cpj0340.pdf

Media

Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 13, Issue 2 (October 4, 1984)

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VOLUME NUMREH 13, ISSUE NUMRJ.:R 2

Acting Presi«Jent Discusses Term of Office

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Richard Schwartz h'as been Acting
President of The Evergreen State
College since June of 1983. If the
Presidential Search remains on
schedu le, his term of office will end
in' December. On October I st the
CP J spoke with Schwartz about the
immediate past and short-range
future of Evergreen. Here is most of
that interview. Schwartz's comments
on the causes and consequencies of
Evergreen's growing population will
accompany a group of articles on
that subject two weeks from now.

CPJ: Your lerm as ACling Presidelll appears 10 be drawing 10 a
clol'e. HolV do YOIl feel aboul Ihol?
I

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Schwartz: It's been an interesting
yea r ... plus, but I think it's high time
we got out of this temporary
business and got things sett led into
t he new President. ['m looking forward to thai and everythin g I hear
from the Search Comm ittee, why it
ooks like we're going to have a fine
pool of possib le ca ndidates. Looks
good.

CPJ: Why. were you seleCied
ACling President?

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Schwartz: it was actually Dan's
,hoice in .J.une when 1,<: left for his
summer sabbatical that I sit in for
him because Patrick (Hill,
[,erg reen's ProvoSI) had only been
on board for about one week and
needed to get into his new position.
Dan felt it would be betler, even
though the Vice-President for
Business is th'e number three position
at a higher education institution. It
would have been normal for the Provost to be appointed Acting Presi dent, but Byron (Youtz) was the '
outgoing Provost and he had just
left for China. Then when Dan got
appointed to the Senate, the Board
(of Trustees) just continued me in
t hat position. It was really just an
acc ident.

CPJ: So you anlicipaled Ihree
months?
Schwartz: It was simply three
months of temporary assignment
and I could call Dan at any time and
ask him what he wanted to do about
thi s or that particularly tough question, tough situation. I anticipated
that would be just for the summer.

CPJ:

How Ions has il been?

Schwartz:

A year and a hal r.

CPJ: How do you feel abOll1 being lefl wilh Ihe lemporary assignfor
0 vel'
a
year?
/IIenl
Schwartz: It isn't what any of us
anticipated. We expected that the
permanent replacement for Dan
wou ld come within four months
0 riginally. Also we anticipated it
'Nould be a very short time. It's been
;m interesting position and I've
learned a lot.
I'm also quite convinced that an
acting position is not something I'd

THE EVERGREEN
STATE COLLEGE '
Otympia. WA 9850~

probably want to do a second time.
It does not give you the opportunity really to make a lot of changes.
You're almost a caretaker to kind of
cont inue things as you find them until the new person comes in.
It's been my philosophy that we
really should'nt reorganize anything
major on campus because that really is the perogative of the new pres id(·nt. In other words, if [ should
de.:ide that we ought to change the
reporting relationshirs of people
who report to the President, I would
nOl make that decision because in an
act ing role I really feel like a
caretaker.
There are classic cases where people have made that mistake. They've
come in as an acting person, made
a lot of changes, and then when a
new president comes in, obviously
he's going to make some changes.
And it just makes it difficult on
ever"body, on all the people, it
makl's it difficult in their lives to go
through two changes in a very short
period of time. There are many
things that a person might wish to
do, s~e the need for, but not (do) in
an acting role. Therefore the longer
it goe:' on the less satisfaction it is
for tht' institution because if there is
a need for a change and a need for
a deCision on major items, it
shouldn't be put off. So you find
yourself in this Catch 22 situation:
should we go ahead and do
something, not knowing what way
the new president will feel about it.
So we've made some interesting progress on a number of fronts this year
which I feel very good about, but [
think we could have a little more
progres.s if we had had our person
he re.

CPJ: Whal kind of changes would
you have made if you had been the
Presidenl ralher thall Ihe ACling
Presidenl?
Schwartz: Oh, it's hard to say. I'm
really stating a philosophical situation; [ don't have any concrete examples . I'm just glad that all the
cabinet positions have stayed filled
this year, for example, I would have
thought it very difficult to try to go
out and recruit a key person who
reports to the President when I'm
not the President. Knock on wood
it looks like we're gelling closer t~
having a person and we didn't lose
a key cog in our group. I wou ld have
found that a very difficult situation.

CPJ: What effect has il had on
you personally, Dick Schwanz, Ihal
YOII've had Ihis responsibilily for a
year and a quarler now?
Schwartz: Slowed down my dissertation work. (laughs) You can't be
working ... The Presidency is an ex,
iernal position. There are various
kinds and numbers of community
activities that you become involved
with just because thilt college needs
to be represented at all kinds of
functions and activities. ·It's been interesting. I've enjoyed doing it, but
you don't ... you have ... your time
is less your own, So the biggest
change for me has been the amount
of time. f did not have evenings and
weekends topursue the finishing of.

my dissertation which was a major
goal in my plans.

CPJ: You said you wOllldn 'I be inler(.'Sled ill a temporary posilion
again; afler a year in Ihis, would you
ever be illlerested in beillg a college
presidelll ?
Schwartz: I don't know. I thirIk
after it's over with I can evaluate it
more than I can right now. I don't
think that would be a near term gnal
for me. My feeling is that there's a
job to do as Vice president for
Busines~. Tha t' s what I came here to
do. there are somethings thai need
to be finished and I want to get back
at that. So my immediate goals are
to do those things and finish th e
dissertation. Tha t dissertation
weighs very heavily uron me because
th at data is getting o ld and it' s ~o­
ing to become less easy to finish-'"
time slips away from me

CPJ: Whal does Ihe El'ergreen
President do?

I

Schwartz: Like every college president, the President deals with the external public and that public is
multifaceted--alumni organizations,
political organizations, civic
organizations, polit ical interrelationships with people in all levels of
government. The day to d2 Y operation of the college really falls on the
two Vice-Presidents. The President's
job is pretty external, working with
the Foundation of the College. Over
a month of my time this past year
has been spent fund raising for the
Foundation Scholarship Program,
which is very important, something
we need and, in fact, if this were a
private college I'd probably spend a
lot more time fund raising. At a
private school, fund raising is
something that a president does an
awful lot of.

CPJ:

If it were up 10 you 10 selecl
Ihe neXI Presidenl, whal would be
your mOSI imporlanl crileria?
Schwartz: Energy. I wou ld say the
person ought to be very energetic
and be able to rut in a seven day
week kind of existence and not tire.
It's a serious and importr,nt thing
that the person has to have the
stamina for the position. That '.I just
the first thing that hit my mind. Ther
are many qualifications that the perso n ought to have. They ought to
have a good understanding of
academic administration and have
particinated in it. they I hould havc
done some teaching and understand
things from the student and facult y
point of view. Tiley should have th e
ability to relate well to exterior .
groups. A whole series of things that
are important for a president.

CPJ: Ken Dolbeare staled Ihallhe
President mUSI be someone who con
help us see where we are going, a visionary if you will. Do yo u agree
-wilh Ihat?

Richard Schwartz, Acting President of The Evergreen State Co llege
St'hwartz: Yes,' do . The President
has to become the leader of the
inst itution.

they did. We felt it wa, vcrv imrortant that we should be talkin g wilh
reopk in the fall--O ctober,
Novell1ber--a bou t a pres idency ,
CP.I: The Presidelllal Search Combecallse that seems to be the time
mitl~e has had Ihree public meetin~s
when mos t instilUtion~ are doing it,
III/s flt/arler in whicl/'lheyal/empled There probably will be four to five
10 draw the stlidenl body inlo Ihe inhundred new presidents selected thI S
formalion aboullhe search. One was
year. That's an incredible number.
wilh Ihe Third World Coalilioll and
We want to have the very best choit'e
Ken Dolbeare eslima led allendance
we can have. Th erefore, we had to
Ihere altwenly-j'iVC' and guessed thai
be on the time seque nce that
seventeeN were students rUlher Ihull
everyone else was on.
facully or slaff. The lolal number of
I'm sure that Ken, as head uf tha
sludenls nOI working for the CP}
committee eill do much more to
who allendild either of Ihe olher Iwo
bring student inVOlvement into that
meelings was seven or eigill.
process. I have never seen a meeting
since I've been at Evergreen, even if
CPJ: Whal is Ihe significallce of it's right in the heart of the prope
Ihe low Iumoul?
time in terms of where you are in the
term, that you're going to get a large
Schwartz: Well, probably it's the . turnout. You'll get those people who
first week of class. People arc getare interested, and that's the good
ting into the programs. They're fin part about the Evergreen student
ding out just how busy they're. goThe ones who turn out will be in
ing to be for the term. 'think the interested enough to give you quality
terest will pick up as we get closer
participation. I don't think chang
to picking a president.
ing the time a couple of weeks would
have made any great difference if
CPJ: The lime line for Ihe search
the number of people. That's incon
drawn by Ihe Board, saysfinal.selec- sistent with my first reacti ons, bu
tion will be~in on Ihe firSI of Ocas I think abollt it , as lon~ as we
lober. While Ihe Search C()mmillee
have the quality participatio~, that' .
says Ihey're ' .1'1[/1 open 10 new
number one, and the more' think
nomillalions, at leasl the struclure of about it, too , wc've had meeting s on
Ihesearchsays, O.K. we'relhrough
new buildings, campus plam, a
looking for people; whal we're dowhole ser ic,s of things in the busincs,
ill~ now is seleclin~ people. An
area. Gencrally the turn OUI is light,
onRoing crilicism of the c()lIe,~e has
bllt thOse who turn out arc intemeheen Ihal .1'0 many major dec/:~ions
Iy intere-qcd and participate ami
lake place on breaks. The Opporll/niyuou ge t "orne rcal profitable
Iy for inpul is when no one:, On
feedback.
campUJ . Knowin~ Ihal il was going
It would hav e been nice if wc'd
10 be Ihe jirsl week of class , why
had more a nu , think we might have
didn 'I sommeone say, "0. K, we can
had more if it were a lillie la tcr in
lake Iwo more weeks before we close
the tr: rm. but that' s a gucs,. When
nominalions. ''?
, was a student , t he first week of
Schwartz: For a very ill1ronant
class was no t all that important, bIll
reason . We went out and wc had a
, thin~ at Evergreen the opros it c is
search th a t lurned up empty last
tnrc : people reall y neeel 10 get inr o
spring. We sought the very best adtheir work and stan mo vin g a lon g.
vice we Co uld get. We hi red a con Whether we would havc had morc
s ultant to help us figure out all the
or not , I'm not sure,
things we should do this time to
It' s a curious thing th a t we ha\c
make the sea rch s uccessful. And it' s
such a participatory kind of program
only su,cess ful if a new president is
here a nd yet on any number of issu es
hired . That's the ultimate test.
when I was hoping wc'd have a rre tWe found that we were off the
ty good turnout, some time s you
academic cycle -- the academic
have four, somet imes you have tell.
presidential selection cycle--Iast year,
Twenty-five is not a bad number .
by no fault of our own. The subased on my e,xpcrience.
quence of events happened the way

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Laura Zacarro Speaks for Geraldine Ferraro
CPJ: If Goldsmith is correct in her

CPJ: Where is it>
Zaccaro: Providence, Rhode Island.
Laura Zacarro, daughter or the
Democratic nominee ror VicePresident Geraldine Ferraro, came
tOt he Evergreen cam pus on
September 26, 1984. She was intervi'ewed by the Cooper Point Journal.
What rollows is a transcript or that
interview and two editorial comments by person s who were present.

CPJ: Are you representing your

mother in Ihe campaign?
Zaccaro: Mr. Mondale and my
mom, yes.

where you would campaiRn you
chose Washington .Hate. Was there
any parlicular reason for thaI"
Zal'caro: I went on an exchange program two years ago to Lakeside
Sc hool . I went to school there for
three months and I just had a blast
~o when our schedulers sat us down
and laid 'arc there any places in particular 1 '
I hasically called
Wa~hill~tol1 State.

Recent polls show the
Democratic nominees are as much as
30 points behind. Judy Goldsmith,
head of NOW, has said that's not
. true. A lot of women will vote for
M()ndale and Ferraro but aren't saying so at this time. She suggested
that these women were unwilling 10
commit themselves. The quote says:
" These women are not telling the
pollsters--they're not even telling
their husbands--but I know their
support is there. " Do you think that
is true?
Zaccaro: Yes, I read that. I sure
hope it's true . I think the women n
this country have a lot of reasons for
supporting this ticket. One thing I
think about when I think about the
polls: There are a lot of people who
are undecided. I think once they
sta rt hearing the issues, they'll start
realizing that there really is only ol1e
choice.

CP.I: Whal is il Ihal V()U lik(' a/loul
Ii ·a.lhinglon'
Zan'aro: Oh. I ju~t think it's
heautirul. The ·Iake and the moul1 tain~. trees.lt·sjmt things 1' 111 lurc
wc ha ve in New York but not in New
York City. Abo I just find the peori c really fri endly .. 1 think it',
hcca use 1 ju~t had a really rOlitive
c 'perience here.'

