain its power over Third
World countries. However, it is my belief
that an invasion of Nicaragua by the U.S.
would be doomed to failure and result in
Ihe needless deaths or thousands of
Americans and innocent Nicaraguans. The
people are as passionate in their hatred of
the imperialist 'yanqui ' as they are proud
of their culture and revolution. During
their struggle for self-determination 50,000
Nicaraguas died out of a population of 2.7
million. It seemed as though most everyone
had lost someone dear to them in the war
and they will not allow those deaths to have
occured in va in. I met a few people who
didn't support the FSLN, hadn't supported
Somoza, but don't want their country to
be a battleground for the U.S. either. As
far as I could tell, the majority of
Nicaraguan people are strongly committed
to their futures and to the revolution. The
people are armed, they know their hi story,
and therefore they are aware of the role the
U.S. has had in their past. The Ullited
States will 1I0t pass, is written in spanish
on the walls all over the country. They
stand strong on that statement.
One of the questions I get asked most
frequently with regard to my travels in
Nicaragua is, "Was it life-threatening?"
No, I was never in the wrong place at
the wrong time . When I picked cotton on
teh Gulf of Fonseca I could see the small
islands that were the U.S. Navel frigates
lurking about looking for an excuse to invade in the name of deomcracy. When I
was in Esteli, the most tnilitant city in
Nicaragua where there continue to be
funerals several times weekly for those killed at the front, I could hear gunfire, dis tant in the night. It made my skin crawl
bur the locals hardly seemed to notice. I
wa grieved to know that Nicaragua cannot
rebuild in peace because the policies of the
government under which I live doesn't
allow self-determination for any nation
with conflicting ideologies . Nicaragua has
fought the same war against the U,S. for
a century and the evil Qf the U.S. is persistant in this battle.
The presence of war in Nicaragua can
be felt in the daily conversation on buses
and in the press. There is a strong belief
that if Reagan is re-elected there will be an
immediate invasion. Not an unjustified
sentiment, but they seemed to believe that
if a Democrat was put in office the pressure
would be lifted frolll Nicaragua's shoulders
and borders. I felt it my patriotic duty to
inform Nicaragua that, historically speaking, that wasn't necessa rily the case. They
also had mi staken impress ion that the
ave age citizen of the U.S. was politically
well-informed and in solidarity with
Nicaragua and Central America because
there are representatives of the U.S. in their
country. I felt it important to give them the
straight dope so they wouldn't give the
American people more credit than we
deserve.
In January I went with my language
school to talk with one of the new Dayeare
centers in Managua. We brought your
basic dimestore balloons for the children
because even such a common toy is a
treasure for Nicaraguan youths. During the
talk a balloon popped with a bang near the
ear of a Nicaragua woman . She jumped
from her chair and yelled," Ah, Dios! Oh
my god! Amerika's coming!"
There was a moment of stunned silence
on the part of the U.S citizens. I was
striken with shame for what the U.S . has
done to the lives of Nicaraguans. 1 wanted
to ask forgiveness.
A 16 year old Sandanista police officer
escorted me home one night when I was
lost in the maze of small unmarked streets
that made up my barrio. We joked and
chatted as we walked along, and I asked
him what he thought of the U.S. He
became very serious. He said he thought
the U.S. was a very big, very highly
developed nation technologically and
economically speaking. "What your country has failed to develop," he said, "is a
consciousness. Nicaragua has this, and that
is how we are s uperior to the U .S."
Feminismo
There arc >;everal int eresting aspects of
li t'c in Nicaragua worth c.xp loring. What
"o ll ows is a brief overview o f some of I he
i>sues I found cO lllpell ing durin g my stay
in Ni caragua.
v Check out our
lower prices
on film products!
PROOUCTSBY
Kodak
The Evergreen State
CoUege Bookstore
Juventuda/ Mercado; Mataga/pa
Page Z
This is a hot issue. The Reagan administration took full advantage of
manipulating the Miskito "problem" to
put the Sandinista government in an in humane, racist, se lf-serving light. I perceil'e
the problem concerning the Miskito
population in Nicaragua to be relat iv ely
simple. However, th e answer to the problems the revolution has caused for them
is considerably more eompli(ated. Basically, the Miskito Indi ans are of a different
culture from the Nicaraguans. They didn't
participate in the revolution to any great
extent and see it as a great disruption in
their lives. And it is . The Miskito population of 60,000 have traditionally lived in
the northea ste rn part of Nicaragua a, well
as the so uthwe stern pari of Hondura, .
They didn't observe borders as such and
traveled from one area to another rreely.
Now with the mntras (U.S. backed rebc!»
just across the border, they don't have the
same freedom to travel. Their extended
familie s are divided bel ween regions and
many of them have been relocated against
their wills by the FSLN. The people who
have chosen to go 10 Honduras are
recruited by the conl'ras to fight the Sandinistas with promises of a return to th eir
traditional homeland. Recently the contras
have been terrorizing the Miskitos so they
haven ' t got any choice but to fight or be
found in another mass grave. They are fleeing back into Nicaragua with tales of
horror.
They want to be left alone to practice
their religion, language and traditional
culture. The Sandanistas can't afford to
have the contras take over any bit of
Nicaraguan territory because it would provide the U.S . with a cause for a beachhead
from which to launch a full-scale invasion
of Nicaragua.
The FSLN acknowledges that it was a
great blunder on their part to move the
Miskitos against their will, but the govern ment simply didn't know of any other way
to protect their territory. It seems to be the
issue most talked about in post - revolutionary Nicaragua, primarily beca use it is
a negative issue. The Honduran deathsq uad killings of the Miskito, on the other
hand, has yet to be critically examined by
the western press.
The rights of the
Miskitos have been subordinated to the
rights of the revolution, and the FSLN
doc." ,,'t know how to proceed.
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The Miskito Indians
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Diane Wiatl
"So. how was it ')"
"S ('~ any Comm i ~, down th ere?"
"Wa~ yo ur life threatl'ne (P"
"Do they haw th e wor>! cuisine in the
world'?' ,
.. And. what about cI'll';orship , abo rtion.
t h~ \1i skil0 i"uI"!"
1' /11 \\riti ng in re'po me to the delu ge of
qtl~,ti(\1IS I'\'c recI'ivcd sinc e returning to
[\L' rgrecn. I spenl .Iallllary and Feb ruar y
thi s yea l in Nicaragua a l tending language
,dlOlll in Managua, picki ng cOlto n in thc
11l)rtbw("t , and Irave ling through theco\llltr!. I "ent down with the certainty that
1' 1 L'l'y \l'o rd rrom t he Reagan adillinist rat iOIl conce rnin g Nicaragua was a lie, but
no t a, sure that the glowing reports in left\' publications were altogether Iru e. I
traveled 10 Nicaragua wit h the saille intenl
as thousands of other North Amcril'ans
and European s who have visit ed there in
t he last couple years: I wanted to ,ee how
a nat ion with a young revolutionary sys tem
proclaillled Marxi,t-Leninist, had changed Ihc daily li ves of it , cilizens.
I ca n writ e onl y about general impression s and observations. I don't claim to be
a n cx pert on Nicaragua and didn't
a ~'o ciat' ? wilh Comc ndant e Daniel Ortega
o r Tomas Borge so I don't have th e inside
scoop . I Jo believe, however, lhat the
Frenle Sa ndini s ta Libcracion Nacional
(FSLN) represents the int eresls of the people and workers . It 's sla rtlin g to be in a
co untry where heads of qate are spoke n
or affectiona tely by rirst name.
Nicaraguans arc a very warm, hospitab le
people. I was treated with great kindness ,
and often overw helmed by the amount of
affection I was shown. So, it' s apparent,
Nicaraguan.s do clearly differentiate bctwcen U.S . citizens a nd th e U.S. govern·
mcnt. I was often to ld to give messages to
Ro nald Reagan for t hcm. One reli gious
lI1an said, "There is no co ntradiction between religion and revolution. We use fl our
to make hol y I'olllmunion warers. So tell
Ronald Reagan Ihat when he denies .
Nicaraguam f1uur. he denies children the
., acrament." What I heard more cOlll mon ly
was, "We wa nt peace in our country. Will
I'O U please tell your president to stop
Illurder in g my people?" With that as the
co mmon scntim ent , I am surpriscd that I
was nc ver appruached with hostilit y.
"0
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Cooper Point Journal
This is a soc ial / economic revolution
without much of a feminist perspective.
The thoughts of Andrea Dworkin or
Adrienne Rich (American feminists)
haven't made it to Nicaragua yet. Because
Nicaragua lacks the feminism that we
North Americans know and idealize, I've
heard American women here discount the
entire revolution . I can't defend the maledominated Junta or Council of State. Even
though the revolution is based on Marxism, there is inherent in that system,
numerous unanswered questions about
how to change the sexist indoctrinations of
a nation .
Before my stay in Nicaragua I was
critical about the priorities of the FSLN being different than those of a North
American feminist. That abortion is still
illegal is something I initially found
abhorent. What I hadn't realized is that the
consciousness of these Latina women is
such that the majority of them are [lot in
favor of legalized abortion. It is a delicate
emotional and ethical question particularly in a country still very tied to the church.
Even contraceptives are controversial in
Nicaragua. As is apparent in the U.S. it is
difficult to break religious conviction on
this issue .
The health priorities have instead been
focused on preventing diseases, such as
malaria and polio, through vaccination
programs, and combating diarrhea which
March 15, 1984
Diane Wiatr went to Nicaragua armed
with Nikon camera and loads of film . A
slide presentation of Diane's trip will he
scheduled for next quarter and prints will
be moun led and presented in a gallery setling as well. Look for announcements early
in the spring quarter.
has been the number one killer of children.
Although abortion is still illegal, only abortionists are pro sec uted, and then only in
cases of malpractice. Underground abortion is a class privilege so it has no place
in a revolutionary society. The important
issue here, however, is that as soon as the
majority voices desire for abortion a law
will be passed to legalize it.
Currently, little is being done to dismantle traditional sex roles in divisions of labor
in Nicaragua. This inequality is magnified
by the fact that women have been active
in the military actions of the Sandinista
government fighting side by side with men .
Yet Nicaraguan women are still being placed in the workforce primarily as unskilled
laborers. They also hold the new positions
in day care and teaching. Women also st ill
have the primary responsibility of the home
and children.
On the brighter side, the women I met
in Nicaragua had a strength and belief in
themselves which is unsurpassed even by
that which I've seen in the U.S. I met a 12
year old girl named Erica who delivered
contact bombs and messages to the Sandinistas before the triumph. Her self-image
was one of power and will. Other women
who fought in the revolution were equally
empowered and intent on seeing this struggle through as they perceived correct. Their
actions stem from knowing their rights as
human beings rather than intellectualization of theory from any feminist
perspective.
>
La Mama y Julio, Familia Hernandez; Catarina, Masaya
Cooper Point Journal
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Last Tuesday as I participated in my first
caucus, I relt overwhelmed by the commitment to political change this process
represents, The enthusiastic turn-out of
over 50 people, compared to only 10 in
1980, at Olympia's 15th precinct caucus
seemed to indicate a change from the
widespread polit ical apathy, which elected
our current head of state, to a willingness
to become informed and involved in shaping the political futur e of thi s country.
I arrived at my caucus location 30
minutes late and soa king wet. After we
<; igned our name s a nd candidate
preferences fo r the registrar, gavc whatever
cas h contribution we co uld afford, and
heard t he ca ucu s rules, we began discussing ge neral quest ions and iss ues as three
people of differing political persuasio ns
tallied the first ballot in a separate room.
Though t he di scussion was relaxed and informal, the mood was quite serious and
co ncerned. Befor the din had completely
subsided order was called to announce the
results of the fir st ballot. The crowd fell
utterly silent as an elderly gentleman rose
and slowly read from the slip of paper he
held in both hands: "33 votes for Hart,
nine for Mondale , five for Jackson, and
two undecided ." People immediately
nooded the room with sounds of approval,
surprise, disgust and confusion.
The chairperson soon restored order by
explaining that for every 10 votes a candidate received, one dclegate wou ld be
assigned to that candidate. He reopened
the noor to give interested parties a chance
to convince each other of the necessity for
a delegate. A loud voca l uproar ensued
from which one could barely distinguish
the chair's call for order over the impassioned voices calling out: "Unified vote!"
"I should be able to vote ror who I want!"
"Washington's known for its liberality!"
