The Cooper Point Journal Volume 3, No. 14 (January 30, 1975)

Item

Identifier
Eng cpj0072.pdf
Title
Eng The Cooper Point Journal Volume 3, No. 14 (January 30, 1975)
Date
30 January 1975
Evergreen Subject
Student Organizing and Activism
Environmental Studies
Curriculum
Native American Studies
Description
Eng Page 1: Cooper Point Journal (front page) -- experiencing the spiritual symposium (image: woman in supplication);
Page 2: (photograph) [smiling lady];
Page 2: Letters: No confidential files;
Page 2: Letters: Tuition hike will cost;
Page 3: Letters: "Marsh incompetent" -- Fleming;
Page 3: Letters: Marsh replies;
Page 3-4: Letters: Unmatched generosity;
Page 3: (advertisement) [share home, must love beethoven];
Page 3: (advertisement) Olympia Sport Shop;
Page 3: (advertisement) New Shanghai Cafe;
Page 4: (advertisement) Dirty Dave's Gay 90's;
Page 4: (advertisement) Looking Glass Gardens;
Page 4: (advertisement) Rainbow Grocery & deli;
Page 4: (advertisement) Town House Flop Shop;
Page 4: (advertisement) Ben Moore's;
Page 4: Letters: Do what COG says;
Page 5: Photo essay -- page 12 (feature story) (image: manholding stack of ?);
Page 5: Table of Contents;
Page 5: Staff Credits;
Page 6: Campus News: Budget proposals justified before legislature today;
Page 6: Campus News: Second program proposal cuts made;
Page 6: Campus News: Board of Trustees studies forest management;
Page 6: Campus News: Cooper Point plan upheld in court;
Page 6: (advertisement) Duck House;
Page 6: (advertisement) Sunrise Mountaineering;
Page 6: (advertisement) The Music Bar;
Page 7: (advertisement) Colleen's Gift Shop;
Page 7: (advertisement) Music Unlimited;
Page 7: (advertisement) Raudenbush Motors;
Page 7: (advertisement) Olympia Brewing Company;
Page 7: Campus News: Policy changed on academic work completion;
Page 7: Campus News: More S&A funds allocated;
Page 8: Campus News: Evergreen goals to be surveyed;
Page 9: Campus News: correction;
Page 9, 18: Announcements;
Page 9: (advertisement) the Pant Stop;
Page 10-11: Unanimous Hearing Board overrules Clabaugh in Moss case (images: Clabaugh, Moss);
Page 11: Images: members of Hearing Board: Rose-White, Knauss, M. Smith, N. Taylor, S. Herman;
Page 11: Journal contests closed deliberations;
Page 12-13: (photographs) Experiencing the Spiritual Symposium;
Page 14, 17: Times Change by members of the Evergreen political information center : Not out of Vietnam yet (image: Asian woman with rifle);
Page 15-16: Guest Commentary: Gold or Bust in Coming Depression (image: men in long coats standing in a line);
Page 16: (advertisement) Evergreen Savings Association;
Page 16: (advertisement) Shakey's;
Page 16: (advertisement) Cut-Rate Auto Parts;
Page 16: (advertisement) Olympia Brewing Company;
Page 17: (advertisement) Vino Fino;
Page 17: (advertisement) Hendrick's Rexall Drugs;
Page 17: (advertisement) The Artichoke Mode;
Page 17: (advertisement) Colony Inn;
Page 18: (advertisement) All Ways Travel Service, Inc.;
Page 18: (advertisement) Peterson's Foodtown;
Page 19, 23: Culture - Arts - Entertainment: Sports at Evergreen: hard to Find, They Still Exist (Images: Woman playing racketball, Man swimming, man running, man playing pool;
Page 20: Books / Cecile Henault : The Cycle of Zen (image: motorcycle in space);
Page 20-23: Culture Guide;
Page 21: Food / Nanette Westerman : Apples' Way (image: man standing beneath apple, "The Post Card by Rene Magritte);
Page 22: (advertisement) the Evergreen blues festival;
Page 22: (advertisement) Willie's Sports Enterprises;
Page 23: (advertisement) Olympia theatre;
Page 23: (advertisement) Rainy Day Record Co.;
Page 23: (advertisement) Word of Mouth Books;
Page 24: (advertisement) Colony Inn;
Page 24: (advertisement) Olympia Brewing Company;
Page 24: (advertisement) Vino Fino;
Page 24: (advertisement) Bob's Water Hole No. 2
Creator
Eng Rothwell, Geoff
Eng Fleming, Ti
Eng Marsh, Paul A.
Eng Hirshman, William P.
Eng Albertson, Chuck
Eng TESC Political Information Center
Eng Marcus, Gary
Contributor
Eng Solomon, Sam
Eng Foster, John
Eng Goodman, Kim
Eng Allison, Nicholas H.
Eng Berger, Knute Olsson H.G.S.
Eng Dawn, Aubrey
Eng deGive, Anita
Eng Overland, Mark
Eng Orred, Liz
Eng Posthumus, Ingrid
Eng Peterson, Gary
Eng Brombacher, Millie
Eng Cornish, Billie
Eng Cowley, Richard
Eng Farnam, Roger
Eng Feyk, Jim
Eng Gilbreath, Ford
Eng Gramam, Tom
Eng Grant, Suzanne
Eng Hanson, Glenn
Eng Henault, Cecile
Eng Hester, Mary Frances
Eng Irwin, Jeffrey
Eng Kramer, Wendy
Eng Lezzi, Craig
Eng Majdali, Kameel
Eng McCartney, Kim
Eng Milner, Ruth
Eng Meighan, Kathleen
Eng Moratti, Brian
Eng Oppenheimer, Dan
Eng Rich, Kathy
Eng Ryan, Andy
Eng Richards, Grant
Eng Spatz, Eddie L.
Eng Wallick, Len
Eng Westerman, Nanette
Eng Gribskov, Margaret
Subject
Eng Spirituality
Eng School tuition costs
Eng Teaching standards
Eng Journalism
Eng Evergreen current events
Eng Curriculum planning
Eng Forest management
Eng Forestry -- Olympia
Eng City development -- Olympia
Eng Discrimination
Eng Affirmative action
Eng Administrative appointments
Eng Minoriy employment
Eng Women's employment
Eng Paris Peace Accords
Eng U.S. Military -- Indochina
Eng Vietnam War
Eng Economic depression
Eng Gold standard
Eng Global economy
Eng Inflation
Eng University athletics
Eng Apples
Eng Aldridge, Les
Eng Volkenburg, Don Von
Eng Allen, Walker
Eng Marsh, Paul
Eng Parson, Willie
Eng Shore, Stan
Eng Moss, John
Eng Evans, Daniel
Eng Unsoeld, Willi
Eng Houston, Jean
Eng Smith, Huston
Eng Satchidananda
Eng McCann, Charles J.
Eng Martin, S. R. (Sennie Rudolph), 1935-2016
Eng Winn, Jack
Eng Jackson, Michael
Eng Cellarius, Richard
Eng Hannan, Robert
Eng Kormondy, Edward
Eng Estes, Betty
Eng Agnew, John
Eng Lundberg, John
Eng Wall, Dan
Eng Siedentop, Cindy
Eng Patterson, Lynn
Eng Clabaugh, Dean
Eng Freund, Hap
Eng Jones, Rindetta
Eng Youngquist, Diann
Eng Carroll, Jim
Eng Monteccuco, Richard
Eng Knauss, Bill
Eng Herman, Steve
Eng Rose-White, Carlos
Eng Smith, McDonald
Eng Taylor, Nancy
Eng Foster, John
Eng Lidman, Russ
Eng Ford, Gerald R., 1913-2006
Eng Kissinger, Henry, 1923-
Eng Aspin, Les
Eng Keynes, John Maynard, 1883-1946
Eng Schlesinger, James R.
Eng Nguyễn, Văn Thiệu, 1923-2001
Eng Exter, John
Eng Wells, Alden
Eng Stevens, George
Eng Pick, Franz
Eng Hospers, John
Eng Stalin, Joseph, 1878-1953
Eng Harnisch, Barbara
Eng Pepka, Vince
Eng Mausch, Larry
Eng Hocevar, Carl J.
Eng Pirsig, Robert M.
Eng Tati, Jacques
Eng Dean, James, 1931-1955
Eng Harris, Julie, 1925-2013
Eng Fleet, Julie Van
Eng Massey, Raymond
Eng Kazan, Elia
Eng Arlin, George
Eng Bow, Clara, 1905-1965
Eng Cooper, Gary, 1901-1961
Eng Wellman, William
Eng Crow, Andy
Eng Steinbeck, John, 1902-1968
Eng Newman, Paul, 1925-2008
Eng McQueen, Steve, 1930-1980 
Eng Steinhart, Jeff
Eng Waiter, Michael
Eng Baker, Gregg
Eng Kanter, Gary
Eng Rhode, Robert
Eng Hitchcock, Alfred, 1899-1980
Eng Cummings, Robert
Eng Lane, Priscilla, 1917-1995
Eng Kruger, Otto
Eng Bogart, Humphrey, 1899-1957
Eng B ergman, Ingrid, 1915-1982
Eng Henreid, Paul
Eng Rains, Claude, 1889-1967
Eng Greenstreet, Sidney
Eng Lorre, Peter
Eng Curtiz, Michael
Eng Huston, John, 1906-1987
Eng Melville, Herman, 1819-1891
Eng Peck, Gregory, 1916-2003
Eng Basehart, Richard
Eng Ford, John
Eng Lamour, Dorothy
Eng Astor, Mary
Eng Smith, C. Aubrey
Eng Mitchell, Thomas
Eng Carradine, John
Eng Nordhoff, Charles
Eng Hall, James
Eng Pakula, Alan J.
Eng Fonda, Jane, 1937-
Eng Sarazzin, Michael
Eng Young, Gig
Eng Buttons, Red
Eng Nichols, Mike
Eng Burton, Richard, 1925-1984
Eng Taylor, Elizabeth, 1932-2011
Eng Dennis, Sandy, 1937-1992
Eng Segal, George
Eng Albee, Edward, 1928-2016
Eng Robert, Yves
Eng Richard, Pierre
Eng Caesar, Sid
Eng Coca, Imogene
Eng March, Frederic
Eng Gaynor, Janet
Eng Mason, James
Eng Garland, Judy
Eng Hecht, Ben
Eng Lombard, Carole
Eng MacArthur, Charles
Eng Lemmon, Jack
Eng Matthau, Walter
Eng Wilder, Billy
Eng Ullman, Liv
Eng Josephson, Erland
Eng Laughlin, Tom, 1931-2013
Eng Taylor, Delores, 1939-
Eng Williams, Paul
Eng Connery, Sean
Eng Gordon, Ruth
Eng Cort, Bud
Eng Stephens, Robert
Eng Martin, Dean
Eng Duvall, Robert
Eng Ryan, Robert
Eng Garbo, Greta, 1905-1990
Eng Gilbert, John
Eng Keith, Ian
Eng Stone, Lewis
Eng Fellini, Federico
Eng Bjoner, Ingrid
Eng Cox, Jean
Eng Holt, Henry
Eng Severinson, Doc
Eng Winter, Johnny
Eng Cotton, James
Eng Alda, Robert
Eng Freeman, Arny
Eng Simon, Neil
Eng Minelli, Liza
Eng Grey, Joel
Eng Magritte, Rene
Eng Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 1803-1882
Eng Claiborne, Craig
Eng Lee, George
Eng Jefferson, Bonnie
Eng Nelson, Gerald
Eng Weigler, Kevin
Eng Johnson, Kathy
Eng Jones, Laurie
Eng King, Ed
Eng Burbank, Spider
Eng Steilberg, Pete
Eng Colony Inn Apartments
Eng Olympia Brewing Company
Eng Bob's Water Hole
Eng Vino Fino
Eng Olympia Sport Shop
Eng New Shanghai Cafe
Eng Dirty Dave's Gay 90's
Eng Looking Glass Gardens
Eng Rainbow Grocery
Eng Town House Flop Shop
Eng Ben Moore's
Eng Duck House
Eng Sunrise Mountaineering
Eng The Music Bar
Eng Colleen's Gift Shop
Eng Ken Lendorf
Eng Raudenbush Motors
Eng The Pant Shop
Eng Evergreen Savings Association
Eng Shakey's
Eng Cut-Rate Auto Parts
Eng Hendricks Rexall Drugs
Eng The Artichoke Mode
Eng Wille's Sports Enterprises
Eng The Olympia Theatre
Eng Rainy Day Records
Eng Word of Mouth Books
Eng The Cooper Point Journal
Eng University of Washington
Eng Rainroots
Eng TESC Board of Trustees
Eng Professional Forsetry Services
Eng Cooper Point Association
Eng The Myers Corpration
Eng Washington Federation of State Employers
Eng King County Blood Bank
Eng Friday Nite Films
Eng TESC Sounding Board
Eng KAOS Radio
Eng First National City Bank
Eng TESC Political Information Center
Eng All Ways Travel Service
Eng Peterson's Foodtown
Eng Evergreen Villiages
Eng ASH Coffeehaus
Eng Applejam Folk Arts Center
Eng Harlem Globetrotters
Eng Seattle Center Coliseum
Eng TESC Bookstore
Eng Jefferson Junior High School
Eng TESC Recreation Center
Place
Eng Olympia (Wash.)
Eng Vietnam
Eng Cambodia
Eng Seattle (Wash.)
Extent
Eng 24 pages
Temporal Coverage
Eng 1975
extracted text
Adult Singles Community

All
Utilities
Included

Fully
Furnished
Apartments
••••

ItiJ

Hiking and
Fishing
Close By

Planned
Social
Functions
DISCOVER

the
COLONY INN GROUP
fJE LEFT OUT OF
FUN AND GOOD LIFE

--69. 5
PER MONTH

1!18 EvercJl'.... Driv.
OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON

98501

You got a letter
from home and
there was just
a letter inside. .
you owe yourself an Oly.
, .":

.J

W

I' , '

.

'1 ' nr' .

'L ( '

II

A~", l m

1)a r jee\i n).;
Iri s h l3 rt-'dk. I J~t
Ordnge Spiel'
En g li sh Brl'akfa'>t
Earl erev
Ja s mi ne '
Queen \,irtt1nd

Ct'o rgia Bl en d
ren n yrnya l
Srl'um in t
,Cry lun
Tea \A.' ilh Mint
Ld 'Jend er
fll'Jipe rmin t '
C hdlTll)tll ile

mESH \.. O H+l-, /11' ,,\:\~ TOO I

111, 111 _l,

SO UTH SOUND CE NTER

into enrollment stagnation.
Your article does not mention that CHE
has proposed hikes at all of the state's
universities, colleges and community colleges, and thus, the paragraph mention ing
that CHE is a lso proposing an increase in
financial a id of $4.4 million is confusing.
On ly a sma ll portion of"this will go to the
student s of Evergreen.
Though CHE ha s made 'this proposal,
the Legislature has not yet considered it.
There will be hearings sometime in the future. In preparation for these hearings
there is research being done here, as well
as o n o ther campuses. A group of us from
the Studies in Capitalism group contract
and th e Evergreen Political Info rmati o n
Center are meeting each Tuesday and
Thursday at noon in 1417 in the Library
to discuss possible research and welcome
anyone w h o is interested.
Geoff Rothwell

"Marsh incompetent"
-- Fleming
To the Editor:

t

No conf idential fi les
T o the- Ed ito r :
Last week I went to th e Reg istra r's ofti ce to look a t m y transcript fil e, ho ping
to find o ut w ha t ha d bce n hidd en th ere
for 0 m a n y yea rs. T o m y d isa pp o intm ent
th e re wa~ no thin g racy a t a ll. o nly o rdi nary m arks, eva lu a ti o n,> a nd th e li ke .
A ~ I ha nded it back , I w as to ld th a t a
. "co nfid enti a l pe r~0 n a lit y profil e" had bee n
ta ken o ut a nd I co uld no t see it. Wh en I
a~ked w hy, I was to ld it w as CONFIDEN T IA L. It see ms m y hi gh sc hoo l se nt it to
the co llege .
I ~po kt, to I.e" Eldri d ge, assista nt to th e
l ) r e~ l de nt : Don V(\ n Vo lke nberg, ac ting
d ir ecto r n f devc ln pment ; a nd Reg istra r
Wa lk er A ll en in an a tt em pt .t o find out
('"act Iy what Wd~ go ing o n . I wa!> to ld
th ,1t <, inu' It Wd<, nllt a pub li c reco rd , it
\\",l ~ mlt ( " vL'red in thl' new Ini t ia tiv e 276 .
\ \",11I.- cr A ll en <,a id thl' new fede ra l la w
prl" \"l'ntl'd nl!' tWill ',l'l' lng it. He '>a id th e
",lIq.: (' did not wdnt <,uch thi ng,> in th e
t dl'~ ,', nd he "' ,l ~ Il'adlng the law to see if
thl' ll,llq..:c ll'lIld dl'~tr<'v <,ut h th in g". I
Page 2 .

asked to be Iiotified if thi s w as go ing to
happen and w as told that sin ce I had no
right to see the prof il e, the y had no respo nsibii ity to tell me if it wa s goi ng to be
destroy ed.
I am appa ll ed that the college is using
weak lega l logi c in denying me the ri ght
to see this profile. W hat if there are unfair
a nd un founded stat ements the re? Have I
no right to refute such things ? I am lega ll y conside red an adu lt now, so why is
. thi s held fr o m me ? Th e rumb lings of a
" Bi g Broth e r" keep turning ove r in m y
mind .
I am askin g th e help of a ll stude nts in
fi ghtin g thi s. If you have not reques ted to
see yo ur fil es p lease do S0 . If you are to ld
there is a confid enti a l ,Profi le there plea se
notify m e . If you have a lrea d y been told
thi s I wou ld li ke to know. I demand th e
ri ~ ht to see thi s prof il e, a nd a m w i'lling to
fi g ht to see itl
I can be reac hed w ee kd ay~ nn ca mpu ~
a t 6107, or leave a m e~sage a t th e ( () o pe r
!'oint lournal for me . Pl ed'se, p lea se,
please help o ut as thi s co nce rn s a ll of us
ri nd our rig hts d ~ c it l ze n ~.
Th a nk yu u ,
Wen d y Krd mt'r

Tuition hike,
.will cost
T () t he Edi to r:
Your news brief o n "Tuition Increase
Co ns id ereJ" was informative but my stifyin g . By this I mean that instead of talking
a bo ut percentages and tntal costs, it may
ha ve been more helpful to say that if YOIl
a re a resident you will be paying $228 per
qu a rt e r, if you are from ou t of state your
tuiti o n is go ing up to $639 , and if you are
a vete ra n , it will be $194 a quarter. These
in cr(.ases are the h!ghest in the state, making th e "price" of Evergree n eq ua l to that
01 the U . of W .
' The C uu n(" il of Higher Ed ucat ion , CH·E.
bd ~l' ~ the hik es for Evergreen on the
"waiting li st" and higher stude nt costs .
Thi " group loo ks a t Evergreen as a stat ic
in ~ titution sim il ar to a ny statl:' co llege or
univers ity dnd docs not consider thl'
you!h 01 thi ., school. The waiting li st has
bce n <, tl,. Hlil y dr(lppin~', as have per ·stu dl 'n t ' ,"h ( ' IIF m.lv 11(' pri c ing EVl'f)!.fl'cn
Cooper Point Journal

1
I

Because of the scope a nd nat ure of
teaching at Evergreen, I fee l that Paul
Marsh should not be on the Evergreen
faculty. I have three reasons for making
this statement: (1) Marsh's mode of teaching, (2) his attitudes toward his students,
(3) his. ability to deal with academic problems. These will be dealt with in the following paragraphs.
Marsh's lectures are generally unprepared, disjointed, and ram blin g. Often the
lecture does not tie in with assigned preparatory reading and thus confuses students, rather than giving insight to the
readings .
Although Marsh's sem inars have been
very good , I feel that this is in spite of,
. not because of Marsh . Comments he made
during sem inar were sometimes puzzling
and often of indistinct relevance to the
material discussed .
Marsh appears to be afra id of his students, uneasy about what might happen if
the wrong thing is said or the wrong
move made. He tries hard to tread middle
grou nd , never comm itt ing him self one
way or the o ther .
At ot her times he is patronizing. I never
felt as if he were talking to me or even at
me, but rather, down to me. College students a re not utterly stupid or totally 'incapable of independent reasoning, yet
Marsh often speaks to them as if they
were. At ot her times he seems to have the
symp toms of megalomania and he becomes "B ig Papa," omnlPo tent , a lI -understanding, wise, and benevolent.
After conferences with Marsh, I wou ld
fee l exasperated . I could not get a s traight
answer to the simplest question , or a
critique (oral or written, good , bad , or
neutral) on assigned wr iting . I felt as if
January 30, 1975

m y intelligence had been insulted , and
that I had been pacified and brainwashed
w ith words. In fact, many students would
not talk to Marsh at all because of his attitudes towa rd them.
As a Chinese-American, one impression
I have of Marsh is that he would be the
first to push m e on the ship back to
Ch ina while say ing that the C hinese were
among his best friends.
Periodically, Marsh's students would air
their views o n various problems a nd aspects of hi s programs. For a short time
conditi o ns might improve , but eventually
a ll would be the same as before. Lip service was paid and min or cha nges undertaken , but noth ing wou l be trul y reso lved. It appeared tha t Marsh didn ' t
want to solve program problems and was
just patching parts of the program together w hen the entire program needed reworki ng.
In a lecture / tes t / grade college, Marsh
could be a more successful teacher. However, at Evergreen, where students and
faculty work closely together , Marsh frustrates a nc;l 'inhibits intellectual / educati o nal growth . He seems unable or unwilling to cope with the type of educational
processes that Evergreen pursues.
For the reasons listed above, I ask 't hat
those inv o lved with the hiring and firing
of faculty carefully examine the evaluations Marsh has Jeceived from ' his students, hi s invo lvemen t in the programs in
w hich he was a faculty member, and a'sk
for the com ments of his past a nd present
studen ts a nd the faculty he has worked
with. Ask, " Is Paul Marsh qualified, menLa ll y and academically , to meet the challenges of teaching atE vergreen? "

eva luation of faculty , s taff, and adm inistrators by all concerned. I look forward
to m y evaluation sess ion with Dean Parso n thi s spring.
Paul A. M arsh

Unmatched
generosity
To the Ed itor:
What's that you say? You're a student
of meager m eans? There a re no em ergency
Share hom e on So und , Hunt e r
Point; t o lerate Beethoven , g r eat
blues , quiet ; 14 miles from TESC.
Don, 866-8175 , ev e nin gs; 65 65 ,
days .