Whal did
I_akeside '

CPJ:

1' 011

Siudl' af

Zan'am: .lust the normal libera l arts
education. RlIl. ane thing that was
rcally different ' was I got to be on the
crew tcam there. That was exc it.ing .

CPJ: How did , .
LaktsIM1
Zaccaro: There's a girl from
Lakeside that wanted to go to school
,n New York. They didn't have an
exchange program set up. They had
,:xchanges set up in other states and
,Ictually in different parts of the
world, but not New York. So they
"alled our school and we set it up
between the two or us. I thought
Seattle would be a nice break from
New York.
.

ed out to major in in college?
Zaccaro: No-: I guess I'm not very
career oriented. You could label me
a humanities person. I want a liberal
arts education. I enjoy languages, I
like English. I enjoy acting as an
e~ tracurricular .

somelhing 10 do with standing up for
yourself and are the women literally so frightened of the implications
of cnoosing their own candidate that
they aren't doing that or is the problem ... that they're . , . do you
have any idea of why that would be
true?
Zaccaro: No, I really don't know. If
this is true, I don't know really why
the women aren't saying it. I think
that's one of the great things about
Mr. Mondale asking my mom is that
he has opened the doors for so many
women and maybe if we start having women play more or a role in
government and in, I guess, the professional world in gcncral. Maybe
these women wouldn't be so reluctant i r they had more people to .. to
encourage the·m.
CPJ: Whalwill il do to Ihe cause of

CPJ: Why is Ihere

on~1I

one choice?

Zaccaro: Just because or the way
Mr. Mo ndal e and my mom stand on
the issues. I always stress educa tio n.
Mr. Mondale and my mom feel
educa tion is extremely important.
Bw Mr. Reagan's budget cut s
haven't not paid much attention to
educat ion . I usually talk about my
mom 's ba<.:kground. I'm no( sure
whether you know but when she was
8 yr.> old s he was left fatherless and
as a result had to really fight for an
education . She had academic
sc holorships throughout her educational career. She was doing jobs
such as selling handkerchiefs in
Bloomingdale's to working in a candy store so s he could get through .
school. She ~aught during the day
and went to law school at night. She
did that because she realized it was
the key to her future. I just feel that
people our age on that issue wi II
understand how Mr. Mondale and
my mom feel how terribly important
it is. Also the deficit: It's tripled
under this administration and I
know Mr . Mondale will handle that
problem fairly. And also arms con- '
trol : the way that Mr. Mondale and
my mom feel that negotiations and
arms control is the only way to work
towards peace_

America have particular reasons for
voting for the Democratic ticket.
Can you articulate some of those?
Zaccaro: Yes--I think just the very
fact that both Mr. Mondale and my
mom support the ERA and comparable pay, two very important
issues which Mr. Reagan doesn't
agree on with them_

CPJ: Your mother has talked
about leveling electrical rates across
the country--federal regulation of
utilities--and the end result would be
that 'our rates here, which are much
lower than they are on the East
Coast, would be used to balance so
that everyone. everywhere would
pay the same' amount for their electricily,the same kilo wall hour
charge. Why?
Zaccaro: I have to be perfectly
honest with you. I usually talk about
those few issl.les I mentioned earlier.
I'm just not qualified and I would
not even make an attempt to talk on
such specifics as that.

You mentioned that you liked acting. The President has at least
one child who is in show business.

CPJ:

Zaccaro: I know, his daughter Patty, and Eleanor Mondale actually
has a movie contract. She's going to
start fi lming in a movie as soon as
the election is over. It's kind of
Irontc.
CPJ:

A r~ you interesled in that?

Zaccaro: Well , I am interested in
acting. I'm not sure if I'm thinking
in career terms but righl no,w the
idea really intrigues me .

the wumen of' women's movemenl in
Ihis co/./n fry if Mondale and Ferraro
iI!,)'e?

CPJ: You said that the women of

CPJ: Do you have something pick-

Zaccaro: I don't know. Can you be
more specific? ·1 don't know what
you are getting at.
CPJ: I don't know what I'm gelling
at either. I guess the question is

CPJ:

CPJ: When you were given a choice

assessment that women aren't telling
the pollsters, they're not even telling
their husbands, what does thm say?
What are the implications of that for
women in the women's movement?

Zaccaru: I think we've already
mad e so much progress for the
women's movement by the very fact
that Mr. MOlldalc had the guts to
ask my mom to run on the ti.cket. I
dOli 't think ,,!e would be making any
hack wards movement at a ll. I think
we've madc a great stcp . We
would make an evel, greater step if
they WOII. 1 shou ldn't say that ...
when t hey win. J f they were to losc,
we've ga ined, if a nythin g from this
whole thing.

f keep hearing you refer to
ferraro as "my mom. " It sounds
like you halle a very close relation ~hljJ with her. fs thaI. ..

CPJ:

Zaccaro: Oh, yeah, we have a very
close family and I would just say
people usually ask if this campaign
has spread us into all different directions and it has to a certain extent,
but we always spend the weekends
together. We're a very close family.

The Solomon Amendment
requires all men who want financial
aid that is any way tied to federal
funds to register for Ihe draft as a
"ondition for even beillg considered.
Would your mother or Mondale
work toward reversing that
.1IlIendment?
CPJ:

Zaccaro: I have to be perfectly
honest with you: I don't know the
specifics on that. but I do know that
both Mr. Mondale and my mom
would work toward helping people
who need federal aid but I don't how
their feelings are in relation to the
draft.

Why are l1'e seeing so many
people Ihal are clos(' I() POlilics,
whether the President or children of
Ih e nominees. involved in show
business? Are Ihere inherent links
bel ween Ihe two?

CPJ:

Zaccaro: I think it' s just ironic and
coincidental, but I think to a certa in
extent this campaigning will be helping myacting skills in the sense that
any politician has to know how to
present himsel f, among a lot or other
things, but I'm sure it doesn't hurt.

0" the issue of arms control:
in the last few days Gromyko has
described lire relationship between
the United States and the Soviet
Union as taking place in "all atmosphere of unrelenting hostility . ..
How would that be different if Mondale and Ferraro win?

CPJ:

Zaccaro: I think one of the important things is obviously if you have
a problem such as that you have to
communicate with the adversary. I
think it says a lot abut Mr. Reagan
that it took him three years 10 communicate with the Soviets. I know
that when in office Mr. Mondale
and my mom ' will negotiate immediately or at least communicate
with the Soviets . I think if they were
in office it wouldn't have led to this,
it wouldn't have taken this long.

Is Reagan's present negotiation and openness wilh the Soviets
sho'<' business?

CPJ:

ZacOlro: I don't know if you'd call
it show business. I don't think it' s
a coincidence that it 's taking place
only a few weeks before the election.

CPJ: Why aren't th e women com ing OUI for the Democratic ticket?

Realiling at the moment Ihal
oren 't speaking for your mOIll,
how do you feel about lying federal
scholorship aid to regislering for the
drafl?

Zaccaro: I don't know. I just hope
that we have their support. I've
traveled with my mom and I've
traveled--now this is my second week
on my own--and I have found
women really supportive. I've
spoken to women's groups and
they've been really supportive. But
I'm not sure why they aren't telling
people. I just hope support's behind
there. That's all that really matters.

Zaccaro: It's not something that
I've given a lot of thought to. I have
to be perfectly' honest. I think that
federal aid is extremely important.
I don't know whether it should
Zaccaro: I don't really feel I'm
necessarily be linked with the draft.
qualified to answer that. I would imI think if you need federal aid it
agine that if they elected Mr. Monshould be, one shou ld be able to get
dale and my mom the signal would
it without registering for the draft
be that they're electing sombody
but I'm not saying that that is . that's ready to start talking with
necessarily a bad idea .
them immediately . ..

CPJ:

Zaccaro: Shakespearean.

Where are you going to
college?

CPJ:

Zaccaro: At one point I'll make it
to Brown University. I don't know
when I'm going to get there .

PAGE 2

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAl,

Zaccaro: First of all I don't really
see how you lead into that question.
I think Mr. Mondale and my mom
are a team. They go together wery
well. When elected Mr. Mondale will
be President and my mom VicePresident. I can tell you why my
mom would make an excellent VicePresident, but I don't really think
it's my place to counteract her with
Mr. Bush. She'd be an excellent
Vice- President because not only is
she a strong woman and a bright
woman, she's sensitive. She'd be
sensitive to the needs of the people
and she'd be fair about it, not to
mention an extremely down to earth
woman. And 'or course, as I mentioned carlier, just the way they
stand on the issues. That's why she'd
be an c.lOCellent Vice-President . J do
not know Mr. Bush as I know my
mother. I'vc known my mother 211
my life and I can vouch for you
everything I've just said.
But I don't really see how you led
into that that question a t all.

What kind of signa' would
the American people be giving the
Soviets if-we elect your parent and
her running mate and what kind on
signal are we giving if we re-elect
Reagan.

by Curt Bergquist

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Although this editorial is reflective
of Ms. Laura Zacarro's (daughter of
Vice-Presidential candidate G.
Ferarro) interview, 9-26-84, it is not
meant to be a personal attack on her
character . This editorial was
stimulated by specific statements of
Ms. Zacarro which produced general
value judgements.
When interviewing a candidate's
representative about a candidate's
positions, it is nice to know the
background of the representative.
However, it is going way beyond the
realm of reason for the representative to answer questions specifically about the candidate's viewpoint
with an "I think" or "I feel" statement. The representative should present knowledge of how the candidate
stands on a specific issue. How the
representative thinks or feels is of little or no importance, because it is

the candidate that is the issue.
He/she is the one running for office,
not tile representative.
Representatives of candidates
should not answer valid questions
with a bombardment of statements
like "I'm not qualified to answer
that," "I'm not familiar with this
issue" and" I have to be perfectly
honest. . .I'm only familiar with the
issues I talked about before." It is
a representative's obligation when
campaigning to be knowledgable
about relevant topics and issues~ To
use the excuse that one has just
started campaining ("'I've been on
the road with my mom for two
weeks .. _and this is just the first of
my own") is no excuse for being
uneducated about the issues . It is a
represenatative's duty to be informed on topics before the campaigning
starts. It is a "be prepared" boy
scout process, not "learn as we go."
Ms. Zacarro states, "I think that

\

Zaccaro:

any politician should know how to
present themselves,': but what about
facts and issues at hand? Of course,
it is politically important to know
how to smile, shake hands and appear pleasing, but it should not be
the basis of a campaign. Priorities
for people who represent campaigns
should be based on their knowledge
of the issues, knowledge of how the
candidate one is representing stands
on the issues, and of how that stand
differs from the position of others
running for the office. Then personal appearance and presentation
should come into view, not the
opposite.
In monarchies it is valid for
relatives of the king to prioritize
their roles with personal appearance
outweighing knowledge about current affairs (i.e_ Princess Di). In
democratic governments, especially
one with presidential elections every
four years, concerns about

'showmanship' and stage prescence
should be of little concern. It is
unimportant what a brother is like
(i.e. Billy Carter), what a second
cousin thinks, or a daughter feels.
What is important is how a candidate stands on the issues, and that
is what we should base our votes on.
When Ms Zacarro states, "I'm
familiar with the issues I talked
about before," those issues should
not be how mom received her education or what Ms. Zacarro thinks of
Washington or how close the family is now . Instead, the issues should
concern the issues: doubling of electric rates, the regulation of utilities,
and the Solomon ' Amendment.
While age (eighteen) may be used
as an excuse for Ms. Zacarro's poor
performance, that is all it is, an excuse. There is no just reason for
choosing Ms. Zacarro or anyone,
age four or forty, as a campaign
representalive if they are not familiar

with the issues. Ms. Zacarro even
states several times that she is not
qualified. Ms. Zacarro may collect
some votes because of her appearance or because her mother raised her well, but if she were a
qualified campaign representative
relying on facts, figures and relevant
knowledge she would collect many
more. Becallse her priorities are out
of sequence, that is, 1) personality,
2) issues, she is a liability instead of
an asset. She is wasting valuable time
(hers and mine) and money, with her
entourage of campaign managers,
personal advisors and staff.
Ms . Zacarro should take her own
advice and leave the baby kissing to
the candidates who can back up their
political stage acts with knowledge
of how they stand on the issues .
"It's time to talk about the
issues ... and once we start ... i t wi II be
obvious who is going to win."

COOPER POINT Letter

.'

