The Cooper Point Journal Volume 3, No. 20 (April 3, 1975)

Item

Identifier
Eng cpj0078.pdf
Title
Eng The Cooper Point Journal Volume 3, No. 20 (April 3, 1975)
Date
3 April 1975
Evergreen Subject
Student Organizing and Activism
Environmental Studies
Curriculum
Media Studies/Arts
Description
Eng Page 1: Cooper Point Journal (front page); (cartoon: two men floating in air)
Page 2: To the Point: Plaintiffs Speak;
Page 2: To the Point: Tongue-Tied Majority Speaks;
Page 2-3: To the Point: Deans Burst into Song;
Page 3: To the Point: EPIC Responds;
Page 3, 21: To the Point: Editors Criticized;
Page 3: (advertisement) Boston Harbor Grocery;
Page 3: (advertisement) Duck House;
Page 3: (advertisement) Malmo Nursery;
Page 4: Over the Gap (Feature Story);
Page 4: Table of Contents;
Page 4: Staff Credits;
Page 5: To the Women of Evergreen;
Page 6: Image: corner of Lab I and Lab II;
Page 6: As it Is: Salary raises discussed by Trustees;
Page 6: As it Is: Department of Interior Finds Evergreen Work Valuable;
Page 6: As it Is: Evergreen Awarded Science Grant;
Page 6: As it Is: Spring Art and Recreation Workshops Listed;
Page 6-7: As it Is: Summer Programs Released;
Page 7: As it Is: Rapist Apprehended;
Page 7, 20-22: As it Is: DTF Reports (image: Ken Donohue);
Page 7: (advertisement) Women instructor for self-defense class;
Page 7: (advertisement) College Recreation Center;
Page 8: (advertisement) the Evergreen Evening Bus;
Page 9: Leo Daugherty Declared Dean (image: Daugherty reading with magnifying glass);
Page 10: (advertisement) Dirty Dave's Gay 90's;
Page 10: (advertisement) Music Bar;
Page 10: (advertisement) Erlich Stationers;
Page 10: (advertisement) Rainy Day Record Co.;
Page 10: (advertisement) Park Lane Hoisery;
Page 11: (advertisement) Moreno's Mexican Restaurant;
Page 11 : (advertisement) Red Apple Natural Foods;
Page 11: (advertisement) Mr. Rags Ltd.;
Page 11: (advertisement) Gourmet Vintners;
Page 11: (advertisement) The Cooper Point Journal;
Page 11: (advertisement) Evergreen Savings Association;
Page 11: (advertisement) Word of Mouth Books;
Page 11: (advertisement) Captain Coyote's;
Page 12: Bank Manager resigns;
Page 12-13: President Hucks Demands More Exposure (image of man flashing);
Page 14: Moss Case Blasts into Court (cartoon: jet fighter plane exploding);
Page 15: Guest Commentary: Earthwasters Waste the Mind (image: car floating over lake);
Page 16: (advertisement) Olympia Brewing Company;
Page 16: (advertisement) Colony Inn;
Page 16: (advertisement) House of Cameras;
Page 16: (advertisement) The Bike Stand;
Page 16: (advertisement) Acme Upholstery Supply Co.;
Page 17: Food / Nanette Westerman : Sugar Up Your Nose (drawing: rows of Coke bottles);
Page 18: Goings On (image: man's surprised face);
Page 19: Announcements;
Page 19: (advertisement) [For sale 1964 VW camper];
Page 19: (advertisement) Asterisk* and Cheese Library;
Page 20: (advertisement) ROBCO'S;
Page 20: (advertisement) Sea-Mart Drug;
Page 20: (advertisement) Grace Piano Service;
Page 20: (advertisement) Import Car Service;
Page 20: (advertisement) Olympia Sport Shop;
Page 21: (advertisement) The Cooper Point Journal;
Page 21: (advertisement) Shakey's;
Page 21: (advertisement) Town House Flop Shop;
Page 21: (advertisement) [Musicians Notice];
Page 22: (advertisement) Hendrick's Rexall Drugs;
Page 22: (advertisement) Bob's Big Burgers;
Page 22: (advertisement) The Great American Newsmachine and Wire Service;
Page 22: (advertisement) Olympia Brewing Company;
Page 23: Editors reply (to criticism beginning on page 7)
Page 23: (advertisement) All Ways Travel Service, Inc.;
Page 23: (advertisement) Willie's Sports Enterprises;
Page 23: (advertisement) Jeckel and Sons Bicycles;
Page 23: (advertisement) W.J. Lynch Paint Co.;
Page 24: (advertisement) Evergreen State College Housing
Creator
Eng Chambers, Lee
Eng Evans, Ed
Eng Greenhut, Naomi
Eng Pittman, Perry
Eng Wear, Tina
Eng Bork A.
Eng Aldridge, Bill
Eng Daugherty, Leo
Eng Goodman, Kim
Eng Dawn, Aubrey
Eng Hester, Mary
Eng Solomon, Norman
Eng Westerman, Nanette
Eng McChesney, Robert
Eng Hester, Mary
Eng Peck, Kraig
Eng Usadi, Eva
Eng Bley, David
Eng Solomon, Sam
Eng Dawn, Aubrey
Contributor
Eng Solomon, Sam
Eng Dawn, Aubrey
Eng Smith, Ralph
Eng Stanton, Ralph
Eng Baugher, Sandy
Eng Cornish, Billie
Eng Feyk, Jim
Eng Goodman, Kim
Eng Hester, Mary
Eng Murphy, Brian
Eng Westerman, Nanette
Eng Brombacher, Millie
Eng Foster, John
Eng Lozzi, Craig
Eng Gribskov, Margaret
Subject
Eng lawsuits
Eng affirmative action
Eng racism
Eng singing
Eng contracts
Eng revisions
Eng progress
Eng change
Eng solutions
Eng newspaper
Eng rape
Eng radio
Eng ecological research
Eng science education
Eng workshops
Eng recreation
Eng summer
Eng college credit
Eng rapists
Eng internships
Eng committees
Eng academic deans
Eng bank
Eng manager
Eng resignation
Eng legal cases
Eng symposium
Eng environmental
Eng nutrition
Eng events
Eng art
Eng tuition
Eng Allen, Walker
Eng McCann, Charles
Eng Schillinger, Jerry
Eng Humphrey, Don
Eng Foote, Tom
Eng Beck, Gordon
Eng Humphrey, Don
Eng Herman, Steve
Eng Brian, Richard
Eng Wiedemann
Eng Hanfman, Andrew
Eng Olexa, Carol
Eng Exquivel, Cruz
Eng Taylor, Peter
Eng Humphrey, Wills
Eng Marr, Dave
Eng Tsai, Andrew
Eng Gribskov, Margaret
Eng Aldridge, Bill
Eng Hahn, Jeanne
Eng Martinez, Jim
Eng Nelson, Mary
Eng Portnoff, Greg
Eng Romero, Jacob
Eng Sparks, Paul
Eng Spence, Carol
Eng Stepherson, Lem
Eng Taylor, Nancy
Eng Regan, William
Eng Donohue, Ken
Eng Daughtery, Leo
Eng Leland, Marie
Eng Erwin, Ross
Eng Hucks, Roland
Eng Kurp, Rick
Eng Clabaugh, Dean
Eng Dixon, Thomas
Eng Hadley, Herbert
Eng Halverson, Halvor
Eng Tourtellotte, Janet
Eng Schmidt, Trueman
Eng Freund, Hap
Eng Monteccucco, Richard
Eng Teasy Ryken
Eng Lori Hyman
Eng Gypsy Gyppo
Eng Board of Trustees, Evergreen State College
Eng EPIC (Evergreen Political Information Center)
Eng KAOS radio
Eng Department of the Interior
Eng National Science Foundation
Eng South Sound National Bank's Evergreen Branch
Eng Union of Gruel and Softhead Workers
Eng All Campus Hearing Board
Eng Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing
Eng Rocky Mountain Center
Eng International symposium of the environment
Eng The 5000 Fingers of Dr. T
Eng Four Musketeers
Eng Tacoma Philharmonic
Eng Miracle Worker
Eng King of Hearts
Eng Young Frankenstein
Eng The Orient Express
Eng Private Lives
Eng Harold and Maude
Eng Love and Pain and the Whole Damn Thing
Eng Amarcord
Eng Shampoo
Eng Tommy
Eng Lenny
Eng The Harrad Experiment and Emanuelle
Eng Parallax View
Eng Paper Moon
Eng Pinky Floyd
Language
Eng eng
Place
Eng The Evergreen State College
Publisher
Eng The Evergreen State College Board of Publications and members of the Evergreen community
Extent
Eng 26 pages
Temporal Coverage
Eng 1975
extracted text
COOPER