"We just want him ou t of there!" and so
on.
When all those wishing to have their say
had had it, thanks to the chairperson insisting on orderly procedure, those wishing
to chan ge their vote d id so and the same
elderly gentelman who read the previous
results read the seco nd ballot. With his
slow, deliberate manner, he stood and read
to the tense faces filling the room: "Mondale, nine; Hart, 27; and Jackso n, 13."
Thererore from this precinct Hart would
receive four dclegates and Jackson one
delegate to procecd to the County Caucus
at the West Water Inn on April 21. The
.
resolutio ns late into the eveni ng.
In concluding this brief description
outlining my first exposure and involvement with the caucus system, I must say
it was an exciting educational evenl. But,
by far the most inspiring aspect of this
evening was the enthusiasm and involvement or so many people with varying
backgrounds, uniting to achieve a common
goa l.
Workshops on war tax
resistance held
A workshop on resisting federal war
tal'es will he held on Satu rday March 17
from 10 a. m . to 3:30 p.m. at the YW CA
Fr iendship Hall, 220 E. Union. The
workshop is sponsored by the Olympia
Fellowship of Reconciliation and the
Olympia Friends Meeting.
More and more people around the country are opposing war, according to Fram
Williams, workshop orgamzer. I n order to
make their lives co nsistent with their
beliefs, more and more of those people arc
refusing to pay a portion of their federal
income tax and / or their federal telephone
tax. Many of them are se nding the money .
instead to charitabl e or peace-related
o rganizations, and notifying the govern ment of their actions. Williams has
donated to the food bank money she
withheld , as an indication of how her con-
science says money shou ld be spent.
Rev. Paul Jeffery, a Methodist minister
from Elma, will discuss spiritual reasons
and results or resisting war taxes. Lisa
Hicks, a nurse from Seattle, will discuss
variou s resistance methods and their con sequences. Some have low risks. Several
local persons will share their own personal
experiences . Ot her presentations and
discussions will complete the afternoon.
Participants shou ld bring brown-bag
lunches. Chi ld ca re will be provided.
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Cooper Point Journal
By John McGee
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The bottle of Dom Perignon smashed
against the bow, and a deafening cheer rose
from the crowd as the graceful craft slid
down the way onto the sea. Well, not quite,
but that's the way it should have been. The
date: January 19; the scene: the "machine
room;" deep in the bowels of the Daniel
J. Evans Library; the event: E~ergreen's
new academic computer system had come
on-line.
Evergreen's new computer is a Data
General "Eclipse" MV /10000. It uses an
operating system called AOS/VS (Advanced Operating System/ Virtual Storage). The
development of the Eclipse was the subject
of the 1982 Pulitzer-Prize-winning article
"The Soul of a New Machine." The
MV / 10000 is approximately four times as
fast as the College's previous academic
compter system. It has six megabytes
(6,000,000 bytes) of memory and one
gigabyte (that's 1,000,000,000) characters
of disk storage. Essentially, this means that
it can accomodate more users doing different things and still be faster than the old
system. It also a llows students to program
in up to eight programming languages (and
maybe more later), compared to the one
language available on the old system.
The $405,000 acquisition was funded by
the legislature last year, and the acquisition process began during the summer. The
MV / lOOOO was finally selected over two
R
G
competitors in October, after what selection panel member John Aikin described
as an "exhausting and exhaustive" selection process·. (John Aiken is the former
director of Computer Services.) The other
members of the selec tion committee were
dean Ron Woodbury, Computer Services
staff members Chas Douglas and Van
Shafer, faculty members Judith Bayard
and David Paulsen, and students Joel
Schmidt and Mark Lewin.
So what does this mean to the Evergreen
community? Generally, the acquis ition was
seen as both a necessity and as an opportunity. The Hewlill-Packard 2000 computer which the new computer is replacing
has been described as "archaic" and,
moreover, Hewlett Packard no longer
guarantees that replacement parts can be
made available. The new computer is
subs tantially more powerful and flexible,
and respresents the "state of the art" in
computer technology. It also a llows
student s to use the same software as other
similar computer systems, in contrast with
the old system, which h~d evolved into a
one-of-a-k ind .
There will be an open house at the Computer Services terminal room (LIB 2408)
on April II, from 3-6. Tours of the
machine room and demonstrations or computing resources available to students and
faculty are among the act ivities plamled.
All members of the campus community are
welcome.
R E E N ).
Central American teachin slated for ,April 11
By Cliff Missen
The afternoon will be devoted to one
hour workshops to be led by each of the
speakers, with the emphasis being the
speaker's particular area of expertise.
The evening's event will provide the
capstone as Costigan and the state department representative present their positions
in a public lecture which will provide room
for general questioning from the audience.
The day will wrap up with a panel of the
day's speakers and commu nity members
fielding and posing questions in a debatesty le forum.
In addition, all throughout the day film s
will be shown, averag ing a half-hour in
length , which address Central American
issues. Those schedu led already are Ed
Asner's America's in Transition, a 1981
film covering the history of U.S. involvement in EI Salvador, Guatemala, and
Nicaragua; Seeds 0/ Revolution. a 1980
ABC television documentary on the operations of U.S. international fruit corporations in Ccntral America; Nicaraguan
Literacy Crusade, a look at the literacy
campaign initiated in 1980 which has tripl ed the literacy rate in that country; Todos
Santos Cuchamantan, a documentary on
Guatema lan village economy; and EI
Salvador: Allother Viet Nam, a documentary which argues t he paralle ls bctween
U.S. involvemcnt in Central America and
in the carly stages of the Viet Nam war .
"Thesc are just thc things that we've got
in concrete so far," added Barnes. "We
expect to have more activities set by April
11th. "
The Teach-in on U.S. foreign policy in
Central America and the Caribbean is opcn
to the public and all the events arc free.
Donations will be glad ly accepted.
For more information, or to offer a
hand, contact: .lcssica Barncs at 866-8831.
Shawn Sinclair at 754-3825, or Terry Lee
Bark~dale
at
943-3695 .
The Students for a Humane Foreign
Policy announced their plans for their
April II Teach-in on U.S. foreign policy
in Central America and the Caribbean this
week, revealing a full slate of distinguished speakers and dynamic evcnts to fill the
day-long event.
The speakers include : a state Depart ment spokesperson, yet unknown; Giovanni Costigan, professor emeritus of History
at t he University of Washington and wellknown lecturer; Evergreen's own Stephanie
Coontz; Collette Craig , a linguist from the
University of Oregon who recently toured
Central America; and Felipe Ortez, a
representative of ANDES - the Teachers
Union of EI Salvador.
"The State Department can't tell us yet
who is going to come," sa id Terry
Barksdale, an organizer. "But they've
assured LIS that it will be someone who
plays a key role in the policy making. "
"We've taken some flak for including
a spokesperson from the State Department," said Jessica Barnes, one of the
organizers for the teach-in. "Some people
around here thought that the state department a lready exploits the press enough to
push its point of view. But this is a very
important issue and we want people to
have a chance to sec both sides at the same
time."
The tcach-in will start at 10 in the morning with films and workshops, but the real
fireworks start at noon as the keynote
speake rs, the representative from the state
department and Coont z, present their sides
of the debate for a lunchtime gather ing.
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Washington's legislature came to an
agreement on the state's supplemental
budget in the wee hours of last Friday morning and adjourned the 1984 session.
Among the expenditures, that totaled
around $55 million, was an appropriation
of $400,000 earmarked for The Evergreen
State College.
I I' you overlook the fact that their
business ran a little beyond midnight, this
is the first legislative session to end within
the allotted time (60 days) since 1957.
The TESC allocation is intended to compensate the college for higher enrollment
numbers than were anticipated when the
1983 legislature drew up the sta te 's $8. 1
billion budget for the 83-85 biennium.
Evergreen was expected to have a full-time
enrollment (FTE) of 2209 for the biennium. After registration for Fall 83 was
tallied, this year's FfE was revised to 2350
and next year's was projected at 2400.
The $400,000 will be spent next year to
maintain an average of $2,319 spent per
FfE for the 84-85 school year only. The
school's FTE will not, however, be allowed to surpass 2380 - twenty students short
of expectations. The 141 "extra" students
enrolled this year will not count in the
dollars per FTE average.
The money is to be spent onry for expenses that fall under the heading "instructional." This is money that primarily goes
toward faculty salaries, but it also includes
sa laries for lab aides and miscellaneous
program expenses. TESC will have to make
do with the same number non-instructional
staff it has at present despite the larger student body, since none of the $400,000 can
go toward those areas.
Evergreen's legislative liaison, Stan Marshburn, specu lated that the school will be
ablc to add between eight and ten faculty
members with the extra money, but he
stressed that this was a rough estimate. The
inability to pinpoint exact numbers is due
to severa l factors. For instance, adding a
program in th e natural scien ces is often
more expensive, due to the necessit y of lab
aides, than adding a lit erature program .
More concrete figures will be available
after administrators have determined
which areas need to be enlarged.
E
Evergreen's . new
computer christened
By Bradley P. Blum
chose their delegates.
Mondale supporte rs, disappointed with the
evening's outcome in the 15th precinct, got
to go home early.
At this point we sp lit into two groups to
select by secret ballot which of us would
assumc the duties of delegate for the
respective candidates. Hart supporters
stayed in the living room while the Jackson
supporters convened in the kitchen. We
short ly reconvened and discussed platform
)
TESC ends up
with $400~OOO
'Caucus inspires Greener
B}' David Scull
(
Cooper Point Journal
••
=
•=
•
Page 5
(
F
Thank you,
•
come again
Dear Editor:
Who made that wonderful cartoon of
the opening ceremony of BOB BARKER'S
BIG BOB BARKER BURGERS between
The Smithbow Restaurant and The Rainfield Cafe??
IT SURE DESERVES A SIGNATURE!
Thanks,
SILL Y ISGOODFORUS
Artist and Quizmaster creator Eric
Martin replies, ''It sure does!"
Campus childcare center
needed
Dear Editor:
Hi. About children attending student
functions, and the disturbances some of
them cause. (CP J, Feb 9th) I would bet you
that most student parents either dOl ·'t bring
their children, or, if a child gets unduly
restless, they take it out, and are just as irritated and embarrassed because of irresponsible parents as you and I are.
Sometimes we overlook the many who
carry the added load of being a parent very
well, and notice only the few who don't.
Having been a parent to small children
eleven years ago when I was first on campus, I can appreciate t he problems of being a student-parent, and also , the natural
wish we parents have to expose our
children to experiences we think will later
prove valuable to them. So I wouldn't want
to see arbitrary rules that make it harder
for responsible parents.
Also, some adults' tolerance of children
is greater than others. I happen to have
hi gh tolerance, and enjoy the presence of
children most of the time. Like many other
Evergreen people, I respond to their zest
for life and feel more alive myself around
them. Hut I fully agree with the editorial,
several weeks ago. When some children's
distracting behavior is ignored and
therefore tacitly encouraged regardless of
the rights of others present, I get annoy~d,
and mostly, with the parents of the child .
However, it just doesn't work to .try to
make rules for other people about their exerci se of thoughtfulness in the conduct of
o
their responsibilities. This has to come
from within. We're all still growing in one
way or another.
Maybe if the college could make some
centralized space available as a drop-in
child-care center, managed by a studentparent group on a regular basis, there
would be another option available to
parents who want to attend events. Parents
with a suddenly cranky child could take
him to the center and return to the gathering. Parents with one child of an age to
benefit from an event, but who also have
a smaller child could leave the smaller one
at the center. Unattended children who are
disturbing a gathering could be escorted to
the center if it appeared they were too
young to be unattended. They could await
their parents there.
I f a drop-in child-care center were
managed and staffed by volunteer and
hired child-care people, the sponsors of an
event would not have to either bar children
from attendance or take on the added job
of providing child care.
I also think that when children do
disturb a performance it is up to all of us
in the audience to take action then and
there, quietly letting the children and
parents know what we want.
Thanks for listening,
Peg Wortman
Buddy, can you
spare some
change?
Dear Editor:
Does anyone have change for a dollar
bill? - rarely on this campus. The need
for a "change machine" is, and always has
been top priority - let's make the Change
already. Even iFit were installed in or near
the Security OfFice, or perhaps in the CAB
information booth. With Security open 24
hours a day their staff could offer change.