OLYMPIA SPORT SHOP
Rod, Reel & Gun Repair
RAINGEAR • PANCHOS
BLEUET STOVE CARTRIDGES
Wed· Sat Only
719 E. 4th

Post Script :
I have considered the content of this
letter carefu lly ~'nd for some time, and I
am not writing it o ut of spite ,' or feelings
bruised by the faculty member in question.
Ti Fleming

Marsh replies
To the Editor:
Here is my response to Ti Flemi ng's letter aski ng the deans to rev iew my file
carefu lly and determine whether or not I
am fit to teach at Evergreen.
Were I to respond publicly to her mass
produced le tter I would be required to
open up old wounds a mong the faculty
a nd some students of the Chinese Civilizati on program. Therefore, I have chosen to
answer her remarks by placing a letter in
my portfolio which goes into considerable
de ta il.
If a nyone is cu rious abou t my a nswers
to Ti Fleming I urge them \0 co nt ac t me
a nd I w ill b e w illing to share that letter
wi th them.
One of the reasons th a t I a m at Evergreen is because I suppo rt co ntinuin g

Hew

~HANGHA'

1;AFE

"OLYMPIA'S OLDEST CHINESE
RESTAURANT"

CHINESE and AMERICAN FOOD

ORDERS TO JAKE OUT
Open 12 No~n to 11 P,M,
Tuesday Thru ThursdaY'
12 Noon to 3 ;00 A.M .
Friday & Saturday
_2 P.M . to 10:00 P.M. Sunday
Closed Monday

357·674T
117 W. 5th

Page 3

into enrollment stagnation.
Your article does not mention that CHE
has proposed hikes at all of the state's
universities, colleges and community colleges, and thus, the paragraph mention ing
that CHE is a lso proposing an increase in
financial a id of $4.4 million is confusing.
On ly a sma ll portion of"this will go to the
student s of Evergreen.
Though CHE ha s made 'this proposal,
the Legislature has not yet considered it.
There will be hearings sometime in the future. In preparation for these hearings
there is research being done here, as well
as o n o ther campuses. A group of us from
the Studies in Capitalism group contract
and th e Evergreen Political Info rmati o n
Center are meeting each Tuesday and
Thursday at noon in 1417 in the Library
to discuss possible research and welcome
anyone w h o is interested.
Geoff Rothwell

"Marsh incompetent"
-- Fleming
To the Editor:

t

No conf idential fi les
T o the- Ed ito r :
Last week I went to th e Reg istra r's ofti ce to look a t m y transcript fil e, ho ping
to find o ut w ha t ha d bce n hidd en th ere
for 0 m a n y yea rs. T o m y d isa pp o intm ent
th e re wa~ no thin g racy a t a ll. o nly o rdi nary m arks, eva lu a ti o n,> a nd th e li ke .
A ~ I ha nded it back , I w as to ld th a t a
. "co nfid enti a l pe r~0 n a lit y profil e" had bee n
ta ken o ut a nd I co uld no t see it. Wh en I
a~ked w hy, I was to ld it w as CONFIDEN T IA L. It see ms m y hi gh sc hoo l se nt it to
the co llege .
I ~po kt, to I.e" Eldri d ge, assista nt to th e
l ) r e~ l de nt : Don V(\ n Vo lke nberg, ac ting
d ir ecto r n f devc ln pment ; a nd Reg istra r
Wa lk er A ll en in an a tt em pt .t o find out
('"act Iy what Wd~ go ing o n . I wa!> to ld
th ,1t <, inu' It Wd<, nllt a pub li c reco rd , it
\\",l ~ mlt ( " vL'red in thl' new Ini t ia tiv e 276 .
\ \",11I.- cr A ll en <,a id thl' new fede ra l la w
prl" \"l'ntl'd nl!' tWill ',l'l' lng it. He '>a id th e
",lIq.: (' did not wdnt <,uch thi ng,> in th e
t dl'~ ,', nd he "' ,l ~ Il'adlng the law to see if
thl' ll,llq..:c ll'lIld dl'~tr<'v <,ut h th in g". I
Page 2 .

asked to be Iiotified if thi s w as go ing to
happen and w as told that sin ce I had no
right to see the prof il e, the y had no respo nsibii ity to tell me if it wa s goi ng to be
destroy ed.
I am appa ll ed that the college is using
weak lega l logi c in denying me the ri ght
to see this profile. W hat if there are unfair
a nd un founded stat ements the re? Have I
no right to refute such things ? I am lega ll y conside red an adu lt now, so why is
. thi s held fr o m me ? Th e rumb lings of a
" Bi g Broth e r" keep turning ove r in m y
mind .
I am askin g th e help of a ll stude nts in
fi ghtin g thi s. If you have not reques ted to
see yo ur fil es p lease do S0 . If you are to ld
there is a confid enti a l ,Profi le there plea se
notify m e . If you have a lrea d y been told
thi s I wou ld li ke to know. I demand th e
ri ~ ht to see thi s prof il e, a nd a m w i'lling to
fi g ht to see itl
I can be reac hed w ee kd ay~ nn ca mpu ~
a t 6107, or leave a m e~sage a t th e ( () o pe r
!'oint lournal for me . Pl ed'se, p lea se,
please help o ut as thi s co nce rn s a ll of us
ri nd our rig hts d ~ c it l ze n ~.
Th a nk yu u ,
Wen d y Krd mt'r

Tuition hike,
.will cost
T () t he Edi to r:
Your news brief o n "Tuition Increase
Co ns id ereJ" was informative but my stifyin g . By this I mean that instead of talking
a bo ut percentages and tntal costs, it may
ha ve been more helpful to say that if YOIl
a re a resident you will be paying $228 per
qu a rt e r, if you are from ou t of state your
tuiti o n is go ing up to $639 , and if you are
a vete ra n , it will be $194 a quarter. These
in cr(.ases are the h!ghest in the state, making th e "price" of Evergree n eq ua l to that
01 the U . of W .
' The C uu n(" il of Higher Ed ucat ion , CH·E.
bd ~l' ~ the hik es for Evergreen on the
"waiting li st" and higher stude nt costs .
Thi " group loo ks a t Evergreen as a stat ic
in ~ titution sim il ar to a ny statl:' co llege or
univers ity dnd docs not consider thl'
you!h 01 thi ., school. The waiting li st has
bce n <, tl,. Hlil y dr(lppin~', as have per ·stu dl 'n t ' ,"h ( ' IIF m.lv 11(' pri c ing EVl'f)!.fl'cn
Cooper Point Journal

1
I

Because of the scope a nd nat ure of
teaching at Evergreen, I fee l that Paul
Marsh should not be on the Evergreen
faculty. I have three reasons for making
this statement: (1) Marsh's mode of teaching, (2) his attitudes toward his students,
(3) his. ability to deal with academic problems. These will be dealt with in the following paragraphs.
Marsh's lectures are generally unprepared, disjointed, and ram blin g. Often the
lecture does not tie in with assigned preparatory reading and thus confuses students, rather than giving insight to the
readings .
Although Marsh's sem inars have been
very good , I feel that this is in spite of,
. not because of Marsh . Comments he made
during sem inar were sometimes puzzling
and often of indistinct relevance to the
material discussed .
Marsh appears to be afra id of his students, uneasy about what might happen if
the wrong thing is said or the wrong
move made. He tries hard to tread middle
grou nd , never comm itt ing him self one
way or the o ther .
At ot her times he is patronizing. I never
felt as if he were talking to me or even at
me, but rather, down to me. College students a re not utterly stupid or totally 'incapable of independent reasoning, yet
Marsh often speaks to them as if they
were. At ot her times he seems to have the
symp toms of megalomania and he becomes "B ig Papa," omnlPo tent , a lI -understanding, wise, and benevolent.
After conferences with Marsh, I wou ld
fee l exasperated . I could not get a s traight
answer to the simplest question , or a
critique (oral or written, good , bad , or
neutral) on assigned wr iting . I felt as if
January 30, 1975

m y intelligence had been insulted , and
that I had been pacified and brainwashed
w ith words. In fact, many students would
not talk to Marsh at all because of his attitudes towa rd them.
As a Chinese-American, one impression
I have of Marsh is that he would be the
first to push m e on the ship back to
Ch ina while say ing that the C hinese were
among his best friends.
Periodically, Marsh's students would air
their views o n various problems a nd aspects of hi s programs. For a short time
conditi o ns might improve , but eventually
a ll would be the same as before. Lip service was paid and min or cha nges undertaken , but noth ing wou l be trul y reso lved. It appeared tha t Marsh didn ' t
want to solve program problems and was
just patching parts of the program together w hen the entire program needed reworki ng.
In a lecture / tes t / grade college, Marsh
could be a more successful teacher. However, at Evergreen, where students and
faculty work closely together , Marsh frustrates a nc;l 'inhibits intellectual / educati o nal growth . He seems unable or unwilling to cope with the type of educational
processes that Evergreen pursues.
For the reasons listed above, I ask 't hat
those inv o lved with the hiring and firing
of faculty carefully examine the evaluations Marsh has Jeceived from ' his students, hi s invo lvemen t in the programs in
w hich he was a faculty member, and a'sk
for the com ments of his past a nd present
studen ts a nd the faculty he has worked
with. Ask, " Is Paul Marsh qualified, menLa ll y and academically , to meet the challenges of teaching atE vergreen? "

eva luation of faculty , s taff, and adm inistrators by all concerned. I look forward
to m y evaluation sess ion with Dean Parso n thi s spring.
Paul A. M arsh

Unmatched
generosity
To the Ed itor:
What's that you say? You're a student
of meager m eans? There a re no em ergency
Share hom e on So und , Hunt e r
Point; t o lerate Beethoven , g r eat
blues , quiet ; 14 miles from TESC.
Don, 866-8175 , ev e nin gs; 65 65 ,
days .

OLYMPIA SPORT SHOP
Rod, Reel & Gun Repair
RAINGEAR • PANCHOS
BLEUET STOVE CARTRIDGES
Wed· Sat Only
719 E. 4th

Post Script :
I have considered the content of this
letter carefu lly ~'nd for some time, and I
am not writing it o ut of spite ,' or feelings
bruised by the faculty member in question.
Ti Fleming

Marsh replies
To the Editor:
Here is my response to Ti Flemi ng's letter aski ng the deans to rev iew my file
carefu lly and determine whether or not I
am fit to teach at Evergreen.
Were I to respond publicly to her mass
produced le tter I would be required to
open up old wounds a mong the faculty
a nd some students of the Chinese Civilizati on program. Therefore, I have chosen to
answer her remarks by placing a letter in
my portfolio which goes into considerable
de ta il.
If a nyone is cu rious abou t my a nswers
to Ti Fleming I urge them \0 co nt ac t me
a nd I w ill b e w illing to share that letter
wi th them.
One of the reasons th a t I a m at Evergreen is because I suppo rt co ntinuin g

Hew

~HANGHA'

1;AFE

"OLYMPIA'S OLDEST CHINESE
RESTAURANT"

CHINESE and AMERICAN FOOD

ORDERS TO JAKE OUT
Open 12 No~n to 11 P,M,
Tuesday Thru ThursdaY'
12 Noon to 3 ;00 A.M .
Friday & Saturday
_2 P.M . to 10:00 P.M. Sunday
Closed Monday

357·674T
117 W. 5th

Page 3

t

., ••••••••••• , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . •••••••••••••••• ••••• • •• ••••• ••••• •• •••••••••• 1 ••••••• • • •••••••• • •••• • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

~

Dim DAVE'S GAy'90's r
SAVE-fREE SPAGHETTI DINNER!
ONE FREE SPAGHETTI DINNER
with the purchase of one REGULAR
$2.00 SPAGHETTI DINNER'.
garlic bread but no salad.
HAPPY HOUR 5·9 Tues & W~.

saft BRING Tt-fIS COUPOI':

~LW; I'dcific. Coupon Expirt'~
(,honl' ~5b - 1560

21 6 175

Co •••• •• • • . . ... . .. ... . .. ..... ..... . ...... .......... . . . ..... . ... .. .. .. . . . , ....... , . ...... , .. : , ..... , ..... , ...... , . . ........ " ... , . . ..... ... ..... . .... , ..... .. ~

~~

l ooking Glass
~~~k
G a rdens

~~~G~

.~

~t$'

&

Deli

·UCe

4th & Columbia
OPEN TIL MIDNITE
357-6616

'Y.

loans left in the financial aid office? The
bank won 't give you a loan because you
don't earn enough money? The food
stamp program looks like it 's going to be
cut back? Well you need not worry any
longer. Yes. that's right. Your friends on
the S&A board will give yo u what you
need and you don't even have to work.
Take for instance the case of student
Stan Shore. Stan submitted a proposal to
the board for a little over $3 ,000 to publi sh three issues of a literary magazine
known as Rainroots. [n this proposal he
requested that he be paid $2 .33 an hour
fo r 15 hours a week for the rest of the
year. A reasonable request for the amount
o f work. But the board in its generosity ,
realizing t he economic strains on students
these days, offered to pay Stan the entire
sa lary for publishing only one issue. before
the end of the year.
Yes friends , you too ca~ get rich quick.
Just go to the nearest office of your
fri endly student Serv ices and Activities
Boa rd and take your share.

I
COOPER POINT JOORNAL
The Evergreen Stat e College

food

Do

what ~

COG says
I
(

T o the Editor:

t

I '

of Backroo m Cafe & Lounge
FILMS - OPEN PIANO

10'('n D ISCOUNT TO ST UDENTS

WITH
SCHOOL lDE'\;T IFICAT IO N
108 Eas t Fo urth

" make thi s year's first stop
downtown for sandwiches"

943- 177<'

. HOUSE
FLOP SHOP

r-J~OWN
r

,/

'3530

Martin Way
456-3100

Ot, Monday a ftern oo n . Jan . 27, I was
denied ' admitta nce to th e H ea ring Board
m eeting on the John M o ss appointment.
The rea son g iven was that it was a
"closed deliberation ." and that this closure
w as permit-ted under provisions of the
Open Meeting Act. However, as it is presentl y interpreted, the Open Meeting Act
does not a pply to a Hearing Board as it
deliberates on what it has heard. Furthermore . the Board's action violates both the
spirit and the letter of the COG (Committee on Governance) document w hich provides tha t "m eetings of the Hearing Board
sha ll be open to the public. " If the Hearing Board wishes to .conduct its d'e liberati o ns in private, then the COG document
sho uld be amended accordingly. Until it
is. the Hearing Board should keep their
d e liberati o n s pub li c , a nd quit feeding
peopl e the horseshit they fed me on Mond ay a fte rnoon .
Cy nica lly,
C huck

Alb ~ rt sun

Vol. 3

I'

I

[
t

No. 14

January 30, 1975

Page 12

Photo essay

William P . Hirshman

coffee beans

Olympi.a , Washington

It all started in th e seco nd f loor library lo bby with a prayer by ii Native
Ameri can . Th e c hairs and st eps w ere fi ll ing up . Then Washington Governor
Dan Evan s gave so m e o pening rem ark s. He la ced hi s speech with optimism
about mankina 's ability t o sol ve o ur prese nt prob lem s. Faculty member Willi
Unsoeld spok e 'next about th e re leva nce o f spiritual values. He gave hi s definition of the word " pragm ati sm " - u sing
any available m ean s t o ward reac hin g th e final goal. After both speakers received a
generous applau se, a doubl e rainbow appeared over the library buildin g. Thu s co mmen ced the Symposium on Community and
Spiritual Life on Thursday, Jp. n . 23.
Although there w as n o accu rate count
taken, approximately 3,000 person s ca m e to
Evergreen durin g th e four d ay s of f es t ivi ties. Many of th e events we re w ell attended . Dr. Jean Hou ston, a pioneer researcher in hum an co nsc io u sness, and D r .
Huston Smith, an ex pert o n compa rativ e religions, spok e to 500 peopl e eac h . Th e
crowd that cam e to hea r Swami Sa t c hid ananda numbered 800. The Sufi c ho ir gave a
performan ce on Saturda y ni ght and Sunday afternoo n with an aud ience of
510 and 350, respectiv ely. Th ey sa ng, encouraged audien ce parti c ipation , and
just plain "had a good tim e."
"I enjoyed th e oppo rtunity to share my v iews," said one student, " but I
found that th e symposium emph asiz ed love of t he indi v idual and community
before 'love of God .'" On e lady from O lympia lam ented , " The spirit, unity
and love was so thrillin g th at I wa nt to k now w hat yo'u peopl e (E~rrg~e~ner s )
plan to do when thi s ev ent is ove r. " " The sy m pos ium was one o~e bes t
things that has happened to thi s sc hoo l sin ce I have bee n here," commented
a faculty m ember.
The photo essay o n pages 12 and 13 co nsists o f a vi su al record o f the symposium put togeth er by ph o tograp hers Kathl ee n M eighan and M ark Overiar,)d .

MOSS DECISIO N O VERT URNED ........... .. . ..... .. ......
.. .... .. .. ... . ...... . PA GE
U.S. NOT O UT O F VIETNAM .... . ........ . ....... .. . ...... ...... .. ..... ... ....... .. PAGE
GOLD OR BUST.... ..
. . ... ....... .... ... : .... ...... ..... ..... ..... ..... ....... .. .. .. . PAGE
SPORTS AT EVER GREEN.. ....... ..... .. . .. .........
. ...... ............... PAGE

10
14
15
19

BEN MOORE'S
112 W 4th

.. :. . .- .i£ ..r
..
. __

~~-=? _ ~. :c.. _

WAT ER BEDS
M- F 1 1 -8

. __ .__ .

'. '

~_-=

PILLOW FURNITURE
10 YEAR GUARANTEE
SAT 10-6

--_"':~= ~

-~

~~

ACCESSORIES
SUN 12- 5

35 7 -'75 27
Good Food at Moderat e Prices
D elicious But.termi[k Biscuits a nd Gravy
f9 r Breakfast 60 cents

7 a. m . - midnight
Lun c heon Spec ial $1 .7 5

Departments
Lell ers .. .. ....... .
C amplIs N ews .
C ulture .. ...

Bou ks .

. .......... . .. b

C lIl t u re G lI ide ..

19

Foot! .. .

TI,is week 's cover pllO to wn ~ takell li y F"ll { Cil/nCLlt l, tllld
tl /(' Sp i rit ll lli SY lll po si ,.lII .

r(1mrill ,~ d, n ill g

Page -l

........ ...... 2

S I1CllVS

... 20
. .. 20
. ... 2 1

a SlIfi Cho ir dancer pe/'-

EDITOR
Sa m So lo mon
M ANAGING EDITO R I
BUSIN ESS M ANAG ER
John Foster
NEWS EDITO R
Kim Goodm an
CUL T URE EDITORS
N icho las H . A ll iso n
Knute O lsso n H .C .S. Berger
CO MM ENT EDITO R
Aubrey Da wn
PH O TO EDITO RS
A n ita d eG ive
M a rk Over la nd
PRODU CTION
Liz O rred
Ingrid Post hu m us
AD VE RTISIN G MA NA GER
Gary Pe te rso n

GENERAL STAFF
M illi e Bro m bacher. Billie Co rn is h . Rich a rd Cow ley . Roger Fa rn a m . Jim Feyk.
Fo rd G il b rea th . Tom Graham. Suza nne
Gra nt . G lenn Ha nson. Cec il e He na ul t.
Mar y Fr a n ces H ester , Jeff rey Irw in .
W e nd y K r a m e r . Cra ig f. nzz i. Ka m ee l
M a jda li, Kim McCar t.ney , Rut h M iln e r.
Kathl ee n Meigha n , Bria n Mo ra tti . Da n
Oppenh eim e r. Kathy R ich , A nd y Rya n.
Gr a nt Ri c h ar J s . · Edd ie L. Spa t z. Le n
W a lli ck . Na ne tte Wes te rman.
Fa cult y a d v iser : Margare t Cr i b ~ kov

rh e COopl' r POint Jo urn a l I ' pllh 1< ~ h ed
hebdomada ll y hv the Evergreen State Co l·
lege Board of P u b ll cat l o n ~ and me mbe rs ot
the Ev('[grec r) ',or11mu <1 lty . It is funded. ,n
part . by stu de nt ~ervi(('s and ac ti vit ies fee s
Views ex pressed Jr(' no t n e c e~,a rd y those o f
the edi to rial staif or The [v('rgree n State
Coll ege . The , Journa l n e w~ and bu s in e~'
roo ms a re located on th e third floor of tht'
co ll ege Ac ti v lti ps b ldg , CAB rm 306
Pho ne ' 866 -6 213 Fo r advertiSing and bu sl'
n e~s info rm at ion 866 -6080
The lo urn a l " (ree ·to a ll s tud e nt~ 0 1 1 h('
I:ve rgree n St3 tt.' C o ll e~;e <l nd IS d l'>t n but pd
on ca mpus without (hdrge I:ve rgree n student s may rece ive . by ma d. ~ub~cr i p t' ons to
the lo urn a l With out cha rg(' Fo r non · ~ v er
gree n stu de nt s. a n,ne mon th sub,( rl pt lon
m clY b£" obta ined ilt the pri ce of fo ur do l·
l a r ~ I-or In forma t, on 866· 6080

Coope r Point Journal
Ja nu a ry 30, 1975
I

Page 5

t

., ••••••••••• , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . •••••••••••••••• ••••• • •• ••••• ••••• •• •••••••••• 1 ••••••• • • •••••••• • •••• • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

~

Dim DAVE'S GAy'90's r
SAVE-fREE SPAGHETTI DINNER!
ONE FREE SPAGHETTI DINNER
with the purchase of one REGULAR
$2.00 SPAGHETTI DINNER'.
garlic bread but no salad.
HAPPY HOUR 5·9 Tues & W~.

saft BRING Tt-fIS COUPOI':

~LW; I'dcific. Coupon Expirt'~
(,honl' ~5b - 1560

21 6 175

Co •••• •• • • . . ... . .. ... . .. ..... ..... . ...... .......... . . . ..... . ... .. .. .. . . . , ....... , . ...... , .. : , ..... , ..... , ...... , . . ........ " ... , . . ..... ... ..... . .... , ..... .. ~

~~

l ooking Glass
~~~k
G a rdens

~~~G~

.~

~t$'

&

Deli

·UCe

4th & Columbia
OPEN TIL MIDNITE
357-6616

'Y.

loans left in the financial aid office? The
bank won 't give you a loan because you
don't earn enough money? The food
stamp program looks like it 's going to be
cut back? Well you need not worry any
longer. Yes. that's right. Your friends on
the S&A board will give yo u what you
need and you don't even have to work.
Take for instance the case of student
Stan Shore. Stan submitted a proposal to
the board for a little over $3 ,000 to publi sh three issues of a literary magazine
known as Rainroots. [n this proposal he
requested that he be paid $2 .33 an hour
fo r 15 hours a week for the rest of the
year. A reasonable request for the amount
o f work. But the board in its generosity ,
realizing t he economic strains on students
these days, offered to pay Stan the entire
sa lary for publishing only one issue. before
the end of the year.
Yes friends , you too ca~ get rich quick.
Just go to the nearest office of your
fri endly student Serv ices and Activities
Boa rd and take your share.

I
COOPER POINT JOORNAL
The Evergreen Stat e College

food

Do

what ~

COG says
I
(

T o the Editor:

t

I '

of Backroo m Cafe & Lounge
FILMS - OPEN PIANO

10'('n D ISCOUNT TO ST UDENTS

WITH
SCHOOL lDE'\;T IFICAT IO N
108 Eas t Fo urth

" make thi s year's first stop
downtown for sandwiches"

943- 177<'

. HOUSE
FLOP SHOP

r-J~OWN
r

,/

'3530

Martin Way
456-3100

Ot, Monday a ftern oo n . Jan . 27, I was
denied ' admitta nce to th e H ea ring Board
m eeting on the John M o ss appointment.
The rea son g iven was that it was a
"closed deliberation ." and that this closure
w as permit-ted under provisions of the
Open Meeting Act. However, as it is presentl y interpreted, the Open Meeting Act
does not a pply to a Hearing Board as it
deliberates on what it has heard. Furthermore . the Board's action violates both the
spirit and the letter of the COG (Committee on Governance) document w hich provides tha t "m eetings of the Hearing Board
sha ll be open to the public. " If the Hearing Board wishes to .conduct its d'e liberati o ns in private, then the COG document
sho uld be amended accordingly. Until it
is. the Hearing Board should keep their
d e liberati o n s pub li c , a nd quit feeding
peopl e the horseshit they fed me on Mond ay a fte rnoon .
Cy nica lly,
C huck

Alb ~ rt sun

Vol. 3

I'

I

[
t

No. 14

January 30, 1975

Page 12

Photo essay

William P . Hirshman

coffee beans

Olympi.a , Washington

It all started in th e seco nd f loor library lo bby with a prayer by ii Native
Ameri can . Th e c hairs and st eps w ere fi ll ing up . Then Washington Governor
Dan Evan s gave so m e o pening rem ark s. He la ced hi s speech with optimism
about mankina 's ability t o sol ve o ur prese nt prob lem s. Faculty member Willi
Unsoeld spok e 'next about th e re leva nce o f spiritual values. He gave hi s definition of the word " pragm ati sm " - u sing
any available m ean s t o ward reac hin g th e final goal. After both speakers received a
generous applau se, a doubl e rainbow appeared over the library buildin g. Thu s co mmen ced the Symposium on Community and
Spiritual Life on Thursday, Jp. n . 23.
Although there w as n o accu rate count
taken, approximately 3,000 person s ca m e to
Evergreen durin g th e four d ay s of f es t ivi ties. Many of th e events we re w ell attended . Dr. Jean Hou ston, a pioneer researcher in hum an co nsc io u sness, and D r .
Huston Smith, an ex pert o n compa rativ e religions, spok e to 500 peopl e eac h . Th e
crowd that cam e to hea r Swami Sa t c hid ananda numbered 800. The Sufi c ho ir gave a
performan ce on Saturda y ni ght and Sunday afternoo n with an aud ience of
510 and 350, respectiv ely. Th ey sa ng, encouraged audien ce parti c ipation , and
just plain "had a good tim e."
"I enjoyed th e oppo rtunity to share my v iews," said one student, " but I
found that th e symposium emph asiz ed love of t he indi v idual and community
before 'love of God .'" On e lady from O lympia lam ented , " The spirit, unity
and love was so thrillin g th at I wa nt to k now w hat yo'u peopl e (E~rrg~e~ner s )
plan to do when thi s ev ent is ove r. " " The sy m pos ium was one o~e bes t
things that has happened to thi s sc hoo l sin ce I have bee n here," commented
a faculty m ember.
The photo essay o n pages 12 and 13 co nsists o f a vi su al record o f the symposium put togeth er by ph o tograp hers Kathl ee n M eighan and M ark Overiar,)d .

MOSS DECISIO N O VERT URNED ........... .. . ..... .. ......
.. .... .. .. ... . ...... . PA GE
U.S. NOT O UT O F VIETNAM .... . ........ . ....... .. . ...... ...... .. ..... ... ....... .. PAGE
GOLD OR BUST.... ..
. . ... ....... .... ... : .... ...... ..... ..... ..... ..... ....... .. .. .. . PAGE
SPORTS AT EVER GREEN.. ....... ..... .. . .. .........
. ...... ............... PAGE

10
14
15
19

BEN MOORE'S
112 W 4th

.. :. . .- .i£ ..r
..
. __

~~-=? _ ~. :c.. _

WAT ER BEDS
M- F 1 1 -8

. __ .__ .

'. '

~_-=

PILLOW FURNITURE
10 YEAR GUARANTEE
SAT 10-6

--_"':~= ~

-~

~~

ACCESSORIES
SUN 12- 5

35 7 -'75 27
Good Food at Moderat e Prices
D elicious But.termi[k Biscuits a nd Gravy
f9 r Breakfast 60 cents

7 a. m . - midnight
Lun c heon Spec ial $1 .7 5

Departments
Lell ers .. .. ....... .
C amplIs N ews .
C ulture .. ...

Bou ks .

. .......... . .. b

C lIl t u re G lI ide ..

19

Foot! .. .

