cpj0336.pdf

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Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 12, Issue 25 (May 24, 1984)

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Thursday
Evergreen Artists sponsor" A Field'
Day," multi-media art event,
noon, behind Evans library, free.
Thursday Night Films presents
"Room at the Top" featuring
Oscar-winning performance of
Simone Signoret, 7, 9:30 p.m.,
Lee Hall I, $1.50, chi Ideare
provided.
DANCE: CREATION AND PERFORMANCE opens, 8 p.m., Experimental Theater of the Communications Bldg. $3. Tickets at
Yenney's and the Bookstore.
Presidential Symposium presents
University of Washingron Faculty
Artist Michael C. Spafford speaking on "Art and Politics," 8 p.m.
Recital Hall, Comm Bldg., free.
Olympia Coalition for Central
American Refugee Rights is sponsoring a silent vigil at Percival Landing in Olympia on Friday and
Saturday. The vigil is being held to
protest the relocation of Central
American Refugee camps in Honduras. The Friday event will take
place between 4 and 5:30 p.m. and
will be repeated between noon and
1 p.m. on Saturday.
On Sunday, May 20, letter
writing at several churches and
community groups will be done to
discourage the relocations. For additional information contact, Bob
Gragson at 866-3983.
.
Mount Adams Climb, Friday afternoon the Wilderne s s Center
members will be leaving the campus in an Evergeen van and driving to the foot of Ml. Adams. On .
Saturday they will attempt a summit climb. There are still three
openings for the trip, which is be·
ing offered to any staff, student,
faculty, or alumnus of the
Evergreen Community. Contact
the Wilderness Center for more
details. You must have hiking
boots and your own outdoor gear.
Ice equipment optional. x6537.

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DANCE: CREA nON AND PER- MAY 19·20
Ultimate Frisbee Tournament conFORMANCE continues, 8 p.m.,
Olympia Wooden Boat Fair at Pertinues, 10 a.m.·5 p.m., campus
Experimental Theater, Comm
cival Landing Park. Races, marimplayfields, free.
Bldg., $3.
ba music, marine skills demonstraKOY AANISQATSI is coming ro tions. Free.
Olympia! This internationally ac·
claimed film, featuring a sound
Softball, I p.m ., campus play fields
track by composer Philip Glass,
will be shown at the State Theatre,
Performance and Dance by Pablo
May 18-24, at 7 p.m. $4
Schugurencksy and Gena Gloar
general, $2 12 and under.
"Color Zone - a study of percep866-6000 ext. 6001 for more info.
tion and composure" "Light
Lines" with Music by Noh Special
Effects. 8:00 311 E. 4th (The
Tropicana) $2 .50 cover (come
Festival of New Growth presents ready to dance)
Native American arts and crafts, 10
a.m., library lobby, and films
"They Promised to Take Our Festival of New Growth continues
Land," "Multiply and Subdue the with the films "Land of War
Earth," and "New Alchemists," Canoes" and "Windwalker" Lecture Hall 1. $2, 3:30 p.m.
7·10 p.m., CAB 108 , free.

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Monday
Volunteer Wilderness Ranger posi.lion available with DarringlOn
Ranger Station. Find out at the
slide show at I :00, Room U221.
Open campus meeting on parking
fee increase for next fall. 11 :30
a.m.·1:30 p.m. in CAB 110.
Epic presents "On Company
Business" at 7:30 p.m. in Lecture
Hall I, free. Repeated Tuesday at
noon in CAB 108.

:=

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

Tuesday

Wednesday

"Computers and t he Law" will be "Survi val skill s in the Job Market:
discussed in a free lecture on Tuesday, May How to find the Employer That's
Right for me ." Co-sponsored by
22 from 3 to 5 p.m . in CAB 108
California attorney Randy Komisar will Career Planning and Placement
discuss various issues in protecting interests and the Library , this workshop is
in proprietary information, including pa- on Wednesday in L 2221 at I p.m.
For more information call Career
tent, copyright and trade secret issues.
Komisar, a member of the law firm of Planning and Placement.
Gaston Snow and Ely Bartlett in Palo AllO,
is a frequent lecturer on the legal aspects Weslern Swing. rare film footage
of computer usage. He earned his J. D. of Western Swing bands, shows
from Harvard University and a B.A. in with Blues Country, rescheduled
from May 16, at 7 and 9 p.m.,
economics from Brown University.
respectively.
Capital Theatre, $6
Further information on the free 3 p.m.
for
both.
Olympia
Media Exlecture can be obtained by calling Joanne
change, 866-6000 X6001.
Jirovec at 8*6000, ext. 6!70.

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Evergreen Expressions Series
presents former Evergreen Facul·
ty Member Jose Arguelles conduc·
ting workshop on "Warriorship
Without War: Art as a foundation
for global peace," 11:30 a.m.-6
p.m., Olympia Community Center,
1314 E. 4th, free. Details and reser·
vat ions at 866-6000 X6833.

A real hands-on presentation about
massage led by Barbara Park of
Radiance Herbs and Massage. 1320
E. Eighth Ave., Olympia,
754-4085.

50s sock hop dance to benefit
Ujamma. Lib 4300,9 p.m., $3.50

May 18·20
Tumwater Bluegrass Festival,
Tumwater High School. Banjo
contest, open mike, children's activities, workshops, and more. Fri·
day and Sat urday concerts $5. Day
Activities, gospel show and dance
- Free with SI Festival button.
Weekend pass $10.

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May 19-May 26
The Artist's Co-op Gallery, at 524
S. Washington, in downtown
Olympia, will be featuring as their
Artists of the Week, Dorothy
Curry - Oil, Stephen NicholasWood Sculptor. Hours of the
gallery a re 10·5, Monday through
Saturday.

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counseling Center presents,
"Counseling Skills Workshop," 8
a.m.-5 p.m., location and other
details availab le at X6800, $30.
Ultimate Frisbee Tournament,
10-5, campus playfields, free.

Women's Center plans trip lO
Women's Economic Rights Conference at Seattle Cent ral Com.
munity College. Call Susan Cohen
at 866-3821 for details.
Wilderness and Counseling centers
sponsor "New Games for New
People," outdoor work shop,
featuring loserless competition,
leadership·building activities and
more, 10 a .m .-dark, campus
athletic field s, $6 students and
senior citizens, $8 general.
Registration necessary. Call Joe
Franke at 357-6068 or 866-9761.
Final Show of DANCE: CREA·
TION AND PERFORMANCE , 8
p .m. Experimental Theater. Comm
Bide. $3.

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By Francisco A. Chafeaubriand
Awe·some (adjeclive) I. Inspiring awe: an

awesume sigh I. 2. characterized by awe. 3.
Lily Tomlin
It's hard to find words to adequately
describe Lily Tomlin's performance at the
Capitol Theater last week but one could
start with the word "awesome" and work
their way through the alphabet.
Miss Tomlin's performance was theater
in its purest sense . Her abilities as an actress, comedienne, mime and monologist
are so well developed and fully integrated
that she, with minimal props and simple
though effeclive lighting, can transform an
empty stage into one crowded with wacky,
funny, strange but always real characters.
After a hilarious opening, in which Miss
Tomlin confessed her realizatior. of a
dream ("I've always dreamed of making
it to broadway so thai someday I might get
a chance to play Olympia! "), she went into a wildly surreal piece featuring Mrs.
Beasley. A s sh e goes outside to call in lit t ic 13i11 )" Be~ s ley, who is "playing" war
wilh hI S friends, she carefully avoids
landm inc'i and comolains bitterly about

The Cooper Point Journal

the tank tracks in her garden. Mrs. Beasley
is less than pleased when Billy comes home
minus a leg and lets him know il:
"You march right back out there and find
your leg young man. Do you t hink limbs
grow on trees?"
All of Miss Tomlin's characters made an
appearance : Tess, the bag lady; Edith Ann;
Rick; Glenna, child of the sixties: Little Lily; Bobbie Jeanine and, o f co u rs e
Ernestine, beloved telephone operator who
is crushed by the divestiture of AT&T.
Threatened by the advance of compute r
technology, Ernestine must now resort to
courteousness ("THANK YOU for calling
A T&T. Can you imagine what ,aying th a t
does 10 me?") if she is to save her job.
Using no make up or co stume change,
Miss Tomlin slipped in and out of
character with astounding ease. Afler each
sketch she would shake her body as i ri o
rid herself of whatever residue migh t remain, take a bow, then proceed , ofte n
throwing OUI one-lincr , as a tran sitional
pr o p.
The lOur de force of her two-ho ur per formance was the encore sketch featuring

Sister Boogie Woman, a 77 year old Black
evangeli st who\ got the cure for whatever
ail s you ("Boogie! " ). As her body sways
to the go spel music, Sister Boogie
Woman ' s gravell y voice preaches the vir·
tues of Boogie. She exhorts the crowd to
yell " I got Boogie" and shares her Boogie
wisdom with an elderly couple in a nursing home who want to make lo ve but the
a ttendants refuse 10 al low it, forcing the
couple to keep th eir bedroom doors open .
Sister Boogi e Woman 's advice? "Keep the
door open and mak e love. They'll close it
,oon en ough'"
;\I is, Tomlin' s characters are funny, sad
and full of patho;. And while they ' re easy
to laugh a t. th ey a re too real to ridicule .
A bond of trmt is establi shed between the
charact ers and the audien ce. Mis s Tomlin
shows us their vulnerabilities , Iheir dreams,
Iheir fe a r ~ . W e as an audien ce can't help
but idc ntif" so whe n we la ugh , we're
laughing a t o urselves as well as the
cha racters o m ta ge . T hai is the geniu s of
Lih Tcol11lin .