There are alternatives . The machine in the
library never works, and the xerox
machines stand idle, while we wander
. aimlessly in search of who? He who knows
- because I don't. And this letter will not
even mention the many times the food service machines don't work for weeks on
end. A reply to this letter would be a great
service in itself. Excuse me, while I seek out
another student manager.
Signed,
Most Everyone.
Greenerspeak
u
R
M
)
Navaj.o need our help
Dear Editor:
A situation requiring the immediate atl tention and commitment of those of us living in the United States is the forced relocation of nearly 14,000 Navajo in the Big
Mountain area of their Reservation. It is
nothing less than our responsibility to insure that this shameful devaluation of
human life and rights does not continue to
take place. A call to all of us has come out
of the heart of the Navajo ancestral
homeland asking for non-Indians and Indians alike to come together beginning on
April 19 and continuing through the summer. The Navajo traditionals have sworn
to only be removed if dead or unconscious.
They need people who are willing to
witness their resistance with cameras, pen
and paper, tape recorders and constant
presence. Hard working individuals are
greatly needed to herd sheep, chop wood,
haul water and build structures. Total selfsufficiency, an ability to adjust to culture
shock and a willingness to obey and respect
the elders are also essential in all who feel
so moved to support the resistance by being right with the Navajo.
Here in Olympia, a variety of support
tasks are being developed by a group that
meets every Monday and Wednesday at
3:00 p ..m. in the non-smoking lounge of the
CAB Building's cafeteria floor. All of us
are interested in educating as many people as possible. We were able to raise
enough money among ourselves to purchase an hour long video called The W,.ong
Side of the Fence which we will be showing on campus as soon as it arrives. We
hope to have a polished presentation to
take to community groups in this area in
an effort to expand support beyond
"Greeners" and "hippies." It is extremely crucial to avoid the comfortable trap of
exclusiveness and strive for a unity among
as many races and cultural trap of exclusiveness and strive for a unity among as
many races and cultural groups as possible. This point cannot be stressed strongly
enough. I f we were not so ethnocentric in
this society, we would not be permitting
continued atrocities to be enacted so
regularly against people of color and financial disadvantage right here in our home
country.
.-.. Another support effort is being explored
6y those interested in walk ing all the way
from Olympia to Big Mountain. This par-
Define the term
correct . ..
ticular action would have the advantage of
not only educating people encountered
along the way, but could bring continuLlus
media attention as the walk progressed. It
is also a symbol of supportive memory to
the Long Walk of 1864 that Kit Carson
forced the Navajo to take to Bosque
Redondo, as well as the Cherokee Trail of
Tears. Hundreds of Native Americans died
in both of these tragic walks. Support
vehicles and Olympia-based supporters are
needed to insure this particular event of
simplicity and commitment.
There are those planning to go down in
April by car and at other times throughout
the summer. Building materials and survival supplies of all types are greatly needed. Donations are welcome.
A benefit is in the works tentatively set
for May. We would love to make this a
high quality · event of conscience and
generosity. We call to those with artistic
gifts of all varieties to donate their abilities
to this.
Finally, we are working on becoming a
permanent resource for current information, networking and dependable support
for any who choose to be directly involved in the resistance. Nonviolent commitment is another point we are stressing. The
Navajo have said they will fight to the
death and are likely to use their rifles. The
gift I feel we have to bring is that of our
knowledge and expanding awareness of the
power of nonviolent direct action. Consequently, we are asking all who intend to
be at Big Mountain to seriously consider
the power and place of soul force. It is not
our place or right to tell the Dine (as they
call themselves) how to orchestrate their
struggle, but I do feel that time has come
for the race of oppressors to seek the power
of the heart rather than the fist. Nonviolence ·training will be available this
Saturday, March 17 for all interested, at
the Yogurt Farm, 3133 14th Ave., 352-2597
at I p .m. for those interested in doing
Missile .motor train civil disobedience.
Training will begin at 10 a.m. It i~ hoped
that we soon can make nonviolence training available to all who want it on a regular
basis.
New ideas and faces are greatly desired.
The best of what each one of us has to offer is necessary for the creation of a living
peace.
Swaneagle
"politically
By Shannon O'Neill
+++
+++
MEMBER N.F.C.B.
NON-COMMERCIAL COMMUNITY RADIO IN OLYMPIA
KAOS-FM Drives Into Spring
After several months of heavy preparation, KAOS radio is proud to unveil our first
Membership drive of 1984. Sports. Specials.
Trivia. Comedy. Craziness ... It's all happening on a radio near you April 6 through 15,
courtesy of your local community raDIO
FAVORITE. On those ten days, we'll reveal
the secrets of the ages; the wisdom of a thousand years, and limericks 0' the Gods, in an
effort to get you to pledge your support for
local public radio with no commercials.
So what's in it for me, you ask. KAOS has
several classes 0' membership, each tailored
to the individual needs and tastes of our
listeners. They are:
$15 Supporting Membership: You get a
KAOS bumpersticker, and our Program
Guide delivered to your home for twelve
months.
$25 Subscriber: As a subscriber, you receive
our KAOS Subscriber Card, good for discounts on KAOS T-Shirts, and KAOS
events. PLUS, you'll have the opportunity
to obtain a 10 percent discount on products
and services offered by KAOS patron
businesses. The card actually pays for itself!
Plus the Guide and the bumpersticker.
$40 Producer: You also get our "Certificate
Appreciation", hand calligraphed with
YOUR NAME, as a special friend of community radio.
$89.30 Frequency Membership: All 0' the
above, plus annual reports on the state of
KAOS radio from the General Manager,
issued each July.
$150 Manager: Our dedicated fund. Allows
you to put your money towards programming, operations, or capital investment programs, and receive quarterly reports on our
progress.
In addition, all memberships are available
on an installment payment plan for as little
as $5 a month, and with your first payment,
you'll receive your benefits.
As if this weren't enough incentive, KAOS
also has stashed a pile of goodies in our programming archives, which we will unveil during our membership drive. Buford Thaxton
will feature the music 0' James Bond, and
the Pirates of Penzance with Linda
Ronstadt, on his Cinema Theatre programs
of April 8th and 15th. Linda B's blues program, Thursday morning April 12, will
feature a tape 0' the recent Lonny Brooks
0'
1984
Page,
Market Bros.
To Perform
concert, recorded at J ally Roger's
Roadhouse in Seattle last month. Chris Metz
Smger/songwriter Jim Page will be perforwill be highlighting the work of Seattle jazz ming his unique blend of folk music, social
pianist Scott Cossu on his Tuesday morning commentary and humor in a benefit concert
program April 10.
for KAOS radio on Saturday, April 14, at
In addition to the special program 8:00 p.m. in the lobby of the Evans Library
features, you'll also hear those famous at The Evergreen State College. Appearing
featurettes which are the signature of KAOS with Page will be the Olympia duo of Anmembership drives, including: Things You son Olds, guitar, and Eppo, mandolin,
Can't 'dQ With Your Radio; Subscriberata; known collectively as The Market Brothers.
John Houseman for KAOS; The Olympia
Page is known for his wry and biting wit,
Travelogue; Henry Black's 17 Reasons Why cutting commentary, and clean, competent
You Should Become A KAOS Subscriber; . guitar style. He has made numerous apGremlins; The Truth about the Program
pearances at festivals in the U .S. and Europe
Guide; Richard Nixon for KAOS; Your over the past seven years, and has become
Mother for KAOS; and of course, 10 reasons a noted figure in American folk music circles.
for not pledging money. Plus many, many
In many ways, he is a kindred spirit with
more ... stay tuned for further developments . Woodie Guthrie, and his songs capture the
humor, the tragedy and the irony of the comThe last KAOS membership drive in October 1983 yielded a whopping $3,323.99 in
mon man and the Great Society. He has
pledges, and we know that our audience has penned more than a few classics for our
grown in the past few months. It's up to times, including "White Shoe Blues", in
YOU to help us surpass our previous efforts,
which he satirizes the Young Professional
and keep commercial free radio on the air syndrome; "Miles and Miles", an encapin the South Puget Sound. So, turn, tune in, su lated history of Bay Area Growth; and
and make that pledge ... You too could
"Where You Gonna Run To, Runaway
become a KAOS Subscriber!
Shah?". Page is also a master ' of talking
blues, instantaneous song, and improvisational commentary--all the elements of great
American Folk Music .
Page has recently returned from an extended stay stay in Europe, where he toured
exteilsively in Ireland, Denmark and Sweden.
His latest album, This Movie isfor Real, was
cut in Sweden. Though it has not been releasdeveloping this most important program ... ed in this country, it can be heard as a feature
and speaking of foreign language programs, album on KAOS Variet"y Morning Programs,
KAOS does feature three hours of Spanish each weekday from 6 to 10 a.m.
The Market Brothers will be performing
Language programming every week with EI
Mensaje del Aire, Saturday from 2 to 5pm.
traditional and not-sa-traditional music in
This program has recently received many the genres of bluegrass, swing jazz, and new
positive comments from our hispanic com- acoustic music . One half of Olympia's
munity, and we' d like to thank Jose Valadez Stoney Point bluegrass band, Eppo and An·
and Jose Pineda for their continued efforts ... son have been fixtures of local music and
NEW FOLKS: Elizabeth Johnson, Tuesday KAOS Programming for many months.
Ethnic Music, 1 to 3:30 pm; Kristar Milburn,
Tickets for the Jim Page/ Market Brothers
poetry, 12-1 every other Friday; and a very concert are available at Rainy Day Records
special hello to Paul Felix, Big Band Music, and Positively 4th Street Records in OlymSaturday, 1 to 2 ... finally, Jim Patrick is off pia, and The Evergreen State College
to climb mountains for a couple of months. Bookstore. General admission is $3 .50, or
Tune in Saturday, 7-10 am, for substitute just $3.00 for KAOS ,Subscribers with a
jazz .
validated subscriber card, students and
seniors . We'll see you at the show!
Program Notes Program Notes Program
Jack Ramsey , /984 Program
"To be politically correct you have
to ha ve a mo ra l obligation to
benefit all the people and not just
come from a Liberal or Conserva tive standpoint. It becomes incorrect when it's broken down in to a Liberal vs . Conservative bat tleground. They break down what
the Conservatives stand for and
what the Liberals stand for when
it all really seems to intertwine. The
onl y real difference depends on
which inner group you belong to ."
Page 6
Ceu Ratliffe, Social Historian
Paul Gallegos, /984 Program
Sandy Silva, Great Books
" Is thi s in terms of Evergreen or
1984? I suppose my definition of
politically correct is being aware of
the ramification s of one's action
beyond how they affect that situation. It's knowing that everything
a ffects everything else. At
Evergreen , however, I feel it means
being a s anti-establishment as
possible to the extent that people
close themselves off to reality ."
"To me, politically correct is a very
limiting term that implies some sort
of a framework that you have to
work within . It seems to be a
limiter of one's ability to be
creative. So to me it is an invalid
concept. "
"People who are so obsessed with
their own narrow beliefs that they
won't listen to anyone who opposes
them; a sort of 'holier than thou'
attitude. The cushy liberals are
preaching non-violence yet are
unaWare that violence in certain circumstances may be their only way
for survival. The conservatives supporting violence and destruction to
an extreme with nuclear arms scorn
their humanist opponents. Both
sides are just skimming the surface
and not looking deeply into the
issues. "
Cooper Point Journal
Ter,.y Barksdale, A verage Guy
"Firstly, being politically correct is
not a series of lifestyle decisions
like shopping at the Co-op or riding
your bike to school. I f there is such
a thing it might involve realizing
that the personal world, a world of
individual conciousness, is intensely shaped by the social world. And
that social world is made and
changed by people with grossly
unequal degrees of ecomonic and
political power. So being plitically
correct is not a series of frozen left
wing ideals, but a commitment to
engaging in politics for the sake of
making a society of real human
equality . Amen, Brother."
March 15, 1984
KAOS welcomes back EPPO to our morning variety programming WEDNESDAYS,
6-10 am. He's taking over for long-time morning programmer Petrina Walker, who left
last month, saying she was "tired of being
tired on Wednesday". We wish Petrina all
the best, and are glad to have Eppo back
from his sabbatical at the legislature ...