TI,is week 's cover pllO to wn ~ takell li y F"ll { Cil/nCLlt l, tllld
tl /(' Sp i rit ll lli SY lll po si ,.lII .

r(1mrill ,~ d, n ill g

Page -l

........ ...... 2

S I1CllVS

... 20
. .. 20
. ... 2 1

a SlIfi Cho ir dancer pe/'-

EDITOR
Sa m So lo mon
M ANAGING EDITO R I
BUSIN ESS M ANAG ER
John Foster
NEWS EDITO R
Kim Goodm an
CUL T URE EDITORS
N icho las H . A ll iso n
Knute O lsso n H .C .S. Berger
CO MM ENT EDITO R
Aubrey Da wn
PH O TO EDITO RS
A n ita d eG ive
M a rk Over la nd
PRODU CTION
Liz O rred
Ingrid Post hu m us
AD VE RTISIN G MA NA GER
Gary Pe te rso n

GENERAL STAFF
M illi e Bro m bacher. Billie Co rn is h . Rich a rd Cow ley . Roger Fa rn a m . Jim Feyk.
Fo rd G il b rea th . Tom Graham. Suza nne
Gra nt . G lenn Ha nson. Cec il e He na ul t.
Mar y Fr a n ces H ester , Jeff rey Irw in .
W e nd y K r a m e r . Cra ig f. nzz i. Ka m ee l
M a jda li, Kim McCar t.ney , Rut h M iln e r.
Kathl ee n Meigha n , Bria n Mo ra tti . Da n
Oppenh eim e r. Kathy R ich , A nd y Rya n.
Gr a nt Ri c h ar J s . · Edd ie L. Spa t z. Le n
W a lli ck . Na ne tte Wes te rman.
Fa cult y a d v iser : Margare t Cr i b ~ kov

rh e COopl' r POint Jo urn a l I ' pllh 1< ~ h ed
hebdomada ll y hv the Evergreen State Co l·
lege Board of P u b ll cat l o n ~ and me mbe rs ot
the Ev('[grec r) ',or11mu <1 lty . It is funded. ,n
part . by stu de nt ~ervi(('s and ac ti vit ies fee s
Views ex pressed Jr(' no t n e c e~,a rd y those o f
the edi to rial staif or The [v('rgree n State
Coll ege . The , Journa l n e w~ and bu s in e~'
roo ms a re located on th e third floor of tht'
co ll ege Ac ti v lti ps b ldg , CAB rm 306
Pho ne ' 866 -6 213 Fo r advertiSing and bu sl'
n e~s info rm at ion 866 -6080
The lo urn a l " (ree ·to a ll s tud e nt~ 0 1 1 h('
I:ve rgree n St3 tt.' C o ll e~;e <l nd IS d l'>t n but pd
on ca mpus without (hdrge I:ve rgree n student s may rece ive . by ma d. ~ub~cr i p t' ons to
the lo urn a l With out cha rg(' Fo r non · ~ v er
gree n stu de nt s. a n,ne mon th sub,( rl pt lon
m clY b£" obta ined ilt the pri ce of fo ur do l·
l a r ~ I-or In forma t, on 866· 6080

Coope r Point Journal
Ja nu a ry 30, 1975
I

Page 5

Force (EIS DTF) responded to board
discussion of the report and the report
itself by saying "I think it is possible to
do a certain amount of selective cutting
on certain areas of the campus if done
very carefully."
The management program should , be
done, Cellarius said, "in conjunction with
an academic program so students can get
the benefit of working with the
professional foresters, " if the decision -is
made to follow the management proposaL
Upon further discussion by the Board
members, Cellarius, and other administrators present, it was agreed by Cellarius
that the EIS DTF would review the
management proposal and give a t:.ecommendation of approval or disapproval by
sometime in May for eventual action on
the subject by the Board .

BlJDGET PROPOSALS JlJSTlFIED
BEFORE LEGISLATlJRE TODAY
President Charles McCann will make
his budget presentation before the House
Ways and Mean!; Budget Appropriations
Comm ittee today, Jan . 30. McCann had
originally been scheduled to justify Evergreen's budgetary needs to the committee
on Feb. 18, but the date for his presentation was moved up when the budget representatives of the Washington State Community ColI~ges rescheduled their date to
give themselves more time for preparation . The University of W ashington went
before the committee Jan. 28 and 29.
It is ex pected that McCann will ask for
a reinstatement of fu nds in certain areas
cut heavil y by the Governor's Budget Proposal - especiall y Computer Services, Instructional Media Services, Summer
School , and Student Services. No amendment s to the Governor's budget proposal
affecti ng higher education appropriations
have yet been introduced .
...
The date presentl y scheduled for Evergreen's hearing wi th the Senate Ways and
Means Budget Appropriations Committee
is March 12 at 4 p .m . in room 410 .of the
Legislative B·uilding.

SECOND PROGRAM
PROPOSAL ClJTS MADE
EVergreen academic deans and faculty
set the 1975-76 ball rolling for coordinated study and group contract programs
during th e Faculty Work Week last Wednesday, T,hursday, and Friday, Jan . 22-24.
Several Work Week goa ls were established
and a tent a ti ve co urse , schedule was relpil",prl

alog suppl ement . Alth o ugh many programs are still "in-the-making," according
to Academ ic Dean Rudy Martin, a fairsized portion of the planning campaign
ha s been accomplished.
Coordinated studies programs to be of- ·
fered nex t fall are: Env ironments, Perception and Desig n ; In vention and Discovery ; Foundations of Natural Science; Cu lture, Ideo logy and Social Change in
America; Scientific and Cultura l Ch ange;
The Good Earth ; Life and Hea lth ; Africa
and th e United States; and Love in the
Western World .

Group co ntracts offered through the
1975-1976 fall , winter, and spring quarters, a re: The Politics of Health Care;
Jews and Israel ; Humanistic Psychology;
Earl y Childhood Ed uca tion ; Theoretical
Physics; Rationa li sm. Empiricism, a nd
Ideali sm ; Lingui sti cs; Woodworking a nd
Boa tbuil ding ; and Form, T hought, a nd
Feeling .
Biochemi stry , The Social Hi story of
Women . The Artist Class, and American
Country Mu sic Then and Now are gro up
Cl'ntrac! s sc hedu led for the fa ll a nd w inter
quarters , Four fa ll qua·rt er gro up co ntracts
.HI;' E\'rrgreen Enviro nment . Marine Bioll'~\' , I nt rl,du ct ion tt' Mi crobio logy. and
Page 6

Campus News
Economic Cycles . Winter / spring contracts
include : Microbial and Molecular Genetics, Ceramics, and Murals and Architectural Art.
T axes: Theory and Practfce wi ll last
on ly through the winter quarter, and Ornithology : Avocets to Ye ll ow throat s
through the spring quarter. The sole
gro up contrai?t lasting fall, winter, spring
and summer quarters is "A Year in
Nepal."
d'
d
Various other proposed coor mate
study and group contract programs are
being considered; however, before m~k­
ing fin a l decisions, further informatIOn
frorri the program planners is necessary .

A Washington State Superior Court
found in favor of the Cooper Point Associ~tion (CPA) in ' a decision Wednesday
concluding the three-month long Myers
vs. Thurston County and the Cooper
Point Association case.
Established in December 1971, the nonprofit CPA had its beginnings when Evergreen Envir.o nmental Design program students held a public meeting to discuss
components of a comprehensive Cooper
Point land-use plan . On Jan . 28, 1974, the
Cooper Point Plan was officially adopted
by the Thurston County Planning Commission. The . plan became important in
matters concerning proposed Cooper
.Point peninsula commercial and residential developments.
The Myers Corporation , however,
sought land re-zoning for a "convenience
center" and a multi-family residential
building site. The Cooper Point Plan zoning system would prevent · the type of development that was proposed by Myers.
Myers contended there were in:egularities
in the adoption of the Cooper Point Plan.
Among Myers' claims against Thurston
C ounty were that some planning commission and board of county commissioners
proceedings did not appear fair, there was
tlot adequate advance notice given for
some CPA hearings, the State Environmental Policy Act was not properly followed, and the Cooper Point Plan was
not valid as a comprehensive county plan
had not previously been prepared and
adopted according to statute.
County evidence disproved each of
Myers' accusations with the exception of a
35-foot building height 'restriction amendment which was enacted without statutory , procedure. Should due process be
utilized, this amendment could be reinstated.
The presiding judge, Robert ' Hannan,
stated that "(Myers') objections a re of
insufficient merit to invalidate the ordinance, some of them tending to be quite
picayu ne."
January 30, 1975

These trees at the south end of Red
Square may be dead within five years .
to Jackson , some trees, particularly
e'v ergreens between red square and ~he
entrance loop , are in danger of dymg
within th e ne xt ' fiv e years and will
eventually h ave to be removed. T.h e
reason Jackson gave for the mortality of
the trees is their susceptibility to a malady
called "sun-scald. " which is similar to
severe sunburn in humans. This problem
arose as a result of the trees being left in
small clumps when the area was cleared
for bui ldin g which offered them no
protection from the sun by other trees .
The las t two m a nagem e nt areas
s ugges te d in the .report were an
"ecol ogical study and trail area" where
harvestin g would be restricted to "salvage
of dead and dying trees and other danger
trees in co njunction with tra il layo ut or
development of va rious study . areas" ~nd
a "present experiment al structures, proJect
s it e a nd preserv'e a rea " where " n o
harvesting is recommended."
The trustees, at the conclusion· of the
present a tio n by Winn and Jackson asked
for comm~ nt s from student s, fac ult y ,
ad mini strators a nd staff present at the
meet ing. Facult y member Richard Cell ari u ~. c hairm a n of th e Environmental
Im pa ct Sta tem{'nt lJisapp ea ring Task
Cooper Point Journal.

I

SUNRI'S(

DUCK HOUSE
featuring
Clothing

Pictures

Pottery

Jewelry

Wall Hangings

MOUNTAIN( (RIN(j

New . Hours

COOPER POINT PLAN
lJPHELD IN COlJRT

BOARD OF TRlJSTEES
STlJDIES FOREST MANAGEMENT
A report studying the feasibility of
forest management on the Evergreen
campus was presented at the Jan. 23
Board of Trustees meeting. Professional
Fores try Services, Inc. of Olympia ,
represented by company president Jack
Winn and vice-president Michael Jacbon
concluded that four types of timber
management could be undertaken on
campus grounds if management was seen
as desirable by Evergreen administrators .
The proposal, which was solicited by
Evergreen, could mean that approximately
300 acres of forested land on campus
would be selectively harvested or "managed" if accepted.
If the forest management proposal were
eventually ac cepted by the Board ,
Evergreen would stand to gain a $50,000
return on stumpage from 1975 to 1980,
and $12,000 to $15,000 on an average
annual basis after 1980. The total timber
valuation on campus is $322,700.
The fo ur types ot torest management
areas outlined in the proposal included a
"forest management area" in which it was
recommended that "harvest operations
sho uld include salvage of dead a nd dying
trees, silviculture (the art of producing
a nd car in g for a forest) se lective
ha rvesting in mature a lder, a nd silviculture thinning of Douglas fir .
A "buffer zone area" in which any
. harvesting of timber "be restricted to
sa lvage of dead and dying trees, a nd
remova l of danger trees a long roads.
parkways a nd wa lkway s, " was a lso
,contai ned with in th e proposal. Accordi ng

Judge Hannan in his opinion continued,
"Fo r their own self interest, private parties
will try to force standards of meticulous
excellence upon county officials which the
diety itself could not attain. "
An appeal of the court's ruling is not
being considered at this time by Myers.

M-F

9:30 - 4

Consignments Wanted

205 E. 4th
Olympia, WA.
,357-4345

We Get 20 % - You Get The Rest!

The Mus'i c Bar
sales & service
for:
klh altec bose .jbl
ken\Nood marantz
mcintosh" san-s ui
teac sony tandberg
revox dual pionee r


JVC
POP - JAZZ - BROADWAY
ROCK - R & B - WESTERN - SLASSICAL
SPECIAL ORDERS ALLED PROMPTLY

th
south' sound
4422 s.e.6
center
Page 7

Force (EIS DTF) responded to board
discussion of the report and the report
itself by saying "I think it is possible to
do a certain amount of selective cutting
on certain areas of the campus if done
very carefully."
The management program should , be
done, Cellarius said, "in conjunction with
an academic program so students can get
the benefit of working with the
professional foresters, " if the decision -is
made to follow the management proposaL
Upon further discussion by the Board
members, Cellarius, and other administrators present, it was agreed by Cellarius
that the EIS DTF would review the
management proposal and give a t:.ecommendation of approval or disapproval by
sometime in May for eventual action on
the subject by the Board .

BlJDGET PROPOSALS JlJSTlFIED
BEFORE LEGISLATlJRE TODAY
President Charles McCann will make
his budget presentation before the House
Ways and Mean!; Budget Appropriations
Comm ittee today, Jan . 30. McCann had
originally been scheduled to justify Evergreen's budgetary needs to the committee
on Feb. 18, but the date for his presentation was moved up when the budget representatives of the Washington State Community ColI~ges rescheduled their date to
give themselves more time for preparation . The University of W ashington went
before the committee Jan. 28 and 29.
It is ex pected that McCann will ask for
a reinstatement of fu nds in certain areas
cut heavil y by the Governor's Budget Proposal - especiall y Computer Services, Instructional Media Services, Summer
School , and Student Services. No amendment s to the Governor's budget proposal
affecti ng higher education appropriations
have yet been introduced .
...
The date presentl y scheduled for Evergreen's hearing wi th the Senate Ways and
Means Budget Appropriations Committee
is March 12 at 4 p .m . in room 410 .of the
Legislative B·uilding.

SECOND PROGRAM
PROPOSAL ClJTS MADE
EVergreen academic deans and faculty
set the 1975-76 ball rolling for coordinated study and group contract programs
during th e Faculty Work Week last Wednesday, T,hursday, and Friday, Jan . 22-24.
Several Work Week goa ls were established
and a tent a ti ve co urse , schedule was relpil",prl

alog suppl ement . Alth o ugh many programs are still "in-the-making," according
to Academ ic Dean Rudy Martin, a fairsized portion of the planning campaign
ha s been accomplished.
Coordinated studies programs to be of- ·
fered nex t fall are: Env ironments, Perception and Desig n ; In vention and Discovery ; Foundations of Natural Science; Cu lture, Ideo logy and Social Change in
America; Scientific and Cultura l Ch ange;
The Good Earth ; Life and Hea lth ; Africa
and th e United States; and Love in the
Western World .

Group co ntracts offered through the
1975-1976 fall , winter, and spring quarters, a re: The Politics of Health Care;
Jews and Israel ; Humanistic Psychology;
Earl y Childhood Ed uca tion ; Theoretical
Physics; Rationa li sm. Empiricism, a nd
Ideali sm ; Lingui sti cs; Woodworking a nd
Boa tbuil ding ; and Form, T hought, a nd
Feeling .
Biochemi stry , The Social Hi story of
Women . The Artist Class, and American
Country Mu sic Then and Now are gro up
Cl'ntrac! s sc hedu led for the fa ll a nd w inter
quarters , Four fa ll qua·rt er gro up co ntracts
.HI;' E\'rrgreen Enviro nment . Marine Bioll'~\' , I nt rl,du ct ion tt' Mi crobio logy. and
Page 6

Campus News
Economic Cycles . Winter / spring contracts
include : Microbial and Molecular Genetics, Ceramics, and Murals and Architectural Art.
T axes: Theory and Practfce wi ll last
on ly through the winter quarter, and Ornithology : Avocets to Ye ll ow throat s
through the spring quarter. The sole
gro up contrai?t lasting fall, winter, spring
and summer quarters is "A Year in
Nepal."
d'
d
Various other proposed coor mate
study and group contract programs are
being considered; however, before m~k­
ing fin a l decisions, further informatIOn
frorri the program planners is necessary .

A Washington State Superior Court
found in favor of the Cooper Point Associ~tion (CPA) in ' a decision Wednesday
concluding the three-month long Myers
vs. Thurston County and the Cooper
Point Association case.
Established in December 1971, the nonprofit CPA had its beginnings when Evergreen Envir.o nmental Design program students held a public meeting to discuss
components of a comprehensive Cooper
Point land-use plan . On Jan . 28, 1974, the
Cooper Point Plan was officially adopted
by the Thurston County Planning Commission. The . plan became important in
matters concerning proposed Cooper
.Point peninsula commercial and residential developments.
The Myers Corporation , however,
sought land re-zoning for a "convenience
center" and a multi-family residential
building site. The Cooper Point Plan zoning system would prevent · the type of development that was proposed by Myers.
Myers contended there were in:egularities
in the adoption of the Cooper Point Plan.
Among Myers' claims against Thurston
C ounty were that some planning commission and board of county commissioners
proceedings did not appear fair, there was
tlot adequate advance notice given for
some CPA hearings, the State Environmental Policy Act was not properly followed, and the Cooper Point Plan was
not valid as a comprehensive county plan
had not previously been prepared and
adopted according to statute.
County evidence disproved each of
Myers' accusations with the exception of a
35-foot building height 'restriction amendment which was enacted without statutory , procedure. Should due process be
utilized, this amendment could be reinstated.
The presiding judge, Robert ' Hannan,
stated that "(Myers') objections a re of
insufficient merit to invalidate the ordinance, some of them tending to be quite
picayu ne."
January 30, 1975

These trees at the south end of Red
Square may be dead within five years .
to Jackson , some trees, particularly
e'v ergreens between red square and ~he
entrance loop , are in danger of dymg
within th e ne xt ' fiv e years and will
eventually h ave to be removed. T.h e
reason Jackson gave for the mortality of
the trees is their susceptibility to a malady
called "sun-scald. " which is similar to
severe sunburn in humans. This problem
arose as a result of the trees being left in
small clumps when the area was cleared
for bui ldin g which offered them no
protection from the sun by other trees .
The las t two m a nagem e nt areas
s ugges te d in the .report were an
"ecol ogical study and trail area" where
harvestin g would be restricted to "salvage
of dead and dying trees and other danger
trees in co njunction with tra il layo ut or
development of va rious study . areas" ~nd
a "present experiment al structures, proJect
s it e a nd preserv'e a rea " where " n o
harvesting is recommended."
The trustees, at the conclusion· of the
present a tio n by Winn and Jackson asked
for comm~ nt s from student s, fac ult y ,
ad mini strators a nd staff present at the
meet ing. Facult y member Richard Cell ari u ~. c hairm a n of th e Environmental
Im pa ct Sta tem{'nt lJisapp ea ring Task
Cooper Point Journal.

I

SUNRI'S(

DUCK HOUSE
featuring
Clothing

Pictures

Pottery

Jewelry

Wall Hangings

MOUNTAIN( (RIN(j

New . Hours

COOPER POINT PLAN
lJPHELD IN COlJRT

BOARD OF TRlJSTEES
STlJDIES FOREST MANAGEMENT
A report studying the feasibility of
forest management on the Evergreen
campus was presented at the Jan. 23
Board of Trustees meeting. Professional
Fores try Services, Inc. of Olympia ,
represented by company president Jack
Winn and vice-president Michael Jacbon
concluded that four types of timber
management could be undertaken on
campus grounds if management was seen
as desirable by Evergreen administrators .
The proposal, which was solicited by
Evergreen, could mean that approximately
300 acres of forested land on campus
would be selectively harvested or "managed" if accepted.
If the forest management proposal were
eventually ac cepted by the Board ,
Evergreen would stand to gain a $50,000
return on stumpage from 1975 to 1980,
and $12,000 to $15,000 on an average
annual basis after 1980. The total timber
valuation on campus is $322,700.
The fo ur types ot torest management
areas outlined in the proposal included a
"forest management area" in which it was
recommended that "harvest operations
sho uld include salvage of dead a nd dying
trees, silviculture (the art of producing
a nd car in g for a forest) se lective
ha rvesting in mature a lder, a nd silviculture thinning of Douglas fir .
A "buffer zone area" in which any
. harvesting of timber "be restricted to
sa lvage of dead and dying trees, a nd
remova l of danger trees a long roads.
parkways a nd wa lkway s, " was a lso
,contai ned with in th e proposal. Accordi ng

Judge Hannan in his opinion continued,
"Fo r their own self interest, private parties
will try to force standards of meticulous
excellence upon county officials which the
diety itself could not attain. "
An appeal of the court's ruling is not
being considered at this time by Myers.

M-F

9:30 - 4

Consignments Wanted

205 E. 4th
Olympia, WA.
,357-4345

We Get 20 % - You Get The Rest!

The Mus'i c Bar
sales & service
for:
klh altec bose .jbl
ken\Nood marantz
mcintosh" san-s ui
teac sony tandberg
revox dual pionee r


JVC
POP - JAZZ - BROADWAY
ROCK - R & B - WESTERN - SLASSICAL
SPECIAL ORDERS ALLED PROMPTLY

th
south' sound
4422 s.e.6
center
Page 7

POLICY CHANGED ON
ACADEMIC WORK COMPLETION

COLLEEN'S
GIF T SHOP
Ev(' r yt h inl ~ I ~

,

Organs From $195,
Guitars From $49,

CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME

10: 30 - 5 : 30

'---

Amps, From $75,
Accordians From $89,
Grand Opening Feb. 1 & 2

" co m e in a nd brome around "
205 E 5th

J

' GRAND OPENING SALE

Handmade

MUSIC UNLIMITED
911 E. 4th
DOWNTOWN OLYMPIA

T ues - Sat

SOLENOIDS
12VOLT
(1114356,0969)

Universal Style

$4.951J1d1a•••
American Motors, '61-68, Buick '57:
702, Buick Speciol '61-72, Cadillac '57-'
72, Camaro, '67-72, Chevelle '64-72 "
Chevrolet ' 57-72, Chevy II:Nova '6 272, Corvair '60-69, Corvette '57 -72,
Firebird '67-72, John Deere '63 -68 ,
Kaiser Jeep '66-71, Oldsmobile '5772, Olds. F85 '61 -72, Pontiac' 56 -72,
.Tempeu '61 ;70, Vega :71 -72 . Vent)Jra
II ' 71.-72.

(111 4 25 1,2,3,5,6, 1,62,3,4,6,
8,70 ,, 1,2 , 7,9 ,81 , l , 3,;',9, 9A,
5, 7, 9) (111 43 0 4, 6, 24 , ~, 6, 8,
30 , 3 , 4, 5,6, 7, 9 ,4 0 , 1, ' !, 3, At, j,
6, 7,50 , 1,3 , 4, 8) (1118 '110, I, 6,
21) (1 119781, 98) (1 119910, 46,
67 , 74 , 98) (09 30 , 1 2, 3,4,60,5,

6 , 7, 8)

, .,

t

,

~

r .. , • ,. •

RAUDENBUSH
MOTORS

412 South Cherry
Olympia 943-3650

The quart~r after
you moved
out of the dorm,
it went co--ed.
You owe yourself an Oly.
0 ,'

P

"I

q ; ,'. n q
1\

Page 8

(\".1'11(10111 , '

Olyrnpt() W as hl nq l on ' O L Y '

t Cl ,' I""i { ", 1 t"TIC,l I'"

(lf e Ic cyc l;)bl e

u

fore the following Wednesday's meeting,
Presentations of proposals will be reviewed and listened to in the order in
which they are submitted to the S&A
Board office, Groups of 'individuals making presentations will be allowed 15 minutes to describe and explain the intent of
their funding request. After all of the presentations have been given, the board will
re-review the proposals and grant funds ,

Th e Co mpkti o n of Academic Work
a nd Awa rdin g of Credit Disappearing
T ask Fo rce (DTF ) has co mpleted its initial
rev isin ll s on procedures relating to the repo rtin g of incompletes and awarding of
. cred it fo r in completes that have been
made up. The po licy revision has been
given to Aca demic Dean Willie Parson for
review a nd will go to Vice-President and
Pro vost Ed Kormondy before the policy is
t () be ava il a bl e fo r public review,
Unde r the revi sed policy, incomplete
work w ill have to be fini shed within 60
da ys of the beginning of the quarter follow in g the quarter in which the incomrl ete was given , If not completed within
th a t tim e, no credit will be given in place
of the inco mpl ete. This was stated in the
prev io us po li cy, but it is now "more
wo rkable," according to Betty Estes, chairwo man of th e DTF .
T he po li cy now stresses the fact that
th e stud ent mu st be notified by the registrar's office' of each incomplete, with a
desc ription of the mi ssing work or work
t<, be made up , This will then leave no
do ubt with either the student or the facult y member ' as to what work is incomplete. Th ere ,were other :>Iight word revi~ i o n s, b ut th ey were only to tnake the
po li cy mo re workabl e, she said.
Estes sai d th a t the two major reasons
fo r the rev isions in the policy were "to attempt to discourage people from handing
o ur so many inco mpletes" and to "make
, the po li cy more eas il y workable,"
Also, so me fa cult y members have not
bren compl yin g -with the corre<;t procedu res an'd channels to giving incomp letes
or in a wa rdin g credit when the incomrletes have been made up , They have not
a lways bee n o n time in getting their evalua ti o ns w ritt en a nd to the registrar. '
T here has been so me speculation that
th l' new Fac ult y hiring handbook will
make a reference to this problem by statIl1 g th a t dec ision s in vo lving faculty rehirin g w ill co nt ain in their ~o n s ideration the
time lin ess of co mpletion of student credit
repo rts a nd student evalu ations by faculty
members,

EVERGREEN GOALS
TO BE SURVEYED
Four students are undertaking a poll
which will "attempt to focus on institutional goals of Evergreen for the next decade ," The students, who have received
funding from Vice-President and Provost
Ed Kormondy for the project, say the first
segment 'of the three-part poll will ' be
mailed to all paid employees of the college and an equal number of ran~omly selected students on Feb . 7,
The "Institutional Goals Survey" will
be modeled on the "Delphi Study
Method," a polling technique aesigned to
provide persons being polled with immediate feedback to their opinions , The poll
should be completed by the last ' week in
May, said John Agnew, a spokesman for ,
the group :
"It's our expectation th'at this will give
Evergree'ners a chance to express their
hopes for the 'college, both presently !lnd
in the future, and will provide input for
long range decisions on a variety of programs and policies," said Agnew , "We
would like to encompass the widest possible diversity the campus has to offer. "
Students Agnew, John Lundberg, Dan
Wall, and Cindy Siedentop are particularly enthusiastic about the Delphi
Method of polling, which is done in three
separate parts so that at each stage of the
poll the participant can see ' where his
opinions ~tand with those of the rest of
the group,
The students see this poll as a chance
for people to state what they are feeling
and to see those feelings published , "This
poll belongs to the people who take it, "
commented Agnew, 'The question is, can
we as a com111unity focus ourselves on
our goals, One way or another, whatever
happens with the questionnaire is important. "
Copies of the questionnaire will be
available at the information center, the library, and in the Inventory office, Lib ,
. rm . 3505 , The group welcomes participation from all interested students not included in the random sele~tion ,