Early
Warning
"From Under the Skirts,"
original play, written and perfl
ed by Daniel Edward Johnson,
the style of Commedia dell
will premiere at Capital Cit
Studios 911 E. 4th Ave. Olympia
W A. on Friday Ma,y 25 and
day May 26, 1984 at 8:00 p.m
tickets are $5 Advanced ti
available at tpe Asterisk a
Cheese Library and The Sm
Cafe in Olympia.
'Gays and Lesbians Behind Bars
What you should know about

Inrisons. "
Ron Endersby and Anne Hulse,
Gayron Prison Outreach will
coming to the Evergreen camto speak and lead a discussion
the plight of Gays and Lesbians
ocked behind prison walls .
Presen'tation begins Saturday,
May 26 at 7pm in CAB 108. Admission is free.

uesptte the fact that Olympia is one
only two state capitols without
ocal television coverage, its
nts have won numerous naawards for their work. Video
cameras are being widely used by
our schools, churches, social ser·
vice organizations, and arts and
cultural groups, all of whom will
share the screen Saturday night,
May 26 at 7:30 p.m. when the
Capitol Area Community Television Association presents its Com·
munity Television Showcase. The
event will take place at the YWCA
Friendship Hall, 220 E. Union in
downtown Olympia. Admission is
free

Litlle Chubasco Recent works by
Julia Becker and Daniel Biehl. 215
N. Capitol Way, Olympia, May 24
25, 2 - 8p.m . May 26, II 8 p .m. and May 27 , 12 - 5 p .m ..
Reception is Saturday,S - 8 p.m .
"Songs for Coming Home: Poetry,
Praise & the Spiritual Tradition"
On Friday evening, May 25, 7:30
p.m., in CAB 104 at TESC, poet
David White will trace the
significance of poets throughout
the ages whose lives and writings
exemplify a tradition of praise and
spiritual instruction .

May 17, 1984

~.

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E

New law to benefit domestic violence victims
By Francisco A. Chateaubriand

Domestic violence laws are finally getting tougher.
Earlier this month the Olympia City
council passed a new ordinance providing
both criminal and civil remedies for
domestic violence . .The vote was
unanimous.
In a related move, Barbara Clark has
been appointed to the full-time positon of
Assistant City Attorney. The council approved the position in an effort to help
facilitate the prosecution of general
criminal cases which includ es domestic
violence.
Ol ympia City Attorney Mark Erickson,
who drafted the new city ordinance. says
the purpose of the law is to protect
domestic violence victims who were not
covered under the former law.

"While the new law (still) covers married persons, it also covers persons not
married if they live together, have lived
together in the past, or have children in
common," said Erickson .
The law applies to spouses, brothers and
sisters, children, roommates, and couple's
who have been or are living together.
The new ordinance includes a broader
definition of what constitutes domestic
violence. This includes physical harm,
bodily injury, assault, or the infliction of
fear of imminent physical harm, bodily injury or assault.
Erickson drafted the city ordinance to
conform to the new state law (Chapter 263,
Laws of 1984) which becomes effective
Sept ember I. Th e state law will make
ord ers under the Olympia ordinance en·
forceable statewide.
The part of the ordinance dealing with
criminal aspects of domestic violence will

go into effect in mid-June.
People seeking help will find more support and options available to them as a
result of the new ordinance. Some of the
new services and procedures are:
- Persons may now petition the court for
a protection order on their own behalf or
on the behalf of a minor. These protection
orders can prohibit harassment of the vic:
tim, settle child custody, or determine who
may remain on the premises. If the person
leaves the premises to avoid abuse, the
right to ask the court for help still holds.
, Any person may petition the Olympia
coun if he or she is an Olympia resident
or if the violence occurred in the city of
Olympia.
- No attorney will be needed to file a petition. The city clerk' s office will provide
simplified petition forms, an informational
brochure and assistance in filing . The $20
filins fee may be waived if a person is lack-

By Dale Folkerts
Seven bullets, fired in a crowded
cafeteria on a peaceful college campus .
Those bullets ended one life and shot
grief into many more .
For Arthur and Christine Pimentel,
those bullets also carried a load of
unanswered questions, for it is their son
who is accused of pulling the trigger.
The gunfire took the life of Elisa Ann
Tissot, who friends remember as a •'really
spirited, really loving person ." Tissot, 21,
planned to travel abroad and teach after
graduating from The Evergreen State College this June, and then return for postgraduate studies.
"It's a darn shame,'" Mr. Pimentel says.
., I feel so sorry for that girl and her parents
- I hurt inside for her. And they probably
ask themselves the same thing we do why? Why?"
Michael Pimentel is charged with firstdegree murder in the April 17 shooting of
Tissot, a 1980 graduate of Woodway High
School in Edmonds, as she sat drinking
coffee with friends at Evergreen in Olympia. Friends say young Pimentel had dated
Tissot and wanted to rekindle the relationship . She repeatedly said no.
To friends and acquaintances, Michael
Pimentel is an enigma who hinted at his
past, but seldom provided details.

paratroop~r to fight black nationalist guer-

His parents have seen the blitz of news
reports, t he stories from friends, the
speculation . They spend much of their time
trying to sort fact from fiction and searching for answers that nobody, except
perhaps their son, has.
"If I could just get the truth, and know
why, and what's going to happen to him,"
Mrs. Pimentel says.
"We went down to see him," she says .
"He wouldn't see us. I don't understand
why ... " She paused, and then after a moment, said maybe she does understand.
Michael Pimentel was born Jan. 4, 1957,
in Louisiana, one of four children. His
parents say he was intelligent, independent
and adventurous.
He hopscotched around the world as a
child to live wherever his Air Force father
was stationed. In Germany, he became
captain of the altar boys at a local church,
his parents say.
"He always liked the military,' Mr .
Pimentel says. He enlisted in the U.S. Army shortly after high school graduation
and trained as a paratrooper.
Mr. Pimentel gestures toward a framed
Army portrait, showing a straight, c1eancut young man in dress uniform posed in
front of an American flag. The man is
Michael Pimentel, the image of any
American serviceman . Any parent would
be proud.
These parents sit on a sofa amid a clutter of memorabilia, including a "Trooper
of the Month" plaque given by the 82nd
Airborne division to Pfc. Pimentel in
March 1976. That same year, after returning from a leave and while still stationed
in the United States, he deserted from the
Ar"my, his parents say.
The next year he joined the I st Battalion
of the Rhodesian Light Infantry as a

Cooper Point Journal
Senior Editor
Allison C. Green
Managing Editor
Francisco A. Chateaubriand
Production Manager
Curt Bergquist
Graphic Editor
Eric Martin
Photo Editor
Shannon O'Neill
Business Manager
Margaret Morgan
Advertising Manager
Christopher Bingham
Advisor
Mary Ellen McKain
Typist
Karla Glanzman
Distribution
Michael Martin
R eporters: Brad Aiken, Dean Batali, Mike
McKen zie, Lea Mitchell, David Scott Gary Burris
Production Crew: Robert Healy, David Scott ,
Mike McKenzie
Photographers: David Scott, Shannon O'Neill

I

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 JournaI's staff Advertising material contained herein does not imply endorse- .
ment by the Journal. Offices are located in the library building, Room 3232. Phone:
866-6000 X62J3 . All announcements should be double-spaced, listed by category, and
submitted no later than 5 p.m. on Monday J.or that week's pu,blication. A/~ letters to I
the editor must be typed, double-spaced and Signed and need to mclude a dayltme phone
number where the author can be reachedfor consultation on editing for libel and obsceni- ·.
ty. 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.

I

Page 2

rillas in sk irmishes against the white
Rhodesian government. One battle nearly
claimed his life .
It happened in a ground fight. The
paratrooper and a guerrilla came upon
each other suddenly and both fired. The
bullet that hit her son blew away the top
of his skull and portion of'his brain, Mrs.
Pimentel says. Her son's attacker was
killed.
Mrs. Pimentel traveled to Rhodesia to
see her injured son.
"He was laying ther~ with a big hole in
his head," she says. "He had to be lifted
up to be taken to the bathroom. And the
doctor said he'd never walk again."
He still limps and cannot fully use one
arm. A surgical plate now replaces the
damaged skull, and his parents say he still
must take medicine to avoid seizures. Mrs.
Pimentel starts to wonder aloud whether
the injury or medicine could have changed her son . Her husband cuts her off in
mid-sentence. The family and a reporter
had agreed to avoid discussing the events
of the last week.
The Rhodesian government fell (the
country is now Zimbabwe) and young
Pimentel returned to the States after being injured. Beginning in 1981, he began
an on-and-off enrollment at Evergreen.
He didn't like Northwest life, he parents
say. The damp climate bothered his leg. He
thought some students at the "alternate
college" were weird and he often was
depressed.
Gil Salcedo, a modern history and
literature professor at Evergreen, met the
young man about a year ago, before he
began a European history course. After only a couple weeks in Salcedo's class,
Pimentel withdrew to work on an independent project.
Salcedo says Pimentel reminded him .o f
many vets - "impatient with academic
constraints, wanting to move on in their
lives . "
As a student, he was intensely interested
in history, was a voracious reader and has
an excellent memory for historical names
and dates.
But, Salcedo recalls, "He got to be kind
of boring to be around, because he would
just talk about a few subjects to the exclusion of everything else ."
Pimentel wrote three "well-written, intelligent' papers about Rhodesia, one of
which included chain-of-command studies,
field tactics, weapons and air-ground force
liaisons. It also referred to some of his
mercenary experiences, Salcedo says.
But the elder Pimentels bristle when their
son is labeled mercenary.
"It's a terrible connotation of the
word," Mrs. Pimentel says. "It makes you
sound like a murderer. He was working for
a legimate government, and he was making less money than a (U .S. Army) private
would . "
Mr. Pimentel adds, "He did it for a
cause, that's all." He wanted to light communism, the father says.
Michael Pimentel's next battle will take
place in a courtroom.
"I won't go to the trial," Mrs. Pimentel
says. "I know I couldn't take it." Prosecutors might be expected to tear away the
character of their son, who the Pimentels
think of as a little boy playing in the streets

Journal

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Arguelles' Creative Warriorship For Peace

ing sufficient funds. In determining a
waiver, the income of the person named
as the abusing l-'arty is not considered.
- Criminal charges may also be filed if
domestic violence has occured. In that case
the judge may impose an order prohibiting
contact with the victim. This is in addition
to a fine or jail sentence.
Olympia police officers have been trained to respond to domestic violence calls
and are receiving additional training on the
new ordinance. Besides giving advice for
preventing further abuse, they are required
to direct victims to shelters or other community services.
The training has been a coordinated effort with representatives from victim's
assistance services, criminal prosecution
and law enforcement offices working
together to develop the new training
program.