Hands On The Dial, Sunday at 1:00 pm, has
been taken over by Dave Corbett and
Laurien Weisser. The KAOS training program was left in good hands by our sincedeparted Volunteer Coordinator Rich
Jensen, who's off across the country for a
few months ... Drum Beat from the Northwest Indian Center can be heard weekly on
Monday, 7:00 pm, on KAOS. This half-hour
public affairs program features spokesper-
THE EVERGREEN
STATE COlLEGE
OlympIa, W.A 88505
sons from the Native American community
speaking on issues of concern to us all. Your
host is Lucille Johnson ... Now that the Alive
In Olympia series has concluded its 1984 program, we are proud to present Sunday Evening Is For Kids every Sunday from 7 to 8 pm.
Your Host, Robert Parish, will be reading
children's stories, playing music, and offering what we think will be excellent entertainment for the younger set. We'd like to offer
a special thank-you to the staff of Olympia's
Jo' amily Times magazine for their help and
support in developing this program ... KAOS
would also like to introduce you to our new
Vietnamese language programmer, Hung
Phan. He's taken over the Sunday 5-7 program from Vern Nyugen. Our thanks to
Vern for his several years of hard work in
••••••••••••
NONPROFIT ORG .
U.S. POSTAGE
PAlO
OLYMPIA, WA
PERMIT NO. 65
•
•
7:00-10:00
CLASSIC HICK SHOW
with Bill Wake
Wake up with Bill and hear Romantic, Classical , Baroque. Requests from 9 to 10.
10-11:00
OLD TiiviE RADIO
From the 'Golden Age of the Clamshell .
with Gordon Newby
11:00-1:00
GOLDEN OLDIES
The best from 40's, 50's, 60's ...
with Gordon Newby
1:00-2:30
HANDS ON THE DIAL
Rleb Jensen
Each week features the "debut" of a brand new KAOS programmer. If you would
like to guest host Hands On The Dial and learn how to be a KAOS programmer, just
calI KAOS during regular business hours and we'll see what kind of deal we can work out.
2:30-3:30
KIDSHOW
Troy Montoya
A radio program by kids for kids . Music, comedy, lots of fun . If you're a kid and
are interested in radio, call the station during our operating hours to see how youcan
become a radio programmer .
8:00-10:00
JAZZ FROM DOWN EAST
Lester Young, Bird, Monk, The Hawk, etc .. .
yo un g~ t e rs.
8:00-10 :00
C INEM A THEAT Elt
Buford A, Thaxton
A pril I :
II pril Fools Special
Co medy lo nite is order of business as we hea r suc h scores as The Big Bus by David
S hire; T om Jones by Jo hn Addi son; Elmer Bernstein 's sco res for Airplane a nd Animal
H()us~; a lso we' ll hea r A Funny Thin~ Happened on the Way tll the Forum, ada pted
by Ken T ho rne and ma ny olhers.
A pril R
20 Years of lallles Bo nd
To nite we take a look a l th e mu sic from a ll the J a mcs fio nd film s fr o m Dr. No to
Oc topu ssy a nd Ne ver Say Nev~';'A g·airi·:-wit h sco res written by J o hn Barry , Bill C oni i,
George Ma rtin a nd Marvin Hamlisch. We' ll hear such classic title Iracks as "Gold-fin ger" ,
" No boJ y Docs II Bet ter", " Live a nd Lei Di e", and " All Time High".
April 15
Of IIdvelllures and Wargames
T hi s wee k we'll hea r th e story of Raiders of the Lost Ark with mu sic hy John Williams.
We'll a l ~o li ste n to the sto ry album from Wargames, with mu sic by Arthur B. Rubin stei n, as well as mu sic fro m Return of the Jedi.
A pri I 22
EaSIer Special
Toda y we 'll look a t film s dealing with the time of Easter with sco res from The Robe
by Alfred Newman; Pilate's Easter by Edward D. Zeliff; Jesus of Nazareth by Maurice
Jarre; and Miklos Rozsa's scores fo r Ben Hur and King O' Kings.
New Releases
April 29
Tonit e we hear some new film scores. We'll be playing Chris Young's score for the
ho rro r film, The Power; Bruce Broughton's music for Ice Pirates; Richard Band' s score
fo r the horror film Mutant, and o ther suprises!
RAI)JO VERITE
Mr, Space
alternating weekly with Matt Misterik
Space Smith is KAOS ' variety programmer with a trick or two up his sleeve . Tune
in and see why vari ety really is the spice 0' life . P.S.- Don ' t expect new wave stuff--I
leave th at to Matt.
12:00-1:00
1:00-3:30
1:00-3:30
CELTIC SAMPLER
Annie Broome
Join me on a weekly voyage of exploration of all kinds of things Celtic. Words &
music, songs & dances , ideas & traditions. If it's Celtic we will bump into it, eventually .
6:00-6:30
6:30-7:00
EI)JTION 12
3:30-5:30
RAINY DA V CLASSICS
Raine Corliss
Tune for on in fo r C lassical music in the afternoon, be it rainy or what have you .
5:30-6:30
produced by Bill Eiseman
TOWN TALK
alternates weekly with
WashPIRG REPORTS
produced by Michael Fine & Janet Needleman
Elizabeth Johnson
WORLD FOLK
6:30-7:00
Juli Kelen
3:30-6:00
COOKIN' WITH THE CLASSICS
Featuring an original recipe every week, plus mouth-watering classical music : the only music guaranteed not to interfere with normal digestive processes . Be listening April
17th as we celebrate two ... two ... two Holy Week s in one.
6:00-6:30
6:30-7:00
EDITION 12
9:00-10:00
John Shepard
LESBIAN/GAY RESOURCE CENTER REPORT
10:00-12:00
THE WILD WEST SHOW
Brad Sweek
Rock and Roll from the wild west. Brad plays local and regional music. Got a cassette
of your band? Send it to Brad cl o KAOS, CAB 305, TESC 98505 and hear it over the
airwaves.
John Gibbons
10:30-12:00
THE AUTOMATIC MEDIUM
Jeffrey Bartone
alternating weekly with Marc Barreca
Indeterminacy, Minimal Music, Prepared Instrumentation, Electronic Music, in Olympia and elsewhere .. . Where else but?
12 until he sleeps
LA TE NIGHT STUFF
Ron Bond
Ron brings us synthesizer music and then some: Tangerine Dream, Kraftwerk, Kitaro
and the rest ... It's Bond. And beyond,
••••••••
6:00-10:00
THE SPICE OF LIFE VARIETY SHOW
Guy Nelson
American music, news, guests and the button-down humor of Guy Nelson .
Chris Hubbard
Produced by KAOS News Staff
KAOS ALTERNATIVE NEWS
DRUM BEAT
Lucille Johnson
7:00-8:00
A public affairs program featuring spokespersons fro m the Native American com munity speaking on issues of concern to us all.
10:00-12:00
Linda Lammer
AMERICAN FOLK
9:30-Noon
DA Y BLUES
Linda Borgaes
If you like Rock'en'Roll you'll love the blues-You can tune in to hear old and new Blues, Live recordings from local clubs, live
interviews and every now and then a guest appearance.
12:00-1:00
$9 THE CASE 0' TOWELS
Curious? Good! Tune the heck in!
,,~
12:00-3:30
Noon-I:OO
THROUGH THE FLOWER HOUR
Lisa reads from Judy Chicago's Autobiography .
6:30-7:00
EDITION 12
Sharon Berman
Produced by KAOS News Staff
KAOS ALTERNATIVE NEWS
SUBLIMINAL JAZZ
7:00-9:00
Post-bop crossover, fusion, etc .
Joe Haen
Patrie Maley
3:30-6:00
BEETHOVEN'S NIGHTMARE
Peter Rickett
Contemporary Classical music from the early 20th century to the present. Ives to Cage
and everything in between. Lots of special shows and information. Sleep tight Ludwig!
6:00-6:30
6:00-6:30
WORLD FOLK
Lisa Goldman Donally
1:00-3:30
WORLD FOLK
Doug Denherder, Jull Kelen
On April 4 and 18, Juli features Moon Over Ruined Castle. The first half hour will
be devot ed to Japanese music and reading (in English).
3:30-6:00
CLASSICAL
Music of the Rennaisance , and the early 20th century .
Nancy Curtis
alternating weekly with Skip Elliot
12:00-on
FACTORY MUSIC
Marcus Bastida
New music, mostly industrial, but lots of other stuff as well. Requests encouraged
at 866-6822.
KAOS ALTERNATIVE NEWS
12:00-whenever
THE EXPERIENTIAL CONTINUUM
Brahms, Crass, Allen Ginsberg ... It's all the same, really.
JAZZ
10:00-12:00
PILE DRIVING FUNK
Vicki Barreca
The best in independent R&B, this program is a must for dancers and would-be dancers.
Produced by KAOS News Staff
7:00-9:00
BLUES & JAZZ
A program featurin g two truly American musical form s.
KAOS ALTERNATIVE NEWS
7:00-10:00
2:00 a.m.-6:00 a. m.
PRICKLY HEAT RADIO
Dale Knuth
Mu sic that makes you itch, sweat and want to dance, from closing time to bed time.
7:00-10:00
Jim Patrick
SA TURDA Y MORNING JAZZ
Saturday Morning Jazz features the very best in jazz mixed with the latest weather
forecast, community events, a nd local information . SMJ will gently stir you from your
warm, lazy slumber and start your weekend with a smile on your face and joy in your
heart! Phone in your requests between 8:00 and 9:00 to 866-6822.
10:00-1:00
ALTERNATE ROUTE
Janet B .
1:00-2:00
Women's news and views.
ALTERNATE ROUTE
Janel B.
12:00-1:00
BIG BAND MUSIC
Vintage pop. Oldies from the heyday of the Big Band .
2:00-5:00
Lois Maffeo
12 noon ·1:00
TEA PARTY
It' s the call-in show with culture! I co ver the waterfront, and everything else from
Balzac to Bullwinklc . So call in (866-6822) or come up (CAB 305) and chat on the Tea
Party .
XXXOOO
CLASSICAL MUSIC
1:00-3:30
BULGARIAN YAK SHOW
Stephan ()jmitroff
Bulgarian Yak music became a pseudonym for world folk mu sic at KAOS several
years ago . The Bulgarian Yak Show seeks to provide you with the oppurtunity to fulfill
that deep yearning to experience the music of the world. After all , everyone needs a
raga now and then .
Brad Sweek
SHORT STORIES
Pete Hayes
12:00-1:00
METAPHYSICAL REVIEW
Geoff and Hans.
Olympia' s favorite call-in talk show returns to the airwaves. Whaddaya wanna talk
about? Call 866-6822.
Charlie Austin and l or
Buffalo Freeze Dry
6:00-10:00
EPPO'S SHOW
EPPO
Eppo returns to his old slot. Tune on in and enjoy Bluegrass music as only Eppo
know's how to play it.
10 :00-12:00
COUNTRY & BLUES
Eric Brinker
Real hard-core Country Music one week, American Blues the next. From Bob Wills,
The Dusty Chaps, and Vernon Oxford to Howlin' Wolf, Joe Turner and John Lee
Hooker .
3:30-6:00
10:00-12:00
GOOD FOLK
Special emphasis on Celtic Music.
6:00-10:00
THE BEGINNING MUSIC SHOW
Chris Metz
Music to bring freedom into your day . I hope to bring you many moods to start your
day. Jazz, Country, American Folk, R&B, World Folk. Comments and suggestions are
welcomed . Write KAOS, CAB 305, TESC, Olympia 98505. If you wish to be a guest
on the show for a short ten-minute interview, write me at the above address or call
866-6822 Mon .-Fri . 9am-2pm .
C.P.
JAWS: I. Noun . Oral bone wi hinge . 2. Big shark.
3. Even bigger Hollywood film. 4. What Kevin Olson will
be destroyed with when Corliss finds out he lost her program description again. Run for your life!
6:00-10:00 a.m.
BREAKFAST SPECIAL
Bill Eiseman
A special way to start your day . Variety music, spiced with news, weather and interviews . Not to mention a ham of a host, so we won't.. .
• ••••••
10:00-12:00
BATHTUB BLUEGRASS
Twi st yer dial on down, and have a chew .. .
Pbll Hertz
.,
•• •
Midnight-2:00 (at least)
HIGHLIGHTS OF A LOWLIFE
Nan'" Patty
Highlights of a Lowlife is a way rockin' hep show with those totally cool gals Nan
and Patty. Midnight till one will feature a band, style, artist, city or country. April features
will be: German rock/ punk/ wave, the Cure and the Glove, Nena, Bauhaus, and
Australian Band, though not necessarily in that order. From one o'clock on, a variety
of music will be played, plus requests if you make them . So, call Nan and Patty lots,
many times at once quickly without the sheep, to amuse and give them your good ideas
of what you want to hear.