MORE S&A FUNDS ALLOCATED
T he Serv ices a nJ Acti vities (S&A) Review Boa rd a ll oca ted $6,650 to six groups
('11 Ja n . 22 . C ro ups rece iv in g funding '
we re: CA B Ope ra tions Support , $950 ;
the Gay Cent er, $1., 000; the Women's
C lini c, $2, 000 ; the Evergreen Environme nt a l Reso urce Ce nter, $800 ; Rainroots,
$ 1.800; a nd Visual Reco rd , $10Q. Two
proposa ls , for th e S tu ae nt Marketin g
Agency a nd the Bus System, were tabled
until th e nex t meeting on Feb, 5 at 9 a,m,
In addil io n to funding these groups, the
board adopted guidelines fo r reviewing
proposa ls, All requests fo r funding must
be "ubmittnl in w ri\ ing by the ~ri day be-

Coop" Po;n'

Joum~

ANNOUNCEMENTS
• The King County Blood Bank will be
on campus Tuesday, Feb . 4, from 10 a,m,
to 4 p,m, in the first floor Library lobby,
Donations from all Evergreeners have
been requested,
• The Friday Nite Films VolL~~tee r Group
will meet Wednesday , Feb . 5, in Lib , rm,
2205 from noon until 3 p,m, The agenda
will include business and the selection of
spring quarter movies, All are welcome to
attend and offer film suggestions. '

• There will be a meeting of the
Environmental Impact Statement Disappearing Task Force Wednesday , Feb, 5 at
3 p ,m . in the 201 building,
• There will be a Sounding Board meet/ ing Wednesday, Feb, 5, at 8:30 a ,m " in
CAB rm , 110, The Sounding Board will
view a taped press conference on Sounding Board credibility and a discussion will
follow . Also to be discussed with the
dea ns, registrar, and faculty are outstand- .
'ing evaluations, All concerned Evergreen
faculty members have been invited to attend ,
continued on page 18

csm

IT HApPEnS OnlY onCE,

EACH YEAR

0i2JJJ

EnTIRE
InVEnTORY REDUCED '
"-

-

ALL NATIONALLY KNOWN NAME BRANDS

GIANT PRE-INVENTORY CLEARANCE
NO ITEM HAS BEEN OVERLOOKED -

FROM THE MEN 'S SHOP

SALE PRICE

$2,88 to $6.88

PANTS
(Hundred. or item. a1 U .BB and " .113)

1,88 to 8 .88

SHIRTS
(Large't MJecdon at " .881

SWEATERS
WINTER COATS
(Short end long -

3.88 to 12.88
12,88 to 32.88

K- price )

29.88 to 99.88
12.88 to 14.88

LEATHERS
SHOES
FROM OUR GIRL 'S SHOP

PANTS
SH IRTS
JACKETS

4,88 to 9.88
2.88 to 8,88
6,88 to 13.88

Shop Early While Selections Are Best
January 31st to February 15th
Open Monday thru Saturday THI6 - Friday Till9

Pants made to
a different vision

The

CORRECTION

l'

I

The statement printed in last week's
Journal saying all Evergreen classified
staff are members of the Washington
Federation of State Employees (WFSE)
was incorrect. The statement should have
re~d that four Evergreen classified staff
members belong to the WFSE.
January 30, 1975

I~MMI.~DI
USE YOUR
BANKCARDS



DON" MISS 'HIS ONCE A YEAR EVEN'

"This Area's Largest Pant Selection"
CORNER OF FOURTH AND CAPITOL WAY
DOWNTOWN OL YMPIA

POLICY CHANGED ON
ACADEMIC WORK COMPLETION

COLLEEN'S
GIF T SHOP
Ev(' r yt h inl ~ I ~

,

Organs From $195,
Guitars From $49,

CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME

10: 30 - 5 : 30

'---

Amps, From $75,
Accordians From $89,
Grand Opening Feb. 1 & 2

" co m e in a nd brome around "
205 E 5th

J

' GRAND OPENING SALE

Handmade

MUSIC UNLIMITED
911 E. 4th
DOWNTOWN OLYMPIA

T ues - Sat

SOLENOIDS
12VOLT
(1114356,0969)

Universal Style

$4.951J1d1a•••
American Motors, '61-68, Buick '57:
702, Buick Speciol '61-72, Cadillac '57-'
72, Camaro, '67-72, Chevelle '64-72 "
Chevrolet ' 57-72, Chevy II:Nova '6 272, Corvair '60-69, Corvette '57 -72,
Firebird '67-72, John Deere '63 -68 ,
Kaiser Jeep '66-71, Oldsmobile '5772, Olds. F85 '61 -72, Pontiac' 56 -72,
.Tempeu '61 ;70, Vega :71 -72 . Vent)Jra
II ' 71.-72.

(111 4 25 1,2,3,5,6, 1,62,3,4,6,
8,70 ,, 1,2 , 7,9 ,81 , l , 3,;',9, 9A,
5, 7, 9) (111 43 0 4, 6, 24 , ~, 6, 8,
30 , 3 , 4, 5,6, 7, 9 ,4 0 , 1, ' !, 3, At, j,
6, 7,50 , 1,3 , 4, 8) (1118 '110, I, 6,
21) (1 119781, 98) (1 119910, 46,
67 , 74 , 98) (09 30 , 1 2, 3,4,60,5,

6 , 7, 8)

, .,

t

,

~

r .. , • ,. •

RAUDENBUSH
MOTORS

412 South Cherry
Olympia 943-3650

The quart~r after
you moved
out of the dorm,
it went co--ed.
You owe yourself an Oly.
0 ,'

P

"I

q ; ,'. n q
1\

Page 8

(\".1'11(10111 , '

Olyrnpt() W as hl nq l on ' O L Y '

t Cl ,' I""i { ", 1 t"TIC,l I'"

(lf e Ic cyc l;)bl e

u

fore the following Wednesday's meeting,
Presentations of proposals will be reviewed and listened to in the order in
which they are submitted to the S&A
Board office, Groups of 'individuals making presentations will be allowed 15 minutes to describe and explain the intent of
their funding request. After all of the presentations have been given, the board will
re-review the proposals and grant funds ,

Th e Co mpkti o n of Academic Work
a nd Awa rdin g of Credit Disappearing
T ask Fo rce (DTF ) has co mpleted its initial
rev isin ll s on procedures relating to the repo rtin g of incompletes and awarding of
. cred it fo r in completes that have been
made up. The po licy revision has been
given to Aca demic Dean Willie Parson for
review a nd will go to Vice-President and
Pro vost Ed Kormondy before the policy is
t () be ava il a bl e fo r public review,
Unde r the revi sed policy, incomplete
work w ill have to be fini shed within 60
da ys of the beginning of the quarter follow in g the quarter in which the incomrl ete was given , If not completed within
th a t tim e, no credit will be given in place
of the inco mpl ete. This was stated in the
prev io us po li cy, but it is now "more
wo rkable," according to Betty Estes, chairwo man of th e DTF .
T he po li cy now stresses the fact that
th e stud ent mu st be notified by the registrar's office' of each incomplete, with a
desc ription of the mi ssing work or work
t<, be made up , This will then leave no
do ubt with either the student or the facult y member ' as to what work is incomplete. Th ere ,were other :>Iight word revi~ i o n s, b ut th ey were only to tnake the
po li cy mo re workabl e, she said.
Estes sai d th a t the two major reasons
fo r the rev isions in the policy were "to attempt to discourage people from handing
o ur so many inco mpletes" and to "make
, the po li cy more eas il y workable,"
Also, so me fa cult y members have not
bren compl yin g -with the corre<;t procedu res an'd channels to giving incomp letes
or in a wa rdin g credit when the incomrletes have been made up , They have not
a lways bee n o n time in getting their evalua ti o ns w ritt en a nd to the registrar. '
T here has been so me speculation that
th l' new Fac ult y hiring handbook will
make a reference to this problem by statIl1 g th a t dec ision s in vo lving faculty rehirin g w ill co nt ain in their ~o n s ideration the
time lin ess of co mpletion of student credit
repo rts a nd student evalu ations by faculty
members,

EVERGREEN GOALS
TO BE SURVEYED
Four students are undertaking a poll
which will "attempt to focus on institutional goals of Evergreen for the next decade ," The students, who have received
funding from Vice-President and Provost
Ed Kormondy for the project, say the first
segment 'of the three-part poll will ' be
mailed to all paid employees of the college and an equal number of ran~omly selected students on Feb . 7,
The "Institutional Goals Survey" will
be modeled on the "Delphi Study
Method," a polling technique aesigned to
provide persons being polled with immediate feedback to their opinions , The poll
should be completed by the last ' week in
May, said John Agnew, a spokesman for ,
the group :
"It's our expectation th'at this will give
Evergree'ners a chance to express their
hopes for the 'college, both presently !lnd
in the future, and will provide input for
long range decisions on a variety of programs and policies," said Agnew , "We
would like to encompass the widest possible diversity the campus has to offer. "
Students Agnew, John Lundberg, Dan
Wall, and Cindy Siedentop are particularly enthusiastic about the Delphi
Method of polling, which is done in three
separate parts so that at each stage of the
poll the participant can see ' where his
opinions ~tand with those of the rest of
the group,
The students see this poll as a chance
for people to state what they are feeling
and to see those feelings published , "This
poll belongs to the people who take it, "
commented Agnew, 'The question is, can
we as a com111unity focus ourselves on
our goals, One way or another, whatever
happens with the questionnaire is important. "
Copies of the questionnaire will be
available at the information center, the library, and in the Inventory office, Lib ,
. rm . 3505 , The group welcomes participation from all interested students not included in the random sele~tion ,

MORE S&A FUNDS ALLOCATED
T he Serv ices a nJ Acti vities (S&A) Review Boa rd a ll oca ted $6,650 to six groups
('11 Ja n . 22 . C ro ups rece iv in g funding '
we re: CA B Ope ra tions Support , $950 ;
the Gay Cent er, $1., 000; the Women's
C lini c, $2, 000 ; the Evergreen Environme nt a l Reso urce Ce nter, $800 ; Rainroots,
$ 1.800; a nd Visual Reco rd , $10Q. Two
proposa ls , for th e S tu ae nt Marketin g
Agency a nd the Bus System, were tabled
until th e nex t meeting on Feb, 5 at 9 a,m,
In addil io n to funding these groups, the
board adopted guidelines fo r reviewing
proposa ls, All requests fo r funding must
be "ubmittnl in w ri\ ing by the ~ri day be-

Coop" Po;n'

Joum~

ANNOUNCEMENTS
• The King County Blood Bank will be
on campus Tuesday, Feb . 4, from 10 a,m,
to 4 p,m, in the first floor Library lobby,
Donations from all Evergreeners have
been requested,
• The Friday Nite Films VolL~~tee r Group
will meet Wednesday , Feb . 5, in Lib , rm,
2205 from noon until 3 p,m, The agenda
will include business and the selection of
spring quarter movies, All are welcome to
attend and offer film suggestions. '

• There will be a meeting of the
Environmental Impact Statement Disappearing Task Force Wednesday , Feb, 5 at
3 p ,m . in the 201 building,
• There will be a Sounding Board meet/ ing Wednesday, Feb, 5, at 8:30 a ,m " in
CAB rm , 110, The Sounding Board will
view a taped press conference on Sounding Board credibility and a discussion will
follow . Also to be discussed with the
dea ns, registrar, and faculty are outstand- .
'ing evaluations, All concerned Evergreen
faculty members have been invited to attend ,
continued on page 18

csm

IT HApPEnS OnlY onCE,

EACH YEAR

0i2JJJ

EnTIRE
InVEnTORY REDUCED '
"-

-

ALL NATIONALLY KNOWN NAME BRANDS

GIANT PRE-INVENTORY CLEARANCE
NO ITEM HAS BEEN OVERLOOKED -

FROM THE MEN 'S SHOP

SALE PRICE

$2,88 to $6.88

PANTS
(Hundred. or item. a1 U .BB and " .113)

1,88 to 8 .88

SHIRTS
(Large't MJecdon at " .881

SWEATERS
WINTER COATS
(Short end long -

3.88 to 12.88
12,88 to 32.88

K- price )

29.88 to 99.88
12.88 to 14.88

LEATHERS
SHOES
FROM OUR GIRL 'S SHOP

PANTS
SH IRTS
JACKETS

4,88 to 9.88
2.88 to 8,88
6,88 to 13.88

Shop Early While Selections Are Best
January 31st to February 15th
Open Monday thru Saturday THI6 - Friday Till9

Pants made to
a different vision

The

CORRECTION

l'

I

The statement printed in last week's
Journal saying all Evergreen classified
staff are members of the Washington
Federation of State Employees (WFSE)
was incorrect. The statement should have
re~d that four Evergreen classified staff
members belong to the WFSE.
January 30, 1975

I~MMI.~DI
USE YOUR
BANKCARDS



DON" MISS 'HIS ONCE A YEAR EVEN'

"This Area's Largest Pant Selection"
CORNER OF FOURTH AND CAPITOL WAY
DOWNTOWN OL YMPIA

Ly nn Patt erson , left , served as th e main spo k eswoman fo r th ose whose pr: test brought th e Moss case b~fore
til e A ll Ca m pus Hearrng Board. Administrative Vic e- Pres ident Dean Cia
gil , center, made th e contes ted
. declsl:-m to co mbm e th e jobs of Director o f Aux iliary Se rv ices and Dired o o f Perso nn el under Jo hn Moss,
rlF,h t :

Unanimous Hearing Board
Overrules 'C labaugh in Moss Case
BY MA RY HESTER
Th e A ll C a mpus Hearing Boa rd has
dec ided unanim o usly to reverse A dministra tive Vice-President D ean C lab a u'gh's
a pp o intm e n t o f Jo hn M oss a s du a l
dir ec t o r o f A u x il iary Se r v ices a nd
Personn el.
Th e dec is io n came Ja n . 27 after four
hours uf deli bera ti on in a closed se~si o n
(see bo x o pposit e page ).
In it s me m o , th e Boa rd found that
C la b a u g h h ad v io la ted t h e " s pirit of
aff irm a tive ac ti on by his fa ilure to ta ke
~ p e cif i c aLl ion as req uired by that po li cy ."
He wa ~ a lso fo und to have viola ted the
'lett er of th e a ff irma tive ac ti o n ~o li cy"
when he a pp o int ed M o ss to a newl y
c rea ted po s it io n w it h o ut se lec tin g a
cand id a te fr o m a n o n - di sc rimin a to r y
a pp li'ta nt p oo l.
Fac ulty member Hap Freun d, o ne o f the
r e t i ti u n e r~ in the d is pwte, sta ted , 'The
ac tio n spea ks for it self . 1 obv io usly felt it
wa s a good dec isio n . T ha t's w hy I go t
in vo lvcd . N ow w e ca n ge t b ack to
b u s i ne ~~. "
C ldba ugh reac led to th e dec isio n b y
~ta t i n g , "It was th e w rong dec isio n. " He is
l o n ~ id e rin g ta k ing the ma tt er to the Boa rd
\I f Tru ~ t ees, wh ose nex t m ee tin g is
~ c h e du l e d fo r Feb . 13 .
Belo rc reac hi ng Mo nday's decisio n, the
HOJ rd hCLHd testim ony from Affirm a ti ve
Actil1.n O lli cl'r Rind l'l ta Jo nes, th e closing
,lr g u l11l' nh 0 1 A cad e m ic ' Dea·n Ly nn
l \lt t l'r ~ l 1 n Jn d C lab,Hl gh, a nd d iscussed
,1l11l1ng IhL'll1~ L' I \' e<; whether deli bera tio ns
"llI 'u ld bL' cl'''l' d .
Tlw 111 ,11ll i ~ ~ u l' ~ l, 1 the co ntrove rsy
!1.1\ l' l l'ntL'n 'd l1 n p(\~~ ib lr vio la ti ons o f
P age 10

th e a ffirmativ e ac ti o n d oc ument a nd
und e r-utili za ti o n o f w o m e n a nd n o nw hit es in th e o ffi c ia ls a nd m a n age r s
ca tegory. Jo nes ,sta ted it was no t enough
to h a ve eq ual employment opp ortunities
while remaining neutral in rec ruitment
eff o rts . She sa id , "You have to go over
a nd b ey ond the things tha t ha ve been
do ne in the past in o rder to bring people
int o th e job mark e t a nd int o th e
educ a ti o na l sys te m o f th e co ll ege ...
Where we' re under-utilized there should
be vigo rou s recruitment of w o men and
no n-whites in o rde r to have th e necessa ry
a pp licant poo l to select ca ndida tes for
empl oy ment ."
She fo und under-utiliza ti o n o f wo men
in the offici a ls a nd ma nagers cat egory a
prob le m a rea a nd cited th e a ffirmative
acti q n O ctob er 1974 goa l pl a n of 18 per
ce nt wom en. As of Dec. 1 , 1974, when
Di a nn Youn gqui st resigned as Direc tor of
Perso nn el, the perce nt of w omen in tha t
ca tegory dropped to 8 .8 ,
Jo nes reca ll ed telling Cl a b a ugh, w hen
. he co nsulted he r a bo ut th e proposed
co mb in a ti on of positi ons, th a t it would be
"o ne o f the m ost d ea dl y moves he could
make o n campus . T o move so meo ne int o
th e po s iti o n w h o d oe s n ' t h av e th e
spec ified requi sit e sk ill s a nd k now ledge
to perfo rm th a t, fun cti o n would jeo pa rdize
th e ri ght s of all emp loyees. "
She sta ted she ha d no a rgume nt aga in st
co mbinin g positi on s but "the meth o d of
co mb inin g positi ons denied wo men a nd
no n-w hit es a n opp o rtunit y to a ppl y. "
C laba ugh respo nded by sta tin g he had
co nsid ered o th er comb in a ti o ns hut tha t
th e M{) s ~ a ppo in tm ent wa s th e "mo,, 1
a pprop ria te frum a ma nage ri "t! po int of

vl ew .. . lt wa s th e bes t po ssible combinati o n o f hum a n a nd o ther resources to ·
acco mplish the job that needed to be
do ne." He co ntinued , say ing Moss doesn't
full y mee t the minimum qualifica tions
"but neithe r did his two predecessors ."
Beca use of ex pected budge t constraints
du ring the co min g biennium, the college
has been in stituting a poli cy of a ttrition
ma nageme nt. This po licy is one in which
jo b s v aca ted a re n o t reo pened but
co mbined wi th oth er jobs or eliminated
co mplet e ly, In lin e with thi s policy,
Cl a b a u g h li s ted ex te rnal pre ss ure s to
r~du c e a dm ini s trativ e cos ts, humane
co nsidera ti o ns in precluding future firing,
a nd ca reful consulta ti on and consideration
of th e Affirma tive Ac tion document as
factors co nsidered in his decision . He
went on to sa y tha t virtua lly every
adv a ncement made in his are,a has been
taken b y a w o ma n or non-white and that
th e m a jo rit y of these we re no t o pened to
recruitment.
Ano th er issue befo re the b oa rd was the
d ifferin g lega l opini o ns presented by the
o pp os in g p a rti es . Pa tt e rso n , citin g a n
opi ni o n fr o m Hea lth, Ed u ca ti o n , a nd
We lfa re' s Jim Ca rroll , co nt ended th a t the
combin a ti o ns of positi ons crea ted a new
po s iti o n w ith a w h o le n ew se t o f
. respo nsibilites.
T he opini o ll of Richa rd M onteccuco ,
ass ista nt to the A tt o rney Ge ne ra l, which
sa id th a t n o v io la ti o n o f Ev e rg r een 's
Affi rma ti ve Ac ti o n dllCum ent had occurred , wa s ' brou ~ht int o ques ti o n by
Pa tl e rsp n w ho po int ecl o ut th a t a qu o te
fr (lm the A ffirma ti ve Acti o n doc ume nt
w h: ch W.l ~ u,,{'d in hi ~~ npini o n co uld no t
be fo u nd (l r, thl' r age li s ted a nd th a t the
C uoper Poin t Juurnal

closest sounding sentence cam e not fro m
the · policy itself but from an a ppendi x
discussing problem areas .
She urged the Board to interpret the
document themselves instead of relying on
outside legal opinions. Clabaugh co ntended that the Board must pay a ttenti o n
to the assistant attorney general's opinion
-"and that they were precluded from following legal advice from any other source ,
In her closin g argument P a tt e rso n
stated, "We're asking persons who ha ve
the power to hire to abide by the le tter
and spirit of .th e Affirm a tiv e A cti o n
document, that people b e given equa l
opportunities to compet e fo r tho se
positions, and that non-whit es a nd
women be specifically recruited for th ose
areas . We're not asking fo r a ny thing tha t
wa s n ' t already a greed to by thi s
community in adoption o f the Huma n
Rights Policy and approved b y the Boa rd
of Trustees ." She went on to say, "This
lack of attention is a danger o u s
precedent which could jeopardi ze th e
success we have in implementing this
policy ."
Clabaugh st a ted in his closing a rguments that "It is the' usual a nd accepted
practice and responsibility of administrators to decide where and how a nd when
best to employ human a nd oth e r
resources to get the job done . I'm the
persQl\ in charge of th ose respo nsibiliti es

a nd th a t's wh a t I did in co mbining the
positi ons."
In respo nse to Pa tterson 's a rgument
th a t fund s for the position were avai lable
until June 30, C la ba ugh sta ted , "T o hire
so m eo n e a nd h ave th e m m ove to
O ly mpi a for fi ve mo nth s a nd then let
them go is one of the m ost. inhum a ne, not
to m enti o n sill y, suggest ions I' ve ever
hea rd ."
Di sc u ss in g wh e th e r to h o ld o p e n
delibe ra ti ons, staff member Bill Kn a uss
o ne o f the Hea ring Boa rd members, stated
tha t according to COG, All Campu s
Hea ring Boa rd m ee tings a re o pe n to the
public ; th e wo rd "mee tings" including
delibe ra tio ns. Howeve r, faculty m ember
Steve He rm a n, a lso a Hearing Board
m e mb er , fe lt d e lib e r a ti o ns s h o uld b e
c lose d b'e ca u se of th e p o te nti a l for
e mb a rr a ss m e nt o f th e indi vi du a ls in vo lved .
/
Th e Hea ring Boa rd members vo ted 5 to
1 to close the del ibe rati o ns.
.