I

by Anne Bochman
I can;te away from an interview with
Laura Zaccaro, Vice President candidate Geraldine Ferraro's daughter,
feeling excited and touched.
I was excited because it is exciting
to meet someone who knows a
famous
person,
a
weird
phenomenon difficult to avoid in
our culture. But a larger part of my
excitement stemmed From things inherent to Laura herself as I observed them. It was exciting to me to
hear Laura say that education was
a big issue to herself and her fami-

There is a disiinci {JossiiJiliIy thai whoeller is the Vice- Presidefl{
will becolI/e Ihe Presidenl. either ..
God forbid'

God forbid. bllt eilher illihe
Ilext eleclioll or Ihrough any of Ihe
number of reasons that sel1eral Vice
Presidents have become the President. Is your mother qualified to be
tire President?

through a filter. It is in thi s secondhand sort of way that we ' gather
another type of information , inrormation that can lead to discovery or
realization. After all, important
discoveries, realization s and deci sions are not made strictly from hard
facts. To do so . limits one's vision.
As I sat listening and watching
Laura answer questions, I kept
flashing on Nancy Reagan. I might
be fascinaied by her every word and
movement but I doubt J would be
touched. That tells me a lot.

CPJ:

Letters

Zaccaro: Oh, she's more than
qualified and I think Mr Mondale
thought about that when he asked
her. She's been in Congress six
years, she's been making decisions
that affect our country every day
and I think she'd be more than
qualified as President.

S&A
Art
Gallery

Has the issue of your
mother's finances and undisclosed
financial records hurt the chances?
CPJ:

Zaccaro: I don't believe so. I think
not only am I, but I think the
American public is fed up with hearing about our finances. It has been
out in the open. It is obvious that we
are honest people. I'm just happy
that everyone has realized that now.
Now it is time to talk about the
issues and I don't think we can get
away from that anymore. Once we
start talking about the issues, I think
it will be obvious who's going to
win.

Women
and
,

Uranium

I
Are you're //lotherand MOIl- .
dale going to win?

CPJ:

"The representative should present knowledge o·f how 'the candidate stands ... "

CPJ:

CPJ:

YOII

CPJ: Whdt type of acting?

CPJ: Mr. Bush, our present Vicepresident in 1980 wds the second
strongest canidate for The
Republicans. He was very popular in
certain areas. A lot of people fell he
was a beller canidOie Ihan Mr.
Reagan. A t least a sizeable segment
of our population feels if Reagan
dies or is assasinated we've gOI someone who is a good strong candidate. Why is your mother a beller
Vice-presidential candidate than Mr.
Bush?

Greeners Speak al)out .Z acarro Speaking for Ferraro

Zaccaro: Oh, I am more than confident. I say that actually because I
traveled with my mum for two weeks
and the excitement' with which we
were met was just indescribable. It
can not be conveyed in polls and I
can't even convey it on a interview,
but, for exan1ple, elderly women
were coming up to us and saying, "I
, never thought I would live to see this
day". There's just such excitement
and such crowds that have been
drawn that I have definite
confidence.
OCTOBE~

4,1984

I

Mining

\

I
IIWe.11 if

<3 e t

au t

OCTOBER 4,1984

caV)'t st'oVid the heat
0 F th e ove V\ ~ I'

yOU

To the Editor:
A few very crucial elements missing in the U.S. peace movement have
become of primary focus to me
within the past six months. The first
is the direct relationship that abuse
of the Mother Earth has to the abuse

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

..

In peaceful struggle,
Swaneagle
PO Box 10234
Olympia, W A 98502

PAGE

Cartoons by Charlie Campbell
MEMBER N.F.C.B.

KAOS,announces 'new
KAOS has made a shift in our evening programs
to allow us to bring you what we hope will be five
very special new' programs this Fall. Beginning October 1, KAOS introduces a SPECIALTY PROGRAM BLOCK,
from 6:30 to 8:00 PM, Monday through Friday. The
new programs are:

"I f

we e"joye d Q
sit'YIple vneG\1 U/;+h the FcV',vson5! \\

D ',J

.r

+ke

tvt'~
8~t'"

yOLl

(11<.)$+

Kl'\ow,

wiFe, Lill ;'1,
My Jon, Don, "",d,
ore 01)(. .5 e, t h i .s
i5

MONDAY - MUSIC NORTHWEST, which will feature the
full range of Northwest musical talent.
You can expect to hear JIM PAGE, BRYAN
BOWERS, T.R. RICHEY, TRACY MOORE, THE
YOUNG PIONEERS, the PERCIVAL STREET
BASEMENT TAPES and much more. All this
leads up to our 3RD ALIVE IN OLYMPL6,
SERIE~ this spring.
TUESDAY - BACKSTAGE WITH THE ARTS, hosted by
Forrest Wilcox. A program which features
interviews, panel discussions, reviews
and performances by connnunity artists.
Topics cover . the full range of music
theatre, dance, literature and visual
art.
- followed by REEL TO REAL THEATRE: the best in contemporary and historical radio theatre . We'll
begin with thirteen plays produced by the
National Radio Theatre of Wcase.

r.y

otF
vAte

ny id ,

~

KAOS COMMUNITY RADIO is proud to bring , two very
special events to the Olympia area in October. First,
a concert by DAROL ANGER AND MIKE MARSHALL, with PAUL
CHASMAN, on October 13, in The Evergreen State College
Recital Hall. The second event is the THIRD ANNUAL
KAOS HALOWEEN MASQUERADE BALL, in TESC's Activities
Building on October 27. October is shaping up to be
a great month for music fans!

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL
The Coope r Po int Jo urn ,, 1 need., wr ite rs , ph o togra ph e rs. gra phk a rti sls a nd pro du c tio n sta fr. Wh e ther yo u're m o tiva ted by a need fo r
academi C credi t, Ih e dri ve tn se rve yo ur le li o,", ma n o r pl a in o ld masoc hi sm. the C P J needs you, Come by C A'B .306 or call x6213 ,

Second Hand
Gifts
&

Collectibles
106112 E, Fourth
Old Town Olympia
943-5025
Hours Mon·Sat 11AM·5PM

3210 Cooper Point Rd , NW

*Groceries, Vegetables
Fresh Fruit

HOUSE
OF
ROSES

F fCC grocery del/vefy wl thm 3 miles WIIIl $30 minimum order

Calf rhe mghr be fore or before 2 00 PM

* Old-Fashioned
Del ica te s se n
* 'Village' Chicken
* Excellent Variety of
Beer and Wine Imports

Your c hOICe of mears and cheeses
wlrhJoJos +Bumros

Watch For Our Weekly Specials
On Food And Beverages!

SPECIAL DISCOUNTS FOR WGE ORDERS
Please Call Ahead ,

866-3999
Hours 7 AM to 11 PM Weekdays · Saturdays
6 AM to 11 PM Sunday

Presentation Bouquets
Plants
(;fIts
Fresh Flowers

INTRODUCING··

GERMAN SAUSAGE
Reg ~ S1. 49
$ 1 • 19
'
Special from 10/1/84 thru 10112184

The Deli .. T.E.S.C.

Over 125 Varieties
oj Balloons
AmprlC8n E)(DreSS QlIler'i

Club Cal le Blanche V,sa ana
Mas/('fcard orders accepted
fly phone

1821 Har ri, on Avenue
Olympia , Wa 98502
754 ·3949

DELIVERY AVAILABLE

OCTOBER 4 , 1984

NON-COMMERCIAL COMMUNITY RADIO IN OLYMPIA

Darol Anger and Mike Marshall are known to thousands of fans around the world from their involvement in
the New Acoustic Music, particularly in the context of
The David Grisman ·Quintet. Known collectively as THE
DUO, Anger and Marshall have performed around the world,
including appearences at Carnegie Hall and the Montreaux
Jazz Festival. They have recorde twenty-one albums
between them, including their Rounder release, THE DUO.
Playing mandolin, mandola, mando-cello, violin, viola,
. and guitar, Anger and Marshall provide an exciting and
personable show which blends elements of jazz, bluegrass, R & B, classical and ethnic music into a complex
and vivid collage of string music.
Also performing on this bill will be Portland
guitarist PAUL CHASMAN. A long-time fixture of the
Northwest music scene, Chasman has released three albums,
including his most recent duet effort with percussionist
Roger Hadley, SO BE IT. Chasman performs in styles
ranging from ragtime to raga with fluidity and accuracy
which have made him a notable talent.
THE DUO and PAUL CHASMAN will perform two shows
on October 13, at 7:30 and 10:00 pm, in TESC's Recital
Hall. Tickets are $4.50 for students, senior citizens,
and KAOS subscribers, $6.00 for" the general public.
Tickets are available at TESC Bookstore, Rainy Day
Records in west Olympia, and Cracker's Resteraunt downtown on Capitol Blvd.
, You are cordially" invited to spend an evening with
KAOS radio at the THIRD ANNUAL KAOS HALLOWEEN MASQUERADE
BALL. This year' s big gig will be headlined by . the newly reformed and revitalized FACTORY GIRLS, and the ALL -

schedule

WEDNESDAY - VOICES AND EXPRESSIONS OF LATIN AMERICA
hosted by Lisa Levy. A bi-1ing~1 journey
through the music and culture of Central
and South America. One of our most popular and wel1":produced programs.
THURSDAY - AMERICAN ANECDOTES hosted by Tom Foote.
Our finest program of contemporary and historic bluegrass, hosted by "Our Man from
New England",. Tom the chicken theif.

t
,

'"

FRIDAY - AUTOMATIC MEDIUM II with Marc Barreca. I
Northwest resident and new music composer
Barreca brings you the best in new electric
and electronic sounds. The cutting edge
of composition today.
All these changes have caused a significan~ shift in our
afternoon and evening sched,u 1e. These changes are detailed in our program descriptions' inside

NEW, ELECTRIC BALLROOM, plus THE MUD BAY JUGGLERS and a
yet-to-be-signed - special guest. Both these bands perform highly danceable original rock and roll to which
you are invited to dance the night away. Great sounds,
great costumes, and of course free refreshments can all
be yours.
Last year's Halloween Ball was again sold out to
overflowing in the first hour, so this year we've moved
to the even larger COLLEGE ACTIVITIES BUILDING. The
larger space should ~lccomodate another one hundred
guests and allow plenty of room for dancing. You are
invoted to dress as you please, and be eligible for
prizes in our BEST COSTUME CONTEST. Last year's winners included a trio of Bob Barker look-a1ikes and
a Barbarian. Tickets will be sold only at the door
on a first-come, first served basis, with ID required .
Admission will be a flat $4.00.
As in the past two years, we expect the Halloween
Bash to be totally sold out, so come early. It's all
happening in TESC's Activities Building on Saturday,
October 27, beginning at 8:00 PM. Line up, sign up
and dress up today - Halloween ain't far away!

Station Manager/Program Director: Laurian Weisser
Production Manager: Corliss .P rong
Technical Director: Norm Sohl
Cheif Operator: Robert Rensel
Operations Manager~ Shannon O'Nei1
Volunteer Coordinator: Jim Hartley
Community Affairs Department: Judy Samuel~, Janet
Benke, Michael Fine, Austin Kelly
Production Staff: ' Peter , Ricke~t, Juli Kelen, Scott
Vanderpool, Sandy Silva, Evan Davis, Lisa
Levy, Laurian and Michael.
Music Director: Dale Knuth
General Manager: Michael Hiintsberger
Special Thanks to: Roger Dickey and Mary Ellen McKain,
and ! he Cooper P01nt Journal

•••

NCM'AOFIT ORG,

U.s. f'08TACW

PAID
0lVWIA. WA

PERIoWT ..0: •

Cartoons by Charlie Campbell

+++
MEMBER N.F.C.B.

L

L

"1

o
.

,

II

I f YOU Mu,+ Kl1ovJ, we
simple V'I'IeC\1 w;+h the

q

Fevjv50r\5!\\

VA~"--"

of
i 5

KAOS amounces neweYeningschedule·

se, thiS
t"Iy ; d .

(auf

~

WEDNESDAY - VOICES AND EXPRESSIONS OF LATIN AMERICA
hosted by Lisa Levy. A bi-lingualjourney
through the music and culture of Central
and South America. One of our most popular and well-produced programs.

KAOS has made a shift in our evening programs
to' allow us to hring you what we bDpe will De five
very special new programs this Fall. Beginning October 1. KAOS introduces a SPECIALTY PROGRAM BLOCK.
from 6:30 to 8:00 PM. Monday through Friday. The
new programs are:

THURSDAY - AMERICAN ANECDOTES hosted by Tom Foote.
Our finest program of contemporary and historic bluegrass. hosted by "Our Man from
New England". Tom the chicken theif.

MONDAY - MUSIC NORTHWEST. which will feature the
full range of Northwest musical talent •
You can expect to hear JIM PAGE. BRYAN
BOWERS. T.R. RICHEY, TRACY MOORE, THE
YOUNG PIONEERS, the PERCIVAL STREET
BASEMENT TAPES and much more. All this
leads up to our 3RD ALIVE IN OLYMPL~
SERIES this spring.
TUESDAY - BACKSTAGE WITH THE ARTS, hosted by
Forrest Wilcox. A program which features
interviews, paRel discussio~s, reviews
and performances by connnunity artists.
Topics cover the full range of music
theatre. dance. literature and visual
art.
- followed by REEL TO REAL THEATRE: the best in cont~m­
porary and historical radio theatre. We'll
begin with thirteen plays produced by the
dio Theatre of
National

1'\'1 wife, Li-/! ;<1,
my Jon, Don, al"ld,

iJ 1: tlJt'"" ofF

he B4t'"

enjoyed

OCTOBER 4, 1984

NON-COMMERCIAL COMMUNITY RADIO IN OLYMPIA

la

FRIDAY - AUTOMATIC MEDIUM II with Marc Barreca.
Northwest reSident and new music composer
Barreca brings you the best in new .electric
and electronic sounds. The cutting edge
of composition today.
All these changes have caused a significant shift in our
afternoon and evening schedule. These cha~ges are detailed in our program descriptions inside

Chieare.