Live Among
the Forest Happenings
Trees surround
our living units
on all sides.
Gaze
across a sea of. treetops
watch the branches
sway
against your window Or stroll
home through forest paths.

HOUSING
Bldg. A, Rm 220 866-6132
rooms 'range from
61.60 - 18.80
I

.

I



I

.

JOURNAL

--

----:£

-------=---=-

=-

hear this contract quartet. Voice quality
will become a key qualification for the
deanship. A new kind of harmony will
prevail among our administrators. And, if
this catches on as I think it will, can't you
iust see Charley McCann simply knocking
01' Kuehnle over by singing our next budget request to the legislature. ,
Thank you, Walker, for thinking of this
powerful innovation. You have brought
new life to a dull institution .
Bill Aldridge

EPIC responds
To thl' Point:

- - - to the pOint
Plaintiffs speak

majority speaks

To the Po int:
Alt hough we dec ided not to be interviewed by th e staff of the Cooper Point
Jo urn al on o u r suit aga inst the Board of
Trustees, we do fee l it is necessa ry for us
to make a shu r! statement.
Th e particularities of our petition for
revi ew are clear and ca n be read in this
issue of th e paper. What we wish to emph as ize here are the reaso ns w hy we are
takin g o ur grieva nce to court.
We feel that th e Boa rd of Trustees demo nstra ted th eir disregard of and contempt
for the Evergree n co mmunit y by ignoring
th e fa cts that we re presented to them and
b y makin g a dec ision based upon an issue
w hi ch was not releva nt to the case. Specifi ca ll y, th ey igno red Evergreen's open
hi ring po li cy whi ch requ ires that minorities an d women be included in any hirin g, promotion or appoi ntment process.
Th e Board decided th e case by declaring
tha t C laba ugh had th e power to combine
posi ti ons '- thi s was not at issue!
We beli eve th at th e cou rt s are one way
to co nfro nt th e unjust use of power by
th e ruling elite . Rac ism an<;l sex ism by the
peop le in power is not a pecu liarit y of
Everg ree n . Our act ion is directed not only
agai nst speci fi c individua ls, but more generally aga in st th e power of the elite to dis~
cr im inate and to igno re and step on the
w ishes of the peo pl e in fav o r of their own
spec ia l int eres ts and "management efficlency .
We are representa tive of the very many
peop l(;' o n ca mpu s who fee l as we do. We
thank them and th eir man y ex pressions of
a~ r t'e m e nt a nd support.

,

Lee C hambers
Ed Evans
Naomi Greenhut
Perry Pittman
Ti na Wear
Page 2

Tongue-tied
To the Poiht:
You liberals with your Affirmative Action, look where it got you. Now you're
fit to be tied, but I warned you . These
people are just different.
I watched shaking my head when you
first let them into this place. They've got
their own schools back East, and plenty
of their own teachers . Let them stick to
their own kind. But y.ou insisted, saying
though they're slow, they can lean} plenty
from us. Besides, having a few around
will make things easier. We'll enlighten
them, and at the same time try to figure
out what makes them tick.
It started out with just a few, and on ly
the special ones who half knew our ways.
But their numbers have steadily grown.
Did you ever wonder how? Cause they
always choose their own. In the beginning
they pretend to give everybody a chance,
equality and all. Eventually, they don't
even bother with that. They just line up
all the possibles, look 'em over, and
whichever looks the most like them is in.
Simple as that.
This business of one brotherhood is a
big front. Take a good look at what
you're being tied to. If they want to mix
so much, how come they always sit by
themselves. They seem to speak the same
language, but how come you can't understand what they say. I'll tell you why, because they're plotting.
Before long they're after the top jobs.
And you enco~rage them, like so many
mules. I've seen you watch them on the
TV and smile, but when the cameras
aren' t looking they're laughing at you .
Then they go to the capitol and you think
they stand for you, actually they're saving
their own tails. Tying up important
people in the halls , talking on telephones.