, A t right, from to p , five of th e seven
Hearing Board m embers wh o heard the
M o~s ,case and decided 'in fa v or of tile
plaintIffs : Ch airman and student Carlos
Rose- Whit e, staff m embers Bill Kn auss
arid M c D o n a ld Smith , ' and fa culty
m e mbers Na nc y T a yl or a n d S t eve
Herm an :

I

Journal ConJests Closed Deli beration s
T.he Cooper Point Journal filed a complaint in the Ombudsl A dvocate o ffice
agamst the All Campus Hearing Board last Wednesday, Jan . 27, on the grounds
that reporters were prevented from attending the delibera tions of the Board.
Accordmg to the Journal complaint, "COG (the Committee on Governance
document) prohibits closed meetings, "
In a memor~~dum writ~en in. answer to the Journal accusations, the Hea ring
Board .stated: Closed deliberatIOns of the Boa rd are not specifically prohibited
accordmg to any law, statute or executiv e order currently in force a nd known to
any of the Board members. Since the deliberations were closed , a ny observation
by any party would be denied."
.
Responding to a statement from P resident C ha rles McCa nn tha t "t he p resent
COG document. .. does not expressly state tha t the deliberatio ns rnay be closed ;
the~efore. your proc:~ures should be set up a t present with a view to ha ving y our
deliberations open, ' t~e H earing Board developed on Jan . 8 a p roposed
am~ndm~nt to COG which would allow the Board the alterna tive of having closed
deliberatIOns .
In the ~OG document the following sentence would be added: "D elibera tions of
the He~nng Board may be closed to the public at the discretion of the Hearing
Board. The amendment is still awaiting ratification by the Boa rd of T rustees.
.
When questioned on the Journal complaint , Russ Lidman, a member of the
~earing . Board, pointed o ut that the Journal w as being "picky ." Only the
mterruptlon of the Moss delibera tio ns p revented the amendment . from being
approved · by the Board of trustees. Lidma n also pointed out tha t "juries
t raditionally have closed sessions. "
Sp~aking for the Journa L John Fo ster, ma nagi ng edi tor, pointed out tha t this
was more than a moot point. When yo u tramp le o n the C O G documen t" he
~aid: ."yo~ a re trampling on the ideals of the Evergreen commun ity . T his cann~t be
JlistIfled Simply for bureaucratic convenience ."
Vi~e-President and . P rovost Ed Kormqndy said , ;'It is my understa nding that abl)
meetmgs o.f the I:I~armg Board. must, in line w ith the present COG document, ~
open pendmg ratifICation o f the prop osed a mendmen t of CO G 11."
January 30, 1975

Ly nn Patt erson , left , served as th e main spo k eswoman fo r th ose whose pr: test brought th e Moss case b~fore
til e A ll Ca m pus Hearrng Board. Administrative Vic e- Pres ident Dean Cia
gil , center, made th e contes ted
. declsl:-m to co mbm e th e jobs of Director o f Aux iliary Se rv ices and Dired o o f Perso nn el under Jo hn Moss,
rlF,h t :

Unanimous Hearing Board
Overrules 'C labaugh in Moss Case
BY MA RY HESTER
Th e A ll C a mpus Hearing Boa rd has
dec ided unanim o usly to reverse A dministra tive Vice-President D ean C lab a u'gh's
a pp o intm e n t o f Jo hn M oss a s du a l
dir ec t o r o f A u x il iary Se r v ices a nd
Personn el.
Th e dec is io n came Ja n . 27 after four
hours uf deli bera ti on in a closed se~si o n
(see bo x o pposit e page ).
In it s me m o , th e Boa rd found that
C la b a u g h h ad v io la ted t h e " s pirit of
aff irm a tive ac ti on by his fa ilure to ta ke
~ p e cif i c aLl ion as req uired by that po li cy ."
He wa ~ a lso fo und to have viola ted the
'lett er of th e a ff irma tive ac ti o n ~o li cy"
when he a pp o int ed M o ss to a newl y
c rea ted po s it io n w it h o ut se lec tin g a
cand id a te fr o m a n o n - di sc rimin a to r y
a pp li'ta nt p oo l.
Fac ulty member Hap Freun d, o ne o f the
r e t i ti u n e r~ in the d is pwte, sta ted , 'The
ac tio n spea ks for it self . 1 obv io usly felt it
wa s a good dec isio n . T ha t's w hy I go t
in vo lvcd . N ow w e ca n ge t b ack to
b u s i ne ~~. "
C ldba ugh reac led to th e dec isio n b y
~ta t i n g , "It was th e w rong dec isio n. " He is
l o n ~ id e rin g ta k ing the ma tt er to the Boa rd
\I f Tru ~ t ees, wh ose nex t m ee tin g is
~ c h e du l e d fo r Feb . 13 .
Belo rc reac hi ng Mo nday's decisio n, the
HOJ rd hCLHd testim ony from Affirm a ti ve
Actil1.n O lli cl'r Rind l'l ta Jo nes, th e closing
,lr g u l11l' nh 0 1 A cad e m ic ' Dea·n Ly nn
l \lt t l'r ~ l 1 n Jn d C lab,Hl gh, a nd d iscussed
,1l11l1ng IhL'll1~ L' I \' e<; whether deli bera tio ns
"llI 'u ld bL' cl'''l' d .
Tlw 111 ,11ll i ~ ~ u l' ~ l, 1 the co ntrove rsy
!1.1\ l' l l'ntL'n 'd l1 n p(\~~ ib lr vio la ti ons o f
P age 10

th e a ffirmativ e ac ti o n d oc ument a nd
und e r-utili za ti o n o f w o m e n a nd n o nw hit es in th e o ffi c ia ls a nd m a n age r s
ca tegory. Jo nes ,sta ted it was no t enough
to h a ve eq ual employment opp ortunities
while remaining neutral in rec ruitment
eff o rts . She sa id , "You have to go over
a nd b ey ond the things tha t ha ve been
do ne in the past in o rder to bring people
int o th e job mark e t a nd int o th e
educ a ti o na l sys te m o f th e co ll ege ...
Where we' re under-utilized there should
be vigo rou s recruitment of w o men and
no n-whites in o rde r to have th e necessa ry
a pp licant poo l to select ca ndida tes for
empl oy ment ."
She fo und under-utiliza ti o n o f wo men
in the offici a ls a nd ma nagers cat egory a
prob le m a rea a nd cited th e a ffirmative
acti q n O ctob er 1974 goa l pl a n of 18 per
ce nt wom en. As of Dec. 1 , 1974, when
Di a nn Youn gqui st resigned as Direc tor of
Perso nn el, the perce nt of w omen in tha t
ca tegory dropped to 8 .8 ,
Jo nes reca ll ed telling Cl a b a ugh, w hen
. he co nsulted he r a bo ut th e proposed
co mb in a ti on of positi ons, th a t it would be
"o ne o f the m ost d ea dl y moves he could
make o n campus . T o move so meo ne int o
th e po s iti o n w h o d oe s n ' t h av e th e
spec ified requi sit e sk ill s a nd k now ledge
to perfo rm th a t, fun cti o n would jeo pa rdize
th e ri ght s of all emp loyees. "
She sta ted she ha d no a rgume nt aga in st
co mbinin g positi on s but "the meth o d of
co mb inin g positi ons denied wo men a nd
no n-w hit es a n opp o rtunit y to a ppl y. "
C laba ugh respo nded by sta tin g he had
co nsid ered o th er comb in a ti o ns hut tha t
th e M{) s ~ a ppo in tm ent wa s th e "mo,, 1
a pprop ria te frum a ma nage ri "t! po int of

vl ew .. . lt wa s th e bes t po ssible combinati o n o f hum a n a nd o ther resources to ·
acco mplish the job that needed to be
do ne." He co ntinued , say ing Moss doesn't
full y mee t the minimum qualifica tions
"but neithe r did his two predecessors ."
Beca use of ex pected budge t constraints
du ring the co min g biennium, the college
has been in stituting a poli cy of a ttrition
ma nageme nt. This po licy is one in which
jo b s v aca ted a re n o t reo pened but
co mbined wi th oth er jobs or eliminated
co mplet e ly, In lin e with thi s policy,
Cl a b a u g h li s ted ex te rnal pre ss ure s to
r~du c e a dm ini s trativ e cos ts, humane
co nsidera ti o ns in precluding future firing,
a nd ca reful consulta ti on and consideration
of th e Affirma tive Ac tion document as
factors co nsidered in his decision . He
went on to sa y tha t virtua lly every
adv a ncement made in his are,a has been
taken b y a w o ma n or non-white and that
th e m a jo rit y of these we re no t o pened to
recruitment.
Ano th er issue befo re the b oa rd was the
d ifferin g lega l opini o ns presented by the
o pp os in g p a rti es . Pa tt e rso n , citin g a n
opi ni o n fr o m Hea lth, Ed u ca ti o n , a nd
We lfa re' s Jim Ca rroll , co nt ended th a t the
combin a ti o ns of positi ons crea ted a new
po s iti o n w ith a w h o le n ew se t o f
. respo nsibilites.
T he opini o ll of Richa rd M onteccuco ,
ass ista nt to the A tt o rney Ge ne ra l, which
sa id th a t n o v io la ti o n o f Ev e rg r een 's
Affi rma ti ve Ac ti o n dllCum ent had occurred , wa s ' brou ~ht int o ques ti o n by
Pa tl e rsp n w ho po int ecl o ut th a t a qu o te
fr (lm the A ffirma ti ve Acti o n doc ume nt
w h: ch W.l ~ u,,{'d in hi ~~ npini o n co uld no t
be fo u nd (l r, thl' r age li s ted a nd th a t the
C uoper Poin t Juurnal

closest sounding sentence cam e not fro m
the · policy itself but from an a ppendi x
discussing problem areas .
She urged the Board to interpret the
document themselves instead of relying on
outside legal opinions. Clabaugh co ntended that the Board must pay a ttenti o n
to the assistant attorney general's opinion
-"and that they were precluded from following legal advice from any other source ,
In her closin g argument P a tt e rso n
stated, "We're asking persons who ha ve
the power to hire to abide by the le tter
and spirit of .th e Affirm a tiv e A cti o n
document, that people b e given equa l
opportunities to compet e fo r tho se
positions, and that non-whit es a nd
women be specifically recruited for th ose
areas . We're not asking fo r a ny thing tha t
wa s n ' t already a greed to by thi s
community in adoption o f the Huma n
Rights Policy and approved b y the Boa rd
of Trustees ." She went on to say, "This
lack of attention is a danger o u s
precedent which could jeopardi ze th e
success we have in implementing this
policy ."
Clabaugh st a ted in his closing a rguments that "It is the' usual a nd accepted
practice and responsibility of administrators to decide where and how a nd when
best to employ human a nd oth e r
resources to get the job done . I'm the
persQl\ in charge of th ose respo nsibiliti es

a nd th a t's wh a t I did in co mbining the
positi ons."
In respo nse to Pa tterson 's a rgument
th a t fund s for the position were avai lable
until June 30, C la ba ugh sta ted , "T o hire
so m eo n e a nd h ave th e m m ove to
O ly mpi a for fi ve mo nth s a nd then let
them go is one of the m ost. inhum a ne, not
to m enti o n sill y, suggest ions I' ve ever
hea rd ."
Di sc u ss in g wh e th e r to h o ld o p e n
delibe ra ti ons, staff member Bill Kn a uss
o ne o f the Hea ring Boa rd members, stated
tha t according to COG, All Campu s
Hea ring Boa rd m ee tings a re o pe n to the
public ; th e wo rd "mee tings" including
delibe ra tio ns. Howeve r, faculty m ember
Steve He rm a n, a lso a Hearing Board
m e mb er , fe lt d e lib e r a ti o ns s h o uld b e
c lose d b'e ca u se of th e p o te nti a l for
e mb a rr a ss m e nt o f th e indi vi du a ls in vo lved .
/
Th e Hea ring Boa rd members vo ted 5 to
1 to close the del ibe rati o ns.
.

, A t right, from to p , five of th e seven
Hearing Board m embers wh o heard the
M o~s ,case and decided 'in fa v or of tile
plaintIffs : Ch airman and student Carlos
Rose- Whit e, staff m embers Bill Kn auss
arid M c D o n a ld Smith , ' and fa culty
m e mbers Na nc y T a yl or a n d S t eve
Herm an :

I

Journal ConJests Closed Deli beration s
T.he Cooper Point Journal filed a complaint in the Ombudsl A dvocate o ffice
agamst the All Campus Hearing Board last Wednesday, Jan . 27, on the grounds
that reporters were prevented from attending the delibera tions of the Board.
Accordmg to the Journal complaint, "COG (the Committee on Governance
document) prohibits closed meetings, "
In a memor~~dum writ~en in. answer to the Journal accusations, the Hea ring
Board .stated: Closed deliberatIOns of the Boa rd are not specifically prohibited
accordmg to any law, statute or executiv e order currently in force a nd known to
any of the Board members. Since the deliberations were closed , a ny observation
by any party would be denied."
.
Responding to a statement from P resident C ha rles McCa nn tha t "t he p resent
COG document. .. does not expressly state tha t the deliberatio ns rnay be closed ;
the~efore. your proc:~ures should be set up a t present with a view to ha ving y our
deliberations open, ' t~e H earing Board developed on Jan . 8 a p roposed
am~ndm~nt to COG which would allow the Board the alterna tive of having closed
deliberatIOns .
In the ~OG document the following sentence would be added: "D elibera tions of
the He~nng Board may be closed to the public at the discretion of the Hearing
Board. The amendment is still awaiting ratification by the Boa rd of T rustees.
.
When questioned on the Journal complaint , Russ Lidman, a member of the
~earing . Board, pointed o ut that the Journal w as being "picky ." Only the
mterruptlon of the Moss delibera tio ns p revented the amendment . from being
approved · by the Board of trustees. Lidma n also pointed out tha t "juries
t raditionally have closed sessions. "
Sp~aking for the Journa L John Fo ster, ma nagi ng edi tor, pointed out tha t this
was more than a moot point. When yo u tramp le o n the C O G documen t" he
~aid: ."yo~ a re trampling on the ideals of the Evergreen commun ity . T his cann~t be
JlistIfled Simply for bureaucratic convenience ."
Vi~e-President and . P rovost Ed Kormqndy said , ;'It is my understa nding that abl)
meetmgs o.f the I:I~armg Board. must, in line w ith the present COG document, ~
open pendmg ratifICation o f the prop osed a mendmen t of CO G 11."
January 30, 1975

~)

Experiencing the Spiritual Symposium

Page 13

~)

Experiencing the Spiritual Symposium

Page 13

Gttest Commentary
Afan.Kessler
Golq or Bust

Times Change
By Members of the Evergreen

in Coming Depression

Politica1 Information Center

BY GARY MARCUS
American soldiers in Vietnam again?
T~e possibility is quite real. According to
Time magazine, "Not sin ce January 1973 ,
when the Paris Peace Accords supposedly
brought peace, has fighting in Indochina
been so bloody. " Presiden t Ford a nd Defense Secretary Schlesinger have sk irted
answeri ng direct questions on the potential renewal of bombing in the North like
two-time crimina ls caught red-handed
Wit hout their lawyers . Unlike the exposed
knaves in the preceding adm inistration ,
Ford and .Schlesinger admitted g1,lilt when
they stated that the United States has
been flying reconnaisance flights over
North Vietnam. This is a direct violation
of Kissinger's highly venera ted ~ork of
diplomacy - the Paris Peace Accords. As
citizens of this country, we are in the
unique position of being both v ictims and
through the electoral process, jurors. As
such it ' is our responsibility to question
why a~d to find out what has really been
happening.
But alas, that may be quite difficult , for
when our top government officials aren' t
lying (remember the Pentagon Papers,
Watergate and the bombing of Cambod ia)
they are practicing sophistry that would
have the a ncient Greek masters dumbfounded l ~ drooling. Yes, they have told
us the war is over and that wounds must
be healed. They have a lso said that en- '
ergy might have to be rationed, the taxes
on 011 for heati ng homes raised and that
necessary socia l programs like health resea rch and free food for malnourished
~mericans cut. Yet they go on heading a
Dlas~hemous military machine, which according. to Representative Les Aspin of
WiSCOnSin , spent 8 .2 billion dollars on Indoc hin a since the Paris Peace ' Agreements
were Jubilantly hailed as th e end to the
war.
Now Ford, w ho adu lated over Kissinger's so-called accompJhment as jf it were
.1 new verse to the Star Spangled Banner,
wants Congress to allow our dubious
Iriends in the military 300 million tax dollars in addition to the $700 million all ocated for this fiscaf year. Hi s adminis tratil," want s Congress to ra ise the ce iling on
l11i1it,uy spending for Cambodia to over
S200 millil)n . In addition . it is reported
th.1t Fl)rd plan ~ tl) reque:ot in hi s nex t bud~t' t S1.3 h ll il," dl)lIars to sllpp6rt Viet \1,1 111 .10.1 l'\'t' r SOL) r-iilil'n t()r th e milit a ry .
PA~e H

Not out of Vietnam yet
Vietnam doesn't on ly sap us of money
With a bloodthirsty Dracula-like mania
but it depletes life susta ining veins of re~
sources such as o il to the minor key gurgling of m illi ons of barrels.
With the cold ~rroga nce of men who
have helped in the dropping of bombs on
scream ing people they have never seen
nor h eard, Ford and Kiss.inger now
threaten the Middle Eastern nations with

military interventio'n if they won't give us
the oil which lies in their homelands. I
wonder what color of people their blatant
power will come down upon next?
A sad result of these policies 'for us has
been inflation at a time when unemployment grows steadily larger. I feel no need
to delinea te the difficulties to ·the individual brought by our deformed economy
and misplaced priorities; shoppers, workers, students and families who are unable
to pay hospital bills live and die in a perpetual hangover from them.
For the Vietnamese people the results
have been far sadder. They have had to
suffer the bloody havoc reeked on their
li ves and their land while the United
States gove rnment supported the audaCiously corrupt Thieu dictatorship which
has behaved in ways diametrically op-

posed to democratic ideals. Ford's recent
comment that the $300 million in additional aid "could very likely be a key for
the future preservation of their freedom ... " is nonsensical. If he isn't trying
to .deceive us with such a comment then
apparently he has forgotten much: such
as Thieu's abolishing hamlet elections;
such a~ Thieu's police state and his jailing
of political opponents, such as Thieu being the only candidate in a so-called
demoCratic election.
. According to the nonpartisan organization , Amnesty International. there are
over 200,000 political prisoners in South
Vietnam. Many who have survived Vietnamese prisons and / or animal cages tell
Kafkaesque . stories of torture and mistreatment that would have left the Marquise de' Sa de in awe.
I think it is time Ford and Kissinger
r ea ll y become concerned with human
wounds rather than false, empty, brainwashing cliches like "peace with honor."
[n the eyes of many human beings around
the world , the United States no longer
symbolizes human justice but human mutil a tion due to. ruthless imperialistic greed .
To me a free nation is a nation that
holds elections such as those provided for
in the Paris Peace Accords. But the results
haven't been so nightmarishly tragic for
our present rulers. They have received
complimentary. Time .and Newsweek
cover stories and in one absurd case a
Nobel Peace Prize. Events like these bear
more resemblance to escapist schizophrenia than objective reality .
N<?w is the time for we, the people to
adamantly say "no more!" The new
United States Congress is considerably
more liberal than before. Ford will have
t? fight much harder for his bloody millions. Every tenth of a million dollars
matters . to many people in many ways.
We can and we must fight back for our
victimized selves and our victimized
brothers and sisters on other parts of the
earth. The Vietnamese have nobly fought

continued on page

1'7

Coop~r Point Journal

Unfort unately there is no way to stop the coming economic depression. This worldwide depression was forecast as early as 1967
by a small group of economists who favored a return to the gold
standard.
Our government ignored and continues to ignore these economists. The government has successfully postponed the depression
by vast amounts of deficit spending; the longer the government
postpones the depression the greater that depression will be. Not
only the U . S. governmept but almost all western governments
have been ' irresponsible.
Let's taks a look at the causes of the present economic crises,
the coming depression and vow to ourselves that after this depression we will establish a stable worldwide economy .
The present economic instability is caused by the government
printing paper money without gold to back it up.
But isn't the wealth of this country backed by our natural resources, industries, American know-how and labor? Yes. But the
tr.agedy is that without gold functioning as a commonly recognized store of value all foreign and domestic products have disproportionate prices.
A common argument against gold is that we are too sophisticated to rely on this uncivilized metal. However, for the past
3,000 years whenever an institution or government had authority
over issuing money, those institutions inflated and debased their
currency and after their currency fell gold was reinstated.
Why this rellance on gold? Because gold has proven the only
substance that satisfies all three functions of a currency :
1.) It is a medium of exchange.
2.) It is a measure of value.
3.) It is a store of valu e .
All non-gold currencies - the dollar, the franc, the yen, are
mediums of exchange and measures of value but no other currency is a store of value. Humans can't be trusted. Governments
can't be trusted ; at the slightest provocation they try to get a little
more somet hing for a li,ttle less. All a government has to do is
turn .on the printing press and order a new atom bomb. Gold is
more honest than governments. It can't be made or destroyed so
eas il y and as a result people everywhere trust it more than they
tr ust paper money.
Why did we get off the gold standard and how did we get into
this mess? It started long ago but we can point a finger at the end
of World War II when all countries except the United States were
devastated by war . Economics doesn't hold all the answers now
and it held even fewer answers then. Everyone was arguing about
what to do . Countries which had been destroyed , like Britain,
wanted to rebuild their industr ies and trade. Everyone wanted a
stable economy and full employment. The laissez faire policies
that led to the Great Depression were spit upon.
January 30, 1975

Onto the center stage stepped John Maynard Keynes. Keynes
had been revo lu tionizing economics. Among other observations he
pointed out that rich people spe nd less of the ir income than poor
people . Be that as it may, Keynes form ulated a plan to set the
world back on its feet a nd run smoo thly forever. That plan,
which more or less was put into effect, meant going off the gold
standard. The International Monetary Fund was formed and wa~
partly responsible for the rejuvenat ion of England and other countries that mi~ht not have been possible under an unsophisticated
gold standar~. But after about five years governments should
have realized that it was time to sw!tch back, not to an unsophisticated, but to a sophisticated gold standard.
Keynes died in 1946, but his ideas lived on and that's why we're
in thi s mess today. Some of his ideas are good and some are bad .
The good ones include realizing that government intervention is
necessary to maintain full emp loyment. The bad ones include the
concept of deficit spending which says, "Anytim e a government
needs money' it can borrow a nd let the future take care of itself. "
In short he legitimatized getting something for nothing. The effects
of thirty years of deficit spending is beg inning to take its toll.
Soaring inflation, high interest rates, and a r~distribution of
wealth from the poor to the rich are some of the effects. (The
poor pay the taxes which pay th e 10 percent interest on government bonds that the rich buy.)
Not only does the U. S. government print money but every government has been doing it ; and all of them at different rates! First
the nationa l eco nomy starts going to seed, then the international
economy has it s troub les compounded. Nobody knows w hat anything is wort h a nd major shifts in world currency values occur
rapidly.
Instead of slowing deficit spending we are increa sing it. It was
recently a nn ounced that last year we had a 30 billion dollar tax
deficit and next year that deficit w ill have doubled.
If the trouble had been acted on 10 years ago we wou ld have
pulled through . But it' s too late now. The o nly possible future is a
depression w hich. like an enema, will rid the world of bad
money .
The sad part is that our government still in sists that every thing
is OK . Even though they lega lized go ld they do not believe in the
go ld standard. In fact their legali zing gold is their way of saying
"gold is unimportant. " They refuse to acknow ledge the cause of
the problem . "Things wi ll pick \lP by the end of 1975." They
simply point to the strength of America and its people . A strength .
w hi ch is well founded but needs a littl e more realistic action from
the government to keep it s balance .
Let 's hope that the monetary policy-makers in our' government
. and abroad wise up and accept the fact that we're headed for a
depress ion and get it over with . And then formu late a rea li stic
worldwide mo netary policy.
continued on next page
Page 15

Gttest Commentary
Afan.Kessler
Golq or Bust

Times Change
By Members of the Evergreen

in Coming Depression

Politica1 Information Center

BY GARY MARCUS
American soldiers in Vietnam again?
T~e possibility is quite real. According to
Time magazine, "Not sin ce January 1973 ,
when the Paris Peace Accords supposedly
brought peace, has fighting in Indochina
been so bloody. " Presiden t Ford a nd Defense Secretary Schlesinger have sk irted
answeri ng direct questions on the potential renewal of bombing in the North like
two-time crimina ls caught red-handed
Wit hout their lawyers . Unlike the exposed
knaves in the preceding adm inistration ,
Ford and .Schlesinger admitted g1,lilt when
they stated that the United States has
been flying reconnaisance flights over
North Vietnam. This is a direct violation
of Kissinger's highly venera ted ~ork of
diplomacy - the Paris Peace Accords. As
citizens of this country, we are in the
unique position of being both v ictims and
through the electoral process, jurors. As
such it ' is our responsibility to question
why a~d to find out what has really been
happening.
But alas, that may be quite difficult , for
when our top government officials aren' t
lying (remember the Pentagon Papers,
Watergate and the bombing of Cambod ia)
they are practicing sophistry that would
have the a ncient Greek masters dumbfounded l ~ drooling. Yes, they have told
us the war is over and that wounds must
be healed. They have a lso said that en- '
ergy might have to be rationed, the taxes
on 011 for heati ng homes raised and that
necessary socia l programs like health resea rch and free food for malnourished
~mericans cut. Yet they go on heading a
Dlas~hemous military machine, which according. to Representative Les Aspin of
WiSCOnSin , spent 8 .2 billion dollars on Indoc hin a since the Paris Peace ' Agreements
were Jubilantly hailed as th e end to the
war.
Now Ford, w ho adu lated over Kissinger's so-called accompJhment as jf it were
.1 new verse to the Star Spangled Banner,
wants Congress to allow our dubious
Iriends in the military 300 million tax dollars in addition to the $700 million all ocated for this fiscaf year. Hi s adminis tratil," want s Congress to ra ise the ce iling on
l11i1it,uy spending for Cambodia to over
S200 millil)n . In addition . it is reported
th.1t Fl)rd plan ~ tl) reque:ot in hi s nex t bud~t' t S1.3 h ll il," dl)lIars to sllpp6rt Viet \1,1 111 .10.1 l'\'t' r SOL) r-iilil'n t()r th e milit a ry .
PA~e H

Not out of Vietnam yet
Vietnam doesn't on ly sap us of money
With a bloodthirsty Dracula-like mania
but it depletes life susta ining veins of re~
sources such as o il to the minor key gurgling of m illi ons of barrels.
With the cold ~rroga nce of men who
have helped in the dropping of bombs on
scream ing people they have never seen
nor h eard, Ford and Kiss.inger now
threaten the Middle Eastern nations with

military interventio'n if they won't give us
the oil which lies in their homelands. I
wonder what color of people their blatant
power will come down upon next?
A sad result of these policies 'for us has
been inflation at a time when unemployment grows steadily larger. I feel no need
to delinea te the difficulties to ·the individual brought by our deformed economy
and misplaced priorities; shoppers, workers, students and families who are unable
to pay hospital bills live and die in a perpetual hangover from them.
For the Vietnamese people the results
have been far sadder. They have had to
suffer the bloody havoc reeked on their
li ves and their land while the United
States gove rnment supported the audaCiously corrupt Thieu dictatorship which
has behaved in ways diametrically op-

posed to democratic ideals. Ford's recent
comment that the $300 million in additional aid "could very likely be a key for
the future preservation of their freedom ... " is nonsensical. If he isn't trying
to .deceive us with such a comment then
apparently he has forgotten much: such
as Thieu's abolishing hamlet elections;
such a~ Thieu's police state and his jailing
of political opponents, such as Thieu being the only candidate in a so-called
demoCratic election.
. According to the nonpartisan organization , Amnesty International. there are
over 200,000 political prisoners in South
Vietnam. Many who have survived Vietnamese prisons and / or animal cages tell
Kafkaesque . stories of torture and mistreatment that would have left the Marquise de' Sa de in awe.
I think it is time Ford and Kissinger
r ea ll y become concerned with human
wounds rather than false, empty, brainwashing cliches like "peace with honor."
[n the eyes of many human beings around
the world , the United States no longer
symbolizes human justice but human mutil a tion due to. ruthless imperialistic greed .
To me a free nation is a nation that
holds elections such as those provided for
in the Paris Peace Accords. But the results
haven't been so nightmarishly tragic for
our present rulers. They have received
complimentary. Time .and Newsweek
cover stories and in one absurd case a
Nobel Peace Prize. Events like these bear
more resemblance to escapist schizophrenia than objective reality .
N<?w is the time for we, the people to
adamantly say "no more!" The new
United States Congress is considerably
more liberal than before. Ford will have
t? fight much harder for his bloody millions. Every tenth of a million dollars
matters . to many people in many ways.
We can and we must fight back for our
victimized selves and our victimized
brothers and sisters on other parts of the
earth. The Vietnamese have nobly fought

continued on page

1'7

Coop~r Point Journal

Unfort unately there is no way to stop the coming economic depression. This worldwide depression was forecast as early as 1967
by a small group of economists who favored a return to the gold
standard.
Our government ignored and continues to ignore these economists. The government has successfully postponed the depression
by vast amounts of deficit spending; the longer the government
postpones the depression the greater that depression will be. Not
only the U . S. governmept but almost all western governments
have been ' irresponsible.
Let's taks a look at the causes of the present economic crises,
the coming depression and vow to ourselves that after this depression we will establish a stable worldwide economy .
The present economic instability is caused by the government
printing paper money without gold to back it up.
But isn't the wealth of this country backed by our natural resources, industries, American know-how and labor? Yes. But the
tr.agedy is that without gold functioning as a commonly recognized store of value all foreign and domestic products have disproportionate prices.
A common argument against gold is that we are too sophisticated to rely on this uncivilized metal. However, for the past
3,000 years whenever an institution or government had authority
over issuing money, those institutions inflated and debased their
currency and after their currency fell gold was reinstated.
Why this rellance on gold? Because gold has proven the only
substance that satisfies all three functions of a currency :
1.) It is a medium of exchange.
2.) It is a measure of value.
3.) It is a store of valu e .
All non-gold currencies - the dollar, the franc, the yen, are
mediums of exchange and measures of value but no other currency is a store of value. Humans can't be trusted. Governments
can't be trusted ; at the slightest provocation they try to get a little
more somet hing for a li,ttle less. All a government has to do is
turn .on the printing press and order a new atom bomb. Gold is
more honest than governments. It can't be made or destroyed so
eas il y and as a result people everywhere trust it more than they
tr ust paper money.
Why did we get off the gold standard and how did we get into
this mess? It started long ago but we can point a finger at the end
of World War II when all countries except the United States were
devastated by war . Economics doesn't hold all the answers now
and it held even fewer answers then. Everyone was arguing about
what to do . Countries which had been destroyed , like Britain,
wanted to rebuild their industr ies and trade. Everyone wanted a
stable economy and full employment. The laissez faire policies
that led to the Great Depression were spit upon.
January 30, 1975