Michael Pimentel's parents wonder why
Edilor 's Note: Michaef Pimelllef pfeaded
in n ocent to a charg e of first-degree
premeditated murder on May I. His
fawyer. Richard Hicks, said the pfea is based on a reason of possible insanity. 'The
defendant does not deny the plzysicaf acts
occurred, ., he said. This article was printed
the week after the shootinR.
(C)Copyright The Daily Herald Company

v

of Germany, as a history buff, a bright student with a book always in his hand.
They would have to confront Gary and
Diane Tissot, Elisa's parents, in the courtroom. It's a strain the Pimentals are not
ready for.
"I hope I never have to face them eyeball
to eyeball," Mrs. Pimentel says. And both
realize that some people probably have
formed their own conclusions about the
parents of someone accused of murder.
"I just want Michael to understand that
we still love him and that he's still our
son," Mrs:' Pimentel says. "And that we're
not monsters. You raise your children but you never know what will happen."
Although some neighbors have expressed support, the couple admits they worry
about what other will think. They cope by
turning away.
A sunshade is lowered outside the large
front window of their suburban home. The
inside curtain also is drawn, sealing off any
glimpse inside. They have changed their
phone to an unlisted number.
Mrs. Pimentel lights cigarette after
cigarette she talks about her son. Her
recollections are interwoven with questions
to the reporter about the workings of
criminal courts . It's a topic unfamiliar to
this family.
Mr . Pimentel sits on the edge of the sofa,
hands clasped in front of him. It is hard
for him to talk about his son now, he says.
It's like rubbing salt in the wound. He
hangs his head when his wife asks a question about the death penalty.
Prosecutors still have the option of
amending the charge to the more serious
aggravated first-degree murder if investigators find substantial new evidence.
An aggravated first-degree murder charge
can be punishable by execution .....
During his client's first days in jail, [the
defendant's lawyer Richard) Hicks says,
"He was still in shock and the enormity of
the events and their consequences hadn't
sunk in yet."
Now, Hicks says, "He's very sorry at
what happened."
Arthur and Christine Pimentel know
their son must pay for his actions if he is
judged guilty. Arthur Pimentel says he
always told his kids, "Never say you're
sorry if you blow your cool. Sorry isn't
good enough. "

Deadline
extended
Next week' s CP J will come out on Friday,
June I, because of Monday's Memorial
Day Holiday. The deadline is therefore extended to Tuesday, May 29 at 5 p.m. Turn
submissions in to LIB 3234 in the envelopes
outside the door.

By Monica Johnson
In the eyes and heart of Jose Arguelles
the earth is a luminous thought form, a
work of art. On May 18 he brought to his
workshop "Warriorship without War: Art
as a Foundation for Global Peace" a
message of both the urgency for world
peace and the hope of its emergence. The
purpose of Arguelles' work is to prepare
earthlings for the evolution of our global
consciousness through a higher ' intelligence. Through his Colorado-based
Planet Art Network Arguelles envisions the
potential to creatively inspire, educate, and
organize people so that they function as a
"single, purposeful planetary organism."
The impelling need for such a transformation is the contention between the nations and the mounting arms race. A
nuclear exchange would mean the destruction of life on earth as we know it, an
evolutionary process of about four billion
years. According to Arguelles, our world
as a conscious thought form of life energy
reflects a single pattern of planetary events
which has occured "in at least one other
elsewhere." The purpose of this resonating
pattern is to "arouse the memory of the
previous occurence (planetary suicide) in
significant numbers of planetary intelligence agents so that the solution to
total destruction at the point of no-return
may be reconstructed by all ... working as

a single coherent network." The event
which triggered the beginning of the countdown to the point of no-return was the
detonation of the first nuclear weapons in
1945. The resulting relt:ase of radioactive
agents into the atmosphere was a sign of
cancerous illness to the earth's life energy.
The grace period given mankind to heal his
attitude toward each other and to grow in
attunement with his world is 40 to 45 years,
meaning that the next few years are crucial
concerning the outcome of our future.
Part of Jose Arguelles' work is the training of the "warrior" for intervention during the coming period of transformation,
that is, intervention by the higher intelligence of the earth's energy with
messages of healing . It is the task of the
warrior to listen and LISTEN ("let intelligence silently tingle every nerve"), to
be aware of other people's needs, to live
in simplicity, to overcome doubt and fear,
and to tame his own mind and ego (meditation!). The warriors of the Planetary Art
Network will be gathering forces to face
the next few years. On June 6, 1984 will
be the" Dragon's Day Alert, " a time for
focusing Network energy in a syncronized
healing manner. Additional gatherings are
being planned all over globally for 1984 1987 according to a UFO (Unified Field
Organizers) timetable, If intered in participating in these events contact Monica
Johnson 866-3517 , Tom Danaher
866-8746, Johanna Pemble 866-9349.

. olf Play set
Virginia W
May 31
"Orlando," a free production of
Virginia Woolf's fantastical novelbiography will be performed Thursday and
Friday evenings, May 31 - June I, in the
Recital Hall of the Communications
Building.
Faculty member Judith Espinola
adapted the 1928 novel and is the director
of the all-student cast from the "Interpreting Art and Literature" program. The
novel, reports Espinola, ' "combines
parody, literary criticism, fantasy,
historical fact and satire. The play begins

in 1586 when Orlando is a fourteen-yearold boy and ends in 1927 when Orlando is
a woman in her thirties. What happens in
between, needless to say, reflects many
transformations. "
Cast members are: Jody Eikenberry,
Bruce Fogg, Nancy Loftness, Sharlene
Lugenbeel, Jill Robertson, Paul Traub,
Ann-Marie Wehrer, Ann Seidner, Per
Fjelstad, Chela Metzger , and Rebecca
Orendurff. Faculty member Hiro
Kawasaki worked with the students to produce the music and set projections .
Admission to the 8 p.m. performances
are free and open to the public.

"Songs for Coming Home"
Northwest poet DavidWhite will discuss
poetry and read his own works on Friday,
May 25, at 7:30 p.m. in CAB 104. His
evening presentation, entitled "Songs for
Coming Home: Poetry, Praise and the
Spiritual Tradition," will trace the
significance of praise and spiritual instructions.
White , a member of the Chinook learning Community on Whidbey Island, will
draw on a variety of sources including
Beowulf, new translations of medieval In-

dian poets, as well as modern poets such
as Rilke and Gary Snyder. He will also read
from his book, Songs for Coming Home,
which will be published next month.
White, who has been highly reviewed by
poet Robert Bly, grew up in England and
developed an early love of the Celtic tradition of storytelling and poetry . He will
return to England in 1985 to coordinate an
Intercultural Studies Program at Oxford
U ni versity. Sponsored by t he Art s
Resource Center and Innerplace, the 7:30
p.m. reading carries a $1 admiss ion fee.

WILDERNESS FIELD STUDIES
·EARN COLLEGE CREDIT
Natural history, field
ecology, wilderness .history ·
and management, wilderness
instructors school. Courses .
for 1984 in the Pacific NW,
Sierra/Summer/Fall quarters. \
For information, write .or call:
Sierra Institute, Box C
Carrige House
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
smA' CRUZ CA. 95604
(408) 429·2761

.z=
o

~

Women's Clinic offers exams
Evergreen' s Health Services and
Women's C linic will present a Staff/ Faculty Day for women on Tuesday, May 29.
from 9 a.m . until noon complete annual
exams will be offered including Pap
smears, blood pressure rNdings,
hematocrits and breast exams. In lile afternoon volunteers will be available for blood

pressure checks, hematricri(s, and other exams . Free information sheets will also be
available.
While the afternoon session is free, halfhour morning sessions carry a $15 fee and
appointments must be called in to ext.
6200. Further details on the Staff/Faculty
Health Day are also available at the same
number.

3rd World Graduation Saturday
Evergreen's Third World Coalition will
host the Sixth Annual Graduation Banquet
for Third World students, faculty, staff
and alumni on saturday, May 26, at 2 p.m.
on the fourth floor of the Library.
Hi&hlishts of the free banquet will be

recognition of the custodial staff, an address by Ed Trujillo, administrative services manager, and selection by 1984
graduates of the Third World Faculty
Member of the Year. Further details on the
banquet can be addressed to the Third
World Coalition at ext. 6034.