Why do you think the government wants
to see more and more of them out here.
Pretty soon there'll be no room for the
fest of us.
Finally when they've nearly got you
hogtied, you begin to see the light. That
it's us against them . When at last you try
to show you've got the high hand, they
play along, all the time upping the ante,
and letting you think they don't know the
game. But last month you learned, they
had the top of the deck stacked all along.
And your hands were tied.
I haven't spent my whole life out West.
I've lived and worked with these people, I
know them inside out. The shade makes
no difference, could be polka dot, they
still want only one thing. To take over I
Before they tie us all down, they must be
stopped. T-shirts, tank tops, and turtlenecks don't be deceived by the liberal line
any longer. Move now before 'it's too late.
T urn the tide! There is still time to loose
this menace from our midst. Remember, a
tie hangs two ways.
A. Bork

Deans burst into song
To the Point:
f,.

During Spring break all faculty, staff,
and program secretaries received a bulletin from Walker Allen, Registrar, regarding "Slight Revision of Contract Processl ing." The bulletin contains one revision
which is certainly not "slight;" it is indeed
one of the most exciting innovations to
come down the pike at or Nevergreen.
Point #3 on the memo relates to the
deans. It says that deans will: a. check
content of contracts, and b. sing them
and send them back to the secretaries.
WOW! I really like that. Oh, the images
ca ll ed forth. Just imagine it. There they
are, Rudy, Lynn, Willie and Charley
gathered on the clock tower singing our
co ntracts. Large crowds will gather to
Coooer Point Journal

As members of EPIC (Evergreen Political Information Center), we really appreciate the criticism we have been receiving.
Our view is that criticism and self criticism are positive contributions to the
process of learning and continuing to
grow. We especially thank Angie and
Sheila - two of the writers of a letter to
'~he last issue of the Cooper Point Journal
- for coming to the EPIC meeting at
which we spent four hours critiquing the
rally we held on Feb. 28.
Many people have asked us why we are
studying about and working towards a
radical change of American society. The
answer is fairly simple. We find the condition o f society intolerable. As we look
to our own futures, we see that the options offered to us are aliena ting, unfulfilling, and unhealthy .
Some people have asked us why we , in
our "privileged" position (as students) are
not content to enjoy that position. This
logic implies that we should be content
because others are worse off than we are.
Our question is - what is this "privilege?" We are "privileged" to ' become
'o ffice bureaucrats, corporate managers
and technicians, military scientists and, if
we're "talented," we ca n become advertising artists; in sho rt, if we're lucky , we
can become the upper stra tum of the
work force , serving those w ho are' a lready
in control of our society.
This is one option. Exciting, huh? This
is the predominant option offered to us a t
Evergreen. Here, we are encouraged to explore the most rational means for strengtheni ng the social o rder that is the cause of
an itnti-human wasteland. In the guise of
the "Evirgreen Spirit" we are asked to
"tone down" our act ivities to join the " Evergreen Commun it y, " a n apprenticeship
to an uncritical acceptance of the "A merican Communi ty ."
W e refuse to acce pt the illu sion of democrat ic control as a substitute for its rea lity , eit her at Evergree n or in society at
large.
A seco nd op tion is one that has been
popul arized by the med ia in recent years
- a nosta lgic glorifica ti on of the past. exemplifi ed by the mys ti ca l, a nd back - toApril 3, 1975

the-land movements . Though both are
understandable responses to the ugliness
in the world, they are not creative and
progressive solutions to our situation. To
react to a deepening worldwide environmental crisis with a refusal to demand the
removal from power of the people who
are responsible for the "profitable" destruction is to allow these people to continue to rape the earth.
Ins tead of attempting to rebuild the
past , or strengthen a social order that pats
us on the head if we're "reasonable," we,
like many others, choose to be creative,
and consciously construct a democratic
socia l order. For us this means a socialist
society , a society in which people take
priority over corporate profits, and every
individua l is able to pursue his or her fullest potentialities, instead of having to sacrifice creativity merely in order to Jive.
In a letter to the editor in the last issue
of the Cooper Point JournaL we were
asked to change our name, so as to make
clear our socialist methodology. This request is based on the assumption tha"l'-it is
possible for education or for political information to be "cbjective." We believe
that no dissemination of information or
ideas (in the form of journalism, TV ,
movies, or other mediums) is ever objectiv e. Ultimately , political information
ei ther leaves intact society's dominant ideology, or serves to criticize it.
Unlike the six o'clock news (which
cla ims "objectivity" but could accurately
be titled "Report from the Government"
or "Lessons in Bourgeois Ideology") we
spread no illusions of objectivity ; we
have consciously attempted to make our
politics very clear . To change our name
would be to accept the myth of "objectivity" that we hope to dispel!
Everyone is invited to our weekly meeting on Wednesdays at 7 :30 p.m . in Lib.
rm. 1407. And next Thursday, April 10,
(7:30, Lib. rm. 1407) we will begin a
s tudy group examining the student movement , and the role of the university in
U. S. society. All are welcome .
The members of EPIC

Ed itors criticized
To the Point:
We are Evergreen students who are
very interested in the direction that the
Cooper ' Point Journal takes in the
upcoming quarter. Several times during
the past month we confronted the present
ed itor s with criticisms of the winter
quarter paper and the direction which the
editors have outlined for this spring, most
notably in their "butterfly" statement in
the Feb. 27 issue. The editors responded
by devoting the second page of tPte March
, 6 issue to a rebuttal of their critics in an
essay entit led "Forever Green." In that
essay , beneath an onslaught of meaningless platitudes, the edi tors re':t?aled their
continued on page 21

GROCERIES, BY BOAT

n

Sandwiches

tIm

Cold Beverages

1 Block from the Marina

The

DUCK HOUSE
is looking for works of serious
artists and craftsmen for
display Iconsignment. .
LOCATION: basement of CAB
building across from cafeteria
PHONE: 866-6477
NEW HOURS: 10:30-2:30

nurser
SOUTH SOUND CENTER
491-4545

2112" FOLIAGE PLANTS
over 35 varieties
REG PRICE 49 cents

NOW

PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH
April '110, 1975

Page 3

--

----:£

-------=---=-

=-

hear this contract quartet. Voice quality
will become a key qualification for the
deanship. A new kind of harmony will
prevail among our administrators. And, if
this catches on as I think it will, can't you
iust see Charley McCann simply knocking
01' Kuehnle over by singing our next budget request to the legislature. ,
Thank you, Walker, for thinking of this
powerful innovation. You have brought
new life to a dull institution .
Bill Aldridge

EPIC responds
To thl' Point:

- - - to the pOint
Plaintiffs speak

majority speaks

To the Po int:
Alt hough we dec ided not to be interviewed by th e staff of the Cooper Point
Jo urn al on o u r suit aga inst the Board of
Trustees, we do fee l it is necessa ry for us
to make a shu r! statement.
Th e particularities of our petition for
revi ew are clear and ca n be read in this
issue of th e paper. What we wish to emph as ize here are the reaso ns w hy we are
takin g o ur grieva nce to court.
We feel that th e Boa rd of Trustees demo nstra ted th eir disregard of and contempt
for the Evergree n co mmunit y by ignoring
th e fa cts that we re presented to them and
b y makin g a dec ision based upon an issue
w hi ch was not releva nt to the case. Specifi ca ll y, th ey igno red Evergreen's open
hi ring po li cy whi ch requ ires that minorities an d women be included in any hirin g, promotion or appoi ntment process.
Th e Board decided th e case by declaring
tha t C laba ugh had th e power to combine
posi ti ons '- thi s was not at issue!
We beli eve th at th e cou rt s are one way
to co nfro nt th e unjust use of power by
th e ruling elite . Rac ism an<;l sex ism by the
peop le in power is not a pecu liarit y of
Everg ree n . Our act ion is directed not only
agai nst speci fi c individua ls, but more generally aga in st th e power of the elite to dis~
cr im inate and to igno re and step on the
w ishes of the peo pl e in fav o r of their own
spec ia l int eres ts and "management efficlency .
We are representa tive of the very many
peop l(;' o n ca mpu s who fee l as we do. We
thank them and th eir man y ex pressions of
a~ r t'e m e nt a nd support.

,

Lee C hambers
Ed Evans
Naomi Greenhut
Perry Pittman
Ti na Wear
Page 2

Tongue-tied
To the Poiht:
You liberals with your Affirmative Action, look where it got you. Now you're
fit to be tied, but I warned you . These
people are just different.
I watched shaking my head when you
first let them into this place. They've got
their own schools back East, and plenty
of their own teachers . Let them stick to
their own kind. But y.ou insisted, saying
though they're slow, they can lean} plenty
from us. Besides, having a few around
will make things easier. We'll enlighten
them, and at the same time try to figure
out what makes them tick.
It started out with just a few, and on ly
the special ones who half knew our ways.
But their numbers have steadily grown.
Did you ever wonder how? Cause they
always choose their own. In the beginning
they pretend to give everybody a chance,
equality and all. Eventually, they don't
even bother with that. They just line up
all the possibles, look 'em over, and
whichever looks the most like them is in.
Simple as that.
This business of one brotherhood is a
big front. Take a good look at what
you're being tied to. If they want to mix
so much, how come they always sit by
themselves. They seem to speak the same
language, but how come you can't understand what they say. I'll tell you why, because they're plotting.
Before long they're after the top jobs.
And you enco~rage them, like so many
mules. I've seen you watch them on the
TV and smile, but when the cameras
aren' t looking they're laughing at you .
Then they go to the capitol and you think
they stand for you, actually they're saving
their own tails. Tying up important
people in the halls , talking on telephones.

Why do you think the government wants
to see more and more of them out here.
Pretty soon there'll be no room for the
fest of us.
Finally when they've nearly got you
hogtied, you begin to see the light. That
it's us against them . When at last you try
to show you've got the high hand, they
play along, all the time upping the ante,
and letting you think they don't know the
game. But last month you learned, they
had the top of the deck stacked all along.
And your hands were tied.
I haven't spent my whole life out West.
I've lived and worked with these people, I
know them inside out. The shade makes
no difference, could be polka dot, they
still want only one thing. To take over I
Before they tie us all down, they must be
stopped. T-shirts, tank tops, and turtlenecks don't be deceived by the liberal line
any longer. Move now before 'it's too late.
T urn the tide! There is still time to loose
this menace from our midst. Remember, a
tie hangs two ways.
A. Bork

Deans burst into song
To the Point:
f,.

During Spring break all faculty, staff,
and program secretaries received a bulletin from Walker Allen, Registrar, regarding "Slight Revision of Contract Processl ing." The bulletin contains one revision
which is certainly not "slight;" it is indeed
one of the most exciting innovations to
come down the pike at or Nevergreen.
Point #3 on the memo relates to the
deans. It says that deans will: a. check
content of contracts, and b. sing them
and send them back to the secretaries.
WOW! I really like that. Oh, the images
ca ll ed forth. Just imagine it. There they
are, Rudy, Lynn, Willie and Charley
gathered on the clock tower singing our
co ntracts. Large crowds will gather to
Coooer Point Journal

As members of EPIC (Evergreen Political Information Center), we really appreciate the criticism we have been receiving.
Our view is that criticism and self criticism are positive contributions to the
process of learning and continuing to
grow. We especially thank Angie and
Sheila - two of the writers of a letter to
'~he last issue of the Cooper Point Journal
- for coming to the EPIC meeting at
which we spent four hours critiquing the
rally we held on Feb. 28.
Many people have asked us why we are
studying about and working towards a
radical change of American society. The
answer is fairly simple. We find the condition o f society intolerable. As we look
to our own futures, we see that the options offered to us are aliena ting, unfulfilling, and unhealthy .
Some people have asked us why we , in
our "privileged" position (as students) are
not content to enjoy that position. This
logic implies that we should be content
because others are worse off than we are.
Our question is - what is this "privilege?" We are "privileged" to ' become
'o ffice bureaucrats, corporate managers
and technicians, military scientists and, if
we're "talented," we ca n become advertising artists; in sho rt, if we're lucky , we
can become the upper stra tum of the
work force , serving those w ho are' a lready
in control of our society.
This is one option. Exciting, huh? This
is the predominant option offered to us a t
Evergreen. Here, we are encouraged to explore the most rational means for strengtheni ng the social o rder that is the cause of
an itnti-human wasteland. In the guise of
the "Evirgreen Spirit" we are asked to
"tone down" our act ivities to join the " Evergreen Commun it y, " a n apprenticeship
to an uncritical acceptance of the "A merican Communi ty ."
W e refuse to acce pt the illu sion of democrat ic control as a substitute for its rea lity , eit her at Evergree n or in society at
large.
A seco nd op tion is one that has been
popul arized by the med ia in recent years
- a nosta lgic glorifica ti on of the past. exemplifi ed by the mys ti ca l, a nd back - toApril 3, 1975