Onto the center stage stepped John Maynard Keynes. Keynes
had been revo lu tionizing economics. Among other observations he
pointed out that rich people spe nd less of the ir income than poor
people . Be that as it may, Keynes form ulated a plan to set the
world back on its feet a nd run smoo thly forever. That plan,
which more or less was put into effect, meant going off the gold
standard. The International Monetary Fund was formed and wa~
partly responsible for the rejuvenat ion of England and other countries that mi~ht not have been possible under an unsophisticated
gold standar~. But after about five years governments should
have realized that it was time to sw!tch back, not to an unsophisticated, but to a sophisticated gold standard.
Keynes died in 1946, but his ideas lived on and that's why we're
in thi s mess today. Some of his ideas are good and some are bad .
The good ones include realizing that government intervention is
necessary to maintain full emp loyment. The bad ones include the
concept of deficit spending which says, "Anytim e a government
needs money' it can borrow a nd let the future take care of itself. "
In short he legitimatized getting something for nothing. The effects
of thirty years of deficit spending is beg inning to take its toll.
Soaring inflation, high interest rates, and a r~distribution of
wealth from the poor to the rich are some of the effects. (The
poor pay the taxes which pay th e 10 percent interest on government bonds that the rich buy.)
Not only does the U. S. government print money but every government has been doing it ; and all of them at different rates! First
the nationa l eco nomy starts going to seed, then the international
economy has it s troub les compounded. Nobody knows w hat anything is wort h a nd major shifts in world currency values occur
rapidly.
Instead of slowing deficit spending we are increa sing it. It was
recently a nn ounced that last year we had a 30 billion dollar tax
deficit and next year that deficit w ill have doubled.
If the trouble had been acted on 10 years ago we wou ld have
pulled through . But it' s too late now. The o nly possible future is a
depression w hich. like an enema, will rid the world of bad
money .
The sad part is that our government still in sists that every thing
is OK . Even though they lega lized go ld they do not believe in the
go ld standard. In fact their legali zing gold is their way of saying
"gold is unimportant. " They refuse to acknow ledge the cause of
the problem . "Things wi ll pick \lP by the end of 1975." They
simply point to the strength of America and its people . A strength .
w hi ch is well founded but needs a littl e more realistic action from
the government to keep it s balance .
Let 's hope that the monetary policy-makers in our' government
. and abroad wise up and accept the fact that we're headed for a
depress ion and get it over with . And then formu late a rea li stic
worldwide mo netary policy.
continued on next page
Page 15

continued from page 14

support it.

a lone ly struggle against the avalanche ot
cold technology and capitalism for too
lo ng. But remarkably they haven 't yet
yielded to foreign intervention .

Passage could very well mean national
pub licity. That would be a significant addition to the snowbal l of "doing something" which has once again started to
grow out of the awareness and subsequent
outrage of human beings in this nation .
P lease join your brothers and sisters. We
need whatever help you can share, now
and in the future . Come to the demonstration and come to EPIC meetings . Toge ther we can succeed .

GET YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS AT

continued from preceding page

&ergreen Savinqs As.!ociation
Cooper Pt & Harrison
lacey - 817 Sleater-Kinnev

SIAIEt'S

Here is my modest proposal for a noninflationary, full emp loyment world
economy which allows poor countries to
develop.

943-8086
491-4341l

.AT IN OR TAK. OUT

SIAIEt'S

11 VARIETIES OF

.357·757~

107S.'... S••
Ig..' ..... ....
t)".,.a CIty Hal

_

& DlVlSIOI
In••0.,.,..',
SH!HEY'S ;, :.~'." ,-" # '2' '''Afikl~tt
,,,.... c.ntw
_

4

_

__

_

__

CUT - RATE AUTO ·PARTS
DlSCOU NT PRICES

1027 E. 4th
Foreign Car Oil Fi lters . .. .. .. '.' .. .. . . . . . .. . .. . . $2.95
Tune- Up Kits . .. . . ..... . . ... .. . .. . .. .. . $2.95 - $3.95
D AT SUN

TOYOTA

VOLKSWAGEN

Your counselor
says you have
good reason
to feel inferior.
You owe yourself an Oly.
" "

P~e 16

1:3' ,,:. ".1 Co·npony. Olympia. W as h l ng l on ' O LY ' R
'\
( .... ',I" ~ : .1 ('' (no t rs i:U C rp r yc lab lc

. '1 .) To end inflation fore~er we should
establish a world bank with one currency
based on the gold standard . The bank will
adjust the standard to reflect shifts in
wealth and productivity of each country.
2.) The world bank should operate like "
a commercial bank, making loans and accepting deposits, thereby increasing the efficiency of capital. Special consideration
will be given to developing countries who
could obtain loan s with no political
strings attached .

3.) JFull employment ~ill be achieved
through each individual cout:\lry's government policy . No deficit spending but
plenty of spending to employ the unemployed in constructive public work programs such as education, hospitals, and
urban planning. Military spending must
be eliminated. It is not only foolish but
too expensive . It does not aid the economit strength of a country, imperialism
aside . Japan is an example of a country
with a low military budget. Japan rose
from ruins and in 30 years became an '
economic giant. (Even though Japan failed
in other areas, i.e ., pollution, cut-throat
social competition , and an increasingly
plastic culture.)
For those interested in this subject,
radio KAOS, 89.3 FM , will be broadcasting a series of lectures daily from 4 to
4 : 30 p. rri. during the week of Feb. 4. This
Monday, Feb. 4, C. V. Meyers speak.s on
Humanity, Energy and Gold . This is an
entertainmg lecture on the true price on
go ld , the oil price limit, and the coming
disaster. Tuesday, John Exter, former economics professor, forme r vice-president of
First National City Bank, and forme r
member of the Federal Reserve ' board,
gives a comprehensive view of world economics. On Wednesday, Alden Wells criticizes the past 40 years of economic
policy . Thursday, George Stevens gives a
monotone reading of an interesting lecture
by Franz Pick who writes about deficit
spending and inflation . And on Friday,
Dr. John Hospers gives a right wing view
of the importance of gold, the subjugation
of Americans by our government, a
the
importance of laissez faire . He uses stirring example by talking about Stalin's
reign of terror and the cost in human misery for Soviet gold .

At the Evergreen Political Information
Center (EPIC) ki~sk there is a petition
protesting the fiasco of continued United
States involvement in Indochina . It will
be sent to congresspersons. I urge you to
read it and decide if you can support it
with your signature . An additional and
more effective means of gaining change is
to write your own letter to your congressperson. For those who feel they would
like to do this but can't, there is a form
letter at the EPIC kiosk which can be
used for reference or sent as itself.
Jan. 27 marks the second anniversary of
the Paris Peace Accords. But unfortunately
our trust in the government soothsayers'
utterances of peace was unfounded. As a
small but necessary part of the attempt to
make peace in Indochina a reality , a demonstration will be held Saturday, Feb. 1
beginning at noon at Sylvester Park in
Olympia, on Capitol Way next to the
Greyhound bus terminal .
Knowledgeable speakers will talk , often
o n the basis of first hand information on
the breaking of the Paris Peace Accdrds,
political prisoners, amnesty and the relati onship of .the economy to United States
involvement in Indochina . Their views
and information will often be ones you
normally don't get via the media. Afterwa rds, many of us will march to the Sta te
Capitol where a memorial protesting
United States policy in Indochina will be
presented to a state legislator.
A copy of this memorial is at the EPIC
kiosk . later in the week we will be lobbying to have the memorial passed by the
State legislature. Please read it and if you
agree, let your legislator know that you

Coo per Point Journal

I

I

· ' ~m

,..:~~\ ..

iiAi

DRUGS
WESTSIDE CENTER 943-3311

Adult Singles Community .

Fully .
Furnished
Apartments.

All
Utilities
Included
Hiking and
Fishing
Close8y

F!Janned
Social
Functions

IMPORTED TEAS
Assam
Darjeeling .
Irish Breakfast
Orange Spice I
English
Breakfast
.I
.
Earl Grey
Jasmine) ,
Queeri Victoria ·

Georgia Blend
. Pennyroyal
iSpearmint
Ceylon '
Tea With Mint
lavender
Peppermint
Chamomile

DISCOVER
the

. COLONY INN GROUP

~69.5

FRESH COFFEE BEANS TOO I

456-8988
PER MONTH
ma ll 3

G u('s t co m men taries in til e Jo urnal are
til e o pinio ns of th e indiv id ual w riters and
do no t necessarily rep resent the opinions
o f tlr l' edi to rs o r tire staff.

CoIQny

H'E NDRICKS

SOUTH SQ!jND CENTER
Ja nua ry 30, 1975

1818 ~••• ~
OLYMPIA. WASHINGTON
tI501
Page 17

continued from page 14

support it.

a lone ly struggle against the avalanche ot
cold technology and capitalism for too
lo ng. But remarkably they haven 't yet
yielded to foreign intervention .

Passage could very well mean national
pub licity. That would be a significant addition to the snowbal l of "doing something" which has once again started to
grow out of the awareness and subsequent
outrage of human beings in this nation .
P lease join your brothers and sisters. We
need whatever help you can share, now
and in the future . Come to the demonstration and come to EPIC meetings . Toge ther we can succeed .

GET YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS AT

continued from preceding page

&ergreen Savinqs As.!ociation
Cooper Pt & Harrison
lacey - 817 Sleater-Kinnev

SIAIEt'S

Here is my modest proposal for a noninflationary, full emp loyment world
economy which allows poor countries to
develop.

943-8086
491-4341l

.AT IN OR TAK. OUT

SIAIEt'S

11 VARIETIES OF

.357·757~

107S.'... S••
Ig..' ..... ....
t)".,.a CIty Hal

_

& DlVlSIOI
In••0.,.,..',
SH!HEY'S ;, :.~'." ,-" # '2' '''Afikl~tt
,,,.... c.ntw
_

4

_

__

_

__

CUT - RATE AUTO ·PARTS
DlSCOU NT PRICES

1027 E. 4th
Foreign Car Oil Fi lters . .. .. .. '.' .. .. . . . . . .. . .. . . $2.95
Tune- Up Kits . .. . . ..... . . ... .. . .. . .. .. . $2.95 - $3.95
D AT SUN

TOYOTA

VOLKSWAGEN

Your counselor
says you have
good reason
to feel inferior.
You owe yourself an Oly.
" "

P~e 16

1:3' ,,:. ".1 Co·npony. Olympia. W as h l ng l on ' O LY ' R
'\
( .... ',I" ~ : .1 ('' (no t rs i:U C rp r yc lab lc

. '1 .) To end inflation fore~er we should
establish a world bank with one currency
based on the gold standard . The bank will
adjust the standard to reflect shifts in
wealth and productivity of each country.
2.) The world bank should operate like "
a commercial bank, making loans and accepting deposits, thereby increasing the efficiency of capital. Special consideration
will be given to developing countries who
could obtain loan s with no political
strings attached .

3.) JFull employment ~ill be achieved
through each individual cout:\lry's government policy . No deficit spending but
plenty of spending to employ the unemployed in constructive public work programs such as education, hospitals, and
urban planning. Military spending must
be eliminated. It is not only foolish but
too expensive . It does not aid the economit strength of a country, imperialism
aside . Japan is an example of a country
with a low military budget. Japan rose
from ruins and in 30 years became an '
economic giant. (Even though Japan failed
in other areas, i.e ., pollution, cut-throat
social competition , and an increasingly
plastic culture.)
For those interested in this subject,
radio KAOS, 89.3 FM , will be broadcasting a series of lectures daily from 4 to
4 : 30 p. rri. during the week of Feb. 4. This
Monday, Feb. 4, C. V. Meyers speak.s on
Humanity, Energy and Gold . This is an
entertainmg lecture on the true price on
go ld , the oil price limit, and the coming
disaster. Tuesday, John Exter, former economics professor, forme r vice-president of
First National City Bank, and forme r
member of the Federal Reserve ' board,
gives a comprehensive view of world economics. On Wednesday, Alden Wells criticizes the past 40 years of economic
policy . Thursday, George Stevens gives a
monotone reading of an interesting lecture
by Franz Pick who writes about deficit
spending and inflation . And on Friday,
Dr. John Hospers gives a right wing view
of the importance of gold, the subjugation
of Americans by our government, a
the
importance of laissez faire . He uses stirring example by talking about Stalin's
reign of terror and the cost in human misery for Soviet gold .

At the Evergreen Political Information
Center (EPIC) ki~sk there is a petition
protesting the fiasco of continued United
States involvement in Indochina . It will
be sent to congresspersons. I urge you to
read it and decide if you can support it
with your signature . An additional and
more effective means of gaining change is
to write your own letter to your congressperson. For those who feel they would
like to do this but can't, there is a form
letter at the EPIC kiosk which can be
used for reference or sent as itself.
Jan. 27 marks the second anniversary of
the Paris Peace Accords. But unfortunately
our trust in the government soothsayers'
utterances of peace was unfounded. As a
small but necessary part of the attempt to
make peace in Indochina a reality , a demonstration will be held Saturday, Feb. 1
beginning at noon at Sylvester Park in
Olympia, on Capitol Way next to the
Greyhound bus terminal .
Knowledgeable speakers will talk , often
o n the basis of first hand information on
the breaking of the Paris Peace Accdrds,
political prisoners, amnesty and the relati onship of .the economy to United States
involvement in Indochina . Their views
and information will often be ones you
normally don't get via the media. Afterwa rds, many of us will march to the Sta te
Capitol where a memorial protesting
United States policy in Indochina will be
presented to a state legislator.
A copy of this memorial is at the EPIC
kiosk . later in the week we will be lobbying to have the memorial passed by the
State legislature. Please read it and if you
agree, let your legislator know that you

Coo per Point Journal

I

I

· ' ~m

,..:~~\ ..

iiAi

DRUGS
WESTSIDE CENTER 943-3311

Adult Singles Community .

Fully .
Furnished
Apartments.

All
Utilities
Included
Hiking and
Fishing
Close8y

F!Janned
Social
Functions

IMPORTED TEAS
Assam
Darjeeling .
Irish Breakfast
Orange Spice I
English
Breakfast
.I
.
Earl Grey
Jasmine) ,
Queeri Victoria ·

Georgia Blend
. Pennyroyal
iSpearmint
Ceylon '
Tea With Mint
lavender
Peppermint
Chamomile

DISCOVER
the

. COLONY INN GROUP

~69.5

FRESH COFFEE BEANS TOO I

456-8988
PER MONTH
ma ll 3

G u('s t co m men taries in til e Jo urnal are
til e o pinio ns of th e indiv id ual w riters and
do no t necessarily rep resent the opinions
o f tlr l' edi to rs o r tire staff.

CoIQny

H'E NDRICKS

SOUTH SQ!jND CENTER
Ja nua ry 30, 1975

1818 ~••• ~
OLYMPIA. WASHINGTON
tI501
Page 17

................................................
ALL WAYS TRAVEL SERVICE, INC.

943-8701

.WESTSIDE SHOPPING CENTER

943.8700

. OLYMPIA , WASHINGTON

............. ...........................................
~

PETERSON'S

WESTSIDE SHOPPING CENTER
YOUR FRIENDLY GROCERY STORE··
FEATURING IN STORE BAKERY
MEXICAN,CHINESE, AND ITALlt'N
FOODS.
FINE SELECTION OF WINES AND BEER
HEALTH FOODS
FRE~H VEGETABLES & COURTEOUS SERVICE

~-tOURS~9to9 daily 11to7 sunday

FRESH MEAT ,SOLO .ON SUNDAY
r=::::=======~-==---~-- I ·

EVERGREEN
VILLAGES
NOW OFFERING FURNISHED APTS.

$110 $133 $150 $162
1 BfI)ROOM

'2- SEDROOM

3 BEDROOM

4' BEDROOM

spacious living units - westinghouse appliances - ~ drapes and carpets, . I,i nen storage,
closet space - clean electric heat, master TV hookup - patios, glass doors
and landscaped courtyards 3 months to pay deposit
Ask about Rent-Sharing 'plan
$25 Reward for TENNANT jtEFERRAl
(.-Ill5I' tll

Westside Shopping eellfer and bus sfOp)

5' '5 N. DIVIS
P~ge

18

AVE. I

.ph'943-5505

continued from page 9
• Hours for the use of the darkroom in
Building 211 have been set for winter
quarter. The darkroom will be closed on
Tuesdays and Saturdays and open during
t he following hours : Mondays, 1: 30 to
10:30 p .m.; Wednesdays, 1:30 to 10:30
p.m .; Thursdays, 9:30 a.m. to 6:30
p.m.; Fridays, 1: 30 to 6 p.m.; and Sundays, 11:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m.
Fees for use of the darkroom are 50
cents for a single use and $7.50 for the entire quarter.
It The Headrest Club will reopen Saturday, Feb. 1, at 8 p.m. , on the fourth floor
of the Library building. The cover charge
will be two dollars at the door and one
dollar for a pizza dinner. The "Jazz Jammers" will provide the evening's entertainment.
• WANTED: TALENT. Radio station
KAOS-FM needs a news announcer. Interested persons may call Barb Harnisch,
866-6397, or apply in person at the
KAOS studios in CAB rm. 304 .
. • Services and Activities (S&A) Board
meetings have been set for the following
Wednesdays: Feb. 5 and 19, and Mar. 5
and 19, according to Executive Secre,tary
Vince Pepka .
• The Evergreen Sounding Board will be
represented in two campus television '
broadcasts next week . "Campus Reports"
on Monday , Feb . 3, at 12)0 p.m., covers
Sounding Board highlights . Sounding
Board' moderator Larry Mausch will be
interviewed in a press conference aired
T hursday, Feb. 6, .at 12:10 p.m., on
"How Credible is the Sounding Board?"
The Campus Reports and conference are
produced weekly by the Public Information and Minority Affairs group contract.
• Carl J. Hocevar will talk here on "Nuclear Power: Is It Safe?" in Lee. Hall 1,
on Wednesday, Feb. 5, at 7:30 p.m.
Hocevar, formerly a safety expert with
the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) resigned last year as he thought the AEC ig. nored expert advice on reactor safety
problems., He is currently with the Union
of Concerned Scientists, and was responsible for developing safety analyses computer programs for nuclear reactors.
• The proposal to decrease the number of
individual contracts will be discussed at a
Town Meeting to be held at 1 :30 p.m. tomorrow, Jan. 31, on the third floor library balcony .
• "Prairie Fire, " a revolutionary singing
group from San Francisco, will be performing o n campus Thursday, Feb. 6 in
Lee. Hall ", at 7:30 p.m . Performing with
them will also be a working class ban'd
from Tacoma, "Rising Storm," ventrilOquists D a n and Larry, and a speaker from
the Revolutionary Union. There will be a
donation of $1.50.
• There will be a mandat~ry meeting of
Amnesty Inlernational Monday, Feb. 3 at
5 p .m . o n the third fl oor library balcony.
Cooper r oint Journal

.' .

= = = = = = = COOPER POINT JOURNAL ::;::=======

CULTURE.ARTS.ENTERTAINMENT:

Sports at Evergreen
Hard to Find, They Still 'E xist
By LEN WALLICK
It's almost like searching for some rare and exotic animal.
You're not quite sure what it looks like, and you really don't
know where to start. Of course there are no giant stadiums, no
letterman's jacket's, no astro-turf fields ; nobody expects that.
When closer inquiry reveals, however,. not even so much as a
small gymnasium one begins to wonder.
Does athletics re~lly exist at Evergreen 1 The answer is an enthusiastic, though 'qualified, yes . Facilities and money are often
lacking, and in some cases practically non-existent. But such hardships are more than made up for by people who are usually full time s~udents as well as avid athletes. Examples are abundant,
even in the middle of a cold, wet winter.
The college swimming pool, when normally occupied by an assortment of aquaphiles , is a calm and uncluttered scene. On one
particular Saturday (Jan , 12) things were decidedly out of the ordinary. Strung about ]0 feet above the water; a chaotic web of
cable and cord supported a number of what seemed to be giant
candy canes . In reality these were wooden dowel-sticks, paired by
color (one bearing green, and white stripes, the o ther pain ted alterna tely white and red) and numbered to form "g.ltes ," And w hat
January 30, 1975' ·...

was intended to go through those suspended "gates1 " The answer
was kayaks and canoes, a ~hole pool full of them .
The event was the first annual Evergreen Pool Slalom. Organized by Evergreen student Chris -Walters, the contest attracted i4
"paddlers" from all over Western Washington and Canada. Each
contestant maneuvered his or' her boat through the gates in their
designated order, trying for the fastest possible time while striving
to avoid any physical contact with the gates themselves. Touching
one of the sticks is penalized by the addition of 10 or mor~
"points" to the amount of time (in seconds) it takes to complete
the prescribed course.
Walters termed the event a success and is now preparing (along
with several other Evergreen students) for an upcoming season of
slalom competition. Walters and other canoeists and kayakers
hold "pool sessions" both for their own practice and for anyone
wishing to come and learn the sport themselves . .
While the pool slalom was kicking off the sporting season at
Evergreen , another group was picking up from where they left off
before Christmas vacation .
Evergreen ha s entries in both the men's and women 's divisions

cont inued on page 23
Page 19

................................................
ALL WAYS TRAVEL SERVICE, INC.

943-8701

.WESTSIDE SHOPPING CENTER

943.8700

. OLYMPIA , WASHINGTON

............. ...........................................
~

PETERSON'S

WESTSIDE SHOPPING CENTER
YOUR FRIENDLY GROCERY STORE··
FEATURING IN STORE BAKERY
MEXICAN,CHINESE, AND ITALlt'N
FOODS.
FINE SELECTION OF WINES AND BEER
HEALTH FOODS
FRE~H VEGETABLES & COURTEOUS SERVICE

~-tOURS~9to9 daily 11to7 sunday

FRESH MEAT ,SOLO .ON SUNDAY
r=::::=======~-==---~-- I ·

EVERGREEN
VILLAGES
NOW OFFERING FURNISHED APTS.

$110 $133 $150 $162
1 BfI)ROOM

'2- SEDROOM

3 BEDROOM

4' BEDROOM

spacious living units - westinghouse appliances - ~ drapes and carpets, . I,i nen storage,
closet space - clean electric heat, master TV hookup - patios, glass doors
and landscaped courtyards 3 months to pay deposit
Ask about Rent-Sharing 'plan
$25 Reward for TENNANT jtEFERRAl
(.-Ill5I' tll

Westside Shopping eellfer and bus sfOp)

5' '5 N. DIVIS
P~ge

18

AVE. I

.ph'943-5505

continued from page 9
• Hours for the use of the darkroom in
Building 211 have been set for winter
quarter. The darkroom will be closed on
Tuesdays and Saturdays and open during
t he following hours : Mondays, 1: 30 to
10:30 p .m.; Wednesdays, 1:30 to 10:30
p.m .; Thursdays, 9:30 a.m. to 6:30
p.m.; Fridays, 1: 30 to 6 p.m.; and Sundays, 11:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m.
Fees for use of the darkroom are 50
cents for a single use and $7.50 for the entire quarter.
It The Headrest Club will reopen Saturday, Feb. 1, at 8 p.m. , on the fourth floor
of the Library building. The cover charge
will be two dollars at the door and one
dollar for a pizza dinner. The "Jazz Jammers" will provide the evening's entertainment.
• WANTED: TALENT. Radio station
KAOS-FM needs a news announcer. Interested persons may call Barb Harnisch,
866-6397, or apply in person at the
KAOS studios in CAB rm. 304 .
. • Services and Activities (S&A) Board
meetings have been set for the following
Wednesdays: Feb. 5 and 19, and Mar. 5
and 19, according to Executive Secre,tary
Vince Pepka .
• The Evergreen Sounding Board will be
represented in two campus television '
broadcasts next week . "Campus Reports"
on Monday , Feb . 3, at 12)0 p.m., covers
Sounding Board highlights . Sounding
Board' moderator Larry Mausch will be
interviewed in a press conference aired
T hursday, Feb. 6, .at 12:10 p.m., on
"How Credible is the Sounding Board?"
The Campus Reports and conference are
produced weekly by the Public Information and Minority Affairs group contract.
• Carl J. Hocevar will talk here on "Nuclear Power: Is It Safe?" in Lee. Hall 1,
on Wednesday, Feb. 5, at 7:30 p.m.
Hocevar, formerly a safety expert with
the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) resigned last year as he thought the AEC ig. nored expert advice on reactor safety
problems., He is currently with the Union
of Concerned Scientists, and was responsible for developing safety analyses computer programs for nuclear reactors.
• The proposal to decrease the number of
individual contracts will be discussed at a
Town Meeting to be held at 1 :30 p.m. tomorrow, Jan. 31, on the third floor library balcony .
• "Prairie Fire, " a revolutionary singing
group from San Francisco, will be performing o n campus Thursday, Feb. 6 in
Lee. Hall ", at 7:30 p.m . Performing with
them will also be a working class ban'd
from Tacoma, "Rising Storm," ventrilOquists D a n and Larry, and a speaker from
the Revolutionary Union. There will be a
donation of $1.50.
• There will be a mandat~ry meeting of
Amnesty Inlernational Monday, Feb. 3 at
5 p .m . o n the third fl oor library balcony.
Cooper r oint Journal

.' .