•
JAWS
6:00-10:00
12:00-2:00
THE TWILIGHT ZONE
Rock, reggae, and rhythm & blues in the' wee hours.
On the second week of each month, Ginnie plays music written and performed by
women. If you have a band or reasonable facsimile thereof, send tapes c/o KAOS, CAB
305, TESC 98505.
10:00-12:00
Midnight-2:00
SVEN SVENSON PROGRAM
Sven Svenson
A Montage 0' Modern Rock mixed with Outlandish Humor , as presented by an aut hentie (') Swedish host.
ADV ANCED ROCK'" ROLL
Bryan Learned
alternating weekly witb Tucker Petertil
Rap, scratch, funky street stuff and yes, even hardcore. The leading edge of rock & roll.
to
Vern Nguyen
SUN ()AV EVE NING IS I:OR KIDS
Robert Parish
7:00-8 :00
C hil dren's storie" Illusic. Ent ert a inm ent for th e entir e fa mil y, es peciall y those
10:30-12:00
10:00-12:00 THREE DIFFERENT DJ's EACH MONTH I Murph Rhudil, Glnole.
Rhoda drives up from Portland the first Monday of each month play lots of pop/new
wave.
Bret plays new releases and occasionally hosts a live local band from the KAOS studios
on the second, fourth, and sometimes fifth weeks . .
3:30-5:00
EMOTIONS, PLACES '" SPACES IN ROCK
Major Tom
Expression o f Rock a nd related music as befits anything in the thoughts of Maslow .
5:00-7:00
VIETNAMESE
Music a nd cultural information .
Harry Levine
6:30-7:00
EDITION 12
Produced by KAOS News Staph
KAOS ALTERNATIVE NEWS
7:00-9:00 p.m.
AMERICAN ANECDOTES
Tom Foote
Hey, wait a minute, this is a jazz slot!? NEW NEW NEW by popular demand, KAOS
brings you an evening of American Traditional music every Thursday. Many rare, oneof-a-kind records, and a complete history of our music in America.
Hal Medrano
9:00-10:30
VOICE AND EXPRESSION OF LATIN AMERICA
Lisa Levy
A bilingual program of culture, information and music from Latin American nations .
9:00-10:30
THE WORLD OF LATIN MUSIC
C.P.
A program which hopes to bring the music of Spain and Latin America to our community. Flamenco, Salsa, Latin Jazz, and occasional live pieces with local groups and
people. In the enjoyment of music, we hope to share a cross-cultural experience, getting
to know the world around us all, Join in with requests, comments, or get in touch with
c.p , for an interview at 866-6822.
EL MENSAJE DEL AIRE
Paul Felix
Jose y Jose
5:00-7:00
LOW DOWN, MEAN TALKIN',
Dave Corbett
HARD WALKIN', DOWN ON MY LUCK BLUES
This is it -- This is where it's at. Tune in every Saturday Evening for the best in the
Blues from the 1930's to the present. Requests and listener response are , of course, always
encouraged, Call 866-6822 .
7:00-10:00
ONE DROP RADIO
Charlie Morgan
"CAUTION: Reggae can be dangerous, You may lose friend s who don't like your
taste in music. You may find yourself liking something Un-American. You may find
yourself dancing when you swore you never would." Right and tight Reggae in all forms
with host Charlie Morgan .
10:00-12:00
Geoff Kirk
THE OTHER SIDE OF PARADISE
Lots of hep new music: funk, scratch, rap, R&B ... A bit of philosophy here and there
and some fine, fine moments .
Midnight-4:00 a.m.
OLDIES REVIVAL
The Dr.
Hey, all you cats and kittens, when you're chcckin ' out the Radio tune to 89.3 FM
for the best in Oldies 1950-1968 with the Dr. Can you dig thi s forma t?.
12- 12:30 Oldies Revival Part"
12:30-1:00 Nightmare Theatre
I :00-4:00 Oldies Revival Part"
Between I and 3 you ' ll have Trivia from the 50' s and 60's . So get your Dnein' Shoes
on and Rock Your Socks Off!
NOTICE: Mental Health may occur after repeated listening.
(
A
N
Visualizing the future:
A
L
y
5
I
\
\
:::-.-' ' (I
t
<
"I never slamdanced. Waltzed once though. Dang near
broke my ankle. Heh heh. That was the night I proposed to Betsy Joe Ray. 'Course she turned me down flat.
But it was just as well in the long run, 'cause I found
out later that year that she was a nun. Which reminds
me of an old joke my cousin Mike told me a long time '
ago ... What kind of meat does a priest eat on Friday?
Can't remember the punch line though ... But I do
remember the time I got into my Grandma's flour .... 1
had a Plymouth once. A real beauty, she was. Cost me
an arm and a leg, but boy ... But these membership drives
are a different sorta thing altogether. Yeah, you can bet
1'/1 be pledgin' fifteen bucks to KA OS again this spring.
Can't much think of anything I'd rather invest in. You
pledge your money to KA OS. Don't go out buyin ' them
dang mufti-corporate commercial albums. Give the other
folks a chance for once. And get a haircut.
Spring Auction May 8, 9, 10
Early Warning ... The 1984 KAOS Auction will be on the air May 8, 9 and 10, during morning and evening hours. Here's a
small sample of some of the products and
services we expect to offer as part of the
auction:
·1 hour of professional life-counseling
service--Retail $30.00.
*Two gift certificates from At Home With
Books of Olympia--Retail $10 each.
./ month's membership to the Olympia
YMCA--Retaif $29.00.
·A /-hour private plane flight over the
Olympia Area--Retail value: $55.00
*Two hand-made wool watch caps--Retail
value $16.00 each.
·A large two-topping pizza from Pizza
Haven of Olympia--Retail value $12.95.
·Broadcast advertising on KQEU-AM
radio, Olympia--Retail value over
$200.00.
This is just a small sample of the items
we will be auctioning off over the air as
part of our 1984 fundraising auction.
Another list will be published in the May
Program Guide. Every item will be auc·
tioned for at least one ten minute period
during the air time--highest bidder will
receive the item upon KAOS. So stay tun-'
ed tuned for more information!
Volunteer Coordinator STILL TO COME
Production Manager
Bill Eiseman
Technical Director
Norm Sohl
News Director
John Kersting
Music Director
Chris Met..
Production Staff
Tom Hill, Corliss Prong, Louis Herron,
Laurian Weisser, Charlie Austin, Luke Goodwin
News Staff
Corliss Prong, Amber Shinn, Lucille Rhoades
Student Station Manager
Laurian Weisser
General Manager! Advisor
Michael Huntsberger
Program Guide
Kevin Olson
The 1984 KAOS T-Shirts are in! Yes, you've been hearing about 'em, waiting for 'em, dreaming of 'em ... Well
DREAM NO MORE! These beauties sport the official
KA OS logo in a bright brown silkscreen printed on a
vibrant tan T-shirt. These babies are gain' quick, so hurry
up and order one for yourself or a loved one in time Jar
the growin' season.
--
r
ORDER FORM
II Please
-,1
send me
Enclosed is a check for_ _
U_ _ 1984 KAOS T-Shirts
(Sales tax included in
0 $6, 50 regular rate
price--please include
0$6.00 subscribers
$1.00 for postage and
Please indicate size(s)
handling on mail-orders
I
I
IName:~
I
__________________
Address
I
city
I
1
SEND MY T-SHIRTS TO:
street
The businesses listed here offer a limited 10 percent discount on products and
services at their locations. We urge you to shop at the outlets of KAOS Patrons,
and remind you to carry your subscriber card with you when you shop. KAOS
also wishes to express our heartfelt appreciation to our patrons-your support
is vital to the continued growth of community in the south Puget Sound region.
state
y, _
Please allow 6-8 weeks for deliver..
I
The Asterisk & Cheese Library
Westside Center
Olympia
357-7573
At Home With Books
1827 East 4th
Olympia
352-0720
The Bookstore
108 East 4th
Olympia
357-7470
Columbia Bakery
III North Columbia
Olympia
352·2274
The Grainery
3644 Mud Bay Road
Olympia
1166-7048
Mansion Glass
221 \11 West 4th
Olympia
352·2274
Alta Artworks
8430 Mason Rd. Northwest
Olympia, WA. 98502
The Benson Hotel, as is true for structures in North America over 15,000 in
population, is currently a live target for a
thermonuclear missile from the Soviet
Union. What an odd circumstance, considering that we come together here on a
very nice, sunny day to discuss peace. We
didn't invent the situation ... we are
targeted.
We have a habit of the media in the
United States, and I'm not picking on Time
magazine, but this is typical...here's a
cover showing the Earth viewed as a hand
grenade. This kind of negative imagery is
now pervasive ... it sells magazines. More
and more images of "The Bomb" infiltrate
consciousness. Here's an interesting
catalogue called the" International Defense
Review." It's basically a mail-order
catalogue for battleships, missiles,
tanks ... if you've got the money, you can
buy it. They use the same advertising
techniques for soap, clothing or houses;
only here they're essentially selling the
elimination of life on Earth. This is puslished every month in four languages out of
( ~
Switzerland.
I received a letter a few months ago from
a friend who works for the United States
Arms Control and Disarmament agency.
In part he writes, "As for experts in the
peace visualization process, I am unaware
of people who would fit that description.
tion, as has Willis Harmon at Stanford.
Since my work involves support here in
Even the physicists are getting involvWashington I am not familiar with
ed .. . particle physicists are talking about
U.S.S .R. officials." And here's the kicker:
whole new models of reality.
"Our Agency has taken some severe
In spite of these intial pointers, our mabudget cuts; this has meant curtailment of
jor institutions are reeling, they are conmost of our research budget, the Agency
fused, they are scanning all possibilities to
library, and all of our public education
begin to understand in which direction lies
programs. The Arms Control and Disarstability.
mament Agency is one of the smallest of
A few days ago, I scanned some
Federal agencies and yet the Agency is
documents from the city of Portland. One
responsible for the most important
was called "Report on a Vision of
elements in our national security program,
Portland's Future" and the other "Critical
namely, the reduciton of threats through
Choices for Greater Portland."
arms control." The Reagan administration
Remarkable documents. They're pointing
sliced 25 percent out of this agency's $20
to a completely different future than the
million dollar budget, while spending
world we're experiencing ... a shift away
about four times the amount of money that
from ego-centricity and runaway
this entire Agency operates with for a
materialism to sharing, personal growth,
public relations campaign to promote inresource efficiency, stewardship, honesty .
creased defense expenditures.
At Transition Graphics for the past two
Polls across the country show that a mayears we have asked a slightly different
jority of high school students believe that
question than the question that prompted
they will eventually die in a nuclear war.
these two studies. Specifically, we asked
I can imagine no more dangerous condigroups of interested citizens throughout the
tion for any culture than to produce a
state to tell us , "What would the world
generation of young people who believe
look like if peace broke out?" The result s
they have no future.
are identical to the results generated from
Thankfully, Woody Allen offers us some
the Portland effort. .. looking into
perspective. He says, "More than any
Portland's future .. . which astonished us.
other time in history, mankind fJ.ces a
Just this week we received a report from
crossroads. One path leads to despair and
sociologist Elise Boulding who was conduchopelessness, the other to total extinction.
ting workshops on tl]e East Coast, asking.