the-land movements . Though both are
understandable responses to the ugliness
in the world, they are not creative and
progressive solutions to our situation. To
react to a deepening worldwide environmental crisis with a refusal to demand the
removal from power of the people who
are responsible for the "profitable" destruction is to allow these people to continue to rape the earth.
Ins tead of attempting to rebuild the
past , or strengthen a social order that pats
us on the head if we're "reasonable," we,
like many others, choose to be creative,
and consciously construct a democratic
socia l order. For us this means a socialist
society , a society in which people take
priority over corporate profits, and every
individua l is able to pursue his or her fullest potentialities, instead of having to sacrifice creativity merely in order to Jive.
In a letter to the editor in the last issue
of the Cooper Point JournaL we were
asked to change our name, so as to make
clear our socialist methodology. This request is based on the assumption tha"l'-it is
possible for education or for political information to be "cbjective." We believe
that no dissemination of information or
ideas (in the form of journalism, TV ,
movies, or other mediums) is ever objectiv e. Ultimately , political information
ei ther leaves intact society's dominant ideology, or serves to criticize it.
Unlike the six o'clock news (which
cla ims "objectivity" but could accurately
be titled "Report from the Government"
or "Lessons in Bourgeois Ideology") we
spread no illusions of objectivity ; we
have consciously attempted to make our
politics very clear . To change our name
would be to accept the myth of "objectivity" that we hope to dispel!
Everyone is invited to our weekly meeting on Wednesdays at 7 :30 p.m . in Lib.
rm. 1407. And next Thursday, April 10,
(7:30, Lib. rm. 1407) we will begin a
s tudy group examining the student movement , and the role of the university in
U. S. society. All are welcome .
The members of EPIC

Ed itors criticized
To the Point:
We are Evergreen students who are
very interested in the direction that the
Cooper ' Point Journal takes in the
upcoming quarter. Several times during
the past month we confronted the present
ed itor s with criticisms of the winter
quarter paper and the direction which the
editors have outlined for this spring, most
notably in their "butterfly" statement in
the Feb. 27 issue. The editors responded
by devoting the second page of tPte March
, 6 issue to a rebuttal of their critics in an
essay entit led "Forever Green." In that
essay , beneath an onslaught of meaningless platitudes, the edi tors re':t?aled their
continued on page 21

GROCERIES, BY BOAT

n

Sandwiches

tIm

Cold Beverages

1 Block from the Marina

The

DUCK HOUSE
is looking for works of serious
artists and craftsmen for
display Iconsignment. .
LOCATION: basement of CAB
building across from cafeteria
PHONE: 866-6477
NEW HOURS: 10:30-2:30

nurser
SOUTH SOUND CENTER
491-4545

2112" FOLIAGE PLANTS
over 35 varieties
REG PRICE 49 cents

NOW

PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH
April '110, 1975

Page 3

Vol. 3

No. 20

COOPER

April 3, 1975

th€

pOint

JOURNAL

The EvergJ::een State College

oveu the qap,
Editor: Sam Solomon
Managing Editor:
Aubrey Dawn
News Editor: Ralph
Smith
Culture Editor: Robin
Stanton
Sandy Baugher
Billie Cornish
Jim Feyk
Kim Goodman
Mary Hester
Brian Murphy
Nanette Westerman
Production:
Millie
Brombacher
Business Manager: John
Foster
Advertising Manager:
Craig Lozzi
Faculty
Adviser:
Margaret Gribskov

Page 4

Olympia, Washington

You begin in the rain. Your gentle rinsing soon
turns 'into frostbite. It doesn' t take long for you to
hide out. And that's where outlaws have to stay.
Then when everyrhing in your dinghy seems safe and
you're on top of the typical ' building wearing your
reflecting false sky camouflage jumpsuit it happens.
Something really happens. Something has grabbed
you gently by the brain and taken you up where your
camouflage would be a lying redundancy. And you
look around and there are two banks and the dark
chasm you and your guide are floating over doesn't
seem to have bottom . And panic seeps in your ears
and scra mbles up your brain, "We're floating now but
will it last?"
We ha ve to last up there. It is individual and
collective. It begins with a question and ends with a
choice .
Down in the blind 'g ap is where events fall, carrying
passersby with them if those people haven' t seen them
yet. So they will see them AS IT IS.
AS IT IS now Evergreen is temporarily losing a
grea t faculty member and temporarily gaining a great
dean, in Leo Daugherty. Rape is about the darkest
chasm around and too many people are being pushed
int o it--therefore a message is in order. The long lines
turn many people away from the bank, including its
manager. Evergreen proudly receives the solidness in
concrete award. When the big big day came the big
big guys themselves received the .award themselves,
wid, bated breath . It was a glorious moment, a
moment that would be cherished for generations to
come and go--that award will still be very hardly with
us reminding us that anything can dry up and turn to
stone if it doesn't receive its proper ration of water.
Put your own rain to work. Let's hope you see the
gap fill a bit by the time you graduate.

Letters .... .. ......... .. .. ... .... ....... 2
As It Is ............... ... .... ..... .. ... 6
Daugherty New Dean ............. 9
Moss Case Goes to Court. ...... 11
Bank Manager Resigns ... .. ..... . 12
Hucks Demands Exposure .. .. .. 13

I he Cooper Po int Journal is publi shed hebd o m adally by the Evergreen
Stat e Co ll ege Board o f Publi ca tion s
and members o f the Evergreen community . It is fund ed , in part, by student serv i ces and ac tiviti es fees .
Views expressed are not necessa rily
th ose of the ed it o rial staff or The Evergree n Sta te Co ll ege . Th e Journal
new s and business rooms are lo ca ted
o n th e tlmd floor of the ct> ll ege Act lvit i", b ld g., CAB rm . 300. Phon e :
86&-&211 ,for advertiSing and business
In format io n : 8&&-6080.

To the WOOlen of Evergreen
I am vvriting this to make a statement, a vvarning, at best a plea. My
statement is simply that during evaluation vveek I became another one
of Evergreen's rape victims. But the statement ' goes beyond that. It
must incillde some transference of information, something I novv knovv
that all: vvQmen and men need to knovv.
First, I vvould like to emphasize the IItypical" nature of the circumstances tha:t surrounded the rape. I vvas hitchhiking back to school to
get to the bank before it closed. It vvas the middle of the day, a beautifully sunny ,day on Kaiser Road at the Cooper Point light. I hitchhike
rarely and I came . from an upbringing that taught me to feel safe" in
the vvorld around me. I knovv that my attitudes vver.e similar to many
other vvomen at this school, ,the typical #lit vvon't , happen to me." Fr~m
the minute my thumb vvas out I vvas a victim. Turning dovvn a ride may
seem like a feasible vvay to avoid rape but not . if the rapist has a
vveapon like a gun.
OK, the rape is over. What do you do? I vvas fortunate enough to
have some vital information off the registration card. Rape Relief vvas
the next step. ' 1 vvas counseled on my options and encouraged to report
it to the police, vvhich I did.
'
Was it the right decision? Will I have to go to court? Questions that
can't be ansvvered eat you avvay. But one out of every 10 vvomen
report rapes and from there - the n.umber of rapists vvho eventually get
caught and convicted is extremely lovv. And that's in relation to the reported rapes. Most go unreported, and it is a convnon occurrence. You
never knovv if your report might provide information that vvill correlate
vvith other reports and give the opportuni:tY for the rapist to be caught
and stopped. I suggest that as many of the people in this community
as possible try to attend the movie about rape next Thursday, April 10.
Perhaps the movie vvill bring the reality of the sit~ation a bit closer
without letting, the reality become an experience.
Name vvithheld by request
II