UijS lilliiS ~ The Duo, J)allowttn
KAOS COMMUNITY RADIO is ' proud to bring two very
special events to the Olympia area in October. First.
a concert by DAROL ANGER AND MIKE MARSHALL. with PAUL
CHASMAN. on october 13, in The Evergreen State College
Recital Hall. The second event is the THIRD ANNUAL
KAOS RALOWEEN MASQUERADE BALL. in TESC's Activities
Building on October 27. October is shaping up to be
a_ great month for music fans!

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL
T he Coo pe r P o int J o urn a l need, writ e r., .

ph{)tographcr~ , graphi~

a rti sts and

pr~duct ion

slafr. _W hether you're motivated by a need for

a cad eml!: cn:dit , the drive to serve your lellow man o r plain old ma~ ochi s m. the C PJ needs you . Come by C AB 306 or call x6213 .

&.

Collectibl~
106112 E. Fou rth
Old Town Olympia
943-5025
Hours: Mon-Sat 11AM-5PM

3210 Cooper Point Rd . NW

*Groceries, Vegetables
Fresh Fruit

HOUSE
OF
ROSES

Free grocer) d el/very wIthin 3 m iffS with $30 minimum ordCf
Call the night before or before 2 ()() PM

* Old-Fashioned
Del icat e sse i1
* 'Village' Chicken
Excellent Variety of
Beer and Wine Imports

Your chOICe 0 1 meals and cheeses

*

Second Band
Gifls

wllhJ<A1os + BumlOS

Watch For Our Weekly Specials
On Food And Beverages!

SPECIAL DISCOmrrs FOR LARGE ORDERS
Please Call Ahead

86 ,6-3999
.Hours 7 AM to 11 PM Weekdays - Saturdays
8 AM to 11 PM Sunday

Presentation Bouquets
Plants
Gifts
Fresh Flowers

INTRODUCING--

GERMAN SAUSAGE
Reg. $1. 49
$ 1 • 19
Special from 1011/84 thru 10/12/84
The Deli -- T.E.S.C.

Over 125 Varieties
of Balloons
Amp.flca ll ElCp ress Diners
Clab Ca rre Blanche: Vis a al1d
Mastercard ordefS acr'epled
lJy phone

1821 Hani' on Avenue
Olympia , Wa 98502
754 ,3949

DELIVERY AVAILABLE

Darol Anger ' and Mike Marshall are known to thousands of fans around the world froni their involvement in
.the New Acoustic Music. particularly in the co_n text of
The David Grisman Quintet. Known collectively as THE
DUO. Anger and Marshall have performed around the- world.
including appearences at Carnegie Hall and the Montreaux
Jazz Festival. They have recorde twenty-one albums
between them. including their Rounder release. THE DUO.
Playing mandolin. mandola. mando-cello, violin, viola,
and guitar. Anger and Marshall provide an exciting and
personable show which blends elements of jazz. bluegrass, R & B, classical and ethnic music into a complex
and vivid collage of str~ng music.
Also performing on this bill will be Portland
guitarist PAUL CRASMAN. A long-time fixture of the
Northwest music scene. Chasman has released three albums;
including his most recent duet effort with percussionist
Roger Hadley. SO BE IT. Chasman performs in styles
ranging from ragtime to raga with fluidity and accuracy
which have made him a notable talent.
THE DUO and PAUL CHASMAN will perform two shows
on October 13, at 7:30 and 10:00 pm. in TESC's Recital
Hall. Tickets are $4.50 for students. senior citizens.
and KAOS subscribers. $6.00 for" the general public.
Tickets are available at TESCBookstore. Rainy Day
Records in west Olympia, and Cracker's Resteraunt downtown on Capitol Blvd.
You are cordially, invited to spend an evening with
KAOS radio at the THIRD ANNUAL KAOS HALLOWEEN MASQUERADE
BALL. This year's big gig wi,ll be headlined by the newly reformed and revitalized FACTORY GIRLS, and th~ ALL -

NEW ELECTRIC BALLROOM. plus THE MUD BAY JUGGLERS and a
yet-to-be-signed special guest. Both these bands perform highly danceable original rock and roll to which
you are invited to dance the night away. Great sounds.
great costumes. and of course free refreshments can all
be yours.
Last year's Halloween Ball was again sold out to
overflowing in the first hour. so this year we've moved
to the even larger COLLEGE ACTIVITIES BUILDING. The
larger space should accomodate another one hundred
guests and allow plenty of room for dancing. You are
invoted to dress . as you please. and be eligible for
prizes in our BEST COSTUME CONTEST. Last year's winners included a trio of Bob ' Barker look-alikes and
a Barbarian. Tickets will be sold only at the dopr
on a first-come. first served basis. with ID requir~d.
Admissionwi~l be a flat $4.00.
.

As in the past two years. we expect the Halloween
Bash to be totally sold out. so come early. It's all
happening in TESC's Activities. Building on Saturday.
October 27, beginning at 8:00 PM. Line uP. sign up ,
and dress up today - Halloween ain't far alofay!'

Station Manager/Program Director: Laurian Weisser
Production Manager: .I Corliss Prong
Technical Director: Norm Sohl
Cheif Operator: Robert Rensel
Operations Manager~ Shannon O'Neil
Volunteer Coordinator: Jim Hartley
Community Affairs Department: Judy Samu8l~. Janet
Benke. Michael Fine. Austin ,Kelly
Production Staff: Peter ' Rickett, Juli Kelen. Scott
Vanderpool, Sandy Silva. Evan Davis, Lisa
Levy, Laurian and Michael.
Music Director: Dale Knuth
General Manager: Michael Huntsberger
Special Thanks to: Roger Dickey and Mary Ellen McKain.
and the Cooper Point Journal

•••

NONPROFIT ORO .

U.s. P08TAOE

PAID
OL'IWIA, WI!

PERMIT MO..



..

7:00 - 10:00



CLASSIC HICK SHOW

Bill Wake
Bill will brighten your Sunday morning with classics,
makiqg S.unday an o.k. idea. Requests 9 to 10.

10:00 - 10:30

OLD TIME RADIO

Gordon Newby
Fibber McGee and Mollie, The Green Hornet, and oth.e r ' .
gems from the golden age of the clamshell.'

'.

I,

10:30 - 1:00

THE GOLDEN OLDIES

HANDS ON THE DIAL

Personalities
TheKAOS Training program, coordinated by Jim Hartley. Everybody starts somewhere, - in radio' it helps
to start with your hands on the dial. You too can
get involved - call Jim at 866-6822.

3:00 - 6:00

F1edglin~

SWING SESSION

Raine Corliss
Glenn Miller, Artie Shaw, Duke Ellington, Benny
Goodman, and .a very young Frank Sinatra all corning
direct to 'yo'ur 1ivi.ng room. Hosted by someone who
really appreciates the genius of Fletcher Henderson.

6:00 - 7:00

VIETNAMESE LANGUAGE HOUR

Hung Phan
Music and news from Vietnam and Southeast Asia.

7:00 - 8:00
8:00 - 10:00

TO BE ANNOUNCED
SOUNDTP~CK

CINEMA

Ford Thaxton
Just back from his sojourn in Tinseltown, Ford returns to bring you music from films and film music
composers. Really rare stuff. Featured this month:

October 14 roUBLE FEATURE:
+ INDIANA JONES

~

RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK
THE TEMPLE OF roOM

October 21 TANGERINE DREAM: Soundtracks by this
German electronic trio; featuring the
music from RISKY BUSlNESS
10:00 - Midnight

RADIO VERITE

Mr. Space
Original, electric, eclectic - Mr. Space has been
with KAOS since our 10 watt days. Hear some things
you've never heard before. Featuring updates frQm
the National Aeronautics & Space Administration.
- alternating with FEARLESS FRANK'S CAPSTAN CLASSICS

Frank Gunderson
A potpourri of independantly produced cassetes from
Olympia, around the country and around th~ world.



6:00 - 10:00

MORNING MADNESS



.Naiya Corliss

If you think Monday is no fun, well think again:
Henry the Cow, Cluck the Duck, and special guests
join Corliss for a full morning of music and more.
10:00 - 12:00

GOODBYE BLUE MONDAY

Eric Brinker

Blues to get your blood flowing one week, country
:to get your toes tapping the next.
12 : 00 - 1 :00

TEA PARTY

Lois Maffeo

Chris Metz

Classic Jazz fr.om' KAOS - Coltrane, Miles:, Billi.e ,
Ornette, Carla, Abbey • . .
10:00 - Midnight 'ROCK BY WOMEN

Rhoda Flash
Shannon 0' Neill
Lois Maffeo

Rhoda drives up from Portland to do the first show
each month. Then Shannon and Lois alternate over
the succeeding weeks. A bit confusing, Dut consistently excellent music.
~dnighL

- 2:00

MONDAY NIGHT ROCK

Tom ' Geha

Rock-n-roll for the late night set.

6 :00 - 10 :00

CAPE BRETON CLOGGING

Sandy Silva.
Linda Lammer

Sandy specializes in old-timey dance mUSic, especially music from Cape Breton. Linda takes over at .
8:00 with traditional and contemporary American
folk music.
10:00 - 12:00

A'PICKIN 'N' A"BOWIN'

John Holland

Bluegrass, folk and country music.
12:00 - 1:00

REEL TO REAL THEATRE

Rebroadcast of the previous Wednesday's radio play.
See Wednesday 6:30 pm for more information.
1:00 - 3:30

ETHNIC/CELTIC

Patric Maley
alternating with.
Pete Hayes
Patric pla,s music from Asia, Africa and South
America. Pete plays Celtic classics.

3:30 - 5:30. COOK IN , WITH THE CLASSICS

Jul! Kelen

KAOS classic culinary cuisine. The masters, plus
great reCipes and Fun Facts. Be sure to enter
the CWTC recipe contest. Juli will give details.
Weight Watchers approved.

BOY MEETS GIRL

6:00 - 6:30 PACIFICA NEWS
· 6: 30 - 8 :00 BACKSTAGE Wlrn THE ARTS

MidnighL - 2:00

HIDEAWAY

REEL TO REAL THEATRE
This month, continuing the Radio Rep series, produced by National Radio Theatre.
Michael's Lost Angel

. ..
. . . ... ... .
6:00 - 10:00

New music~ jazz musiC, folk. mus·i c, political musiC,
music that shouts wake up and live!
Amarillo to Brownsville, El Paso to Texarkana. The
blues, Bob Wills, TexMex ~ like driving across
the Lone Star State in your pickup truck.
12:00 - 1:00

1:00 - 3:30

Stephan specislfzes in music from Eastern Europe
and Asia. Doug brings you Africa and South A-me.r1.ca.
Sharon Berman
3:30 - 5:30 GENERICA MUSlCA
..i Medleval~ Renaissance., Baroque., and a touch.. of the
contemporary. A rare vintage.. ~

Joel Davis

ADVANCED ROCK'N'ROLL

EDITION 12

6:00 .... 6:30

PACIFICA NEWS

6:30 - 8:00

VOICES AND EXPRESSIONS OF LATIN AMERICA
vi th Lisa Levy

Midnight - 2: 00

SUBLIMINAL JAZZ

MiduighL - 2: 00

Hal Medrano

RON'S ' LATE NIGHT

Ron brings you electronic

SH~W

mu8~c

Ron Bond

and comedy • .

•••••••••••
SPICE OF LIFE

Guy Nelson

A morning mix of jazz. fo-H.~ b~uegras8. and new
music. Guy also has a great sense of humor. plus
all those old Bob Newhart recorda. 'lb.e button down mind of the eighties.
10:00 - 12:00 THURSDAY MORNING BLUES
Linda Borgaes
A steaming heaping helping of blues. served up
with.. occass'looallive. recordings and 1ntervi.ews.

1:00 - 3:30

HAWAIIAN PARADISE

MONSTERS FROM THE ID DANCE PARTY
with Sam Van Fleet

Late ni.ghL antics from your; ~uhconscious mind.





6:00 - 10:00

MUSIC FROM THE PENGUIN CAFE

wit~Michael

BEETHOVEN'S NIGHl'HARE

...I,

10:00 - 12:00

THE EPPO SHOW

Eppo

Bluegrass afficionado Eppo spins Bill Monroe, Doc
Watson, Frank Wakefield . . . and usually brings
his guitar.
12:00 - 1:00

TO BE ANNOUNCED

1:00 - 3:30 . LOUISIANA TO QUEBEC

Rilf Shepard

of French clJlture in North. Ame.ri.c a,
from cajun to Cape. Breton.