Let us pray we have the wisdom to choose
people to describe what a world without
correctly. "
weapons would look like. Identical results
I don't know if anyone on Earth would
volunteer to vaporize in a nuclear clouV. to our project and the kind of material
you've generated right here in your own
In fact, I wonder if you got a bulk rate
city.
from the post office and sent a questionWhat are these descriptions peoplc are
naire to four billion Earthlings, and asked
coming up with? You know many of them.
them, "Are you in interested in dying in
Some are new ... some of them have been
a nuclear cloud?" if you'd find very many
around for centuries. They are in no parpeople who would say "I'm interested."
ticular order. I'll just read you a beginnBut it i5n't good enough to be opposed to
ing laundry list of ideas that people are
vaporizing .. . to be upset at all the negative
beginning to generate: Neighborhood
things t hat are occuring as a direct result
mediators, extended families, more multi of our lifestyle. You have to be for
ple housing, expanded crime watch, shift
something better.
to information and service economy,
The problem with paradigm shifting, as
thirty-hour work week, job sharing, cotwe all know, is that you tend not to jump
tage industries, smaller scale factories, tree
onto a new model until it's clear where
planting ... especially fruit and nut trees,
you're jumping. You hang on to what's
reforestation, more local food production
familiar until a new model, a new vision
at homes, schools and churches, renewable
is available that makes sense. There are an
energy sources, much more mass transit,
enormous number of clues emerging, and
bikes, smaller and more durable cars,
City Club surely has been sampling these
recycling.
new directions over the years. There are
'Organic farming, eating lower on the
bestsellers now, like Megatrends; in fact it's
food chain, exercise, some physical work
number one on the bestseller list this week.
for everybody, conscious investments of
Bob Theobald, who is a good friend of the
local capital in the community (ptobably
city of Portland, writes continuously about
one of the most provocative suggestions),
these new paradigms. Marilyn Ferguson
goods that last made for local consumpand Alvin Tomer have popularized
tion , (here's a funny one) economist
developing trends for personal transformaMarch 15, 1984
Cooper Point
I(~
OLDE BEN SPEAKS OUT
Lady Lynn's Natural Fiber Fabrics
335 Division Street N. W .
Olympia
943·3074
Pizza Haven
270 Capital Mall
Olympia
754-3711
Radiance Herbs and Massage
202 West 4th
Olympia
357-9470
Rainy Day Records
Westside Center
Olympia
357-4755
Smithfield Cafe
212 West 4th
Olympia
786-1725
T-Shirts +
217 Capital MaO
Olympia
754-9525
)
What does peace,Jook like?
Joel Schatl., well-known lecturer on social,
economic and environmental stability, is
coming to Evergreen in April. What
follows is part of a speech he gave to City
Club in Portland, Oregon, April 15, 1983
at the Benson Hotel. For more information on Schatz and his projects contact
Tom Danaher at Innerplace, X6145.
\t--~:
s
retraining centers, community tool-sharing
and skills exchange, casual and creative
clothing, cleaner communities, stress
reduction clinics, wellness clinics, positive
ways to release aggression, interactive community cable television, (here's one that
sounds great but we don't know how to do
it. .. ) holistic news (where pieces fit together
and where problems arc connected to solutions), hospices (more creative, spirit ually
intact ways of dealing with dying), expanded alcohol and drug abuse clinics, alternative celebrations where our highest
celebrations are more in keeping with our
more sacred values (in contrast to the standard way that we now celebrate
holidays ... for example, on behalf of the
birlh of Christ, we do more damage 10 the
biosphere than on any other day of the
year), children involved in the decisionmaking process, planetary passports (you
can go anywhere), love training centers
(tcaching people how to love) . One suggestion that ca me from a workshop in
Ashland: someo ne sa id, "I'd like to see a
bumper sticker that says, 'If you like sex,
you'll love peace.' ..
These are beginning descriptions of a
peaceful world that are coming out of the
visual centers of people's imaginations.
While envisioning peace, we urged
everyone to "Disregard all constraints on
how we'd get there. Leap over tha frontier and just begin to describe how you
would like to live, if you could. Then begin
to wonder how you can get there. Go back
to 1983 and say 'O.K. Now what do we
have to do to get out to those targets we've
just described?' "
So, of course, [now) comes the question
"How do you proceed?" Everyone always
want to know "How do you proceed?"
And the answer must be "In every possible way!" But in particular to remind
ourselves that we have to finally begin to
scale up our solutions to match the size of
our problems. Clearly what happens when
people burn out. .. they look at this overwhelming planetary danger and they say,
"How in the world can we change the
behavior of so many people?"
Gandhi, among his infinitely wise
statements, once said, "Almost anything
you do will seem insignificant, but it is very
important that you do it." And I suppose
I'm suggesting that about your own
blueprint for the future; because, from our
own analysis in asking people to tell us
what peace would look like, what you've
already produced here is basically a plan
for peace for this planet. Although most
people working in the Portland futures
project, and most people who read it, view
it within a narrower context.
Imagine Portland becoming a model for
a planetary city. It could happen overnight
if the decision is made. People do wondrous things when they finally make decisions . These decisio ns are nol political.
These decisions are not institutional. These
decisions are personal since you are, as
Earthlings everywhere on the planet. the
ultimate sources of power; which, of
course, you know.
It 's astounding that a population should
have reached a point of synthesizing
elements ... experimenting with the creation
of new species through genetic engineering .. .. Jbeing) able to hurl itself off the ball
into space .. .inventing artificial intelligence
machines capable of expanding the reaches
of human consciousness .. and at the same
time should be so incredibly preoccupied
with self-destruction.
I s uppose that in the long run, it's not
really worth wondering whether or not our
civilization will make it; that's, to me, an
energy waste. It's more interesting to shape
the future that you're interested in li vin g
in. And because nobody' s in charge. it's
fairly easy.
Thank you.
Cooper Point Journal
Senior Editor Francisco A. Chateaubriand
Managing Editor Allison C. Green
Production Manager Kevin Olson
Graphic Editor Eric Martin
Photo Editor Shannon O'Neill
Business Manager Margaret Morgan
Advertising Manager Christopher Bingham
Advisor Mary Ellen McKain
Assistant to the Editors Karla Glanzman
Reporters: Bradley P. Blum, Ronnie 'C hang,
Gary Wessels, June Finley Maguire, Kevin
Olson, Shannon O'Neill. Christopher
Malarkey, Brian Dixon
The Cooper Point Journal is published weekly for the students, staff and faculty of
The Evergreen State College. Views expressed are not necessarily those of the college
or of the Journal's staff Advertising material contained herein does not imply endorsement by the Journal. Offices are located in the library building, Room 3232. Phone:
866-6000 X6213 . All announcements should be double-spaced, listed by category, and
submitted no later than 5 p.m. on Monday for that week's publication. All letters to
the editor must be typed, double-spaced and signed and need to include a daytime phone
number where the author can be reachedfor consultation on editing for libel and obscenity. The editor reserves the right to reject any material, and to edit any contributions
for length, content and style. Letters 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 subject to the above-mentioned stipulations.
Journal
Page 7
(
)
ENTERTAINM ENT
Portrait
Music group
celebrates
By Cliff Missen
Last Saturday a full house at the
Evergree n State College Recital Hall was
treated to an uproarious and top-notch
musical treat as the Righteous Mothers
brought their politics, humor, and selves
to share with all.
The stage was bare except for the instruments, sound equipment, and a cheery
vase of daffodils which set the mood for
the entire show. "This is not just a concert," insisted "Mother" Lisa Brodoff as
she welcomed the audience, "this is a
celebration! "
Indeed, this weekend's concert was the
group's first since the release of their debut
album and was something of a home comin g: three of the Righteous Mothers live
and work here in ·O lympia and one, Molly
Staley, is a graduate of Evergreen now living in Seattle.
The other five Righteous Mothers are :
manager Lynn Grotsky and performers
Clare Grausz, Marla Beth Elliot, Wendy
Davis, and Lisa Brodoff.
Their mostly original material ranged
from women's difficulties in establishing
credit , to the military budget, to warm and
eloqu ent odes to friends and family. One
number entitled "In Your Place or Mine"
ingeniously transported the audience
through a myriad of situat ions: first with
a boss telling a woma n employee seeking
a rai se she sho uld sta y, "I n your place or
mine;" then a woman telling her abusive
husband that she can't stay "In yo ur place
or mine;" and finally an offer from one
woman to a hurting other to "stay in your
place ... or mine!"
Not only did the se rious songs recreate
the feelings, frustrations, and warmth that
inspired them, but the humorous selections
had the audience bursting with cheers and
ent hu siasm. The funniest being their o nl y
"Unhealth y" love song: medley of sixties
tunes with slightly altered lyrics which admitted unbridled affections for a very elite
brand of ice cream.
The groups talent was exceptional, the
harmonies at times exacting. Their arrangements covered a broad gamut of
musical sty les and their warmth was contagious . Their combined voices sometimes
filled the hall in such a way that they nearly
put the Morman Tabernacle choir to
shame , while other times they sang so softly and sweetly that eyes drooped and smiles
waxed on every face in the house.
The only disappointment this reviewer
found was the fact that the group's
members are happily employed in other
professions and thus limit their concerts to
an average of two a month. It was a
wonderful bonus that the Righteous
Mothers should launch the International
Women's Week celebrations. They seemed each a strong and caring example of the
nuturin g
and
bonding abilities
predominantly attributed to women, while
taking no flak as they made their stand for
a better world. This reviewer was especially
impressed that the Righteous Mothers did
not imitate the style of the male dominated,
se lf-cen tered, and technology oriented
popular entertainment scene, but rather
made their stage a home and entertained
th eir friends with their natural and
dynamic talents .
Their newly released album, entitled
simply The Righteous Mothers, is a well
produced gem and available on the Nexus
label.
Page 8
Class acts pummel punks
By Kevin Olson
Since I'll be leaving Olympia next week
to chase the Grateful Dead all over
America, I thought I should get some practice in going to concerts to make sure I'm
primed for lerry and the boys when the
time comes. Since the Fabulous Tropiqma,
Olympia's newest nightspot, had just opened up the week before and J'd missed the
show 'cause I was out of town, I decided
to take in the show last Friday. It seemed
like a good show to get me in shape for the
Dead. Five bands were playing. One of 'em
even had the name Death Sentenc~, which
is sort of like Grateful Dead, so it sounded like my kind of show. I went.
Things got going around 9:00 with a
band from Aberdeen called The Melvins .
I missed 'em, because the ever-fashionable
Shannon O'Neill, with whom I went to the
show, was still putting on her makeup. I
heard they were real good, though. I hope
to see 'em someday and maybe even write
a review or something. I did catch the second band , Olympia's own Imm-Oral
Roberts. These four guys, hailing from
Capitol High, played their hearts out. They
did some original songs as well as a few
covers to get the crowd really hopping. The
bass player had on a real keen pair of
sunglasses. I didn't take any pictures of
him or any of the other band members
though because I was low on film and their
guitars looked too new. In my book it' s no
fun taking pictures of bands with brand
new guitars . They obviously hadn ' t been
on the road long enough to merit my TriX . But they had a fun, up-beat sound and
you can bet we'll all be hearing more about
'em if we spend the next several years of
our li ves in Olympia.
The third band to assault the audience
was of . Canadian origin . They called
themselves Death Sentence and they played
a type of music commonly referred to as
hardcore. Seasoned musicians, these guys.
Their sound, reminiscent of the early Clash
and the Dead Kennedys ,
the
youthful crowd launched into a frenz ied
ballet from the OUlset. 1 liked these guys
because they played short, fast so ngs and
didn ' t waste any time in between. They
weren't cute, but then they didn't try to be
so I thought they were okay.
After Death Sentence, another Olympia
band, Idle Worship, played. Thi s foursome, composed of remnants of the legendary Pet Produc/s, had a distinctly hard core sound, but with a kind o f arty approach. Most of the songs were good and
fast, but they lost momentum in between
eac h number by taking too much time .
With a little polish and more experience
playing in front of people, Idle Worship
have the pot ential to become one of Olympia's top rock acts. And speaking of lOp
acts, the fifth and final band, House of
Commons, brought down the hou se with
so me of the most hyper hardcorc this si de
0' the Co lumbia. Another Vancouver,
B.C. band, H.O.c. had obviously played
a lot of shows. They were cocky, se lfassured and, especially, loud. So loud , in
fact, that the club was nearly empty by the
end of their third song. Sure, they were
good, but how many decibels does it take
By the end of the night, the Tropicana
was showing signs that Olympia just might
have a Rock & Roll Club to be reckoned
with . The crowd of over 130, decked out
in their hippest punk garb(age), went away
winded, but smiling, like after good sex.
One only hopes the Fabulous Tropicana
can keep 'em coming.
Innovative duo to play
Skeleton Crew, described by The New
York Times as a "duo with enough
counterpoint for a quartet," will perform
Sunday, March 25 in an 8 p.m. concert in
SKELETON CREW
Fred Frith: guitar. bass. viotin.drums. vocals. home ·mades
Tom Cora: (clio. electric bass. drums. voc als. contraptions
Flackmas~tets
Fri.& 5at.
Mar. 16& 17
Only
Cover Charge $2.00
Remodeled
Come see our New Look
Poll TUIes, PidIIl.
· 786-1444
\
the Recital Hall of the Communicalions
Building at The Evergreen State College.