"

The Jo urna l is free to all .stud ents
o f Th e Evergreen State Co ll ege and is
d' str,butpd o n ca mpu s without
<- harge. Fvergree n stud en ts may relelve, by mail , subsc ripti om to th e
JOllrnal w ith out c harge. Fo r no n-Evergrpe n st udents, a nin e mo nth subscri pti o n may be obtain ed at the
price o f four do ll ars For info rmation :
1\&&-6080.

Cooper Point Journal
April 3, 1975

Page 5

Vol. 3

No. 20

COOPER

April 3, 1975

th€

pOint

JOURNAL

The EvergJ::een State College

oveu the qap,
Editor: Sam Solomon
Managing Editor:
Aubrey Dawn
News Editor: Ralph
Smith
Culture Editor: Robin
Stanton
Sandy Baugher
Billie Cornish
Jim Feyk
Kim Goodman
Mary Hester
Brian Murphy
Nanette Westerman
Production:
Millie
Brombacher
Business Manager: John
Foster
Advertising Manager:
Craig Lozzi
Faculty
Adviser:
Margaret Gribskov

Page 4

Olympia, Washington

You begin in the rain. Your gentle rinsing soon
turns 'into frostbite. It doesn' t take long for you to
hide out. And that's where outlaws have to stay.
Then when everyrhing in your dinghy seems safe and
you're on top of the typical ' building wearing your
reflecting false sky camouflage jumpsuit it happens.
Something really happens. Something has grabbed
you gently by the brain and taken you up where your
camouflage would be a lying redundancy. And you
look around and there are two banks and the dark
chasm you and your guide are floating over doesn't
seem to have bottom . And panic seeps in your ears
and scra mbles up your brain, "We're floating now but
will it last?"
We ha ve to last up there. It is individual and
collective. It begins with a question and ends with a
choice .
Down in the blind 'g ap is where events fall, carrying
passersby with them if those people haven' t seen them
yet. So they will see them AS IT IS.
AS IT IS now Evergreen is temporarily losing a
grea t faculty member and temporarily gaining a great
dean, in Leo Daugherty. Rape is about the darkest
chasm around and too many people are being pushed
int o it--therefore a message is in order. The long lines
turn many people away from the bank, including its
manager. Evergreen proudly receives the solidness in
concrete award. When the big big day came the big
big guys themselves received the .award themselves,
wid, bated breath . It was a glorious moment, a
moment that would be cherished for generations to
come and go--that award will still be very hardly with
us reminding us that anything can dry up and turn to
stone if it doesn't receive its proper ration of water.
Put your own rain to work. Let's hope you see the
gap fill a bit by the time you graduate.

Letters .... .. ......... .. .. ... .... ....... 2
As It Is ............... ... .... ..... .. ... 6
Daugherty New Dean ............. 9
Moss Case Goes to Court. ...... 11
Bank Manager Resigns ... .. ..... . 12
Hucks Demands Exposure .. .. .. 13

I he Cooper Po int Journal is publi shed hebd o m adally by the Evergreen
Stat e Co ll ege Board o f Publi ca tion s
and members o f the Evergreen community . It is fund ed , in part, by student serv i ces and ac tiviti es fees .
Views expressed are not necessa rily
th ose of the ed it o rial staff or The Evergree n Sta te Co ll ege . Th e Journal
new s and business rooms are lo ca ted
o n th e tlmd floor of the ct> ll ege Act lvit i", b ld g., CAB rm . 300. Phon e :
86&-&211 ,for advertiSing and business
In format io n : 8&&-6080.

To the WOOlen of Evergreen
I am vvriting this to make a statement, a vvarning, at best a plea. My
statement is simply that during evaluation vveek I became another one
of Evergreen's rape victims. But the statement ' goes beyond that. It
must incillde some transference of information, something I novv knovv
that all: vvQmen and men need to knovv.
First, I vvould like to emphasize the IItypical" nature of the circumstances tha:t surrounded the rape. I vvas hitchhiking back to school to
get to the bank before it closed. It vvas the middle of the day, a beautifully sunny ,day on Kaiser Road at the Cooper Point light. I hitchhike
rarely and I came . from an upbringing that taught me to feel safe" in
the vvorld around me. I knovv that my attitudes vver.e similar to many
other vvomen at this school, ,the typical #lit vvon't , happen to me." Fr~m
the minute my thumb vvas out I vvas a victim. Turning dovvn a ride may
seem like a feasible vvay to avoid rape but not . if the rapist has a
vveapon like a gun.
OK, the rape is over. What do you do? I vvas fortunate enough to
have some vital information off the registration card. Rape Relief vvas
the next step. ' 1 vvas counseled on my options and encouraged to report
it to the police, vvhich I did.
'
Was it the right decision? Will I have to go to court? Questions that
can't be ansvvered eat you avvay. But one out of every 10 vvomen
report rapes and from there - the n.umber of rapists vvho eventually get
caught and convicted is extremely lovv. And that's in relation to the reported rapes. Most go unreported, and it is a convnon occurrence. You
never knovv if your report might provide information that vvill correlate
vvith other reports and give the opportuni:tY for the rapist to be caught
and stopped. I suggest that as many of the people in this community
as possible try to attend the movie about rape next Thursday, April 10.
Perhaps the movie vvill bring the reality of the sit~ation a bit closer
without letting, the reality become an experience.
Name vvithheld by request
II

"

The Jo urna l is free to all .stud ents
o f Th e Evergreen State Co ll ege and is
d' str,butpd o n ca mpu s without
<- harge. Fvergree n stud en ts may relelve, by mail , subsc ripti om to th e
JOllrnal w ith out c harge. Fo r no n-Evergrpe n st udents, a nin e mo nth subscri pti o n may be obtain ed at the
price o f four do ll ars For info rmation :
1\&&-6080.