TI'~ wealt~

CLASSICAL MAGIC

Kimberley Fiedler

5:3Q - 6:00

EDITION 12

6:00

PACIFICA NEWS

6:30

6: 30 - 8 :00

AUTOMATIC MEDIUM II

Marc Barreca

Composer and Olympia resident Barreca bringa you
new electronic music - eerie and eventful.
8:00 - 10:00

.

PERCIVAL STREET JAZZ

Nancy Curtis
Skip Elliot
Tom Russel

Local jazz musicians bring you the roots and
the recent records - jazz for those who love
jazz.
SPECIAL EVENT - OCTOBER i9.

KAOS TRIVIA CONTEST

The phone number is 866-6822. Be prepared for
the ultimate Trivia challenge. Now in its sixth
y~ar - some teams are VERY good.
10:00 - Midnight

PILE DRIVING FUNK

Vikki Barreca

The latest in rap. scratch and fu~. Accept no
. substitutes - this is the real thing!

Midnight - 4:00

PRICKLY HEAT RADIO

Dale Knuth

BlueS, clOSing time to bedtime. Plus. the Pri.cltly
Heat Acres News. the Cubs report. and the KAOS
lCompus (huh?).

Toni Collee

Pe.ter R1.cket:t

Potnt1l11sa, s!JIu.t enalty·, tone rows, sound aas.':'"
sea - ausic from the 20th. century. Ludw£g never
Imew 1 t would lead to this.

5:30 - 6:00

EDITION 12

6 :00 - 6: 30

PACIFICA NEWS

Hunts.berger

An obscure location found only at 89.3 FM, wh.e re.
you'll hear folk, funk, fUSion, new music and
a little rock too. House Band performs weekly.
Espresso is extra.

Now 1n her third season. we guarantee this 1s the '
only show of its kind - anyvhere.! Hawaiian words
a specialty.
3: 30 - 5: 30



Just what you need as you drive. home f-rom a
tough week.' s work.

Lisa brings ' her Ecuadorian heritage to you in this
bilingual (Spanish/English) program of music and
culture from Central a'nd South Ameri.c a.
8:00 - 10:00

Rick. Lewis.
alternating with
Tucker Petertil

Trua head , of the class. in rock~ wave, funk, and
other independant1y m£nded musi.c.

3:30 - 5:30

5:30 - 6:00

Th.e Amorous Adventures of Don Juan



Stephan D~mitroff
alternating with
. , Doug Denherder

MOON OVER RUINED CASTLE

October 30.:

PACIFICA NEWS

10:00 - M£dnight

The title says it all.

TO BE ANNOUNCED

One of the finest programs of classic jazz in tb,e
entire universe. John plays the greats, with a
style entirely :hia ovo.

THE JAZZ LINE

New and vintage jazz - vote today in the Jazz
Line poll.

MISSISSIPPI DIRT WATER BLUES
with
Kristar Milburn

12:00 - 1:00

CLASSICAL HANDS ON THE DIAL

Seth Watkins

TEXAS GUMBO

The Midnight Mocker

John Shepard

8:00 - 10;00

Hari Levine

WAKE UP AND LIVE

October 23:

ROUTE 66

Three.

Tom Foote

Bewitching blues, dedicated to the memory of
Freddie King.

6:00 - 10:00

- followed by -

8:00 - 10:00

Dan Spearman

AMERICAN ANECDOTES

Bluegrass with a capital R. More old obscure
records than you ever dreamed of - including
the infamous "Bluegrass Meets the Beatles".

Independant rock~ local and elsewhere, by the guy
tha t owns this town.

10:00 - Midnight - TO BE ANNOUNCED
hosted by
Fo rres t Wilcox

Interviews, panel discussions~ reviews and bits of
performance from Olympia's many community arts organizations. Music, theatre. dance, visual arts
and literature.

October 9:

CalVin Johnson

A wide variety of post-bop, crossover and new
fusion music. Subtle and subliminal.

5:30 - 6:00 EDITION 12

6:30 - 8:00

- alternating with -

10:00 - 12:00

• ••••••

Bradley Sweek.

Straight from the hip rock, loaded with local music

Anne Broome
1:00 - 3:30 CELTIC SAMPLER
Anne wil return from England this month - what
tales she will tell. The sampler features Celtic
music and p~ose.

Heard only on KAOS.

~.'

ALL OR NUTHING AT ALL

WILD WEST SHOW

So Passionat is the Shade:
Ghost Plays.

6:00 - 6:30

"

8:00 - 10:00

10:00 - Midnight

Oc tober 16:

5:30 - 6:00 EDITION 12- PPBLIC AFFAIRS
I
See the Cooper Point Journal for weeltly schedules
of interviews, features~ and special productions •

~i

various producers
From Vancouver B.C. to Portland OR., the Pacific
Northwest offers ~rich blend of musical talent.
Each week, we highlight one aspect of Northwest
music.

The call-in talk show for those with an ear for
art. Local color par excellence.

3:30 - 5:30

l

MUSIC NORTHWEST

Gordon Newby

All your favorite hits frbm the 50's and 60's, plus
requests galore!
1:00 - 3:00

6:30 - 8:00



••••• ••••
7:00 - 10:00

TO BE ANNOUNCED

10:00 - 1:00

EVERYWOMAN'S RADIO SHOW

Donna Eckenrode

Music by, for and about women. .Information afiout
upcoming events and issues afeecting women and
the world.
1:00 - 5:00

EL MENSAJE DEL AlRE

Jose Valadez
Felix Torres
Jose Pi.neda
Spanish. Language program of music and communi.ty
news.

5:00 - 7 :00

HARD WAllIN', MEAN TALKtN', DOWN ON
MY LUCK BLUES
Dave Corbett

The original KAOS blues show, now in its sixth
year.
7:00 - 10:00

ONE DROP REGGAE

Ch~rlie

Morgan

The oldest reggae show in the Puget Sound, now
hosted by a man who may knOw. more about ~eggae
than anyone in the state.
10:00 - 12:00

SATURDAY NIGHT ROCK

Joh.n Bjornson

MEMBERSHIP DRIVE: OCT. 12-21
KAOS COMMUNITY RADIO will launch its semi annual membership drive at 6:00 AM on Friday, October i2. , . ''Music from the Penguin Cafe", Michael
Huntsberger's weekly trip through musical madness,
will kick off ten days of special programs, special
guests, and especially special opportunities for
KAOS listeners to become a part of the growing KAOS
family.
·~l
Among the many features and surprises of the
membership drive, be sure to tune in for these:

OLDIES REVIVAL

The

Doctor

Every week, the Doctor escapes from the institution to hring you his prescription for Saturday
night. From the 50's and 60's, call in for requests and dedications. PLUS, Ni.gh.tmare Th.eater
at 12:30 AM.

Travels witl1lisa leV\1
This summer I was in Ecuador and my stay coincided
with the 3rd. annual festival of the Latin American
New Song Movement. While there, I served as KAOS's
official correspondent to a festival that presented
65 musical groups from 17 countries.
During the seven nights, between July 8 and 14, I
shared With 6000 other spectators the performances of
some well known artist such as Silvio Rodriguez (Cuba),
Inti-Ulimani (Chilel, Leon Gieco (Argentina), Holy Near
and Pete Se~ger (USA1. There were also artists whose
voices and compositions I had not been familiar with,
as was the case of Luis Eduardo Aute ,(Spain), Santiago
Feliu (Cuba) and Adrian Goizueta and the Experimental
Group (Costa Rical. Every night 12 or 13 groups played.
Lots of music! I
The daytimes, during this week, were filled with. press
conferences, forum-presentations-discussions and interviews
Not only was this an opportunity to meet musicians, out
also one to contact other journalists {rom around the
world. My contact was mainly with those from NPR, Radio
Havana and Mesoamerica Ca newspaper edited in Costa Rical.

What kind of music was it? Well, there was everything
from traditional Andean to Spanish rock to intricate
poetry accompanied by fingerpicked guitars. The boarders
of the Latin American New Song are wide open. The
unspoken, tacit prerequisites to be considered part of
this musical movement have to do with. the musicians attitude. It has to have strong social consciousness and must
not he regimented by commercial formulas.
In the United States, one can expect festivals like
this one to happen. In them the musicians are not paid
and are interested in listening to and playing with
each other. However, this is a new phenomenon in Latin
America and in itself exemplifies the changes estahlished
by this movement. Severa1 times when I spoke with people
on the street, they would say that they had read about the
concerts in the newspapers and then would ask me who ~d
won. Any concerts that they had ever attended or heard
about were contests. The idea of non-commercial,
uncompetitive musical gatherings was new to them and
sometimes somewhat disturbing and incomprehensible.
I am preparing a special program on the 3rd.
Encuentro-Foro de la Nueva Cancion Latinoamericana •
which will be aired on KAOS-FM. For more information
and lots of good music, tune-in ew,ry Wednesday evening
from 6:30 to 8:00pm. for Voice and Expresfion of
Latin America. THIS PROGRAM IS THE ,ONLY ONE OF IT~
KIND IN ~TATE OF WASHINGTON and IT CAN ,BE HEARD
ON.·'\ ,S'TAlI151f· 'tHAT IS EQUALLY UNIQUE : KAOS 89.3»1.

Lisa Levy

Purple Sage
Sot. October 13th
Tickets SI0 each
On sale at the 4th Ave. lav and Rainy Day Records

October 5th & 6th

Midnigbt Rhythm Band

$2.50 Cover

- CINEMA SOUNDTRACK, hosted by Ford Thaxton,
will feature ·RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK and
INDIANA JONES AND THE TEMPLE OF DOOM, on
Sunday, October 14 at 8 pm; And, film music
by TANGERINE DREAM, including the soundtrack.
to RISKY BUSINESS, Sunday, October 21.

- THE KAOS TRIVIA CONTEST will make its fall
debut at 8:00 pm on Friday, Octoher 19..
- Dave Corbett will host a blues extravaganza
ALBERT COLLINS and THE LEGENDARY BLUES BAND
on Saturday Octoher 13 at 5:00 pm.
- For every $40.00 pledge on Thursday morning's
SPICE OF LIFE show Octofier 18, your host GUY·
NELSON will do his impeccable BING CROSHY
imitation.
Bradley Sweekwill host a live show featuring
THE YOUNG PIONEERS - live in KAOS studio C
on Tuesday, October 16 at 10:00 PM.


Smith & Reilly
Pool, Pinball, Live Entertainment, Food
210 E 4th Ave.
786-1444

•r···········-··········~
COUPON SAVINGS
:

I • HAIRCUT ~~issor $4.00 •
•I • PERMS ~2~goo $14.~~:
I
I
Don't Call Them Bees, Please
I • HAIR COLORING :
I AND LIGHTENING :
Razor



Shamooo & Blow Dry In cluded

WIth.

coupon





HatrCljf

co upon

bl,a Shampoo & Sef Ex/ra LOtlf] Hair £:«./ra

i AP:"";;~:;;77
Only

OP~~":~S~ ' " i

Closed Sun . & Mon.




:

WEST OLYMPIA
BEAUTY COLLEGE

:
:




Olympia's Westside Center, 2 blocks north of Capital Mall
All Services Performed by Students



Expires Oct. 31, 1984
I.................





.••

WHY SHOULD YOU BECOME A MEMBER OF KAOS?
To begin with, KAOS is the only FM station in
Olympia, the only· community radio station in Western
Washington, and the only station of its kind in the
entire United Sta tea. KAOS qffers great pro'gr81llllling
without commercial interruptions. KAOS is the only'
radio station in Washington which brings you the
Pacifica News Service five days a week. KAOS plays
alternative independant music which you will not
hear on any other station. KAOS offers special programs in Spanish and Vietnamese, as well as the
bi-lingual program VOICES AND EXPRESSIONS OF LATIN
AMERICA. KAOS has radio theatre, old-time radio
shows, and of course, blues, jazz, rock, 'bluegrass,
classical and ethnic music. KAOS is a unique radio
station which needs your support.

by Wend y Wendlandt

$15 KAOS SUPPORTER - th.e budget membership whi.clL
brings you 12 months of THE PROGRAM GUIDE and
a flashy KAOS bumpersticker.

$40 KAOS PRODUCER - the guide, the sticker, the
card, and a hand-calligraphed .CERTIFICATE
OF APPRECIATION suitable for framing.
As always, all donationa to KAOS are deductable from

your federal income tax as cha:ritable contributions.
All funds go directly to'" {Juppart' the growth. of community radio in the ·Olympia area.