Jackson wins education award
Thelma Jackson,
chairman of
Evergreen's Board of Trustees, has won the
1983 Vocational Education Contibutor of
the Year Award from the Washington
State Advisory Council on Vocational
Education .
Jackson, who served on the National
Task Force on Vocational Education and
presently serves on the Vocational Education Task Force of Washington State
School Directors, was named "Lay Person
Award Recipient" for her contibutions.
Jackson, reports the Council, "has
worked tirelessly to improve the working
relationships between education, government and the local citizenry of the state of
Wash ington." A former chair of the State
Advisory Council on Vocational Education, Jackson relates that her interest in
vocational education began more than a
decade ago when she served as the director of Work Options for Women through
the Olympia YWCA .
"As I began designing occupational programs," Jackson recalls, "I became aware
of the great potential vocational education

holds for women in the job market. " She
later worked with Washington women who
petitioned the state's Joint Apprenticeship
Council to include both sexes in their
program .
As a board member of the North
Thurston County District, Jackson has
been instrumental in the creation of the
Thurston County Vocational Skills Center.
The Center, a culmination of seven years
of "very hard work," will jointly serve six
area school districts . "The cooperative effort," says Jackson "makes it possible for
each school district to enjoy a 'high-co st,
high-demand' program that would ha ve
been cost-prohibitive for a single district."
The 1983 Vocational Education Contibutor of the Year Award marks the eighth
annual award given by the state's Advisory
Council on vocational Education. Nominations were taken by the Council in the form
of letters and applications form the ge nera l
public. Also receiving award s were Seattle
teacher Bruce McBurney (Educator Aw ard
Recipient) and the Genera l Ad visor y Committee of C lover Park Voca tion a lTechnical Institute.)

-.

ALL WAYS TRAveL seRVIce, INC.'

WESTSIDE St"40PPING C['NTER

OLYMPIA . WASHINGTON

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May 24, 1914

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It's our turn: Editor trashes press releases
By Allison C . Green
Alright , it's my time to bitch. I only wish
I could have said these things in the orien·
tation issue . I had to learn them first.
There are a few consistently irritating
things that people do to editors . I just want
to te ll you them now in the hope that you
will have some mercy .
I. "Do a story on me (or us or our
group). " This familiar whine always makes
me suspicious . Three wee ks be fore the end
o f the school year there are still people who
want introductory stories on their
o rga nization s. Nothing timely is going on ;
no thing to motivate readers out of their
armch a irs . Lesson numbe r one: introducto r y stories are fo r the first few issues o f
th e paper. If yo u want to reach peo pl e,
o rga ni ze yo ur st ory a ro und an eve nt.
2. "W hy d o n ' t you co me interview us? "
Som e peo pl e d on' t wa nt th e blandness of
a news sto ry, they wa nt inte rvi ews . But
no bo d y wa nt s to read a n int e rvi ew o f someo ne say ing, in th e in e ffi ciency o f o ra l
(om mu nica ti o n , tha t this 0r ga nizati o n is

sponsoring that event. Lesson number two :
interviews are effective only if used rarely
and carefully . An interview captures the
synl ax of the speaker. Therefore, the
speaker should either have something exceptionally interesting to say or an exceptionally interesting way to say it. Or both.
Famous people are a good example .
Everyone wants to know exacty how their .
favorite movie star phrases his or her feel ings. Or how some imperialist bureaucrat
avoids the subject. But if the story is really about an organizat ion or an event, an
interview is not appropriate.
3. Press releases. Every week, newsy con fetti litters my desk. And every week, I cut,
rewrit e and research them . Lesson number
three: begin the press release with the event,
get a ll the informa tion correct and com plete, and don't write it in the first pe rson.
I don ' t k now how many writers of press
relea ses fee l they need to summ a rize the
state of th e world in six paragraphs before
th ey even get to th e information. Readers
are not stupid . They know nuclear wa r
lo om s o ve r o ur head s, po llution threat ens
our ecosys tem and the p resent administra-

tion is doing nothing to help the situation .
These simple beginnings do nothing to
enhance our understanding of why you are
planning your event. Limit your opening
lines to two at the most. Then tell us when,
where and how your event is taking place.
There are always the incomplete and incorrect press releases. But I can't rag too
much because I make the same m istakes.
Please, please, please don't write in the
first person . A news story that starts with
"We would like to invite ... " or "We' re
proud to . .. " has no context. Who are
"we?" Instead , identify the group or the
specific people by name .
One more thing, the Cooper Point Journal is and probably always will be
understaffed. If you realliwant you r story
covered, writ e it yourself. We ' re happy to
receive your account. We can always edit
it for objectivity and style .
Thank s for letting me get these item s off
my chest. Maybe they don't count for a hill
of beans for this here paper , but next year,
you could really help an edito r by followin g them. I just hope it' s not too late .

Public education perpetuates class disparity
I::u uc<llio n Is Powcr .. . bul fo r who m ?
Th,l( quest ion, as ked by severa l me m bers
pr Ihe fa ll lerm 19R4 program, ha, somc
, urpri,i ng tlieo r ie,.
\Ve,tcrII CU lIc;l\ iOIl ca me 10 mOS I co unIrie, IHlI <I ' a li beralm. bUI a' part of imperial domina l ion. In imDerial Europe.
,ciuJollll g was orgalli/cd 10 develop a nd
main lain an in herent ly inequilable a nd un~U .'I urganil.a lion of produc li on a nd
r1l>lil ical power.
As Nort li America becam e colon ized,
l li c,e im perial powe rs of E ur ope a llem pled. thr o ugh sc hoo ling, 10 I ra in Ih e co lo n iLcd for ro les t haI suit ed the co lo ni ze r.
T hen, as well as now, c hildren are trained to sub mi l unqu esli o ningly to a uth o rity. T hi s Irain ing res ult s in me nt a l habil s,
we ll -fo rmed by ad ulth ood, Ih a t a re a ll 10
t he adva nt age o f Ihe ruling cl ass.
W li c re as so m e o f th e s tudent s in the
1984 program beli eved Ihey were "subj ec ts
of a socia l cOnlro l expe rim e nt e ngineere d

by Ih e rac ull y," ca pit a li sm can be see n as
an "eng in eer" o f a broad er based "soc ial
co ntro l ex pe rim e nl " in vol vin g educa ti on.
Beca u, e ca pi lali sm pr od uces instilUti o ns
Ihal suppo rt cap itali st ic st ruc lu res, sc hools
reward Ihose who arc mO~ 1 des ircab le fro m
Ihe sla nd poi nt of cap ila li slic: econo m ic,
soc: ia l, and po lili ca l in sli l uli ons.
T hi .s syste lll o r rewa rd seems 10 be ne l'il
Ihe in divid ua l. blll il is a lso one o f Ih e mosl
e lliee nl a nd e lleCI ive m eans of ,oc ia li zin g
peop le to serve the do min a n l gro u ps in
soc ielY . II hel ps pe rpclUa le the he ir are hal
Si r ucture o f soci ety .
If a li ena lio n o f la rge segm enl s o f th e
po pulati o n is to be avoid ed, th e moral
co mmitm ent o f cit ize ns to th e d o minanl
va lu es o f soci ety is required. Scho ols musl
cont inue reinfo rcing belie fs that the syste m
is bas ica ll y sound a nd the ro les a lloca ted
by edu ca ti o n ar c the ap pro priat e ro les 10
play.
To accompli sh thi s tas k, scho ol s (a nd
o the instituti o ns) reinforce Ihe image of inco mpelence a nd ignora nce of those who do

Greenerspeak

nOI succeed in sc ho o l.
As the techn o logy o f tod ay's induslri a l
soc ieties beco mes more compl ex and pervas ive , t he m ass o f peo ple ha vin g littl e o r
no fo rm a l hi ghe r ed ucali o n a re se parated
fr o m tec hno logy an d it s power. T ho se
a dult s arc pu shed into inferi o r soc ia l slatu s
a nd income ro les by the am o unl of sc hoo ling they have rece ived.
W hil e in sc hoo l. most slU dellls expect ra I io na l be hav ior fro m Ihe ir e lders and Ihey
expeci 10 ac ti ve ly pa rli cipa te in dec isio ns
a ffectin g the ir ow n be hav ior a nd we lfare .
Ye l mOS I fo rms of st ude nl gove rnm e lll
ne ve r a ll o w slud ent s a ro le in ma kin g impOrl a nt dec isio ns. In stead . stud e nt s a re
given th e illusion of powe r .
Stud ent clubs a nd o rga ni za tion s gi ve a
sense o f communi ty, but o ur public schools
frequ entl y have clubs tha t a re o rganized by
Ihe teache rs. Subseq uentl y, most student s
have little experi ence organi zing clubs a nd
they get a poor id ea o f thei r emotion al
potential.
In a ny de mocrati c so cie ty, th e a tta in-

men l of res po nsible citi zenship is la rgel y
de pendelll upo n the educali o nal syste m.
But o u r sc hoo ls pr ov id e pr ac t ica l
knowledge o f o nl y on e soc ia l insl itUli on,
Ih e schoo l ilse lf. O th er in sl itut io ns,
bu sin ess, gove rnl11 e nl , re li gio n, eIC., ar e
desc ribed o nl y in the abs trac i and freq uently wilhout an y info rm a l ion rega rd in g t heir
worki ng mec ha nisms.
Ame ri ca n schoo ls a re usually eS la bli sh cd a nd mainl ai ned by Ihe st ale , re lig io us
or d ers, or o th er specia l .inl eres t g roups to
serve Ih eir own needs, whethe r educa tiona l
o r econo mi c. Taxes e na bl e the communi Iy to co ntrollhe public sc ho ol s, but com lllu n it y control of the schoo ls d oes no t
necessarily mea n a ny c ha nge in either
teac hing or lea rni ng .
Unfortun a tely , . unless a n individu al
dro ps o ut of sch oo l, the publi c schoo l participa nt must accept th e services o ffered by
th e in stitution .
C on sequently, mill ions of A m e ricans
li ve a life of ideologica l ignora nce or servitude as a res ult of public education.