Cooper Point Journal
April 3, 1975

Page 5

EVERGREEN AWARDED SCIENCE
GRANT

As It Is

The National Science Foundation has
awarded Evergreen a grant allowing 12
studen ts a nd 36 Olympia. School District
teachers to work together in a workshop
on elementary science education. The two
week event is designed to acquaint the
participa n ts wi th modern teaching strategies and materials in elementary science.
The new methods will be used in Olympia
n ex t year with Everg reen students
working as assistant s in the classroom.
Students interested in th e program
should cont act Don Hum phrey in lab.
rm . 3006 or pick up an a pplication in
lab. rm. 3015 .
The workshop will run from June 16
through June 27 on campus. A modest
allowance w ill be offered to successful
a pplican ts to help offset the cost of
tuition , materials a nd travel. Applications
must b e in by April 15; those chosen will
be notified by April 20.

SPRING ART AND RECREATION
WORKSHOPS LISTED

regio
IN THE USE OF CONCRETE 1975 by Washington
Aggregates and Concrete Association , and we didn't even know there was a co ntest. "
buff-colored, lightly sandblasted, cast-in-place reinforced concrete was selected for th
structure to harmonize witf. surrounding campus fa cilities." The architect is Nayr,...,,,ro.
Bain. ~rady and Johnson who we imagine worked closely with Skilling, Helle,
ChristIansen, and Robertson , the structural engineer .

SALARY RAISES DISCUSSED
BY TRUSTEES
Evergreen's Board of Trustees approved
a 12 percent salary increase for faculty
members a nd exempt admin istrators, in
addit ion to a KAOS radio sta ti on power
boost during a March 17 meeting here .
Voted recently by the l egisla ture to improve the sa lary schedule, 42 exempt admin istrat ion staff ra ises were granted by
the Board w hile the adoption of a new
fac ulty sa lary schedule was approved.
A lso awarded during the meeting was a
KAOS power increase from 10 watts to
1.000 wa tt s, pend ing additiona l KAOS
equipment purch ase. In requesting the
boost, Station Ma nager lee Riback informed Board members that the actua l inCR'ase wou ld be approximately 250 watts
as KAOS could not afford t he equ ipment
necessary for a larger power in crease.
Jerry Sch illinger, Evergreen facilit ies director , reported the progress of the labora tory a nd Communications b uil dings to

Page 6

the Trustees, sta tin g - that the labora tory
wing would be occupied ten ta tively by
next October a nd lab building office by
next November. He menti oned the Comm uni cations bu ild ing progress had been
delayed due to adverse wea ther co nditions
and that expected completion is Ja nuary
1977.

DEP ARTMENT OF INTERIOR FINDS
EVERGREEN WORK VALUABLE
"Hood Canal: Priorities for tomorrow ,"
a n O-page report written by 30 Evergreen
studen ts and five fac ulty members in 1972
has recently been pub lished by the United
States Department of the Interior .
The land use study culminated seven
mon th s of int ens ive eco logica l f ield
research in 1972. The st udents and facu lty
members , part of the coordinated st udies
program Poli tical Ecology, were funded
by a grant from the National Sc ience
Founda tion.

Almost four dozen art and recreation
workshops are b e in g offered spring
quarter by t he Office of Recreation and
Campus Activities . Registration for the
non -c red it workshops lasts five day s
. b.eginning April 7 a t 7 a.m . in college
Recreation Bldg. room 302 . Workshops
with limited enrollme nt will be filled on a
first -come, first-served basis.
A n orienta tion session with instructors
present w ill be held from 6:30-8:30 p.m.
Apri l 3 in CAB rm. 108. For more
informat io n abou t the workshops call
866-6531.

SUMMER PROGRAMS RELEASED
Summer qua rter programs will begin
June 23, except for C urriculum Works h op : Elementary Scie n ce which will
begin June 16, a nd Wagner's Ring Cycle
w hich begins Jul y 7, Evergreen's deans
have a nn o unced.
Registration for the summ er will be
May 19 a nd 20. Program enrollment will
' be lim i te d , so early registration is
recommended. A final walk-in registra tion
w ill be held June ,23, for those who
can not m ake the early registration .
A copy of the brochure for the summer
is available in the informa tion center.
Only one copy is available, so it can not
leave the kiosk . S umm er coordinated
studies programs a nd faculty will be: The
Good Earth , Neil Skov; la France Entre
G uerres : Espagne Y America Sur Entre
las Gue.rras Mondiales, Susan Fiksdal;
and Wagner' s Ring Cycle, Charlie Teske.
Group con tracts wi ll be : America Folk
Music: An Overview For Teachers, Tom
Foote; ·Ba c kpacks, Monumen ts and
Museum s , Gordon Beck; Curriculum
Worksh o p : Ele mentary Science, Don

Cooper. Point Journal

Humphrey; Ecology And Chemistry of
Pollution , Steve Herman ; Elementary
Mathematics , Puzzles and Computer
Science, Richard Brian; Evergreen Env ironment , Al Wiedemann; Invitation To
The Theatre: How to Read And Stage
The Modern Play , Andrew H a nfma n ;
Utopia: A Study of Plato's Republic ,
Marl l evensky; The Meaning of life a nd
Death, Carol Olexa ; Native American
Studies: The Squashblossom Project,
Cru z Exq ui ve l ; Natural H istory of
Washington 's Ma rin e Coasts, Pe ter
Taylor; Philosophy A to Z, Wi ll
Humphreys; Photo Skills, Kirk Thompson ; Sex a nd The Historical Sense In
American Li terature, Dave Marr ; T heatre
East and West, Andrew Tsai; Women In
Communications, Margare t Gribskov;
Two Modules for Teachers, Counselors,
and School Administrators, Bill Aldridge;
Education In Contemporary American
Society, Bill Aldridge ; a nd P rinciples a nd
Practices of Guidance , Bill Aldridge .
Th e individual con t ract pool wil l
consist of Jeann e Hahn , Jim M a rtinez,
Mary Nelson, Greg Portnoff , Jacob
Romero, Pau l Sparks, Carol Spence, Lem
Stepherson, and Nancy Taylor.