The Yellow Jacket
It's been a long, dry summer; conditions are prime for a Yellow jacket
explOSIOn. YellowJackets are the
cold blooded heathens that have
been making what might have been
a relaxing day mulling about Red
Square into an apprehensive experience of swatting a nd swear ing·.
Flailillg at Yellowjackets can become
trying after just a few moments, and
also really upsets one's karma.
If you've been outside in the past
few weeks you have probably encountered seve ral of these. winged
hellcats. Yet even at the conscious
campus of Evergreen, it seems some
students are uninformed on the true
id entity of the yellowjackel.
The yell owjacket is not a bee or
a bird or even a plane, but, rath er
a species of wasp . Not many people
ca ll them birds nor even planes. but _
man y do ca ll them bees, " Damn
·bees," "bloodsucking becs," etc.
Allow me to touch upon a few differences between wasps and bee s.
Bees (family Apidae) construct
hi ves of wax and pollen; wasps
(family Vespidae) make paper nests
from chewed up wood and spit, or
they tunnel undergro und. Bees

ched throughout the summer, and
take over the job of feeding the larvae and maintainin g the colony. The
workers bring the larvae pre-chewed
insects, and in turn the larvae produce nectar for the workers' meal.
The males develop from unfertilized eggs in late summer, about the
same time potential Queens hatch
from larvae. The males then lit.eral Iy mate and die, a small. necessary
function .
The Avenger, a local pest ex terminator a nd "very nice person"
states "This is when the fun starts."
The Avenger will rid your wasp nest ·
for a mere $60.00 with hi s spacesuit
and can of Raid bee and wasp killer.
The \;olony is now breaking up, the
hatched workers arc no longer providing food for the larvae. The wasp
numbers will increase until midSeptember. Most of th e yellowjackels out are ei ther the female
workers looking for food - nies,
bologna sandwiches, whatever they
ean find - or pregnant queens looking for a winter resting spot.
Eventua ll y the cold weath er will
kill off the workers, t he Queens will
have found a place to sleep, and we
will not hear from the yellowjacket s
tift next summer. And if it is a nother
warm, arid summer YOll can expl'Ct
many of them. hooray)

WashPIRG
Registers Voters

In addition to all these great reasons, KAOS
offers great benefits to those listeners who make
the pledge and support community radio:

$25 KAOS SUBSCRIBER - you get the Program Guide,
the bumpersticker, and the KAOS SUBSCRIBER
CARD. The card brings you discounts on KAOS
_t-shirts, on KAOS events, and Brings you a
10% discount at KAOS Patron Businesses, ~ch_
include Pizza Haven, The Asterisk Deli, and
The Columbia Bakery. The :card literally
pays for itself.

generally only sting once. The barb
at the end of the bee's stinger hooks
into its victim and becomes caught.
Ho ho! But the wasp has a smaller
barb, which ' enables it to sting
several times and not get as eas ily
hooked. Ouch!
Robert Sluss, instructor of an Entomology (bug) class this fall says
"The technical difference between
bees and wasps are the hairs, or
setae: Bees have branched hairs (split
ends) which cover their .bodies.
Wasps usuall y have less hair and it's
not br;;t"ched. They 're leaner and
meaner looking than the fuzzier
bees. Bees make honey and wasps
make trouble with a capita l Mr. T.
But, hey, don't worry, their
numbers are "quickly diminishing .
Those wasps that have been nying
in mouths o r up pants are, according
to Robert Sluss, impregnated queens
searc hin g for a dark, sa fe nook in
which to lie dormant for the winter.
Unlike bees which live year-round,
yel lo wjackets die off except for the
fertilized queens.
The female wears the wings in the
ye llowjacket family. After a long
winter sleeping, the queen forms a
new co lony. She will build a nest and
collect food ror th e larvae until the
first brood of female workers is hatched. The female workers are hat-

by A. Stark



In addition to all this, you'll get the answers to some.
of today's most pressing questions - information yQU
can use, such as: Things You Shouldn' t Do With.. Your
Radio; The Premiums You Won't Receive; 10 Reasons Why.
You Don't Pledge Money; and the ever-popular saga of
The KAOS Gremlins (yes, we had them long before Steve.
Spielberg!). Plus, special appearences by· Richard
Nixon, Mr. T., Henry Kissinger, your mother, Gerald
Ford, and the President himself.

Harp
Red Hook
Whitbrad

Bass
Guinness
Black Hook

- on October 12, Michael will be giving away
tickets to the upcoming concert by DAROL
ANGER AND MIKE MARSHALL with. paid subscriptions, on MUSIC FROM THE PENGUIN CAFE,
Friday at 6:00 am.

Just turn on the radio and bring the party home.
12:00 - 4:00

New Riders of the

COllle straiglll to Haven the next time you·re hUni,'ly. We'll sef\le YOU our hot.
delicious medium pizza. topped \\ith pul'!' Canadian-s;>'le Bacon, fillis two large. icccold Pepsis. All for lust $'199. Tha(\ a lhil ishh good deal. In Etct. we·re tempted to sal·
it 5 the hest deal all earth. The de\'il illade us do it.

~

PIZZA HA~ IS PIZZA HEAVEN
F:L'l. \Tee delim'. Limited :11"ta. bpil'l~ ~o\"l'lllh('r 21. 19X-t. \o"ll"titutioll' or C"II~ )II '.
Olympia (( ~tpit:ll \\a1l12 70 C:IJlit:11 \\all. 7)+ .~7 1t

The d fom of Wash PI RG will
continue through the deadline fot
registrati on in the sta te, O c tube r 6.
Any indi v idual whu resides in
Thurston Cou nt y anu is a U .S.
citizen ma y regis ter to vote . The
Washl'lRG-cgi strati on will be in the
CAB Thursday and Friday . October
4 and 5, for anyone who has still
managed to miss it.
WashPIRG, th e Washington
Public Int erest Researc h Grou p, is
a .non -par ti sa n , st udent - run
organ ization which foc uses on environmental and consumer issues. Its
fir st organizational meet ing will be
OClober 10 in CAB 108 at noo'n . All
interested students are invited to
a tt e nd .

By October 6. every eligible
member of the [,·erg ree n communi ty will be regis te red to vote if the
Was hPIR G folks have their way .
Since th e beginnin g of the sc hool
year, WashPIRG registered over 200
student s to vote a s they braved the
registration lines, munched lun ch in
th e CAB, relaxed in the dorm~, a nd
sa mpled the fares of Har ves t Fair :
WashPIRG hope s that their
reg istration drive and the array of
important issues on the ballot thi s
November will turn Evergreen
students out in force. Typically ,
student s and low-income individual s
make up the majority of non -voters.

WashPIRG Refunds
The $2.50 WashPlRG fee is refundable to those who don't want to s upport PIRG a t Evergreen. Refund s will be available October 8 - 16 to those
who have paid the fee thi s quarter. Brin g student 10. 2nd noor CAB Mon
- Fri. II :00 a.m. - 1:00 p . m. Library Lobby Tues - Wed - Thur . 5:00
p.m . - 7:00 p.m.

Lacey (Soulld S<~lth CCllter I'H S<)uth S<KlIld CCllter. 'lYJ.2.~1I

.,.

~.'

'f

.

U,\,\1(l1l &. HaHl"'"
\ q 4"~~

MEMBERSHIP DRIVE: OCT. 12"""21
7:00 - 10:00

TO BE ANNOUNCED

10: 00 - 1: 00

EVERYWOMAN' S RADIO SHOW

KAOS COMMUNITY RADIO will launch its semi annual membership drive at 6:00 AM on Friday, October 12. 4f1usic from the Penguin Cafe", Micfiael
Huritsberger's weekly trip through musical madness,
will kick off ten days of special programs, special
guests, and especially special opportunities for
KAOS listeners to become a part of the ' growing KAOS
family.
Among the many features and surprises of the
membership drive, be sure to tune in for these:

Donna Eckenrode

Music by, for and about "women. Information aliout
upcoming events and issues afeecting women and
the world.

1 :00 - 5 :00 EL MENSAJE DEL AIRE

Spanis~

Jose Valadez
Felix Torres
Jose Pineda

news.
5:00 - 7:00

HARD WALKIN', MEAN TALKtN', DOWN ON
MY LUCK BLUES
Dave Corbett
The original KAOS blues show, now in its sixth
year.

ONE DROP REGGAE

SATURDAY NIGHT ROCK

Tickets $1 0 each
On sale at the 4th Ave. Tav and Rainy Day Records

October 5th & 6th

Midnight Rhytluil Band
$2.50 Cover

Charlie Morgan

j .

Smith & Redly
Pool, Pinball, Live Entertainment, Food
210 E 4th Ave_
786-1444

r······················~
COUPON SAVINGS
=

- THE KAOS TRIVIA CONTEST will make its fall
debut at 8:00 pm on Friday, October 19.

John Bjornson

I

II
III
I
I

Just turn on the radio and bring the party home.
12 :00 - 4:00

OLDIES REVIVAL

- Dave Corbett will host a blues extravaganza
ALBERT COLLINS and THE LEGENDARY RLUES BAND .
on Saturday October 13 at 5:00 pm.

The. Docto r

Every week, the Doctor escapes from the institution to bring you~s prescription for Saturday
night. From the 50's and 60's, call in for requests and dedications. PLUS, NighJ:mare Theater
at 12:30 AM.

- For every $40.00 pledge on Thursday morning's
SPICE OF LIFE show October 18, your host GUY·
NELSON will do his impeccable BING CROSBY
imitation.
- Bradley Sweek will host a live show featuring
THE YOUNG PIONEERS - live in KAOS stud~o C
on Tuesday, October 16 at 10:00 PM.

This summer I was in Ecuador and my stay coincided.
with the 3rd. annual festival of the Latin American
New Song Movement. While there, I 3erved as KAOS ' s
official correspondent to a festival that presented
65 musical groups from 17 countries .
During the seven nights, between July 8 and 14, I
shared wit~ 6000 other spectators the performances of
some well known artist such as Silvio Rodriguez (Cuba),
Inti-Illimani (Chilel, Leon Gieco (Argentina),- Holy Near
and Pete Seeger (USA1. There were also artists whose
voices and compositions I had not been familiar with,
as was the case of Luis Eduardo Aute '(Spain), Santiago
Feliu (Cuba) and Adrian Goizueta and the Experimental
Group (Costa Rical. Every night 12 or 13 groups played .
Lots of music!!
The daytimes, during this week, were filled wit~ press
conferences, forum- presentations-discussions and i~terviews
Not only was this an opportunity to meet musicians, out
also one" to contact other journalists from around the
world. My contact was mainly with those from NPR, Radio
Havana and Mesoamerica , Ga newspaper edited in Costa Rical.
What kind of music was it? Well, there was everything
from traditional Andean to Spanish rock to intri.c ate
poetry accompanied by fingerpicked guitars. The boarders
of the Latin American New Song are wide open. The
unspoken, tacit prerequisites t o be considered part of
this musical movement have to do wittL the musicians attit ude.• It has to have strong social consciousness and must
not he regimented by commercial formulas.
In t he United States , one can expect festivals like
t his one to happen. In them the musicians are not paid
and are interested in listening to and playing with
each other. However, this is a new phenomenon in Latin
America and in itself exemplifies the changes established
by this movement. Several times when I spoke with people
on the street, they would say that they had read about the
concerts in the newspapers and then would ask me who hSd
won . Any concerts that they had ever attended or heard
about were contests. The idea of non- commercial,
uncompetitive musical gatherings was new to them and
sometimes somewhat disturbing and incomprehensible .
I am preparing a special program on the 3rd.
Encuentro- Foro de la Nueva Cancion Latinoamericana ~
whi ch will be aired on KAOS-PM . For more information
and lots of good music, tune-in ev,ry Wednesday evening
f r om 6 : 30 to 8:00pm. for Voice and Expresfion of
Latin America. THIS PROGRAM IS THE ~ ONLY ONE OF ITS
KIND IN 11!E~:rATE OF WASHINGTON and IT CAN BE HEARD
ON.-/lIsn1!1f'if 'fHAT IS EQUALLY UNI QUE: KAOS 89..3PM.
Lisa Levy

.

..

In addition to all t~s, you'll get tne answers to some.
of today's most pressing questions - information you
can use, such as: Things You Shouldn't Do Wit~ Your
Radio; The Premiums You Won't Receive; 10 Reasons Why.
You Don't Pledge Money; and the ever-popular 'saga of
The KAOS Gremlins (yes, we had them long before Steve_
Spielberg!). Plus, special appearences by, Ri.chard .
Nixon, Mr. T., Henry Kissinger, your mother~ Gerald
Ford, and the President himself.

Harp
Red Hook
Whitbrad

Bass
Guinness
Black Hook

- on October 12, Michael will be giving away
tickets to the upcoming concert by DAROL
ANGER AND MIKE MARSHALL wit~ paid subscriptions, on MUSIC FROM THE PENGUIN CAFE,
Friday at 6:00 am.

The oldest reggae show in the Puget Sound, now
hosted by a man who may know more about reggae
than anyone in the state.
10:00 - 12:00

Sat. October i 3th

CINEMA SOUNDTRACK,' hosted by Ford Thaxton,
will feature RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK and
INDIANA JONES AND THE TEMPLE OF DOOM, on
Sunday, October 14 at 8 pm; And, film music
by TANGERINE DREAM, including the soundtrack.
to RISKY BUSINESS, Sunday, October 21.