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Disc-tossers air it out in tournament
By Gary Burris
Over the weekend of May 19-20 the Seattle Windjammers and the Portland Fun
Hogs tied for first place in Evergreen' s fitst
Ultimate Frisbee Tournament. Ultimate is
a game that is something of a cross between
soccer and rugby, without any physical
contact. Players pass the disc between
themselves with the object of crossing a
goal line . Games are played to 15 points
and usually run about an hour.
The welJ-attended tournament was
organized by two students, Kris Wudtke
and John Colton. Featured were teams
from Evergreen. An all women's team was
one of the teams to register.
The comments from all the teams were
that this was the best tournament in years.
"Evergreen put out the red carpet , " said

a ·competitor. Participants were particularly p leased with the dinner and video tapes
provided Saturday night. Plans are in the
works for a falJ and spring tournament
next year.
-According t.o Wudtke, Ultimate has been
played at Evergreen for 5 years. Credit for
this year's success and number of participants, he says, goes to the Services and
Activities Fee Review Board. The Board
allocated money that alJowed this tournament to take place and has also allowed for
an Evergreen Team to enter a Seattle
Ultimate League. The league play is less intensive competition than tournament play
competition .
The Evergreen team has a consistent
group of 15-17 players but inore than 30
play just for fun. There are 6 women who

play often and an effort is underway to get .
enough participation to organize an alJ
women ' s team.
Ultimate is an easy game to learn . There
are only two requirements, being in good
shape and knowing how to accurately
throw the disc. If you're not in good ~hape
or don't know how to throw don't let thi s
discourage you, both wilJ come with a little playing time. As student Andy
McMillan says, "While Ultimate is competitive, there is a cooperative effort. There
are no referees and you call your own
fouls . Ultimate is close to the Evergreen
philosophy." Students play pick-up games
three times a week, Wednesday, Friday ,
and Sunday at 3:00. Everyone is invited
and encouraged to participate and have
fun .

G

ood afternoon. The sponsor-whom you
may know better as Rainier Beer-has
asked me to say a few words in behalf of this
latest release. Very well ... Tasteful.
Sophisticated. Intensely reFreshing. In fact, I
consider it a veritable milestone in the annals of
the brewing industry. So keep a Fresh eye
out for Rainier's double bill of Psycoldpack
with Beertigo. (By the way, for a
full .. sized and Rainierized movie poster
showing yours truly, the Man Who
Brewed Too Much, send your name,
address, and check for $2.50 to:
Beeraphernalia, Rainier Brewing
Company, 3100 Airport Way S.,
Seattle, Washington 98134.)

Who would you invite from history to lecture at E vergreen and why?

By S hanno n O' Neill

Jane Scheffer, Social ScienCP'

Ha r r iet I he Spy. S he was a
character in a children's book, sort
o f a pre- teen book, really . She's
wo n de rfu l
inqui s iti ve
a nd
vulnerable . She co uld maybe speak
abo ul learn ing b y putting yo urself
on the line. I do n ' t really know if
she ' s someone from h isto r y,
thoug h.

Page 4

Mike Salapka , History

How abo ut Lenin ? He co uld exp la in how he t hin ks the Sovie t
system went awry a nd help me con siderably in m y Russi an Histo ry
p rog r a m. Or Grouc ho M a rx.
T hin gs tend to get a litt le too
ser io us aro und here."

Jeffrey White, Fiction

Celese Brune, Earth En vironments

J o hn M uir because hi s atti tud e
towa rd s nature seems to be a th ing
o f the past. W e need more of his
type . A lecture by J o hn M uir and
I'd be sati sfied for the rest o f my
li fe.

Cooper Point Journal

Bob Ba rker ' cau se I like Bob . H e's
honest. He gives things away. H e's
got two beagles. I think he should
be the next president of E vergreen .
Hey Eric , where's M ister Quizmaster? One more thing ...,.. G o see
Images o f the Person sho w in
G allery 2 .

I t hink H a n k William s would p robably be the best. To me he' s a
symbo l of the American wa y. H e
knows how to die in the back o f a
cadillac in st yle.

May 24, 1984

May 24, 1984

Cooper Point Journal

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Breakup Blues

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conlinued from front page
to benefit consumers. All across the country for the past 70 years most people have
been able to afford basic phone service
because it stayed cheap. AT&T absorbed
local, long distance and all other costs in
one big embrace. Local customers found
the prices attractive and joined the system,
building it up quickly.
Local phone companies liked the sytem
of "universal serv ice" because the market
was large and the profits dependable. As
a result, the telephone became a way of
life , available to almost everybody. Its affordability cut across class lines and the urban / rural a . It can almost be said the

o

states as interest groups attempt to escape
from rising costs. These questions are basic
to the debate: Is the telephone a right of
every citizen? Should this be one goal of
telephone regulation? Should the telephone
industry be allowed to act in the
marketplace with much less, or no regulation? What is best for the consumer and
the future of telecommunications?
WashPIRG presents this overview of the
telephone issue in the hope that the
Evergreen community can become better
informed about what is ultimately a human
rights issue: Do citizens have the right to
communicate? Are we allowed equal access
to tools of communications?

telephone was' 'democratic."
It is one way to view the telephone as a
socially beneficial and widely available
utility . Others look at it from another
angle. The idea of "telephone as commodity" has not disappeared. Changes in
telecommunication technologies and new
areas of competition have led to a
federally-supervised breakup of AT&T.
The national network embracing local and
inter-state long distance service is no
longer. And consumers are being buffeted
with a dizzying series of rate increases and
service alterations. The idea of universal
service is being threatened.
Oebates are ra in in Con ress and the

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Breakup blues: More problems than it solved
By Danny Kadden
Despite the long history of government
regulation, AT&T has wiclded immense influence and power over the development
of th e "information indu stry" and our
liv es. Government has had to step in
numerous times since 1913 to protect the
public interest . Before World War II struggle's over rate structures were common. In
1956, AT&T was forced to stay out of the
co mputer processing field.
And ten years ago, the Justice Depart ment acted to cure the worst aspect of the
company's monopoly. i\ T&T not onl y
provided telephone service, it ow ned
a lmo ;, t all pertinent equipment manufactu rin g and re searc h facilities. The federal
la w<;\Iit challenging this ownership to uched off the remarkabl e battle that resulted
ill the breakup of the old firm into eight
pmt s, cnding the life of the world's large, t
co rpUIatio ll.

'The I)('al

~ y 19i;2, th e CO llrt manuevering behind
th em, AT&T '>tood on the brink of a major lo<s. It look ed as if th e govern ment
wou ld , uceced in '>e pcrating Western Elcctr ic. the compan y' ,> manuracturing arm ,
and Bell Lab" it ,> resea r(\, and de\'elopIllc nt di\'i~ion, from the ma in co mpa ny. So
i\ T&T negotiated.
T he ultimatc agreement reached \Va;"
con tr a ry to popular pe rccptions, a vi ctory
for Bell. The parent l'ompany let go or it s
22 loca l companies (lumped into seven
regional holding companies). In exchange,
the government agreed to drop its anti-trust
, uit and allow AT&T to compete in the
com puter and hi · tech telecommunications
fields. Thus, i\ T&T was able to shake off
its service s ubsidiaries which were becoming a drain on the company's abi li ty to
move into the important new telecommuni ca tion s growth areas.
The local companies were regulated both by the feds and the states, had limited
profits. and in some areas had effectively
reached market sa turation, They seemed
dull relics compared to the shining promise
of advanced telecommunications .
Under the supervision of Federal Judge
Harold H. Greene, the agreement went into effect this past January I. But by then
battles had been shaping up on the national
stage as well as in some states . They have
since erupted into a full scale economic
war, a war over how phone costs will be
spread now that AT&T has orphaned its
22 children .

Who Pays?
Local companies claim that for years,

the proposed plan, local customers will pay
$3.5 billion that was previously covered by
long-distance users . Long distance rates wll
then be reduced by $1,75 billion. This rate
reduction will benefit the large corporate
users,
By reducing rates in this rather crude
manner, AT&T hopes to retain its biggest
and most valuable customers, who may be
considering "bypassing" Ma Bell and purchasing their own less expensive com munications systems.

the parent subsidized them. Long distance
rates, they argue, have been kept artificailly
high in order to pay the exceedingly high
cost of affordable local service around the
country. A monopoly could do that sort
of thing, Now, say the newly-independent
locals, that subsidy is gone and local service can only be kept up by local revenues.
A plague of rate increases have hit
America, more than $4 billion worth by the
end of last year, more since January.
AT&T, sti ll controlling virtually all the
nation's long-distance services , has chosen
to duck responsibility for paying a fair
share of t he local phone net work. They
believe that cost of equipmen t that connects a caller to the long-distance network
- the wires and poles that stretch from
your home and down the road into the
should be paid by loca l
ho rizon customers through their local billing ill stead of by the uscrs of lon g distance . They
say they cannot afford to subsidize
a nybody , what with all the new competiti o n ex pected. And furthermor e, claims
AT&T. their long distance rates arc un naturall y high due to previous subsidizing
a nd are uncompetitive. In shorl, they a re
as kin g for new infusions of money.
So, AT&T and t he locals have promoted
a n intriguing solution for paying for the
cost of running the "guts" of the nation' s
phone system, They call it an access charge,
and are attempting 10 install it nationa ll y
and in sOllie states .