Skeleton Crew stars Tom Cora on cello,
electric bass, drums, vocals and "contraptions," and Fred Frith on guitar, casio,
drums, vocals and "home-mades." With
each member playing two or three (and
often more) instruments at once, the
"group" creates, according to reviewers,
"a free-wheeling set that evokes folk
dances, marches, funk, dissonant art songs
and Afri~an high-life music ."
Cora and Frith bring extensive
backgrounds in jazz, new wave, avantgarde and classical music to Skeleton Crew,
which they formed in 1982. Since then they
have toured lapan, Europe and North
America, and cut their first album.
"We really enjoy ourselves," says Firth,
who regards Skeleton Crew as the most accessible group he's ever played for. "Normally, audiences have been disarmed . They
come expecting it 10 be difficult and then
have the ground pulled out from under
them when they find out how listenable our
music is."
Sponsored by Evergreen's Olympia
Media Exchange, the Sunday concert costs
$3.50 for students and senior citizens and
$4 general admission. For more informa.
tion call 866-6000, ext. 600 I.
i
I·
I
I
Pearl Grinder
They insulted my Rhino,
They dug up all my worms.
We tried to talk things over,
But we couldn't come to terms.
"If I soften, he might come to me, " she thinks,
aware of her bulkhead effect on others, but thinking
that his chest would make a pleasant knoll
upon which she could rest her head.
I heard their caustic laughter,
I saw them flop about.
I saw them when they did this,
Yet, they never heard me shout.
Patricia Ann Treat
The time, dare, place, and major acti vities have been set for Super Salurday,
1984 . The sixth a nnual spring festival will
be hosted Saturday, lune 9, from 11 a.m.
to 7 p. m. throughout The Evergreen State
College campus, according to co-chairman
Larry Stenberg and Judy McNickle.
The event, which last yea r attracted
more than 25,000 visitors, is plilnned "as
a celebration of both th e coming summer
and Evergreen's successful completion of
another academic year," says Stenberg,
who has overseen the festivities since the
first Super Saturday in 1979.
Invitations to entertainers, artists, food
vendors and community groups will be "in
I said, " I must be going. "
They said, "Go on, Go!"
They shook my bed and shut,
My head inside Ihe kitchen door.
Erich Fry
..
~""
................
~
~
m
."
I
~
o
i)
i)
~
~
~
~
~
~
the sun in moonmask
can 'I disguise his symmelry
Heather Wright
Merlin Edward MacEnookery
lived beneath the Royal Rookery
where he pracliced Appte Cookery
'lit he didn't want 10.
Heather Wright
* Electric Ballroom *
* Travelog *
and
In an End of tbe Quarter,Celebration
BENEFIT DANCE!!!
€)
~
i)
i)
~
€)
i)
Friday March 16th, 9pm to lam ~
~
m
~
The Library Lobby!
Making Heartless Things Run
i)
~
i)
Tell Your Friends! Come and get Crazy!
~
~
Dance! $3.50 Free "Refreshments" Dance!
i)
i)~~t!)t!)t!)t!)(!).(!)(!)(!)(!)(!)(!)
Cooper Point Journal
Filtered
filtered
fittered
white:
the mail within the nex t two weeks, "
Stcnberg adds. People who'd like 10 participate in Super Saturday - to perform,
to demonstrate or se ll their artistic creations or prepare and sell food - are invit ed
to call Stenberg or McNick le at Evergreen
. 866-000, X6296 or 6128, respect ively .
"This is a community wide celebration
in which everyone is welcome to participate, " adds McNickle. "Persons who
want 10 help are invited to call us now;
everyone elso is encouraged to immediately
reserve lune 9 on their calendars and plan
to attend what's become one of the major
free public events in the sou thern Puget
Sound area."
The Duality Waltz Proudly Presents.. .
Stephanie was at the pool,
Trying to perfect a certain,
Dive.
We told her;
Don't give up.
With zealous practice,
Improvement will soon,
Be evident.
Our prayers are with,
You, Stephanie.
Erich Fry
i)QQ~QCC)(dQQQ(Ci)CdCdQ
i)
Stephanie at the Pool
I told them all to register,
(To vote for president).
They said, "Billy in the Pie, "
And then they raised the rent.
Super Saturday planned
-i). *The Duality Waltz*
~
* Orchestra *
FEATURING
210 E 4th
before your average slamdancer starts to
bleed from the ear? If H. o.C. had channeled their considerable energies into their
performance instead of their amplifiers,
they might have been a smash. As it was,
they were just another bunch of punks who
could afford the vcry best. They've even
got an album out . We're talking class act.
The raucous one, the rowdy one who sets older people's
false teeth to clattering, the cause· of more than one mountain
tumbling headlong into the sea or being ground down to santi,
has met, oh so briefly, but as often as she can arrange,
the eyes of the sensuous young poet, the one who never talks,
whose hands and mouth she so vividly imagines caressing her.
March 15, 1984
By Jeff White
\
I
,I
She woke up and knew what she
wanted. She had had a hard time that
night. There was no sleeping with all
that turning and turning back she had
done on her bed. She had listened to
the seconds snap in her alarm clock;
she had tried to squeeze dreams between them. But for most of the night
there was only dog barks and the words
which pulled through her head like
barbed-wire. Miles and miles of words
shredded her mind that night. Later, in
the early morning, it was the traffic
that made distant noises on the distant
freeway that finally whispered her to
sleep.
And she found her dream.
If luliet was anyone's fool, she was
Time's. This, then, made her no different from the rest of us. She was different, however, because she was
beautiful and could use her mind for
more than counting and her mouth for
more than a place to put fruit.
And luliet always knew what she
wanted. She knew this before most of
us knew to call that itch "wanting."
This was unusual - the knowing
before the others - and luliet prided
herself in it. You could ask anyone in
town what it was they wanted, and
they'd all use different words to say the
same thing: I want what Juliet has (and
March 15, 1984
they don't mean beauty or a mind for
more than counting or a ·mouth for
more than a place to put fruit) .
"I want a freeway," said luliet to
lock, who was the man she let put into
her mouth more than fruit. "I want a
freeway right here where this house is,"
she told him.
Now if lock was anyone's fool, he
was luliet's (and Time's of course, like
the rest of us); and the machinery that
drove his mind in all matters except
those concerning luliet hardly slowed to
allow him his simple yes . Jock knew
that Juliet always knew what she
wanted.
Not only was lock no one but
Juliet's and Time's fool, he was also
the richest man in town. Some said he
gained his wealth in the drug trade: he
sold suppositories to nervous young
men with educations and dirty white
coats which they wore to hide their nervousness: he sold them to the selfconscious managers of elderly housing
projects for curious prices. Others
seemed to think that his wealth came
from his hobby . Just as lock was no
ordinary taxidermist: Tropical fish . His
specialty was Black-banded Angelfish
and Teardrop-butterflyfish mobiles for
over the cri b.
A freeway through your house said
Jock so simply and purely that his
sentence wore no punctuation.
"It was a freeway that pulled me
from the twisted coils of thinking and
smoothed me as gentle as Route 66
from Elk City to Albuquerque."
"What was it you were thinking so
hard about? " asked lock.
"Why, about what I wanted, of
course," said luliet. "And if that
freeway hadn't have lulled me to sleep
and slipped me that dream, ('d have
never known what I wanted again."
"And what was the dream that
freeway slipped to you?" asked lock .
"Why, it was of a freeway of my
very own running like a concrete river
below my bedroom window, stretching
me to sleep each night and slipping me
gentle rolling dreams about the things I
want ."
And so the men with orange hard hats
and lost shirts carved an exit off of
1-72 . They slit our town's belly and filled the cut with concrete and guardrails. Now the big-wheelers loop down
through the West end, up the hill past
the Tasti-Dog, swinging left past the
Navy recruiting office and a sharp right
through Juliet's house . There's a big
arch between the laundry room and kitchen. A sign saying: LOADS OVER 14'
WELCOME hangs from the picture
window where luliet sits watching the
Northbound sliding into her home to
join 1-72 a few miles down.
I saw Jock a few days ago . I told
Cooper Point Journal
him that luliet had outdone herself this
time . The whole town was constipated:
No one else could get a freeway
through their house . I asked lock to
help relieve a bit of the pressure. I asked him to tell us what luliet wanted
now that she had her freeway .
"I don't know what she wants
anymore," ·said lock.
"Why's that?"
"luliet don't know what she wants
anymore . She hasn't slept since those
men jammed their dozers between her
laundry-room and kitchen. She says it
was the biggest thrill of her life, and
she didn't mind the mess either. Now
she don't eat or sleep. Her words come
out in spasms. Her eyes look like
they're wrapped in cellophane ... " Jock
just shrugged, "God knows what she
wants. "
I walked over to luliet's that night.
When I saw that freeway pulsing bet~een Juliet's laundry-room and kitchen,
and luliet just staring with· red-running
eyes at the surge of traffic below, I
knew what she wanted. I climbed the
stairs at the side of her house and
knocked on the door until she let me
in. She had a smile on her face that
looked like it was tied behind her head .
"Go home, " I said to Juliet.
"I am home," she drooled .
"Go home," I said to luliet and
threw her out into the sparkling
headlights of a Galaxy.
Page 9
M E 55
Marathon trials
buttons on sale
The Women's Marathon Trials Association
and local Olympia merchanls are now se lling the
o fli cial Women's Marathon Trials promotional
bUlions decorated with the Trials date May 12,
1984 and the white dove mascot.
The Women's Trials Association would like
10 thank the loca l people who helped with the
bUllon_ The white dove became the mascot of
the Trials following a contest which was won by
Sandy Lien. Lien chose to submit the white dove
because it represents "the inner spirit of women
giving leadersh ip and uplifting ideas to the
wor ld ." La rr y l'reemantle, of Olympia High
Sc hool and 'Frecmantle Sign Art,' designed the
bUll on. The two Olympia High School classes
that worked on the bUlions are Jim O'Sullivan's
reprographics class that printed t he buttons and
Joe Kinerk's work experience class concenlrating
on assembly and production.
The buttons sell for $2.00 each . All the proceeds will go support the Women's Marathon
Trials Association. Local merchants who are in·
terested in carrying the bUlions should call the
Trials office at 786·8602 or stop by lID E. 5th
in dOWniown Olympia.
KAOS
Public
Affairs
Who is Myrtle Poor Bear and what happen·
ed during the trial of Leonard Peltier? You can
learn some of the details by listening to Edition
12 on K.A. O.S . F.M. 89 .3. Your noncommercial, listener supported community radio
station brings you public affairs 6:00 to 6:30
Monday through Thursday, and 5:30 to 6:30 on
Friday . Spring break won ' t stop us, so tune in
if you stay in Oly. If you are inlerested in
volunteering at K.A.O .S., we need a morning
variety programmer, engineering staff, news
reponers, etc. We train, you learn, internship
credit available to students.
Monday, March 19 - The Trial of Leonard
Peltier. This is a talk given by Jim Messerschmidt
who authored the book by that title. Subsequent
appeals have revealed deliberate misconduct by
the F. B.1. and a new trial is being requested.
Recorded by KAOS on 2124/8 4 .
Tuesday, March 20 - Japan, It s Tradition
and Change. Produced by The Longhorn Radio
Network , a part of The University of Texas at
Austin.
Wednesday, March 21 - Lautaro Sandino
describes Sandinista policies, life in Nicaragua,
and it s relationship with th e U.S. Recorded by
KAOS on 11 /29 / 83.
Thursday, March 22 - Dialogue on The
History of Ireland and the Irish in America . Produced by The Radio Longhorn Network.
Friday, March 23rd - The Washington
Pub li c Interest Research Group (WashPIRG)
brings local and regional issues to light.
Project
encourages
recycling
City Coun cil members recently approved a
city·sponsored project which could lead to a full
fledged curb-side program where the ci ty garbage department could pick up all recyclable
material.
A drop-box program will be started first which
includes an educational program to "raise con·
sciousness" and a truck to collect the material
and tak e it for sale to the Central Recycling
Ce nt er, 215 W. 7th Avenue, Olympia.
Four big 'yellow containers will be placed in
convenient locations and will probably be open
two Saturdays a month. Volunteer organizations
would make sure only recyclable materials melal, glass, aluminum, newpaper , and card·
board - are dropped off.
City staff are contacting volunteer groups to
see if they would like to join the program .
Groups will keep all money made from the sale
of recycled material.
word
L=
~OJ
Scholarships
The /0110 wing Evergreen scholarships are
available to interested students. A /I applications are due by April 15, 1984. Fo r
complete in/ormation, visit the Of/in! 0/
Financial A id.