= = = = = = = COOPER POINT JOURNAL ::;::=======

CULTURE.ARTS.ENTERTAINMENT:

Sports at Evergreen
Hard to Find, They Still 'E xist
By LEN WALLICK
It's almost like searching for some rare and exotic animal.
You're not quite sure what it looks like, and you really don't
know where to start. Of course there are no giant stadiums, no
letterman's jacket's, no astro-turf fields ; nobody expects that.
When closer inquiry reveals, however,. not even so much as a
small gymnasium one begins to wonder.
Does athletics re~lly exist at Evergreen 1 The answer is an enthusiastic, though 'qualified, yes . Facilities and money are often
lacking, and in some cases practically non-existent. But such hardships are more than made up for by people who are usually full time s~udents as well as avid athletes. Examples are abundant,
even in the middle of a cold, wet winter.
The college swimming pool, when normally occupied by an assortment of aquaphiles , is a calm and uncluttered scene. On one
particular Saturday (Jan , 12) things were decidedly out of the ordinary. Strung about ]0 feet above the water; a chaotic web of
cable and cord supported a number of what seemed to be giant
candy canes . In reality these were wooden dowel-sticks, paired by
color (one bearing green, and white stripes, the o ther pain ted alterna tely white and red) and numbered to form "g.ltes ," And w hat
January 30, 1975' ·...

was intended to go through those suspended "gates1 " The answer
was kayaks and canoes, a ~hole pool full of them .
The event was the first annual Evergreen Pool Slalom. Organized by Evergreen student Chris -Walters, the contest attracted i4
"paddlers" from all over Western Washington and Canada. Each
contestant maneuvered his or' her boat through the gates in their
designated order, trying for the fastest possible time while striving
to avoid any physical contact with the gates themselves. Touching
one of the sticks is penalized by the addition of 10 or mor~
"points" to the amount of time (in seconds) it takes to complete
the prescribed course.
Walters termed the event a success and is now preparing (along
with several other Evergreen students) for an upcoming season of
slalom competition. Walters and other canoeists and kayakers
hold "pool sessions" both for their own practice and for anyone
wishing to come and learn the sport themselves . .
While the pool slalom was kicking off the sporting season at
Evergreen , another group was picking up from where they left off
before Christmas vacation .
Evergreen ha s entries in both the men's and women 's divisions

cont inued on page 23
Page 19

Galleries

Books/Cecile Henault

Culture
"Guide
OLYMPIA

THE CYCLE OF ZEN

Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance:
An Inquiry into Valu es
.
By Robert M. Pirsig
William M o rrow & Compar1Y, N ew York , 1974

It' s difficult to write about Z en And The Art
of Motorcycle Maintenance . Like Quality ,
which the book is really all about , the moment
you try and define it , give it words, it becomes
something else, something less. But Pirsig must
have felt he had so mething important to say
when he wrote the book. In reviewing it, I
,agree with the nature of the importance of what
he says. Rather than attempt to define , sometimes it' s better to use analogies. Analogies are
w hat Pirsig uses.
The book talks about the author's motorcycle
trip ' with hi s so n from Minnesota , through Montana 'and the mountains, and back down into
the populated country of California and the
coast. He talks about how ne fixes motorcycles
by not fearing the outward appearance of the
see mingly incomprehensible conglomeration of
a ll the moving parts, and by first taking the
time to get to know the motorcycle's underlying
form.
The book is about the merging of dualisms.
The author searches for Phaedrus, t,he ghost of .
himself from his past , before his mental breakdowns and shock therapy. He searches for a ' reconciliation between his present self and his self
. that went mad in it s search for the Ghost of
Reason several years earlier. 'He searches for a
reconci liation with hi s son, who remembers his
father of the past, who had an underlying
Quality, a so n confused now because he can no
longer perceive that Qua li ty.
In talking about what brought Phaedrus to
his madness , his own unre lenting search, in
traveling through the mountains and down to
the ocea n . those reconciliations are met. Dualism s of the mind merge naturally , but only after
crises.
~aedrus ' search fo r th e G host of Reason
Pdge 20

brought ~im by those we consider the fathers of
Western philosophy (Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle) ; back to where Quality, everchanging,
flexible Quality, was believed in more than stagnant , . constant truths. He tells how Quality
wasn't enoug h . Those philosophers needed
something tangible to grasp onto. And so they
convinced the Western world, through . logic,
that the truths of Reason should be above all.
They proved that q uality should become subservient to Reason, underlying forms subservient
to apparent realities . Quality became lost along
the way. Faith in Reason brought a society that
saw technology as the great goal. Quality became lost, hidden - but it didn't leave completely. Reason can dictate the subservience of
Qual ity, but Quality will always emerge from
its depths, often in confused ways.
Pirsig tells of his motorcycle friends, who re-.
fuse to attempt to fix their motorcycle, are
frightened of it, shun its technological complexities and implications . It's a gut feeling they
have, not understanding but wanting to avoid
the harmful effects of a technological world . Yet
their dependence on machines still ex ists. It is
those confused attempts at bringing back Quality., because it will not be subservient, that we
see around us everywhere. Pirsig says the confusion need not exist. Realities need not be
shunned in making Quality once again predominant. Realities will merge naturally with individual true recognitions of Quality.
Reading Zen And The Art of Motorcycle
Maintenance brought me closer to the realization of how we accept truths and facts ~hat are
handed to us, thus preventing fixing. Most 'actions are vague attempts to get at Qua lity. But
it' s that unquestioning acceptance that prevents
us from rea ll y getting there. It's not enough to
just negate what appears to be negative realities.
If you take the time to get to know the underlying form of th e rea lities, then what went wrung,
a nd where, a nd why, will float into your con-

,,;u" ' ",'" O ol y t h , " = : s e (;,;og.

Ongoing ..
An ex hibi t entitl ed " Word A rt "
is currently showing at th e Li brary ga ll ery . The ex hibit , com piled by Seatt le art ist and publi sher M ic hael Waiter, seeks to
prese nt works th at use words as
art, and it will be o n di sp la y
through Feb . 15.

Cinema
, rlda ,' . ., - l 1 ...
hid av Nite him : Playtime, a
I ren ch (onwdy rarely avai lab le
In llw U . S. ; don ' t mi "
thi s
( han ce to ~ee It Writer -directo rla r jacqul' ~ Tati ( Mr. Hulot's
Holiday, Traffic) has in this fi lm
Ilerff'cted hi s comi c v i ~ i on, whi c h
i ~ that everyone IS a qar and a
v ic tim . Althoug h the fi lm i ~ in
I re ne h and Eng li sh , the dialogu e
i ~ unimport ant ;1)OSt of th e
hil arj ous soundtrack co mi sts of
c li c ks. t<IPS, creak,. and wh irs as
Tat-i 's charac tf'r s blund er through
hi s iuturi sti c wo rl d . Immense ly
hum an, immense lv funnv .
Sunua y, 2-2 .
Evergreen Coffeehouse (AS H
Co mmon s) ' j a m es Dean , juli e
Harri s. Jo Van Flee t , and Ray mond Massey star in Elia Kaza n'S
ma~t e rp'ie ce' East of Eden (1954) .
This fi lm portrays a rebellious
son ( Dea li ) in a search fo r hi s
lost mother and hi s ; ain att empt s
to win hi s father 's love. Set in
prE' -Wo rid War I Ca li fornia, the
fi lm b ea utifully ca ptures the
mood and power of john Stein be ck 's sto ry .
Com ing :
Tu esda y, 2-18 .
, The Covernor 's r es t ivai of the
Art s br in gs th e sil e nt c l as si c
Wings to the Olympi c Th eater .
Starring Ceorge Arlin , Clara Bow ,
and Cary Coope r , th e fi 1m is an
t'xc iting story of World War I fly ers, and it won th e ve ry first Osca r in 1927 . It was direc ted by
W illi am W ellm an, and w ill be
acco mp a ni e d by an o ri ginal
musi ca l sc ore by Andy Crow .
plaVE'd o n th e Olympi c's big
Wurlitzer org,an .
Ongoing .
~'d '('
The Towering Inferno
\ held over for 5t h week) : O lym pia audien ces ~ee m to be se tting
it local record , queueing up by
th e hundred s to see an all-sldf
(,lq . headed by Paul Newman
and Steve Mcqueen. burning up
In th e' world ', tall t'q skysc raper

In Concert
, rid,l y. , - l'I .
Appl!'ldlll (0 1 it'phollW . 1 hI'
'>ou 'w(',l!'r '>tr in g Ildnel ,llld th('
'>llI'ri>llfllt' Cou nt y K!'vt'lpr, clnd
I ri (' nd , pn',!,,)t ,I progr,lm of go,,,,, 1 mu,i( Door, Oll!'n at H . 10.
~Ol t(Jr".J Y.

i·' .

I vprgwI' 1l (ol(I'I'hllll't' I A'>I I
Common ,) · Jprr Stl'illh,nt ,illg'
dlHI pl.lY ' g l/l~dr , >1\ .I Vdflt't y .. t
orig lll,t! .lIHI horrow(,d tllllt"

AI'I''' ·I.l1I1 (,J! t t 'I'I1IHI'"
li lt ,
I <I lk (1·IlIl·r oh,,'rvl " ii, (ir " .111111
\: 1·r , .Ir y IlI 'gllllling .111\ 10. In 'l' rl'
1/1 ', 11l11t ' 111 ,

Cooper Point Journal

Food/ Nanette Westerman

APPL.ES' WAY

TACOM~

In Concert

".

Friday, 1-3 1 .
Court C Coffeehouse : C regg
Baker and Cowboy Cary Kanter
perform .
.
Sa turday, 2-1 ..
Court C Coffeehouse : Robert
Rhod e sings and plays guitar, per forming many exce ll ent original
story songs.
.
SEATTLE
Cinema

Thursda y,

1-3()

Th e Sea ttl e Art Museum present s A lf red Hit chcock's Saboteur
(1942) . Robert Cumm in gs, Prisc illa Lah e. and Otto Kruger star
in thi s story of an innoce nt man
accused of sa botage during
Wo rld War II. ,A,n ordinary man
unwittingly ca ught in a web of
int;rgue ·is a Hit chcock trade, mark . and thi s film co ntai ns the
classic d enouem ent at th e Sta tu e
of Lib ertv . Shows at 7 :30
Frida y, "-J 1 .
The unmatchabl e Casablanca
(1942). with Humphrey Bogart ,
Ingrid Bergman, Pau l Henreid ,
Claude Rain s, Sidn ey Creenstreet ,
and Peter Lo rre, show s at the
Seatt le Center Food C ir c~s Court
at 6 : 30, free admi ssio n Directed
by Mic hae l Curti z, it is one of
th e best film s ever m ad e.
Th e ASUW Film Seri es p rese nt s Jo hn Hu ston 's ve rsion of
H e rm a n M e l vi ll e's Moby Dick
(19';6) . Sta rring C regory Peck as
Ca ptain Ahab and Richard Ba sehart as I,hma il , the film fo ll ows
th e novel c lose ly and i, an enthralling ,ea adventure . A l so ,
john Ford ', The Hurricane (1937).
w ith Dorot hy Lamour . Mary As.tor, C. Aubrey Smit h . Raymond
Ma ssey, Th o ma s Mitc hell , anq.
John Ca rradin e. Th e fi 1m i, (rom
C hilfll'~ Nordhoff and Jam es
H <l l!'s (Mutiny on the Bo unty,
Botany Ba y) story of id v ili c South
P;ll ift r ncltivp li f!:' d isrupt ed by a
v incii rt i vl' governor . Th(' f dm s
,how at thp UW ', Kan e Hall begill ning at 7.3U .
~aturclay ,

2- '

rhl ' ASUW ~illll S!:'ri p, prp ,('n(\ A I<ln J f',lkulil ', (Klute, The
Parallax View) They Shoot Horses,
Don't They~ ' \,Irrlng j anl' I ()Ilcid ,
Mil h ,1l' 1 SMd/ll ll . Gig YOlIllg .
,mel Kl ·d ilutton " ,I dl'lHI''' lllg
. (ilm I 1'lIt l'rl'd ,Iroulld ,I m,lrdtho ll
d.lnl I' I tllltl"1
AI,o . Who's
Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1%1> ).
<Ilft 'l t"<I by Mlkl' Nil hoi , ,l1lel
,t,ming Hil h,lI<I Iluri oll . 111 /,lIwt l1

January 30, 1975

This year marks the centennial of Washington's apple growing history ; apples were first
grown in the Yakima valley in 1875. By now
Washington is the nation's foremost apple producing state, growing mostly red and yellow delicious apples. These apples seem to be the most
available on the market, perhaps due to their
ability to stand up well under various shipping
and storage conditions.
The remains of charred apples have been
found in anthropological excavations in Switzerland, indicating that our forebears, too, were
aware of the delectability of the little items.
Apples have their place in the . myths and '
legends of the most ancient cultures. Hercules
labored tei obtain the golden apples of the Hesperides and thereby gain immortality, and Snow
White's stepmother plotted to feed Snow White
a poisoned apple by which she would gain
another sort of immortality.
But it is possible that the apples to which the
legends refer were indeed other fr\lits and vegetables than the apples with which we today are
familiar. Tomatoes have been known as "love
apples," potatoes as "earth apples," lemons as
"Persian apples," dates as "finger apples," and
pomegranates as "apples of Carthage."
Apples come in a huge number of varieties.
\ The Romans knew ' 22 types of apples and in
1670 the Grand Duke Cosmo III of Tuscany
gave a banquet at which 56 kinds of apples
. were served.
.
At present there are more than 6,000 known
horticultural forms of apples in the world. The
United States has seen about 1,000 of these varieties, although a great number have died out or
been killed by pes.ts or disease . During prohibi c
tion several apple orchards met their demise at
the hands of righteous temperance leaders who
were fighting off the dread evil of applejack.
While to some the apple may represent the
demon alcohol, others have used it as a symbol
for immortality and knowledge . Ralph Waldo
Emerson relates a dream in which he says, "I
dreamed I floated at will in the great Ether and
I saw this world floating not far off, but diminished to the size of an apple. Then an angel
took it in his hand and brought it to me and
said 'This must thou eat.' And I ate the world."
Apples contain vitamins A and C, and one
fresh medium apple contains about 75 ca lories.
Apples can be adapted to suit many courses;
from sa lad lo dessert. In a sa lad, apples mix
well with other fruits and nuts and can be
. topped with sour cream or yogurt, or mixed
with cheese to provide more nutrition.
. Craig C laiborne of the New York Times gives
this recipe for apple bread: Sift together 2 cups
flour, 1 teaspoon · baking powder, li z teaspoon
soda , 1 teaspoon salt. In another bowl cream li z
ell r shortening a nd add Z/ 3 cup sugar grad\la ll y,

The Post Card by Rene Magritte.

b~<lting unti l the mixture is light and fluffy. Add
'2 eggs, one at a time, beating about a minute
af ter each addition. Add 1 cup unpeeled ground
appl e and juice, 'Iz cup grated sharp cheese and
1/ 4 cup chopped nuts. Mix well. Add the flour
mi xture in two portions, mixing only until the
flour is all dampened. Bake in a greased 9 x 5 x 3
inch pan at 350 degrees for one hour.
Apples and red cabbage go well together as is
shown in thi ~ recipe for braised red cabbage and
app les. To season this recipe more highly you
ca n use nutmeg and cayenne. First melt in a frying pan 4 tablespoons bacon fat. Add 2 table'spoo ns suga r and stir until brown. Add 1 small
chopped o ni on a nd cook slowly until golden.
Add 4 cups shredded red cabbage , 2 tart apples,
sli ced, 2 tablespoons mild vinegar, li z teaspoon
caraway seeds and some salt and pepper . Cook
slowly until lender , addi ng water or red wine as
necessary to prevent sticki ng.

P

• agt' .~ 1..

Galleries

Books/Cecile Henault

Culture
"Guide
OLYMPIA

THE CYCLE OF ZEN

Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance:
An Inquiry into Valu es
.
By Robert M. Pirsig
William M o rrow & Compar1Y, N ew York , 1974

It' s difficult to write about Z en And The Art
of Motorcycle Maintenance . Like Quality ,
which the book is really all about , the moment
you try and define it , give it words, it becomes
something else, something less. But Pirsig must
have felt he had so mething important to say
when he wrote the book. In reviewing it, I
,agree with the nature of the importance of what
he says. Rather than attempt to define , sometimes it' s better to use analogies. Analogies are
w hat Pirsig uses.
The book talks about the author's motorcycle
trip ' with hi s so n from Minnesota , through Montana 'and the mountains, and back down into
the populated country of California and the
coast. He talks about how ne fixes motorcycles
by not fearing the outward appearance of the
see mingly incomprehensible conglomeration of
a ll the moving parts, and by first taking the
time to get to know the motorcycle's underlying
form.
The book is about the merging of dualisms.
The author searches for Phaedrus, t,he ghost of .
himself from his past , before his mental breakdowns and shock therapy. He searches for a ' reconciliation between his present self and his self
. that went mad in it s search for the Ghost of
Reason several years earlier. 'He searches for a
reconci liation with hi s son, who remembers his
father of the past, who had an underlying
Quality, a so n confused now because he can no
longer perceive that Qua li ty.
In talking about what brought Phaedrus to
his madness , his own unre lenting search, in
traveling through the mountains and down to
the ocea n . those reconciliations are met. Dualism s of the mind merge naturally , but only after
crises.
~aedrus ' search fo r th e G host of Reason
Pdge 20

brought ~im by those we consider the fathers of
Western philosophy (Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle) ; back to where Quality, everchanging,
flexible Quality, was believed in more than stagnant , . constant truths. He tells how Quality
wasn't enoug h . Those philosophers needed
something tangible to grasp onto. And so they
convinced the Western world, through . logic,
that the truths of Reason should be above all.
They proved that q uality should become subservient to Reason, underlying forms subservient
to apparent realities . Quality became lost along
the way. Faith in Reason brought a society that
saw technology as the great goal. Quality became lost, hidden - but it didn't leave completely. Reason can dictate the subservience of
Qual ity, but Quality will always emerge from
its depths, often in confused ways.
Pirsig tells of his motorcycle friends, who re-.
fuse to attempt to fix their motorcycle, are
frightened of it, shun its technological complexities and implications . It's a gut feeling they
have, not understanding but wanting to avoid
the harmful effects of a technological world . Yet
their dependence on machines still ex ists. It is
those confused attempts at bringing back Quality., because it will not be subservient, that we
see around us everywhere. Pirsig says the confusion need not exist. Realities need not be
shunned in making Quality once again predominant. Realities will merge naturally with individual true recognitions of Quality.
Reading Zen And The Art of Motorcycle
Maintenance brought me closer to the realization of how we accept truths and facts ~hat are
handed to us, thus preventing fixing. Most 'actions are vague attempts to get at Qua lity. But
it' s that unquestioning acceptance that prevents
us from rea ll y getting there. It's not enough to
just negate what appears to be negative realities.
If you take the time to get to know the underlying form of th e rea lities, then what went wrung,
a nd where, a nd why, will float into your con-

,,;u" ' ",'" O ol y t h , " = : s e (;,;og.

Ongoing ..
An ex hibi t entitl ed " Word A rt "
is currently showing at th e Li brary ga ll ery . The ex hibit , com piled by Seatt le art ist and publi sher M ic hael Waiter, seeks to
prese nt works th at use words as
art, and it will be o n di sp la y
through Feb . 15.

Cinema
, rlda ,' . ., - l 1 ...
hid av Nite him : Playtime, a
I ren ch (onwdy rarely avai lab le
In llw U . S. ; don ' t mi "
thi s
( han ce to ~ee It Writer -directo rla r jacqul' ~ Tati ( Mr. Hulot's
Holiday, Traffic) has in this fi lm
Ilerff'cted hi s comi c v i ~ i on, whi c h
i ~ that everyone IS a qar and a
v ic tim . Althoug h the fi lm i ~ in
I re ne h and Eng li sh , the dialogu e
i ~ unimport ant ;1)OSt of th e
hil arj ous soundtrack co mi sts of
c li c ks. t<IPS, creak,. and wh irs as
Tat-i 's charac tf'r s blund er through
hi s iuturi sti c wo rl d . Immense ly
hum an, immense lv funnv .
Sunua y, 2-2 .
Evergreen Coffeehouse (AS H
Co mmon s) ' j a m es Dean , juli e
Harri s. Jo Van Flee t , and Ray mond Massey star in Elia Kaza n'S
ma~t e rp'ie ce' East of Eden (1954) .
This fi lm portrays a rebellious
son ( Dea li ) in a search fo r hi s
lost mother and hi s ; ain att empt s
to win hi s father 's love. Set in
prE' -Wo rid War I Ca li fornia, the
fi lm b ea utifully ca ptures the
mood and power of john Stein be ck 's sto ry .
Com ing :
Tu esda y, 2-18 .
, The Covernor 's r es t ivai of the
Art s br in gs th e sil e nt c l as si c
Wings to the Olympi c Th eater .
Starring Ceorge Arlin , Clara Bow ,
and Cary Coope r , th e fi 1m is an
t'xc iting story of World War I fly ers, and it won th e ve ry first Osca r in 1927 . It was direc ted by
W illi am W ellm an, and w ill be
acco mp a ni e d by an o ri ginal
musi ca l sc ore by Andy Crow .
plaVE'd o n th e Olympi c's big
Wurlitzer org,an .
Ongoing .
~'d '('
The Towering Inferno
\ held over for 5t h week) : O lym pia audien ces ~ee m to be se tting
it local record , queueing up by
th e hundred s to see an all-sldf
(,lq . headed by Paul Newman
and Steve Mcqueen. burning up
In th e' world ', tall t'q skysc raper

In Concert
, rid,l y. , - l'I .
Appl!'ldlll (0 1 it'phollW . 1 hI'
'>ou 'w(',l!'r '>tr in g Ildnel ,llld th('
'>llI'ri>llfllt' Cou nt y K!'vt'lpr, clnd
I ri (' nd , pn',!,,)t ,I progr,lm of go,,,,, 1 mu,i( Door, Oll!'n at H . 10.
~Ol t(Jr".J Y.

i·' .

I vprgwI' 1l (ol(I'I'hllll't' I A'>I I
Common ,) · Jprr Stl'illh,nt ,illg'
dlHI pl.lY ' g l/l~dr , >1\ .I Vdflt't y .. t
orig lll,t! .lIHI horrow(,d tllllt"

AI'I''' ·I.l1I1 (,J! t t 'I'I1IHI'"
li lt ,
I <I lk (1·IlIl·r oh,,'rvl " ii, (ir " .111111
\: 1·r , .Ir y IlI 'gllllling .111\ 10. In 'l' rl'
1/1 ', 11l11t ' 111 ,

Cooper Point Journal

Food/ Nanette Westerman

APPL.ES' WAY

TACOM~

In Concert

".