An Unproven Case
However, many crit ics of AT&T have
called into question the "threat" of bypass.
They point out that AT&T still contro ls 94
percent of the national long-distance
market, even after stro ng attempts by neW'
competitors to break .in.
T he y wonder aloud whether long
distance service is truly overpriced, as
AT&T has always claimed. The last three
years have seen dramatic growth in use of
long di sta nce lin es, a good sign that the
company's pri ce is attractive in the face of
co mpetitio n. And many arc pu zz led by
AT&T's intent to pocket the difference of
access charges after rate reductions, Thi s
windfall may equal over 1.5 billion th e first
year. Would this be attractive to large
customers?
The national access charge proposal has
become a terribly devisive issue. Origi nally approved at the end of 1982, strong congressional concern has caused the Federal
Commun ications Commiss ion (FCC), the
authority charged with reviewing and approving new rate structures in the phone
system, to twice postpone t he implementation date ,
AT&T has coordinated a $4 million lobbying campaign in support of the charge
and had defeated several bills in Congress
that would protecting consumers and kill
the access charge. As it now stands, the
issue has been removed from election year
scrutiny. Implementation is delayed until
mid-1985 , and more battles are expected
in Congress early next year.
A similar battle is shaping up in the state
of Washington (and other states), A newly constituted Pacific Northwest Bell is
seeking revenue from an in-stale access
charge, along with seve ral smaller companies. Here, in-state long -distance users
wou ld pass along costs to the general local
ratepayer (sec related article this page) ,

Access to What?
The national access charge would be a
new monthly fee on the bill that would buy
"access" to the lon g distance network. As
proposed, the charge would eventually be
bet ween $7 and $8 per phone per month,
whet her or not you make or receive longdistance calls . The costs that were once
basically shared by local customers and
long distance users (to pay for equipment
used jointly) would be shifted completely
to local cu stomers. Long distance
customers would no longer be billed lheir
share of using and maintaining the local
system,
Predictably, the emerging interest groups
are all too familiar. On t he one side are individual ratepayers and small business
customers, making up over one half of the
market. They make relatively few longdistance calls. On the other side stand the
large corporate users of telephones, who
make up only I percent of the market but
who account for 40 percent of long
distance bills .
.
It is this second group that would get the
biggest rate break. Under the first year of

A Familiar Problem
There is convincing evidence that the access charge is unfair as well as unnecessary .
Ironically, the most likely "bypassers"

·



. Page 6

Many suspect the old-line descendents of
th e Bell system of using the atmosphere of
confusion to secure strong positions,
perhaps unfair advantage,. against present
and future competitors. Th e vestiges of
monopqly are still very , t r{lI1 ~ .
Much of the future cour;.: of the
telecommunications industry is un predictable. But one thing is very clear: citizens
have not quite earned their right to universal affordable phone service. We still have
not faced up to the question, do we have
the right to communicate?

(offer good May 29 . June 8)

Cooper Point Journal

Pacific Northwest Bell had the advantage in the last legislative session. They
brought in upwards of ten lobbyists, and
faced a confused legislature, ignorant of
the workings of the telephone companies
(telcos).
But even with their corporate strength
behind them, all of PNB's bills died in
committee.
PNB pushed four bilb during the
legislative session, all of them aimed at
revenue increases, not from state fund s,
but from ratepayers.
Here is the run down:
• Access charges were proposed in order to
allow long distance customers to withdraw
from paying a percentage of the local
operating ex penses , leaving the local
ratepayers to cover all costs.
,.
·Mandatory measured service was proposed to require businesses to pay for local flat
fee calls the same way long distance is paid
for, by length of call and distance from
phone to phone. For examp le, calls from
a TESC office to Lacey or Tumwater
would be charged by the minute, but Lacey
would cost more because it is farther away,
·PNB requested "detariffing," or
deregulation, so it would no longer be considered a utility.
• An affiliated interest' bill would have
eliminated cross subsidizing within PNB ,
These last two bills went through the
legislature as one combined package.

The o rig inal concern that prompted the
federal anti-trust suit seems forgotten. The
promised competition is not between products on the marketplace but is instead
between interest_groups.
What is most troubleso me is the continuing confusion about the real needs of the
various telephone companies. Their accounting books are a mystery; the real costs
of providing long distance, or local, service are unknown. State regulators and
e1ectt:d officials find it impossible to judge
new proposals in the face of such corporate
unaccountability.

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117 NOfIh Wu,Ul1gtOl' Street • ~ Wi:lSI*ogtOl.98501
lice Shop 943-1997 • MotJlIaWl Shop 943-1114

By Ceu Ratliffe

The breakup of AT&T into seven
holding companies and a less potent parent
was supposed to bring about an era of
hea lthy competition and moderniza tion as
we enter the 21st Century. But the postbreakup land scape is littered with burdensome rate increases, rapacious lobbying effort s for an unproven access charge pro posa l, contradictions from the phone companies, and confusion from disheartened
ratepayers,

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may be poor people who simply can't absorb the $8 increase on their monthly bill.
Several studies have indicated that up to
15 percent of low-income users are likely
to abandon basic phone service if rates
double (in many communities the access
charge would result in a doubling of cost).
AT&T studies from just a few years ago
clearly reaffirmed the same conclusion .
It is tragic to realize that those who will
be unable to pay for a phone are the people who need a phone the most: the disabled, elderly, those least mobile, the lonely
and isolated, and the unemployed scanning the want ads, These are the citizens who
will have to bear most heavily the weight
of the breakup. Such a change in our communications "lifestyle" is cruel and
undesirable. The access charge will amount
to the largest transfer of wealth in the
history of the industry.

12 expo
15 expo
24 expo
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1.99
2.79
3.99
5.79

The Evergreen Slate
College Bookstore
May 24, 1984

Mandatory measured service died early
in the session, The Senate Energy and
Utilities Committee claimed PNB inadequately proved the need for the increased
revenues or that businesses included were
nonprofit organizations. Besides, no one
from PNB could quiet fears that the next
step was mandatory household measured

i~t~le~~~~~!~~~~1

The Senate
Committee also killed the acservice
.
cess charge bill. But the Utilities and
Transportation Commission (UTC), which
regulates state utilities, approved the
, harge later in the session,
The UTC expected a decision to come
rom the Federal Communications Comission (FCC) favoring a federal access
harge. In an effort to appear progressive,
he UTC instated a state access charge one
eek before the FCC was to announce its
ecision , Instead, the FCC delayed the
ecision until next January , Members of
he legislature pressured the commission ino making the charge temporary .
At this point in time, Washington has
ad the only access charge in the nation .
It is pending a final decision by the UTC
this summer. The charge was r('moved May
I from all telephone bill, and in its stead
is a 6 percent increase ,
t The decision to grant a rate increase il lustrates the contradictions within this
issue. The access charge indirectly gave
revenues to long distance, whereas the rate
increase gives revenues directly to the local
leicos, Is the money needed so long
distance can avoid local operating costs, or
do the local teicos need the rate increases
as well as a long distance operating fee? In

May 24, 1984

other words , are there legitimate revenue
losses and if so where?
The detariffing and affiliated interest
package passed through the Senate committee. In fact, it passed the Senate floor
by a wide margin, before any consumer
gro ups or competitive telcos knew to stop
it. Rumors surfaced that PNB may have
presented the access charge and mandatory
measured service bills as diversions to occupy the opposition while this bill slipped
through unnoticed,
This bill would have altered the entire

deregulated portions could not defray costs
of the nonprofitable regulated portions of
U .S West. This would leave the local
ratepayers to cover all costs of. PNB, a
regulated and low profit affiliate company.
For example, if loe's Bakery wants a
PNB computer service, he pays, let's say,
a million dollars for it. The cost pays for
advertising, sa les commission, and the
other expenses acrued in a competitive
market.
If PNB wants a computer service for
company use, the advertising costs are unnecessary. The cost of the computer service is reduced to $900,000,
According to the bill, that cost reduction
is a subsidy from the affiliate that makes
the computer to the regulated telco. If loe
paid one million dollars, then PNB must
pay the market price of one million dollars,
This leaves the PNB customers to make up
the $100,000 in the form of rate increases
or reduced quality of service ,
Crossed subsidies also include shared
operating costs. If the bill passed, each
phone call, xerox copy, stamp, envelope,
and paper clip would have to be charged
to the correct affiliate, otherwise one affiliate would end up paying the total office cost. PNB never adequately described
the system by which they would monitor
and separate these costs,
As has already been mentioned, this bill
passed the Senate floor before the opposition found it in the Energy and Utilities
Committee
of
the
House
of
Res presentat ive.
If this bill had passed, and PNB
deregulated and ceased a ll cross subsidies,
any attempts to underse ll the intra-state
long distance eompeJitioll would have been
financed by the loca l ratepayers, Local
rates wou ld have increased in exc ha nge for
low long distance and business services
rates .
After initial outrage at the te lco bill, the
consumer groups joined ra nk s, WashPlRG

committee with over 100 amendments to
the bill, all of which needed to be voted on
individually before the bill could be moved on to the floor for a vote . In the end
the bill died because it did not leave the
committee on schedule.
To the amazement of the opposition,
there were a few last gasp attempts to save
the bill.
UTC Commissioner Mary Hall, a
governor-appointee, drafted a compromise
bill the day before . the deadline , In the
rewrite Hall kept the detarifffing section
and weakened the affilitated interest
language. She also included approximately 20 of the amendments,
In the minds of many people, Hall's action was a terrible breach of faith. One
PNB lobbist said it was "not at all the job
of a eommissioner." WashPIRG's lawyer
claimed it was a "conflict of interest."
According to staff members; Hall claimed she and PNB reached consensus on the
new bill before she brought the draft to the
committee staff. PNB denied the fact, saying she had not discussed anything with
them. In effect, Hall, a regulating agent
supposedly serving the public interest, took
it upon herself to lobby for PNB.
PNB voiced only one compla int with
Hall's legislation. It explicitly stated that
the telco could not raise rates . Yet Ha ll
took the statement from t he testimon y of
PNB' s vice president wh o said the COIllpany could see no reason for rate increases.
On the morning of the deadline to move
bills out of committee, Chair Dick Nel son
called an adhoc meeting to di scuss H a ll' ,
bill.
He informed c.mendm ent spon sors;
respresentatives Ken lacobse n, Mike Todd,
and Seth Arms tr ong , a ll Seat t le
Democrats ; the teleo lo bbyists and th e COI1su mer gro ups, of the mee tin g. A UTe
representative showed up as the mee t in,!;
adjourned.
The commit tee members complai ' IC'd