EDITH K. DRAHAM SCHOLARSHIP
The Edith K. Draham Scholarship for
wrilers for the 1984·85 academic year will
be awarded in t he amount of $1 ,000 . This
scholarship is ava ilable to bOlh new and
continuing Evergreen sludents and is bas ed on financial neeu and demon slrated
abililY in fiction wriling .
SHAUNA
MAY
SCHOLARSHIP
MEMORIAL
The Shauna May Memorial Scholarship,
in the amount of $450, is offered for Ihe
1984-85 academic year to full-limc
undergraduate students who have
distinguished themselves with contribulions
10 community, academic excellence, or
Dlher demonstrated talent, such as in journalism, sc ience, drama , music, athletics,
an, etc. Two Scholarships will be awarded.
ROGER F. CAMP
SCHOLARSHIP
MEMORIAL
Roger F. Camp Memorial Scholarship of
$150 will be awarded 10 a full -time second
year Evergreen student demonstrating exceptional financial need for the 1984-85
academic year.
CHARLES
J.
McCANN
SCHOLARSHIP
A scholarship in Ihe amount of $250 will
be awarded to an Evergreen senior enrolled as a full-time student for the 1984-85
academic year.
Recipient must have completed at least one
full year at The Evergreen State College,
be of senior standing, show the capacity
to work well with others and demonstrate
the ability to plan and carry out a plan of
study and to do it well.
JEAN
SKOV
SCHOLARSHIP
WARD
BOWDEN
SCHOLARSHIP
Washington State Parks and Recreation,
through a contract with the U.S. Forest Service,
is hiring for two positions, Camp Superintendent I and Work Project Leader. Both positions
run June thro.ugh August as supervisors of crews
building and maintaining trails in Eastern
Washington. Requirements, salary, and other
details available at Career Plann;:ig 3!1d Placement , Library x6193 or by contacting John
Brentlinger , 7150 Clearwater Lane, Olympia
98504, 753-5775.
Government Printing Office
Publications
pamPhl':bliag,"phi"
New Location 1827 East 4th
352-0720
MEMORIAL
The Ward Bowden Memorial Scholarship
is offered for the 1984-85 academic yea r
10 full-time undergraduate students who
demonstrate interest in the field of journalism or political science. Eligibility for
financial aid (based on a needs analysis of
the student's Financial Aid Form) is also
required. The scholarship is in Ihe amount
of $250 for the 1984-85 academic year.
MacPHAil
THE
ETHEL
SCHOLARSHIP
This scholarship will be awarded to an upper division Uunior or senior) woman stu denl wilh strong academic standing concentrating in a business management
related field (business administration,
management-science, economics, etc .),
with a demonstrated financial need . Only
full-time sludents are eligible and there is
no residency requirement. The scholarship
is in the amount of $1000 for the 1984-85
academic year.
COOLEY
CARLTON
MORRIS
SCHOLARSHIP
A $500 merit scholarship is offered for the
1984-85 academic year to a student of
senior standing demonstrating excellence
in writing the English language and has accumulated the equivalent of 48 quarter
hours of credit in English courses.
Preference will be given to students who
parlicipate in college governance.
Seattle International will be offering informa·
tion on the Masters of Business Administration,
April 10, 11-1 :00 p.m. in LIB 2101 un a drop
in basis.
Super Saturday talent now being sought. If
you're an anist, entertainer, or pOlential food
vendor, contact the Super Saturday committee
before March 23 to find OOt how you can participate in Evergreen's sixth annual spring
celebration set for June 9. Call ext. 6128 or 6296.
A dozen scholarships ranging from $1,000 to
$150 await Evergreen students for next year. Applications for all are due April 15. Find out
details in the Financial Aid Office, LIB 1218.
On Exhlbit:"Portraits," a multi·media exhibit
of works in progress by students working with
faculty member Lynn Patterson, Gallery Two,
through March 18; "Parasite Station: An Envi ron mental Installation" by alum Candace Lee
Street, Gallery Four through March II; SIGGRAPH '83, a juried exhibit of computer art
and video animatio.n, Lecture Hall Rotunda,
Monday through Saturday through March
24 .. .$1 general, free to students and senior
cilizens.
Lesbian SupportlRap Group meets every Tuesday night 7-9 p.m . in -LIB 3223.
Murry DePillars, Evergreen presldenlial candidate, meets with campus community March
16 at I p.m. in CAB 108 . Lunch with students
at 12 .
The Day Before. A panel o.f disarmament and
anti-war activists discuss the topic "Time to
Build a Movement to Stop the Bomb" on Saturday, March 24, 7:30 p.m. at Freeway Hall,
3815-5th Avenue-N.E ., Seattle.
Winter Gardenin8
Workshops I (9 II
by
Binda Colebrook
Author of Winter Gardening in the Maritime N. W.
She will be available autograph her new book:
1
March I L Workshop
1-3'30 pm
T"'''l
/',.<
~
A
L\
2
prt'1 7 Workshop
9'30-12pm
Attend either one or both-they are complements
but also great together-$2.50 per workshop
atThe Eversreen 6tate Collese
Orsanic farm
, I
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Celebrate Spring!
Start practicing now lor
bathing suit weather.
Rent the famous
Rolling Water Bot T.ub
.
We delIver complete spas IncludIng
Jacuzzis,air bubblers,lights and even an
awning (if you're worried about the
rain).
For more information call 866-2757
~{"Even
Cooper Point Journal
Polyester 101
FUN
NOW .... R' .... G Fop.. cpj PRooOi.,T'IOr-l MANAGER.
"'0 QUA~IF", APPa..I(.ANTS MUST 15r: Ae~E
-rO .••
By The Old Crock
MEMORIAL
The Jean Skov Memorial Scholarships (4) ,
in Ihe amonl of $500 eac h, are offered for
the 1984-85 academic year 1'0 full-time, new
or continuing women studenls. This is a
meril-based scholar~hip for students inte rested in studying pre- 1798 literature
(literature proir 10 Ihe Modern, Romantic
period).
Hearing on Percival Creek Bridge
Department of Ecology oflicials have s<.:heduled a hearing on March 20 to decide whe.her the
construction of a bridge would destro', the environmentally sensitive Percival Creek Gorge.
DOE must issue the construction permits for the
bridge. This bridge would span Percival Creek
from Evergreen Parkway to Cooper Point Road,
providing a new west side link that would ru~
directly through a propo.sed auto mall.
City Coun cil members Kelley, Lux, and Knit·
tie voted against changing the creek's enviro nmental designation to allow for construction a nd also were in the minorit y on initial
passage of a local improvement di strict. This
district was created when Olympia Mayor Dave
Skramstad broke a tie vote. The local improvement dist rict would finance 213 of the cost of
construction . West side business owners have until about March 22 to fi ght paying $2 million
co nstruction costs. According 10 state law, property owners must gather signatures representing 60 percent of the assessed property to stop
t he project.
Environmentalists and other civic groups remain opposed to the project because they say
it is not needed, will not so lve traffic flow pro·
blems, will benefit only the auto mall dealers,
and will significantly damage the irreplaceable
Percival Creek and cove with polluting runoff,
as well as damage caused by actual construction
of the bridge.
C-AT-H--OMf mITH BOOKS)
Page 10
Auditions for the spring production , .. Long to
Live", will be held from 3:30 to. 5:00 p.m . in
the Communicatipns Building Room 209, on
Saturday and Sunday, March 17 and 18. Male
actors only. Contact Ian Pounds, 866-049/.
0'
if the rainy weather persists it's easier to ignore/rom a hot tub"}
March 15, 1984
Long ago, in the dark and unrecorded
reaches of time, Mankind was poorly
clothed. He had to rely upon the skins of
animals to keep him warm . Animals were
extremely reluctant 10 give their skins up
for this purpose and, as a consequence,
large numbers of early men and women
were very cold. As members of the mammal club, Mankind was ootorious for being the least hairy of all that group, reminding some objective observers of a shaved
dog walking on its hind legs . Therefore,
animal skins were very important for th e
survival of this poorly equipped species.
Even when men did manage to wrest
sk ins away from animals, Ihey were often
still cold since, as is widely known, animal
sk ins do not come equipped with eilher
buttons or zippers. Thus it was that even
Ihose people who managed to have a n
an imal skin noneth eless got frostbite,
oftentimes in very embarrassing places.
The n too, early man found it nearly imposs ible to fashion a three-piece s uit out
of animal sk ins. This delayed the pr o fes sion of Law for cenluries and severely curta iled church attendance.
Sizing was anOlher problem. Early
hunters had 10 allempl to judge Ihe sizes
of a nimals from a distance. Oftenlimes,
these hunters has tQ kill hundreds of
animals before they finally found one in
their size.
Early hunters were often driven 10 the
hunt by their mates who chronically complained of having nothing to wear.
Many of these hunters were injured
because of the in sistence of their mates to
have them acquire ever more unusual
garments. 1'.li.s desire for the unusual made
it necessary for pre-historic man to range
ever wider in hi s quest for garme nts . As a
consequeflce he oftentimes found himse lf,
a)loo far from home to make it back, or,
b) in confrontalion with a beast several
times his size and strength who just happened to inhabit an exotic hide.
Most of these problems with clothing
were les sened when early men decided to
take sheep into their living quarters. Thi s
discovery was made when the first prehistoric man lea rned that by wrapping
himself around a sheep, he could sleep
warmly throughoul the night. This was a
definite improvement in the human con dition. However, Ihere were problems.
Many early sheep were restless sleepers
and, as such , disturbed the rest of early
man . Many people complained of blealing
noi ses.
As awareness and technology grew in anc ie nt man , the idea arose of shaving the
sheep so that men could sleep with the wool
a nd not with Ihe sheep . Thi s was a bit bet ler, but t hi s, too, caused problem s . Many
sheep fro ze to death and hunger replaced
warmth as a primary human problem .
Also, the invention of weaving was still
several centuries in the future a nd early
m an had a very difficult lime keeping the
balls of wool gathered aboul hi s ;lerson.
Besides, many people suffered from ilching
and irril ating skin rashes.
Modern man can look back on suc h
times with a wry smile at Ihe quaintness of
hi s ancient ancestor. The Iwenlielh cenlury
has found a solution to m a nkind' s clothing
problems. This so lution dovetailed with Ihe
domestication of Ihe ester, a creat ure so
elusive and nocturna l th all hey co-ex isted
with human beings for ce nturi es before
Ihey were actuall y known 10 exi sl. As is
now we ll known, esters are small, in credib ly furry crcalures who live LInder
beds. T he propensil y for rapid breeding
made Ihe m in credibly numerous. When
human beings di scovered Ih e m and learned how to harvesl them, a new day dawned in Ih c history o f human apparcl.
FOLLOWGraphics Editor through kn .. dup mud by the bay
011 the ULSlStrnce ,hat il is. in Jort. "0 short cui . ••
PRODUCE fiflte n minute rape loops 0/ Jim Morrison QUOitS
from IilJe albums for use on producli on nights (optwnofj.
As with other imporlant breakthroughs
in the human saga, the initial discovery required years of thought before a suitable
application of knowledge was to result.
Due 10 Ihe size of the esters, Ihe use of
them to provide clothing was, at fir sl,
overlooked. In fact, esters were Ihought to
be useless and even an annoyance; Ihe bane
of house wi ves .
SCALE wall Of Senior Eduo,'s /M'O story oportmem in order
to find out "if anyone's home. to
WRITE (he occaslonol rock ,, 'roll revi~w. usinr clear,
unbiased reporting /l'chnlques.
In the 1950's, sc ie ntist s and clothing
manufacturers hil upon the idea of pUlling
a whole lot of eSler togelher to make
mat erial. Thu s was born the poly-ester,
which, as mosl people know, m eans
"many eslers." The invention of material
made from the hides of many esters revolutioni zed the clothing indus try and insured
that Ihe growing numbers of people in th e
world would have raiment.
Iro nically, however, the introduction of
I he polyester set human being back to the
days of cold and deprivation. The process
o f melding Ihe esters togelher was not
perfeci a nd Ihe material produced had
microscopic holes in it at the point where
Ihe ester were pressed together. So it was
thai it came to pass that human being,
a ll houg h well and fas hionably dressed,
relurned to their roots and again fo und
themse lves as cold as they had been in the
days before zippers and buttons.
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Cooper Point Journal
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