Language program of music and community

7:00 - 10:00

New Riders of the
Purple Sage

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• HAIRCUT ~~issor $4.00 II
I
• PERMS ~2~gOO $14.00 I=I
Don-' t Call Them Bees, Please
• HAIR COLORING =
Razor

Wit h

ShRmpoo & Blo w Dry Inclu doo

c oupon

Ha"cu' [ ",. Shampoo & Se' Exlla. Lo"q Ha" E,u"

c oupo n

with

by A. Stark

~s~R and~I~HTENING

oAPnPIYt.

786-8777

$8.00

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Open Tues. -Sat.
Closed Sun. & Mon.

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WEST OLYMPIA
BEAUTY COLLEGE
Olympia ' S Westside Center, 2 blocks north of Capital Mall
Al l Services Performed by Students

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Expires Oct. 31, 1984
I...........
. ........•

WHY SHOULD YOU BECOME A MEMBER OF KAOS?
~

I

To begin with, KAOS is the only PM station in
Olympia, the only community· radio station in Western
Washington, ' and the only station of its 'kind in the
. entire United States. KAOS offers great programming
without commercial interruptions. KAOS is· tlie only
radio station in Washington which brings you the
Pacifica News Service five days a week. KAOS plays
alternative independant music which you will not
hear on any other station. KAOS offers special programs in Spanish and Vietnamese • .as well as tne
bi-lingual program VOICES AND EXPRESSIONS OF LATIN
AMERICA. KAOS has radio theatre, old-time radio
shows, and of course, blues, jazz, rock, cluegrass,
classical and ethnic music. KAOS is a unique radio
station which needs your support.

by We ndy Wend la ndl

$15 KAOS SUPPORTER - the budget membership whi.ch..
brings you 12 months of THE PROGRAM GUIDE and
a flashy KAOS bumpersticker.

$40 KAOS PRODUCER - the guide, the sticker, the
card, and a hand-calligraphed ,CERTIFICATE
OF APPRECIATION suitable for framing.
As always, all donations t o KAOS are deductable from
your federal 'i ncome tax as chaJ' ~ table contributions.
All funds go directly to"'- liuppori ' the growth of community radio in the ·Olympia area .

ched throughout the summer , a nd
take over Ihe job of feeding Ih e larvae and maintaining the col o ny . T he
workers bring the larvae pre-chewed
insect·s , a nd in turn th e larvae p roduce nectar for the wo rkers' m eal.
The ma les develop from unfe rtilized eggs in late summ er , abo ut the
sa me lim e· po te nti a l queens ha tch
from larvae . The ma les Ihe n Iit eral.Iy ma te a nd die. a sma ll ;-n ecessa ry
fun ction.
The Av enger. a local pes I eX lerminalor and "very nice pe rso n"
stat es "Thi s is when Ihe fun sla rt s . "
The,Avenger will rid your wasp nes t
fo r a mere $60.00 with hi s spaces uil
a nd can of Ra id bee and was p killer .
The <;olo ny is no w break ing up . th e
ha tched wo rk er s are no lo n ge r providing food for the la rvae . T he wasp
numbers will · increase until midSepl ember . Most of t he ye liowja ck ets o ut a re either the fe male
workers loo kin g fo r food - ni cs ,
b o logna sand wic hes, what ever Ihey
can find - or preg na nl queens loo king for a winl er res ting spa!.
Evenluall y th e co ld wea th er wi li
k ill o ff t he wo rk e rs, Ihe queens wili
have fo und a pl ace to sleep, a nd we
will no t hear from the yeliowjac kels
till next summer. And ifit is anol hc r
wa rm , arid summe r you ca n expec i
man y o f lh em. hoo ray !

WashPIRG
.Registers Voters

In addition to all these great reasons, KAOS
offers great benefits to those listeners who make
the pledge and support community radio:

$25 KAOS SUBSCRIBER - you get the Program Guide,
the bumpersticker. and the KAOS SUBSCRIBER
CARD. The card brings you discounts on KAOS
t-shirts, on KAOS events, and brings you a
10% discount at KAOS Patron Businesses, which_
include Pizza Haven, The Asterisk Deli, and
The Columbia Bakery . The 'card literally
pays for itself.

The Yellow J ackel
It' s been a long. dry summer; condition s are prime for a Yellowj a cket
exploston, YeliowJackets are the
cold blooded heathens that have
bee n making what mi ght have been
a rela xing d a y mulling abo ut Red
Square into a·n apprehen sive e xp erience o f swa ttin g a nd swearin g .
Flailing at Yellowjackets can become
trying after just a few mo m ents, and
also reall y upsets one ' s karm a,
If yo u ' ve been out side in the past
few wee ks you h ave probabl y encount e red severa l of these win ged
hell ca ts . YtlI eve n at th e consc io us
ca mpus of Evergreen . it see ms some
slude nls a re uninformed on the Irue
identi ty o f Ihe yeiiowj ac ket.
The ye llo wjacket is not a bee o r
a bird or even a plane, .but , rathe r
a spec ies of wasp-. Not many people
call th em birds no r even planes , but
man y do ca ll them bees, "Da mn
bees ," · " bloodsucking bees ," etc .
All o w m e to to uch upon a few differences between wasps a nd bees .
Bees (fa mil y Apid ae) con struct
hi ves of wax and po llen; wa s ps
(fa mil y Ves pid ae ) ma ke pa per neS ls
fro m ch ewed up wood a nd sp il. o r
th ey tunne l un de r gro un d. Bees

generally only sting ollc e. The barb
at the end of the bee' s stinger hooks
into its victim and becomes caught.
Ho ho! But the wa sp has a smaller
barb, which enables it to s ting
several times and not get as casily
hook ed. Ouch!
Robert Sluss, in structor of an E nto molog y (bug ) class this fall says
" Th e technical di ffe rence between
bees and wa sps are 1he hairs . or
sel ae: Bees have branched hairs (split
ends) which cover their bodies .
Wasps usually have less hair and ii ' s
not bra nched . They're leaner and
mea ner looking tha n th e fu zzier
bees . Bees m a ke honey and wasps
ma ke Iro ubl e with a capital Mr. T .
Bul, he y , don ' l worry. their
number s a re -qui ckly dimini shing.
Those was ps that ha ve been flying
in moulh s or up pants arc. according
to Robert Sluss . impreg nated queens
sea rc hing for a dark, safe nook in
which 10 li e dormant for the winte r .
Unlike bees w hich live year -round ,
yellowj ac kets die o ff exce pt fo r the
fertili zed qu eens.
Th e fe male wea rs Ihe wings inlhe
ye llo wjacket fa mil y . A fter a lo ng
winter slee ping • .lhe quee n fo rm s a
new colon y. She will build a nest and
co llec i fo o d for th e la rvae until the
first brood of fe male wo rk ers is hat ched , Th e fem a le work e rs a rc ha t-

. ..
(ome straight to Haven the next time you're hungry We'll serve VOLI oLir hot.
delicioLis mediulll pizza. topped with pure Canadian-slvle Bacon,IJ!n\' two large. icecold l'epsis. All for jusl S4.99 Thai Sa t!e\'ilishl\' good deal. In bet, we're tClllptlxl to S:lI·
it's thc best deal 011 earth. The dl'vil illalil' us do it.

~

"

PIZZA HAVEN" IS PIZZA HEAVEN
Fa'l. lrl~ ddlrel'\". iJmlll'll area. hllirt~ ~owmher 21. I ')~ . \" ,"Ir.,lillllon, or «MIJ'" ''

Ol}mpia (Capilal ,l lall) 270 Capilal liall. 7;~ _ \711
Lacey (Sou nd S<"xilh CCIlICI:) 'tl SWlh Sixlnd (~' nll'r. ~~1 - 2 .\ 1 1

By Oc lobe r 6, eve ry e li gib le
mem ber of the Evergreen com mu n iIY will be reg islered 10 vote i r Ihe
W as h P IRG fo lk, have Iheir way.
Si nce Ih e begi nnin g of Ih e ,c hoo l
year. Wash P I RG regisle red over 200
sl ud ents 10 VO le as Ihey braved Ih e
regislra tion lin es . mun ched lu nc h in
th e CAB. relaxed in Ih e d o rms. a nd
sa mpl ed Ih e farcs o f Ha rvest Fa ir.
Was h P IR G h opes Ih al Ih ei r
reg istra ti o n d ri ve a nd th e a rray of
im porta nl iss ues on Ih e ba ll ol Ihi s
Nove mb er wii l lurn Eve rg reen
stud ents OUl in fo rce . T ypi ca ll y .
studen ts a nd low-incom e indi vidua ls
make u p th e ma joril y of no n-voters.

T he erfon , of WashP IRG will
co n linu e Ih ro ugh Ihe dead lin e fo r
reg islra lion in Ihe Sla le. OClober 6.
A n y in d ivid ua l who resides in
Thurslon Cou nlY and i, a U .S.
cilizen may regis ler In vo le. T he
Wa sh P IRG"egisl rat io n will be in the
CAB T hu rsday a nd Friday, OClo ber
4 and 5, fo r a n yo ne who has still
ma naged 10 m iss it.
Was h P I RG. Ih e Wa~ hin g t o n
P u hlic In terest Researc h Gro up , is
a n o n - pa rl isa n , s tu de nt - run
orga ni za ti o n whi eh foc uses o n en,
viro nmenl a l a nd consume r issues . Its
first orga n iLa tio na l meeting wili be
Octo ber 10 in CA B 108 a l noon . All
inl e resled sludent s a re in vil ed to '
a ll end .

Wash P IRG Refunds
Th e $2.50 Was h P IRG fee is re fun dable to t hose w ho do n ' l· wa nt to suppo rt P IR G at Evcrgrce n . Refu nds wili be available October 8 - 16to Ih ose
w ho h ave pa id th c fee thi s q uartc r. Br ing st ud enl I D, 2nd n oor CA B Mo n
- Fr i. II :00 a.m . - 1:00 p .m . Library Lobby Tues .....: Wed - T hu r. 5: 00
p. m . - 7:00 p.m .

O \II\ IMl

&:

H :llmlill

\q .m ~

Olympia Housing Hunt
by Mike McKenzie
When my roommate graduated, I
was stuck with a two bedroom apartment and1i dream. (fantisized about
sparkling white walls, big windows,
and running water (on the inside).
My idea was to live alone. I ·was
prepared to sacrifice any, or every, .
part of the fantasy for cheap.
I was naive. I was delusive. I had
two weeks to move, and I thought !
I could find an ideal place for under
$200 a month . I started my search
in the classified section of the Daily
Olympian .
The For Rent ads seemed clear
and straightforward; the prices,
locations, and landlordial restrictions were printed for all to see. But,
on closer investigation, it was
misleading.
In Olympia 's classified dialect,
"downtown" meant anywhere with
in a mile radius of what I thought
qualified as downtown; "eastside"
meant Lacey; and "westside" often
meant "out-in-the-woods." After a
week of phone calls and appointments I was no closer to my fantasy,
on ly sore-legged from miles of bicycle riding. The apartments I'd seen
were overpriced, a hike from the
buslines, decorated in gold, orange,
brown, and green, or situated in the
landlord's backyard. When an ad
said 'references required'. it meant
the landlord either wanted to scare
away the riff-raff, or that anyone
you put down as a reference would
be grilled about the details of your
business, soc ial and drug-life . ·
Landlords are a hard to figure, nervous cross-section of Northwest
Americans.
The second week I tried the direct
approach. I walked down Fourth
Aven ue and pretended every apartment house sign was an open invitation for me to venture inside, knock
on the manager's door and ask, .
"Have you vacancies?"
Olympi~'s Downtown apart-

ments, though they are cheap (as low
as $125 a month), ranged from
glorified hotel rooms to squalor a la
mode. Once I felt endangered by
either violence or disease, or both.
Twice, I somehow entered on Fourth
Avenue and exited in an alley. As I
walked home, I drooled at · the
bombed-out, vacant rooms that
make up the second floor of several
Downtown buildings.
My time ran out. I had to move.
So I took, temporarily, a cheap
room with a shared kitchen and
batb. My window looked down onto a restaurant parking lot. Car
doors slammed, the restaurant crew
complained, ("The day shift never
has to do this stuff"), and garbage
men rattled their cans. I kept my
eyes and ears open.
I tried still another approach.; once
a week I checked the housing boards
at the Olympia Coop and on the
main floor of Evergreen's CAB. But
this method only strengthened my
original intention to live alone: I
didn't want to live with people I
didn't know. I was in the market for
an apartment, not a cooperative living experience. I quickly decided not
to live with anyone who ate only
vegetables, who gave their house a
nickname, or who required me to
bring ice cream to the household introductory meeting. I had decided
myself back to square one.
I grew nervous as September approached. I considered taking out a
"starving student needs living
space" ad in the newspaper. In
desperation I put my name on a
waiting list for a single apartment in
Ash (and maybe by 1987 ..). Then I
scored - a clean studio with my
own kitchen and bath - a friend
moved and I snapped up their place.
At $175 a month, all utilities included, I considered myself lucky, and
I won't complain.
If you have just started your
search, my advice to you is make
friends fast, win the lottery, or consult a psychic. Good luck.