The b tea,," II p of

structure of the telephone industry in
Washington,
PNB requested detariffing because they
claimed the divestiture left them wide open
to competition in the in-state long distance
market. They felt they needed deregulation
to undersell the competition.
But PNB already holds 94 percent of the
in-state long distance market. And besides,
competitors buy their service from PNB
before reselling to their customers .
Consumer groups repeatedly objected to
deregulation. They cited the need to
recognize PNB as a utility, a service like
water that should be affordable to
everyone. WashPIRG stressed that the
UTC shold continue PNB oversight
because the teleo refused to disclose either
causes for costs or subsidy flows. To this
day no one knows if, predivestiture, local
service subsidized long distance or vice
versa ,
The affiliated interest portion of the bill
caused the greatest stir. It went beyond
generating operating revenues and into
greed.
Within U.S. West, the holding company
of which PNB is a part, the teleos are
regulated; the other companies, which handle printing (i.e. of phone books), data services, and real estate are not regulated . The
bill mandated that there be no cross subsidies from a regulated U.S . West affiliate
to a deregulated affiliate and vice versa ,
In other words, the profitable

organized a consumer coalition which held
a press conference and packed committee
hearings.
The coalition included legal services,
senior citizens, the handicapped, the
Church Counc il of Greater Seattle, Public
Citizen of Washington D.C, and
WashPIRG .
The coalition was a portion of the opposition which a lso included competitive
telcos, sma ll business & legislators. The opposition repeatedly gave heated testimony .
During one exceptionally tense hearing, the
alloted time ran out. Chairman Dick
Nelson decided to call out the names of the
people who hadn't yet testified, He asked
them to stand and state whether they
favored or opposed the bill. Within two
minutes time, eight people stood, and one
after the other gave the bill a "No" vote.
Along with testifying, the opposition used an age-o ld stall tactic. It flooded the

that important amendment s had not been
included, and that time was too short to
study th.: differences between the two versions . They refu sed to vote it out of
committee.
PNB took the bill back to the Senate in
a halfhearted attempt to amend it Ol1to
another bill. The attempt failed .
PNB , however, did not SlOp when the
legislature ended. They gained a rate in ·
crease in exchange for the expired acces~
charge. They sent a memo to everyone o !
their employees denou cin g Dick Nelson a:
a threat to free enterprise . And they ha v(
made it known that thi s fall they are ba.:king the people running against th ei t
perceived enemies in the legis la tur e:
Nelson, lacob sen , Todd and Armstrong.
PNB is gearing up for a tough fight ir.
t he nex t legislative session . The opposit ion
will have a difficult task rebuffin g them
again,



W,shPIRG IS. ••
The Washington Public Interest Research
Group (WashPIRG) is a non-profit and
non-parti san resea rch and advocacy
organization working on a wide range of
consumer and environmental issues.
WashPIRG is directed by students and
has chapters at the University of
Washington and The Evergreen State Col-

Cooper Point Journal

lege, WashPIRG employs fu ll-time stafr to
assist and train student volunteers.
WashPI RG is an acti vist organizallon
a nd needs strong student support in order
to be effective. If you are interested in
working with WashPI RG or have qu estions, contact the TESC chapter office in
Seminar Building 3152, ext. 6064.

Page 7

ENTERTAINMENT

Dance: Creation and
Performance stands out in
uniqueness and style'
By Dean Batali

VID

Artwork decorates clothesline in outdoor exhibit
"This is only the beginning," says
rgreen student Julia Becker, one of the
nding members of "The Evergreen ArGroup Effort." Becker was referring
the collaborative installation that the
sponsored on March 17 in the field
Evans Library.
group formed last winter when
art students, weary of working inlcie'pelndently within the solitary confines of
studio, decided to collaborate and prouce a show where "anything goes."
The students took weekly planning trips
the field, spoke with several faculty
and other art students, enlisted

the efforts of artists in the Olympia community, and spent a considerable amount
of time and effort in putting their own
work and the show together.
The exhibit, seemingly designed as an art
work in and of itself, was a refreshing. unpretentious success .
According to Becker, the outside exhibition was an attempt to "get art out of its
closed up boxes and out into the elements,
the world."
Several of the participating artists and
a wedding cake paraded through Red
Square to symbolize their commitment to
their work.
Says Becker. "Sometimes you have to
be loud."

Dance creators and performers showcased their works in Evergreen's Experimental Theatre for three shows from May
17-19. The student choreographers and
dancers showed a variety of ability and
displayed wide ranges of complexity and
intensity.
Bud Johansen, faculty for the academic
program Dance: Creation arrd Performance, stepped aside and allpwed his
students to create and share their own
works. Nine Evergreeners moved to compositions by the likes of Bach, Tchaikovsky, Claude Bolling, and Duke Ellington.
The evening performances served as
another opportunity to view Evergreen
students and results of their academic pr-ograms. Each of the choreographers danced (either for their own works or as part
of others') and showed their ability in solo
and group numbers.
Of the fourteen mini-programs, a
number stood out for their uniqueness or
grace with which they were derived and
performed.
Linda Robb and Barbara Nielson mirrored many of each other's movements in
Sentimentale, choreographed by Susan
Cockrill. With slight variations on ballet
and jazz movements, the piece flowed over
the entire stage with lots of gentle
excitement.
John Cowan showed wonderful body
responses to music in his own Primordial.
Electronic cave sounds seemed to control
his body as he· created a creature to fit the
image forming from our aural senses.

Austin SI. John's Cartoon Music
became one of the most successful solo
numbers. Beginning fairly gracefully, he
culminated-the moments by contorting his
body like an animated character (reminiscent of Bugs Bunny before a chase).
A nofe I wrote while watching the scene
reads, simply, "Austin is really good."
SI. John, with the help of Ken Glidden
and additional dancers Nielson and
Cockrill, also put together a lighthearted
dance showdown, East St. Louis Toodle00. With familiar trumpet "wah-wahs"
singing in the air, the four provided broadway and big-band style dancing for some
of the evening's lightest and brightest
moments.
A word of praise should also be sounded for the production and technical crew.
I t might have been easy to settle on
makeshift lighting and merely rely on light
cues such as 'on' and 'off.' But the artists
off the stage displayed their craft as much
as the dancers.
By silhouetting and backlighting the individuals, they created wonderful images.
These sights ·accented and enhanced the
movement on stage and caused the viewer
to appreciate specific instances.

Dance: Creation and Performance was
one of many well-done student shows that
recently have or soon will be performed on
campus. Unfortunately, the chance to see
this one is past.
But keep your eyes and ears open for opportunities to see Evergreeners at work.
There is lots of good stuff out there. And
it's easy to find.

'Two Sides of 1984," an installation of
otographs by James Park and Randy
lery, will run from May 29-June I in the
Lecture Hall Rotunda. Free. Both students
in the 1984 program.

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Page 8



FEATURING

The Ducks
Fri. & Sat.

May 25 & 26
$3.00 cover
210 E 4th

786-1444

R

y

For Now
where are you ... i'm crying
Watching for my star
the wind blows chill
branches creak and rust le
i'm standing still
but where is my star
The mi llion billion ecstatic nobodies
Float by as a gray plume smoke
The orange of a cigarette tip
Scribbles of ink under dark, fleeting clouds
Don't be fooled:
trying to write poem is a cramp of the spirit
It's better to whistle out loud
The whine of a bus,
the whack of a zazen pillow
are as black and white
blacker and whiter
than your nerves could imagine
Words for words is the only way
Joy of cold air is the only pay
Don't waste your time on the verba l debris
that separates night from day
Before you drift off, imagine
the million billion ecstatic nobodi es
rooied in nothing but soil.
bark, fur, the voi ces of bu ses,
the milli on vo ices
of nobody
nothing
at
a ll

the full moon rises blind
or is it me
the follower
is haunted by his own shadows

Spirited I ride
On the rhythm of my days
Planning tomorrow
Planning the garden
Planning forever ...
Everything will be
Allright
If I can dream.
Amy Alexander
1984

standing bl ind in the doorway
barry fourni e s

Ste ve Blakes lee

'

\

1&.

4.

Afte r day s of loving
we as ked for a sign
and in the sky
night rainbow s!
An omen
a blessinq
Northe rn Lights.

Festival of Dance set for July

Cooper Point Journal

T

i look for me admidst empty rooms
i try to call my name but i've forgotten

r

Live Arts announces its 1984 festival of
. dance. The 5th annual Olympia Summer
Dance, a four week dance intensive begins
July I and continues through July 27. The
Live Arts Summer Concert Series, three
evening concerts by Northwest Dance
Companies, are July 5, 12 and 19. Approaches to Movement Integration. three
Friday afternoon workshops, are on July
6, 13 and 20. (Complete schedules to be
announced.)
Oiympia Summer Dance offers 6 hours
of exhilarating classes every day for four
weeks. This year's curriculum includes
Modern Technique, Movement' Basics,
Ballet, Composition. Improvisation, Jazz,
Laban Movement Analysis, Tai Chi
Chuan, and Teaching Creative Movement
for Children. There are part-time as well
as full options and participants receive free
tickets to the Summer Concert Series as
well as other workshops and events.
Live Arts Third Annual Summer Concer! Series features exciting Notthwest Per.formance Companies in Olympia. Helen
Wakley and Christian Swenson just returning from a successful New York tour,
open t he series on J ul y 5. The second concert July 12, is a modern dance company
to be announced. And the final concert on
July 19 features 1984 Olympia Summer
Dance Faculty, Patty Cork, Ruth Griffin.
Pat Graney and Kate Jobe Withner.
Approaches to Movement Integration
are three special workshops featuring Alexander technique. Feldenkris technique and
other movement disciplines .