Friday, 1-3 1 .
Court C Coffeehouse : C regg
Baker and Cowboy Cary Kanter
perform .
.
Sa turday, 2-1 ..
Court C Coffeehouse : Robert
Rhod e sings and plays guitar, per forming many exce ll ent original
story songs.
.
SEATTLE
Cinema

Thursda y,

1-3()

Th e Sea ttl e Art Museum present s A lf red Hit chcock's Saboteur
(1942) . Robert Cumm in gs, Prisc illa Lah e. and Otto Kruger star
in thi s story of an innoce nt man
accused of sa botage during
Wo rld War II. ,A,n ordinary man
unwittingly ca ught in a web of
int;rgue ·is a Hit chcock trade, mark . and thi s film co ntai ns the
classic d enouem ent at th e Sta tu e
of Lib ertv . Shows at 7 :30
Frida y, "-J 1 .
The unmatchabl e Casablanca
(1942). with Humphrey Bogart ,
Ingrid Bergman, Pau l Henreid ,
Claude Rain s, Sidn ey Creenstreet ,
and Peter Lo rre, show s at the
Seatt le Center Food C ir c~s Court
at 6 : 30, free admi ssio n Directed
by Mic hae l Curti z, it is one of
th e best film s ever m ad e.
Th e ASUW Film Seri es p rese nt s Jo hn Hu ston 's ve rsion of
H e rm a n M e l vi ll e's Moby Dick
(19';6) . Sta rring C regory Peck as
Ca ptain Ahab and Richard Ba sehart as I,hma il , the film fo ll ows
th e novel c lose ly and i, an enthralling ,ea adventure . A l so ,
john Ford ', The Hurricane (1937).
w ith Dorot hy Lamour . Mary As.tor, C. Aubrey Smit h . Raymond
Ma ssey, Th o ma s Mitc hell , anq.
John Ca rradin e. Th e fi 1m i, (rom
C hilfll'~ Nordhoff and Jam es
H <l l!'s (Mutiny on the Bo unty,
Botany Ba y) story of id v ili c South
P;ll ift r ncltivp li f!:' d isrupt ed by a
v incii rt i vl' governor . Th(' f dm s
,how at thp UW ', Kan e Hall begill ning at 7.3U .
~aturclay ,

2- '

rhl ' ASUW ~illll S!:'ri p, prp ,('n(\ A I<ln J f',lkulil ', (Klute, The
Parallax View) They Shoot Horses,
Don't They~ ' \,Irrlng j anl' I ()Ilcid ,
Mil h ,1l' 1 SMd/ll ll . Gig YOlIllg .
,mel Kl ·d ilutton " ,I dl'lHI''' lllg
. (ilm I 1'lIt l'rl'd ,Iroulld ,I m,lrdtho ll
d.lnl I' I tllltl"1
AI,o . Who's
Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1%1> ).
<Ilft 'l t"<I by Mlkl' Nil hoi , ,l1lel
,t,ming Hil h,lI<I Iluri oll . 111 /,lIwt l1

January 30, 1975

This year marks the centennial of Washington's apple growing history ; apples were first
grown in the Yakima valley in 1875. By now
Washington is the nation's foremost apple producing state, growing mostly red and yellow delicious apples. These apples seem to be the most
available on the market, perhaps due to their
ability to stand up well under various shipping
and storage conditions.
The remains of charred apples have been
found in anthropological excavations in Switzerland, indicating that our forebears, too, were
aware of the delectability of the little items.
Apples have their place in the . myths and '
legends of the most ancient cultures. Hercules
labored tei obtain the golden apples of the Hesperides and thereby gain immortality, and Snow
White's stepmother plotted to feed Snow White
a poisoned apple by which she would gain
another sort of immortality.
But it is possible that the apples to which the
legends refer were indeed other fr\lits and vegetables than the apples with which we today are
familiar. Tomatoes have been known as "love
apples," potatoes as "earth apples," lemons as
"Persian apples," dates as "finger apples," and
pomegranates as "apples of Carthage."
Apples come in a huge number of varieties.
\ The Romans knew ' 22 types of apples and in
1670 the Grand Duke Cosmo III of Tuscany
gave a banquet at which 56 kinds of apples
. were served.
.
At present there are more than 6,000 known
horticultural forms of apples in the world. The
United States has seen about 1,000 of these varieties, although a great number have died out or
been killed by pes.ts or disease . During prohibi c
tion several apple orchards met their demise at
the hands of righteous temperance leaders who
were fighting off the dread evil of applejack.
While to some the apple may represent the
demon alcohol, others have used it as a symbol
for immortality and knowledge . Ralph Waldo
Emerson relates a dream in which he says, "I
dreamed I floated at will in the great Ether and
I saw this world floating not far off, but diminished to the size of an apple. Then an angel
took it in his hand and brought it to me and
said 'This must thou eat.' And I ate the world."
Apples contain vitamins A and C, and one
fresh medium apple contains about 75 ca lories.
Apples can be adapted to suit many courses;
from sa lad lo dessert. In a sa lad, apples mix
well with other fruits and nuts and can be
. topped with sour cream or yogurt, or mixed
with cheese to provide more nutrition.
. Craig C laiborne of the New York Times gives
this recipe for apple bread: Sift together 2 cups
flour, 1 teaspoon · baking powder, li z teaspoon
soda , 1 teaspoon salt. In another bowl cream li z
ell r shortening a nd add Z/ 3 cup sugar grad\la ll y,

The Post Card by Rene Magritte.

b~<lting unti l the mixture is light and fluffy. Add
'2 eggs, one at a time, beating about a minute
af ter each addition. Add 1 cup unpeeled ground
appl e and juice, 'Iz cup grated sharp cheese and
1/ 4 cup chopped nuts. Mix well. Add the flour
mi xture in two portions, mixing only until the
flour is all dampened. Bake in a greased 9 x 5 x 3
inch pan at 350 degrees for one hour.
Apples and red cabbage go well together as is
shown in thi ~ recipe for braised red cabbage and
app les. To season this recipe more highly you
ca n use nutmeg and cayenne. First melt in a frying pan 4 tablespoons bacon fat. Add 2 table'spoo ns suga r and stir until brown. Add 1 small
chopped o ni on a nd cook slowly until golden.
Add 4 cups shredded red cabbage , 2 tart apples,
sli ced, 2 tablespoons mild vinegar, li z teaspoon
caraway seeds and some salt and pepper . Cook
slowly until lender , addi ng water or red wine as
necessary to prevent sticki ng.

P

• agt' .~ 1..

Tay lor. Sa ndy De nnis . an(1 Ceorge
Sega l. The fi lm is a gruellin g. in te nse . and faithfu l re nderin g of
Edword Albee's play about mea nness and ca nniba li sm be tween
ma le a nd fe ma le. o ld and young .
a t a co ll ege . Show at 7:)0 in
K,l nf' Hall .
Ongoing .

The Evergreen Blues Festival
For the past century the Blues have been an important part of
American Folklore, and historically its roots can be traced to the
Delta regions of Mississippi where even today some of the finest
living blues artists still'ply their trade.
On Feb. 8th three acts from the heart of blues country will be
appearing here at The Evergreen State College in a celebration
we're calling The Evergreen Blues Festival .... . ...... ......... .. .
Mississippi George Lee, an original blues st):,list whose colton picking guitar has pleased crowds from delta dance halls to blues and
pop festivals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Bonnie Jefferson, one of the
oldest living women Blues guitar players, and the incredible Mississippi Delta Blues Band who will be embarking on their first tour
outside of the rich delta lands they call home.
These artists will be appearing at The Evergreen State College in
two shows - Sat. Feb. 8th at 8 and '1 0:30 p.m. Tickets in advance
are: Students $2.50, general public $3.50 and_ $4.00 at the door.
Tickets available at: Rainy Day Records, Rainbow Grocers, The
Music Bar (Lacey) and. T.E.S.C. Bookstore.

' 0

PLAYING

-RACQUETBALL?

.,4

~.

For all your Athletic and Recreation needs.
see . . . .

WILLIE'S
3530 Martin Way 491-8240

M-F 10-7

Sat. 9-6

Cin e -Mond : The Tall Blond
Man with One Black Shoe, a delightful Fre nch film whi c h combip es comedy and suspe nSf> . Yves
Robert directed ; Pierre Ri c hard is
the hilari o us ly du ll mu s ician
caught unknowing ly in the midd le of a spy war . Also, Ten From
Your Show of Shows, te n of the
bes t episod es of the Sid CaesarImoge ne Coca te levision seri es ' of
the fifties
~dg e mont : A Star is Born
(1937), Sliming Frede ri c Marc h
and jane t Caynor as a typ ica l
Ho ll ywood couple with typica l
Hollywood coup le prob lems The
film was re made unde r the sa me
titl e in 1954 wit h lames Mason
a nd Judy Car land . Also, Nothing
Sacred r 19371. a Be n Hec ht comedy with Frederi c Ma rc h and
Carol e Lombard .
Fifth Ave nue : The Front Page
- The third version of the Be n
Hec ht -Charl es MacArthur Broadway com edy about iournalists in
Chi cago in the 1930's, thi s time
starring jack Le mmon and Wa lter
Matthau. and directed by Billy
Wi ld er , .
Harvard tx it : ·Scer.C!s From a
Marriage . Liv Ullm an and Erland
jose phson star in Ingmar Bergma n's highly acc la im ed anatomy
of a re lationship It is three hours
long . culled from a Swedish te levision seri es of Bergman's.
Mu sic Box: The Trial of Billy
Jack - Tom Laughlin and Delo res Tay lor in a se lf-rig hteous '
hom e movi e . Poo rl y acted , poorly
d irec ted , poorly thought out.
Ne ptune: Phantom of the Paradise, starring Paul Williams, a
comedy about a mO
an who "so ld
hi s soul for rock n' roll ." Also
Zardoz. the science-f i ct ion /e roti ~
extravagan za starrin g Sean Connery .
Ridgemont : Harold and Maude
the de li ghtful bla ck comedy star:
ring Ruth Cordon as the aO-yea rold Maude and Bud Cort as he r
17-year-o ld lover Harold . A film
peop le fall in love with . Also ,
The Private Life of Sherlock
Holmes, a recent film ~ tarring
Robert Stephens in the tit le role .
The fi lm is good drama, but its
"reve lations" about Holmes' life
are rather fantasti c.
Seatt le 7th Avenue: Dean Martin in Mr. Ricco, a cop film . Also
Robe rt Duvall and Robe rt Rya~
in The Outfit.
Rosl' Bud : Queen Christina
(19 1.1l. starrirlg Gre ta Garbo jo hn
- G ilb('rt. liln Ke ith . a nd Lew'is
Stone , Wide ly considered Garbo's
h("t fll III , it is th(· story of the
17th cpn!ury Swpdi sh qupe n who
r(' linqui shps her thron e for he r
InvC'r (Gilbe rt) . Creat lovf> scenes
and moving pe rforman cf's by all .

Cooper point Journal

Varsity : Fe llini 's Amarcord , hi s
newest, whi ch has re ce ived gf>n erally high acc laim .

Sports
continued from page 19

In Concert
(orning :
Friday . 2-8.

Rock Groun Wi shbone As h appe ar~ at the Spa ttl e Cente r Arena
at 8.
rhur ..,da Y. 1-.10 ...
llH' Spattlf> Op f> ra pre sp nt ~
Ingrid Bionf>r. jpdn Cox. and Conduttor He nry Holt · in th f> fin il le
to Wagner's " The ~ing of the Ni be lung," Gotterdammerung. Curtain at 7. Pe rforman ces a lso FebfiltHY 1. 2. '1 . 7. a nd 8 . Seatt lf>
Operil HOllse .
Friday , 7-37.

Doc Seve rin sf> n (of th e Tonight
Show) and hi s Now Ge ne ration
BrtlS ~ a t the Opera Ho usf> at 8. '
One performan ce o nly ,
Coming :
Sa rurday, 2-8 ,
Blups/ rock arti st lo hnn y Win t('r pe rforms with hi s ha nd at
PMall10unt orthwe'i t at il Win tf'r', act i'i high -Ifoltagf> . hlgh-vo lUIllP glitte r ro ck . Also apfwaring
I ~ th l' jailles (otton Band .
Wednesday , t 12 .
Th£> Hungari an ro lk Ball ~ t of
l3udappst and Gyp'i Y Orc hestra
danc e and si ng ilt thp Spatt le O r e ra House at a,
Su nday. 2-'1.
Duo-p iani st'i Fe rrant e and Tf> icher pe rf o rm at th f> Sea ttl f> O pera
House at 8 ,
On Stage
(oming .
Frida y a nd Si/turda \" 2-7 & 1-8 '

Robert Aida il nd Arny Freeman
in Neil Simon 's ne wes t
Broildway comedy The Sunshine
Boys at th e Moore The at e r.

qilr

Miscellaneous
Coming :

of the Olympia City basketball league. Both
teams are trying to recover hom rather shaky
starts and are looking forward to successful seasons .
Twenty year-old Gerald Nelson is the student
coordinator for the men's entry in the leag!!e.
He oversees a lineup of about 14 players including six foot nine inch Kevin Weigler (the tallest
hoopster in town) . The team is presently pulling
out of an early season slump with two victories
in a row last week , Nelson is confident that
they can produce a winning season as. the individuals become mo're accustomed to playing together. Games are played on Tuesday and
Thursday nights at Jefferson Junior High School
in west Olympia.
Kathy Johnson is one of the prime movers behind the vfomen's basketball team, whose season has just recently started. Their principal
problem appears to be s imilar to the one plaguing the men's team: learning how to play together while competing against more experienced
opponents.
The College Recreation Center is in the process of organizing an intramural basketball league
for 3-person teams . Sign-up sheets are available
in the third floor office of the Recreation Center . Play is slated to begin in early February and
extend into spring.
As spring and fair weather appear on the fa'T
horizon , p lans for outdoor sports are also being
made. Most notable among these are the efforts
by Laurie Jone~ and other Evergreen women to
form a women's soccer team for competition in
the local area.
On the less competitive side of things, the Evergreen Ski school is striving to overcome adverse weather conditions as it continues its
twice-weekly trips to Crystal Mountain's slopes.

RainyD!o/ Rccord,Co.

THE GOVERNOR'S FESTIVAL HIE ARTS
presents
th e greatest of 1927 Silent Films

~WINGS"
accompanied on the

MIGHTY WURLITZER PIPE ORGAN
by Andy Crow

tickets -

866-8205

INVENTORY SALE

Monda y, 2- J .

. The Hilrl e ~ ' Globetrotte rs ap pear at the Seatt le Cente r Coli seum at 7:30,

According to Ed King, associate director of
campus recreation and activities and coordinator for the ski schooL the Sunday sessions,
whic h have been canceled for two weeks in a
row, will be made up by extending the schedule
into the spri.n~
Other events planned for later in the quarter
include a pool tournament and several crosscountry foot races . The enthusiastic response of
seventeen participants to an eight-ball tournament fall quarter has initiated plans for a more
forma l pocket billiards competition wi,th a pool
cue as first prize . No date has been set , but the
event should take place within the next month.
to ng distance foot races are now an established tradition at Evergreen. Even when the
campus was little more than mud and wet cement , people were testing their lungs and legs
on back ' roads and trails. Student Spider Burbank and Director of Campus Activities Pete
Steilberg are among those who regularly show
up at the races .
"Sophisticated" may not be the word for the
recreation and ath letic programs at The Evergreen State College. For those willing to devote
some extra energy, however, there is an opportunity for a level of participation and creativity
unavailable at la"rger and more structured
schools.

ADULTS $6.
STUDENTS $3 . .

All $6 .98 Album s

NOW $4.95
LATE ADDITIONS
Olympia CineOl.!

o nl y a t our downtuwn store

106 1/ 2 Positively 4th 5t .
Clpito l . Cabaret. one of
th(' lew gredt l11usi( a l~ o f
H'('('nt yt'.H~ . Th" I ilm s tars
I iZd !'V1inclli tl~ S.lli y Bo ll es , a
('. Ih.l rd ... ing(·r in tht' 13er lin oi
tIll' : hi"li('~ when N.lIis m was
'. ' !I
tIlt' ri ... ,·, and 1,1('1 Grey
\\ '. '11 .In Al'oHI('rny Awan.l for
hi .. III .1 q ('f III I .1 " d ch i II i n g
pt·f.1I Irm.tnl.T . 1... t ill' M . C. The
tilm i... l·(·ri(· . ('owI·rllIl . IllIIV '

FEBRUARY 18 OLYMPIA THEATRE

\1 ,· " 1,,
11\ " ' "
1,' 1

II .....

~

II I

, 10"1,,

~ .....

" ,., II " ,,, ,

t!1">(" 1.",:

ing .

OI Yll1pil ' : Island al Ihl' Top
I h(· World . .1 I ) i ... nl·Y
,Il I V('!IIII"I' " 1'('( 1,I(,lI Llr

oi

Janu.try 30, J ~7S

Page 23

Tay lor. Sa ndy De nnis . an(1 Ceorge
Sega l. The fi lm is a gruellin g. in te nse . and faithfu l re nderin g of
Edword Albee's play about mea nness and ca nniba li sm be tween
ma le a nd fe ma le. o ld and young .
a t a co ll ege . Show at 7:)0 in
K,l nf' Hall .
Ongoing .

The Evergreen Blues Festival
For the past century the Blues have been an important part of
American Folklore, and historically its roots can be traced to the
Delta regions of Mississippi where even today some of the finest
living blues artists still'ply their trade.
On Feb. 8th three acts from the heart of blues country will be
appearing here at The Evergreen State College in a celebration
we're calling The Evergreen Blues Festival .... . ...... ......... .. .
Mississippi George Lee, an original blues st):,list whose colton picking guitar has pleased crowds from delta dance halls to blues and
pop festivals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Bonnie Jefferson, one of the
oldest living women Blues guitar players, and the incredible Mississippi Delta Blues Band who will be embarking on their first tour
outside of the rich delta lands they call home.
These artists will be appearing at The Evergreen State College in
two shows - Sat. Feb. 8th at 8 and '1 0:30 p.m. Tickets in advance
are: Students $2.50, general public $3.50 and_ $4.00 at the door.
Tickets available at: Rainy Day Records, Rainbow Grocers, The
Music Bar (Lacey) and. T.E.S.C. Bookstore.

' 0

PLAYING

-RACQUETBALL?

.,4

~.

For all your Athletic and Recreation needs.
see . . . .

WILLIE'S
3530 Martin Way 491-8240

M-F 10-7

Sat. 9-6

Cin e -Mond : The Tall Blond
Man with One Black Shoe, a delightful Fre nch film whi c h combip es comedy and suspe nSf> . Yves
Robert directed ; Pierre Ri c hard is
the hilari o us ly du ll mu s ician
caught unknowing ly in the midd le of a spy war . Also, Ten From
Your Show of Shows, te n of the
bes t episod es of the Sid CaesarImoge ne Coca te levision seri es ' of
the fifties
~dg e mont : A Star is Born
(1937), Sliming Frede ri c Marc h
and jane t Caynor as a typ ica l
Ho ll ywood couple with typica l
Hollywood coup le prob lems The
film was re made unde r the sa me
titl e in 1954 wit h lames Mason
a nd Judy Car land . Also, Nothing
Sacred r 19371. a Be n Hec ht comedy with Frederi c Ma rc h and
Carol e Lombard .
Fifth Ave nue : The Front Page
- The third version of the Be n
Hec ht -Charl es MacArthur Broadway com edy about iournalists in
Chi cago in the 1930's, thi s time
starring jack Le mmon and Wa lter
Matthau. and directed by Billy
Wi ld er , .
Harvard tx it : ·Scer.C!s From a
Marriage . Liv Ullm an and Erland
jose phson star in Ingmar Bergma n's highly acc la im ed anatomy
of a re lationship It is three hours
long . culled from a Swedish te levision seri es of Bergman's.
Mu sic Box: The Trial of Billy
Jack - Tom Laughlin and Delo res Tay lor in a se lf-rig hteous '
hom e movi e . Poo rl y acted , poorly
d irec ted , poorly thought out.
Ne ptune: Phantom of the Paradise, starring Paul Williams, a
comedy about a mO
an who "so ld
hi s soul for rock n' roll ." Also
Zardoz. the science-f i ct ion /e roti ~
extravagan za starrin g Sean Connery .
Ridgemont : Harold and Maude
the de li ghtful bla ck comedy star:
ring Ruth Cordon as the aO-yea rold Maude and Bud Cort as he r
17-year-o ld lover Harold . A film
peop le fall in love with . Also ,
The Private Life of Sherlock
Holmes, a recent film ~ tarring
Robert Stephens in the tit le role .
The fi lm is good drama, but its
"reve lations" about Holmes' life
are rather fantasti c.
Seatt le 7th Avenue: Dean Martin in Mr. Ricco, a cop film . Also
Robe rt Duvall and Robe rt Rya~
in The Outfit.
Rosl' Bud : Queen Christina
(19 1.1l. starrirlg Gre ta Garbo jo hn
- G ilb('rt. liln Ke ith . a nd Lew'is
Stone , Wide ly considered Garbo's
h("t fll III , it is th(· story of the
17th cpn!ury Swpdi sh qupe n who
r(' linqui shps her thron e for he r
InvC'r (Gilbe rt) . Creat lovf> scenes
and moving pe rforman cf's by all .

Cooper point Journal

Varsity : Fe llini 's Amarcord , hi s
newest, whi ch has re ce ived gf>n erally high acc laim .

Sports
continued from page 19

In Concert
(orning :
Friday . 2-8.

Rock Groun Wi shbone As h appe ar~ at the Spa ttl e Cente r Arena
at 8.
rhur ..,da Y. 1-.10 ...
llH' Spattlf> Op f> ra pre sp nt ~
Ingrid Bionf>r. jpdn Cox. and Conduttor He nry Holt · in th f> fin il le
to Wagner's " The ~ing of the Ni be lung," Gotterdammerung. Curtain at 7. Pe rforman ces a lso FebfiltHY 1. 2. '1 . 7. a nd 8 . Seatt lf>
Operil HOllse .
Friday , 7-37.

Doc Seve rin sf> n (of th e Tonight
Show) and hi s Now Ge ne ration
BrtlS ~ a t the Opera Ho usf> at 8. '
One performan ce o nly ,
Coming :
Sa rurday, 2-8 ,
Blups/ rock arti st lo hnn y Win t('r pe rforms with hi s ha nd at
PMall10unt orthwe'i t at il Win tf'r', act i'i high -Ifoltagf> . hlgh-vo lUIllP glitte r ro ck . Also apfwaring
I ~ th l' jailles (otton Band .
Wednesday , t 12 .
Th£> Hungari an ro lk Ball ~ t of
l3udappst and Gyp'i Y Orc hestra
danc e and si ng ilt thp Spatt le O r e ra House at a,
Su nday. 2-'1.
Duo-p iani st'i Fe rrant e and Tf> icher pe rf o rm at th f> Sea ttl f> O pera
House at 8 ,
On Stage
(oming .
Frida y a nd Si/turda \" 2-7 & 1-8 '

Robert Aida il nd Arny Freeman
in Neil Simon 's ne wes t
Broildway comedy The Sunshine
Boys at th e Moore The at e r.

qilr

Miscellaneous
Coming :

of the Olympia City basketball league. Both
teams are trying to recover hom rather shaky
starts and are looking forward to successful seasons .
Twenty year-old Gerald Nelson is the student
coordinator for the men's entry in the leag!!e.
He oversees a lineup of about 14 players including six foot nine inch Kevin Weigler (the tallest
hoopster in town) . The team is presently pulling
out of an early season slump with two victories
in a row last week , Nelson is confident that
they can produce a winning season as. the individuals become mo're accustomed to playing together. Games are played on Tuesday and
Thursday nights at Jefferson Junior High School
in west Olympia.
Kathy Johnson is one of the prime movers behind the vfomen's basketball team, whose season has just recently started. Their principal
problem appears to be s imilar to the one plaguing the men's team: learning how to play together while competing against more experienced
opponents.
The College Recreation Center is in the process of organizing an intramural basketball league
for 3-person teams . Sign-up sheets are available
in the third floor office of the Recreation Center . Play is slated to begin in early February and
extend into spring.
As spring and fair weather appear on the fa'T
horizon , p lans for outdoor sports are also being
made. Most notable among these are the efforts
by Laurie Jone~ and other Evergreen women to
form a women's soccer team for competition in
the local area.
On the less competitive side of things, the Evergreen Ski school is striving to overcome adverse weather conditions as it continues its
twice-weekly trips to Crystal Mountain's slopes.

RainyD!o/ Rccord,Co.

THE GOVERNOR'S FESTIVAL HIE ARTS
presents
th e greatest of 1927 Silent Films

~WINGS"
accompanied on the

MIGHTY WURLITZER PIPE ORGAN
by Andy Crow

tickets -

866-8205

INVENTORY SALE

Monda y, 2- J .

. The Hilrl e ~ ' Globetrotte rs ap pear at the Seatt le Cente r Coli seum at 7:30,

According to Ed King, associate director of
campus recreation and activities and coordinator for the ski schooL the Sunday sessions,
whic h have been canceled for two weeks in a
row, will be made up by extending the schedule
into the spri.n~
Other events planned for later in the quarter
include a pool tournament and several crosscountry foot races . The enthusiastic response of
seventeen participants to an eight-ball tournament fall quarter has initiated plans for a more
forma l pocket billiards competition wi,th a pool
cue as first prize . No date has been set , but the
event should take place within the next month.
to ng distance foot races are now an established tradition at Evergreen. Even when the
campus was little more than mud and wet cement , people were testing their lungs and legs
on back ' roads and trails. Student Spider Burbank and Director of Campus Activities Pete
Steilberg are among those who regularly show
up at the races .
"Sophisticated" may not be the word for the
recreation and ath letic programs at The Evergreen State College. For those willing to devote
some extra energy, however, there is an opportunity for a level of participation and creativity
unavailable at la"rger and more structured
schools.

ADULTS $6.
STUDENTS $3 . .

All $6 .98 Album s

NOW $4.95
LATE ADDITIONS
Olympia CineOl.!

o nl y a t our downtuwn store

106 1/ 2 Positively 4th 5t .
Clpito l . Cabaret. one of
th(' lew gredt l11usi( a l~ o f
H'('('nt yt'.H~ . Th" I ilm s tars
I iZd !'V1inclli tl~ S.lli y Bo ll es , a
('. Ih.l rd ... ing(·r in tht' 13er lin oi
tIll' : hi"li('~ when N.lIis m was
'. ' !I
tIlt' ri ... ,·, and 1,1('1 Grey
\\ '. '11 .In Al'oHI('rny Awan.l for
hi .. III .1 q ('f III I .1 " d ch i II i n g
pt·f.1I Irm.tnl.T . 1... t ill' M . C. The
tilm i... l·(·ri(· . ('owI·rllIl . IllIIV '

FEBRUARY 18 OLYMPIA THEATRE

\1 ,· " 1,,
11\ " ' "
1,' 1

II .....

~

II I

, 10"1,,

~ .....

" ,., II " ,,, ,

t!1">(" 1.",:

ing .

OI Yll1pil ' : Island al Ihl' Top
I h(· World . .1 I ) i ... nl·Y
,Il I V('!IIII"I' " 1'('( 1,I(,lI Llr

oi

Janu.try 30, J ~7S

Page 23

Adult Singles Community

All
Utilities
Included

Fully
Furnished
Apartments
••••

ItiJ

Hiking and
Fishing
Close By

Planned
Social
Functions
DISCOVER

the
COLONY INN GROUP
fJE LEFT OUT OF
FUN AND GOOD LIFE

--69. 5
PER MONTH

1!18 EvercJl'.... Driv.
OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON

98501

You got a letter
from home and
there was just
a letter inside. .
you owe yourself an Oly.
, .":

.J

W

I' , '

.

'1 ' nr' .

'L ( '

II

A~", l m

1)a r jee\i n).;
Iri s h l3 rt-'dk. I J~t
Ordnge Spiel'
En g li sh Brl'akfa'>t
Earl erev
Ja s mi ne '
Queen \,irtt1nd

Ct'o rgia Bl en d
ren n yrnya l
Srl'um in t
,Cry lun
Tea \A.' ilh Mint
Ld 'Jend er
fll'Jipe rmin t '
C hdlTll)tll ile

mESH \.. O H+l-, /11' ,,\:\~ TOO I

111, 111 _l,

SO UTH SOUND CE NTER
Media
cpj0072.pdf