Poetry

Holiday Meal SP.e cjal

When I think about love
I feel like a can of tuna
on a shelf at Safeway,
remembering the ocean.

by Kirty Erickson
Gilda the Geoduck, situated in a
nice spot of wet sand, felt extremely jubilant today. This morning she
captured many slimey organisms to
further please her palate and top off
yesterday's· mini-crab. She had accomplished a feat far greater than
those of any other geoduck and her
spirits rose so high she thOUght to do
even better! Today she hoped to
catch a fish.
The first item on her fish-catching
agenda was to reach the surface of
sand, then wait for a fish to come
poking along. Next, she would just
stick out her neck and suck it in.
'~Oh, won't everyone be jealous
when I come home with a tunafish!"
she thought. "But first, J must start
on minnows or something."
Gilda began her ascent toward the
surface, spit out air, and continued
upward. Little did snelfoow she was
giving herself away. Her progress
soon came to a halt. Suddenly, all
water disappeared from the sand.
She tried to move but to no avail.
Reaching her neck down, she felt
moistness again. A good sign.
Fishing would have to be postponed until a later date . Something was
telling her her life was being
threatened.
Suddenly all her surroundings
moved drastically. A hard object
crashed into her and demanded the
instinctual descending mode in her
tiny brain. Something had her. Descent proved impossible. Gilda the
Geoduck, proud owner of one minicrab and unnumbered other goodies,
began to feel she was losing them .

ORDER SOON FOR BEST PRICES

HENS & TOMS, FRESH OR FROZEN

God is all alone out there,
and I was created in God's image.
(Are you ready for an infinite can·
of depressed tuna?)

Gutsy Geoduck Goes ·Out
Her heart and soul fell apart. She let
go her powerful grip in the Sand. The
beach she thought to be a limitless
expanse of water soon took a tone

Shelton 's raises their turkeys without additives
or hormones, producing tasty. nutritionally
superi~r birds.

1______________
Predestination

I,

With pants in hand
he returned to his feet,
through the newly thickened air,
and looked down upon the water
as he rose ....

1

j

but barely did he gloat,
when he saw that some
were meant to sink
and others
born to float.
Calvin Martin

.Sandal
sP!Kialists.
Custom
fitting

and

repair.

by Liz Nequc tte
Academic survival is what KeySpecial Services is a ll about. and
retention statislic allest to the program's success. A higher percentage
of students participating in the KEY
(Keep Enhancing YoursclO program
stay in school to complete their
degrees than in the college population as a who le.
According to Sherry Warren,
coordinator of KEY -Special Services
vices. KEY "provides tools to help
students make it through" school.
The directors of KEY, all of
whom are Evergreen graduates, act
as advocates and as a networking
service for students needing
assistance with academic advi,sing,
tutoring, basic skills, financial aid,
personal counseling, or time
management. KEY will refer a student to th!! appropriate agency or
program such as ·the Learning
Resource Center, the Math Lab. or
the Counseling Center, then will
follow through to make sure the student is getting effective, timely help.
KEY works with the student as a
whole person, integrating academic
needs with personal. social, · and
financial needs in a way other pro. grams, which focus on specifics, are
unable to do.
An important function of KEYSpecial Services is its advocacy role.
Sherry Warren specializes in
mediating discussion bet'weeri
students and facultv or deans .
Frequently new students freshmen or transfer students who have attended more traditional
educational institutions and are used to viewing faculty as unapproachable authority figures need
some encouragement or assistance in
contacting faculty members with
problems or concerns .
Steve Bader meets regulary with
the financial aid department. He is
familiar will all the financial aid
regulations, and the scholarship programs. Since lie knows the students
and all of their needs so well, he is
sometimes able to see possibilities
for aid that the financial aid offi.cers,
who deal with so many students and
an interface between KEY and the
·Coalition to provide services for
KEY participants of whom approximately" 43 percent are third world
students .
Coalition (when director April West

2528 so. 38TH ST.

474-8228

~":::-;~:::4:

------------------------------------------------Money-saving
Student Coupon
o YES, send me 25 weeks of U.S. News & World Report for only
$9.88. I'll save 50% off the regular subscription rate and 77% off the
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Listen for the News Blimp on KAOS . Brought to you by U.S.News & World Report.
~

1 ~~~H-~~_JUl -~n~
., ~
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1

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THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

PAGE 6

=-

OCTOBER 4,1984 .

••..• _.-

.- .

___

- '""'-':~"I:!?

Open' Every Day
WESTSIDE CENTER

Limousine Servi

Luxury Transportation
For All ·Occasions
4 HOOP'S ENTERPRISES

754-9664

On one level there is the fluid
manner in which past events are narrated by the ancient, enfeebled
Salieri. The frames are merged with
gestures, sighs, shudders of realization and agonizing responses felt at
·one point in time and acted out in
another.
The movie also works as a
historical epic. People don't make
speeches and they don't say things
that don't make sense. they talk. The
sets and locations never seem prcten:
tious. We.can believe that people live
and work and play in these places.
And a genius doesn't behave as
we've been conditioned to believe
but rather as an individual.
Amadeus doesn't just reproduce
a lot . of Mozart's music, it incorporates it into the olot. There are

times when music is· being composed when we can actually hear the
music going through the character's
mind.
If the movie has a fault, it is tllat
we are bombarded with so much
varied stimuli that we are frustrated
at not being able to grasp and
treasure thelT! for later. But it's
definitely entertaining and definitely glorious .

DireCled by Milos Forman
Screenplay by Peter Shaffer from
his play
Cast: F. Murray Abraham. Tom
Hulce. EIi:aheth Berridge
Guild 45th, Seallle
2 hours. 38 minutes

KEY Unlocks Doors to Success

BACK CARE

The Inside Scoop

On
job market: Careers that are hot, skills that sell. What to expect
when you enter the work force.
On today's news- and policy-makers: Who to watch ... who stands where
. .. who holds the reins on red-letter issues.
On the economy: Where is it headed? What does it mean to your buying
power?
U.S. News & World Report takes you behind the scene. Straight to the
source with on-target analyses of what it means to you.
Subscribe to U.S.News at half-price. Just fill out and send in the coupon
below.

8 AM - 9 PM Daily
10 AM - 7 PM Sundays

Movie ReviewA·madeus

by At:me Bochman

After seeing Amadeus, I ran to
find an encyclopedia. I wanted to
look again at that stilted little bustlike etching of Mozart and read the
dry little paragraph . What this
movie did for my concept of Mozart
and my faith in musicals or epics was
more than I could have asked for.
In fact , Forman's movie is
astonishingly successful on many
di fferent levels.
Adapted from the Broadway play,
the movie tells the story of Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart and in particular
of his relationship with court composer Antonio Sali e"ri, a conventional man, lacking genuine talent .
who was enormously jealous of the
yo unger man' s extraordinary
mu sical talent.

U.S.News & World Report presents

_

Place Order By Oct. 26
For Best Price Break
921 N. Rogers - 754-7666
Open 10-7:30 daily

Craig Oare

of reality. The sun beat down, "
dehydrating all that she lived for; her
beautiful neck.
Then, as life seemed to creep to
a close, PLOP! WATER! "I'm
alive!" Her thoughts raced. "What
am I doing here? What's going on?
Super Goeduck. where are you?"
PLOP! From "out of heaven"
another from her own culture appeared next to her.
"Hi cutie," he said.
"What the .. . " she started.
"Well, you have just.experienced
something many geoducks go
through. Some call it starting school.
Others call it escaping the old life.
I call ita chance to meet goodlooking clams like you," he added
with a smile.
"What do I do now?" she asked.
'!Well ... you can come over to my
place
and
I'll
think
of
something ... but really, it's up to
you ."
"Can I ask you a question?"
"Sure anything."
"How do I get out of this pail?"
"Well, sooner than you thmK,
you'll be dumped out into the real
world so you'd bettc~.r design a plan
to attack those ~onsters ready to eat
you."
"Okay, but first let's try your
place. "

~Stlgiou

_
Shelton's
Naturally Grown Turkeys

God, Love and Tuna

'I'fII
SZII!~=:

OCTOBER 4,1984

Baker is on vacation. etc), serves as
~n interface between KEY and th e
Coalition in ode r to provide servi ces
for KEY participant s of whom approximately 43 percent are third
I world students ,
KEY was created four years ago
I through a federal grant origin ally
written by Stone Thomas, director
of Educational Support Programs.
which include KEY Special Serviced, the Learning Resource Center.
The Math Lab, and Upward Bound .
The grant was specifically funded to
provide services for first-generation
college students; that is. students
whose parents and grandparents are
not college graduates. who may encounter special difficulties. such as
familial pressure, in attending college. The grant requires yearly
reports on numbers of students served, performance, and meeting objectives in order to maintain funding .
It must be rewritten every three
years, so this year's grant is a brandnew·one. and the federal funding has
been increased to accomodate 200
students.'
In addition to the students enrolled in the program. KEY serves the
college community as a whole by
sponsoring orientation programs
such as this years "Geoduck Combat Training" (see below), cosponsoring cultural events with other
student groups ·and by providing a
place in the words of Kathy Ybarra
KEY program assistant, "for
students to blow off steam," to air
complaints and frustrations, or just
have someone to talk to. KEY is as
much a resource for faculty as for
students, since faculty may consult
KEY or send students to KEY for
referral to many programs on
campus.
Below is a schedule fo this year's
"Combat Training" sponsor!!d by
KEY. The series will be held on
Wednesdays in Library 1612 from
10:30 -am until noon, except as indicated. For further information.
contact KEY, L 3406. extension
6464.
Geoduck Combat Training: A Series
of Academic Survival Workshops
Are 'you new to Evergreen and
curious about how to survive the
rigors of non-traditional education?
I f so, this series may answer many
of your questions. The workshops

are designed 10 cover iss ues and concerns new student s ma y ha ve about
academ ic success a t Eve rgreen. particularly the sk ills necessary to be efreet ive lea rners.
Each session is facilitated by
faculty and / or SliPPOrt staff. The
are a combination of short lectures
and audience participation. Following is a brief description of each
session:
Demystifying
October 3
Education
Discussion on myths surrounding
higher education. i.e . faculty and
student expectations.
October 10 - How to Read a Book
and Prepare for Seminar
Pointers on getting and remembering information from books so you
are ready for seminar.
October 1'7 - Seminaring Savvy
Discussion on the purpose and focus
of seminars, abilities students need.
how to fix bad seminars, ideas for
quiet participants, and how to find
closure.
October 24, Juggling Time:
Books, Work. and Play
Tips for plal'lning, prioritizing, and
scheduling time for school, jobs. and
socializing.
.
October 31 Learning from
Lectures:
Pointers to develop and enhance
listening al)d note-taking skills
November 7 - Learning Best by Using Your Style
Discussion on identifying your learning style and how to use it to
enhance concentration and study
habits.
November 14 - Portfolios: Reasons
and Content
Discussion on the necessity of portfolios at Evergreen and after; tips on
putting one together .
November
26
Writing
Self-Evaluations
The gambit of evaluation writings:
where and how· to start, what and
how to write. NOTE: This workshop
is on Monday and will be held in
L2205, 3:30-5:00 p.m.

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

Thru Summer

Facilities Works
by Clint Steele
Facilities Mamtenance has been
busy this past summer. Apart frointheir usual plumbing, electrical, and
mechanical maintencance there has
been a host of special projects and
deferred maintenance undertaken
while the student population was
away .
Projects have included re-painting
of all the walkway light poles on
campus (try to count them some
time), repair and re-painting of outdoor stair railings, the remodeling of
the Photo Lab area, extensive repair
and refurbishing of the President's
residence, painting of many offices.
and the Geoduck house deck and
back mom reconstruction . There
was the preparation for the remodeling of the Day Care Center involving the moving of the office trailer,
electrical relocation and plumbing

Time was spent on the construction of a new office area for the
Cooper Point Journal and the Environmental Resource Center. Much
work was undertaken in getting
, things torn down and disassembled
so that what remained of the old Fire
Station building could be hauled
away.
And there was the creation of the
new student lounge in the CAB.
Take a 150 sq. ft. hole, fill it midway with 5 V2 inches of concrete, add
some partial walls, a few posts,
some plants, some oak and lighting
- build in some seating and carpet
the whole lot. There you have it, a
place where students can relax and
enjoy. As Facilities Maintenance
nears completion of these and other
projects, take a look around there's a lot to feel good about here
at Evergreen .

ALL WAYS TRAVeL seRVIce, IIIC.

WESTSIDE S"O"I'ING

943·8701

OLYMPtA . WASHINGTON

943·8700
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