E

my eyes cloud with dry tears

New Games
rescheduled
New Gamesfor New People, an outdoor
workshop featuring loser less competitions
and leadership building activities, has been
rescheduled for Saturday May 26 from
10:00 a.m. until dark .on the upper campus ath letic field at Evergreen.
According to workshop director Joe
Franke , "the activities should interest
anyone in a social service field - camp
counselors, youth leaders, and especially
persons working with special or handicapped individuals."
"The games are designed to build trust
and group unity," says Franke, "and give
leaders tools for recognizing involvement.
The games stress leadership through participation, and create noncompetitive activities for the release of competitive
energies. "
Preregistration is necessary and can be
done by calling 357-6068 during the day or
866-9761 nights . Persons wishing more information, or with specific questions are
also invited to call. The cost will be $6 for
students and seniors, and $8 for the general
public. All interested persons are invited
to participate in the workshop.

o

p

For Brochures Write: Olympia Summer
Dance, P.O. Box 1111, Olympia W A
98507. Or call 456-2791.
Live Arts, a tax exempt, non profit
organization based in Olympia, established in 1980 to promote dance related
cultural and educational events, is sponsoring the 5th annual Olympia Summer
Dance.

C hristo phe r Bingh a m

The Mo b
I've ofte n wondered how ten thou sa nd thou sand co uld beco me as one
Absorbed , consumed, lost in the great GRO UP
It seems to me that ma n·alon e fa r surpasses in huma nit y
the insect b ra in less man -with ·ma n· wit h·man.
I, the g ui de , say , observe thi s nest of a nt s.
And he re, on your ri g ht , is Our mode l of a hive of bees .
Oh YF.S, an d up ahead , a mo b of hu ma ns
In the left wi ng we d ispl ay the Naz is Hit le r Yo uth
An d over he re we kee p in g lass a few su ic ide c ult s
Quite edifYlllg , yes .

Ele pha nts Mourn the Deaths of The ir Own
We met the ir de aths hea d -on ,
and fo r awhile, turne d away:
ho w e lse to abso rb it? Finall y,
turning back to the m, we li fted
the ir bones , blanched dry by the sun ,
and carried them to a clump of trees.
The y'd lain in state too long, and
thi s was the time to admi t to the privacy
and the de pth of 0ur feelings . We hid th e remains
and trumpeted our gr ief. This was all we could d o .
Pa tri cia Ann Treat

Observer as I a m, wa tc he r from th e outside· in
Al one withi n my s kull , I think
"Aaah - mass re lig io n , c ul ts, fana ti c ism - the y're for the weak a nd stu p,d"
But , chantir J in th e c hoi r , I fe lt a vision
the hypnotic counti ng c hant
a nd po und ing feet rele ntl ess rhy thm.
Before me streched a stone·g re y passage
down wh ich compani es a g rey· ro bed figur e ma rched
end less, ecstatic, ide nti cal , co nsumed by the rh yth m
Lost in the gre y fold s of stone and cloth ,
I co uld hav e gone on wi th them fore ve r
Bu tin ';" second it was gone
Back we are to counting one· two·three·four to the song .
So [ say, "now stay away from the Moonies, dear ."
(the a rmy is for others too: all those dehumani Zi ng masses )
You think that you could never be absorbed
But Oh the pulsing lure of the Group is a poison , sick but strong .

..

Jenny Wortman

May 24, 1984

May 24, 1984

Cooper Point Journal

Page 9

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_________------........,L-t'

s

BULLETIN

BOA R D

N0 l1" ....e81

-,j

1984 Th '" Re,lloo• r
.
e "'~e '
o
The NatiOnal'i:ec/e Slsl/e CoU_
25-26,
8 r arnrners
erallo
-..I'
tion .
, or8aniz d
II of Local C
be h~~~~rnrnUnity ~'et0 foster citizen p:b/~ ~r0in 01
.8 lis North
slon progra
. rr,c'pa_
grarn Ympla for the f" West. Regional :;mlOg, "'iIJ
d
mers, cabl
IrSt tlrne. Co
onference
ent prod
e access
mmun'l
"'ill b
ucers from th rnanagers'and' I Y pro_
ing d' e attending A
rougho u1 Ihe /Ii IOdepen_
"R IscuSsed ar ': rnOllg Ihe rn
. Orth"'est
01 efranchising e. .
My ISSUes be_
" Yrnpia
' '''lIh speCial
DeregU/atio
altenrio n
levels
n, on both Ih
·S .
I' FedI' I
" PeclaJjzed P
ra and State
An 1
rogram .
• Pr dn-depth LOok rnlng for the C
o uClio
at 1''''0 W
ornmUni
Prog ramrn n Worksho - ay Cable
ty

!\f.,.

. L'brarY \6\2
IO.3QtO 12:00 In I reeD DTF
on June 6 ftornCo~lluler!l al EV~~~rnents on
rnernbers of ~I~ to collect stude;~he use of cornwill be aVall~ [we year p~ foof the report a re_
their propO e College. CO.Ple~ation desll. the In e
puters at th th Libra\')' C1reu
r Services. Th
available at ~ter and comput~ roposa\ from_
formal\on Ce t reactions to t~ -: ring and pre
'T"F will colleelty an d staff thIS hep Pres.l dent and.
D.
students. fa eununendations to t Ian to attend thIS
sent final reeo
t fall. Please p
est revisions
Provost earl)'o:e~ould lille to sUgg
meeting If Y document.
of the elllsl\ng

"/Ii

ers
P for "
oeginnin
Orthwest M
Legal Risks . anagemenr St
8
If You a~ . 10 Prograrn
rUCtures
SOCial Se e IOVolverj Wilh PrOdUCtion
/"VIce 0 C
a Corn
Or ChUrch in r ultura/Or
munity Grou
concerned
Thurston C ganlzat/on Sch P.
sio n
abOut the
Ounty, Or a ' . 001
NF prograrnrnin
POtential for I re SImply
L C p COnfer g In oUr c
Deal te/evi_
abo ul Ulilizi
ence can hel OllJmunlly t
rnessage OUt ng lOcal cable leI p Y?U learn
he
For
to Ihe co
eVlslo n to
ore
Oly
.a full broch mmuniry.
get YOUr
rnPla M ·
ure call
60(11.
edla EXChange (2'0 Peter Moult
6) 866-6000 on,
"

\.I
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,
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Tuesday May 29,

1984 Films Finale!

ANALySt

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HI'"

MAIL 130)(£.5 wit;

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!
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FLEX • YQE " loa • II BDS
CN • SPEED READING

a Tragicomedy in
Political Science Fiction

fO/IJ'/....fJS

4,7:30,&10pm
Lecture Hall 1
$2.00

~.ftMPIMI
EDUCATIONAL CENTEA

Tnt PrePIf.tion SPfc i.lisU
Sinn 1938
Fo, ''''ormatio" , PIf!IJJ~ C.JI:

If you
think this
is

... sUllllller

funnYe e e

Next week is the CP J' s hum or issue. I f you
think you have somethin g funny in the wa y
o f w riting, drawin gs o r photograph s, submit th em to the C PJ . Ne xt week 's paper
co m es out o n June I . The deadline for
hum or submission s is ex tended to Wednesda y , M ay 30, 5 p.m. for thi s special i ss ue.
A ll ot her submiss io ns mu st be in th e C PJ
o ffi ce by Tue sday , M ay 29.5 p.m. No exce pti ons . Turn submi ssion s in to LIB 3234
in th e envelopes out sidc th e doo r .

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Page 10
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~session

U N

V E R S

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DAHO

June 11 - August 3, 1984
There is still time to plan to attend Summer Session at the University of Idaho,
Moscow Campus or Coeur d'Alene Center.
• Non-resident fees will not be applicable
for Summer 1984 at either the Moscow
Campus or the Coeur d'Alene Center.
Thus fees for all students, whether
residents of Idaho or not will be $50.50
per credit for undergraduate students in
undergraduate courses and $66 .50 per
credit for graduate students and graduate
courses .
The
change
in
the
undergraduate and graduate fees were
among changes made by the Regents of
the University at the April, 1984 meeting.

For a copy of the Summer Bulletin containing com·
plete information in c luding an applic ation , call or
write immediately .

o

Universityofldaho
Phyllis Veien, Asst. to Director
Summer Session
Moscow, Idaho 83843
Telephone: (208) 885-6237

Summer & Fall '84
3-14 units
Join. B.ckpKklng R....rch T •• m
In the Mountain West or AI••k.
On-site explorations to preserve:
• Wildlife Species
• Wilderness Environments
Course details:

mitbfield

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Jne co ees deli sandwicbes * s
212 W.

SOUND MEDIA PRODUCTIONS

AT WASHINCTON STATE
EMPLOYEES CREDIT UNION

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4th ave. Owmpia, ,Wa. 786*1725

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DIVIDENDS IN 1984

******-CLASSIFIEDS******

7,. 00 laVlolsl

Government Jobs. $16,599 $50,553/year. Now hiring. Your
area. Call 1- 805-687- 6000 Ext.
R-5804
Advertise in the CPJ. Student groups
at half pricelCall Chris 866-6000
x6054 Lib. 3229

EVERGREEN COINS
BUYING DOLLARS
Silver Coin.,Gold,Sterling,
Diamond., Goldring., DentalGold,Rare Coln.,ETC.
Harri.on Ave 352-8848

Latchkey has for summer only, 2 part-time positions, 5 hrs. a day
$3_75 an hour, .tarting June 18th. Experience with school age
children preferr~d. Must be 18 years old. Applications taken from
9:30am-12 noon May 24th, 25th, 29th and 30th at Garfield
School Gym.
BUY NEW COMIX AT 25% DISCOUNT! LARGE SELECTION OF
ALTERNATIVES. ORDER MONTHLY. CALL: MODERN MYTHS
352-3591 A COMIX CO-OPERATIVE!

AA/EO

Be an Idaho resident student this summer

•••••••~iiiiiiiiiiiiii~ciioio~pe~rip~oint Journal

.'

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SAN FfUlNCISCOfrATE UNIVEIZSITY
EJ'TENOED EDUCATION

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at NO EXTRA CHARGE! *

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Dividend rates Quoteo are anticipated .
Rates are subject to Cl'1ange without nOtice

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**********************

400 E. Union Ave.

943-7911
Page 11