RAPIST APPREHENDED
Twenty-two year-old Willi a m Regan of
Olympia was charged last week with
rapes, occurring Sept. 26, Nov . 22, a nd
March 11, inv olvin'g three Evergreen
students.
The ra pe incident s occurred on the
Steamboat Island Road and th e O lympia
West Side area. A ll three women were
reportedly hitchhi king when a man
offered them a ride and later threa tened
them with a small calibre handgun . A
weapon h as been confiscated and is being
held as evidence. The last rape victim
gave the a uthoriti es valuable information
from a vehicle registration card leading to
Regan's arrest,
Regan , recently d ischarged from the
U .S . Army, was working at Ft. lew is as a

civilian employee. He is presently waiting
trial in Thurston County Jail. Bail has not
been set.

Ken Donohue

DTF REPORTS
A DTF o n cooperative educa tion has
entered its findings to the department's
head Ken Donohue . The 18 person task
force suggested several guidelines for the
department including a "reverse internsh ip
application" and a limit on the to tal
number of internship units.
Reverse interns (those operating entirely
off campus) would fill out a special
ap plication to be screened by a five
person board. The DTF specifies areas for
the boa rd to consider such as: is the
internship a lea rning experience; is the
student ready to work without facu lty
support; will the faculty have the
resources to make a n evalua tion . The
DTF decided this form should also apply
to any st udents interning in their first
year here.
O ther proposals by the DTF are: a
normal limit of 24 units (six full quarters)
of intern credit ; rejection of the proposed
card system ; a nd emph asized the importance o f advance notifica tion by faculty in
coordina ted studies a nd group contracts
utilizing internships as a part of the
program .
Th e Administrative Procedures DTF
was c h arged by Pres id e nt C h arles
McCann d u ri n g a speec h to the

community o n Feb. 28 following a two
day meeting of a specially appointed
"advi sory group" which considered the
implications of the Tr ustees decision
reinsta tin g Jo hn Mo ss as director of
Aux iliary Services a nd Personnel.
The DTFs goa ls are to exa mine and
develop policy regarding screening p rocedures utilized in the Affirmative Action
office; hiring of exempt administrators;
pro moting open compet ition for classified
staff; a nd combi ning function s for exempt
ad ministrative positions.
A t th e second of three proposed
meetings held last Tuesday a subcommittee reco mmended it was "absolutely
essential that the President a nd Vice-President have complete fl exibility to combine
or c h a n ge th e sco p e of a ll exe m p t
admin istrative positions." They stated
severa l reasons including "efficiency of
opera ti o n, eco nomy a nd f unction a l
cha n ges, and capabilities of current
exempt admin istra tors. " The report adds
that the searc h whether conducted
internally or on an open competitive basis
must comply with the Affirma tive Action
policy.
The subco mmittee on exempt personnel
employment policy suggested a "specific
p lan for recruitment a nd selection" by the
employ ing official be submitted to the
Affirmative Action Officer for a pproval.
Still to be discussed at the next meeting
scheduled for Tuesday, April 8 at 1 p.m .
in lib. rm. 1612 a re a n Affirmative
Action revision , combination of administrative positions, selection a nd recruitm e nt of exe mpt ad mini s tr a tors ; and
proposed policy o n Open Competitive
Classified posi tio ns. The DTF plans to
report to Presiden t McCann on Apri l 11.
A group of women trying to get toge ther a self-defense class needs a
woman instructor qualified to teach
it : A nyone interested call the women's centre at 866-6162 or Nora at
943-7186.

POLVNESIAN DANCE CLASSES
AT COLLECE RECREATION CENTER

HULA
TUESDAY 12-1 PM
LEHUA TOOMEY

AND

6:30-7:30 PM
PUA CHUN

TAHITIAN
WEDNESDAYS 1-2:30 PM
LEHUA TOOMEY

AND

THURSDAYS 6 : 30-8 PM
LEI TOOMEY
,

Learn the graceful Hawaiian hula movements and nine intricate hip movements of Tahitian
dancing from native instructors who have danced professionally in las Vegas, Hawaii,
Japan and USA.

REGISTRATION APRIL 7-11
CLASSES BEGIN APRIL 15
INFORMATION AT THE RECREATION CENTER OR 357-3573 EVENINGS.
A nr;l

.~

1975

EVERGREEN AWARDED SCIENCE
GRANT

As It Is

The National Science Foundation has
awarded Evergreen a grant allowing 12
studen ts a nd 36 Olympia. School District
teachers to work together in a workshop
on elementary science education. The two
week event is designed to acquaint the
participa n ts wi th modern teaching strategies and materials in elementary science.
The new methods will be used in Olympia
n ex t year with Everg reen students
working as assistant s in the classroom.
Students interested in th e program
should cont act Don Hum phrey in lab.
rm . 3006 or pick up an a pplication in
lab. rm. 3015 .
The workshop will run from June 16
through June 27 on campus. A modest
allowance w ill be offered to successful
a pplican ts to help offset the cost of
tuition , materials a nd travel. Applications
must b e in by April 15; those chosen will
be notified by April 20.

SPRING ART AND RECREATION
WORKSHOPS LISTED

regio
IN THE USE OF CONCRETE 1975 by Washington
Aggregates and Concrete Association , and we didn't even know there was a co ntest. "
buff-colored, lightly sandblasted, cast-in-place reinforced concrete was selected for th
structure to harmonize witf. surrounding campus fa cilities." The architect is Nayr,...,,,ro.
Bain. ~rady and Johnson who we imagine worked closely with Skilling, Helle,
ChristIansen, and Robertson , the structural engineer .

SALARY RAISES DISCUSSED
BY TRUSTEES
Evergreen's Board of Trustees approved
a 12 percent salary increase for faculty
members a nd exempt admin istrators, in
addit ion to a KAOS radio sta ti on power
boost during a March 17 meeting here .
Voted recently by the l egisla ture to improve the sa lary schedule, 42 exempt admin istrat ion staff ra ises were granted by
the Board w hile the adoption of a new
fac ulty sa lary schedule was approved.
A lso awarded during the meeting was a
KAOS power increase from 10 watts to
1.000 wa tt s, pend ing additiona l KAOS
equipment purch ase. In requesting the
boost, Station Ma nager lee Riback informed Board members that the actua l inCR'ase wou ld be approximately 250 watts
as KAOS could not afford t he equ ipment
necessary for a larger power in crease.
Jerry Sch illinger, Evergreen facilit ies director , reported the progress of the labora tory a nd Communications b uil dings to

Page 6

the Trustees, sta tin g - that the labora tory
wing would be occupied ten ta tively by
next October a nd lab building office by
next November. He menti oned the Comm uni cations bu ild ing progress had been
delayed due to adverse wea ther co nditions
and that expected completion is Ja nuary
1977.

DEP ARTMENT OF INTERIOR FINDS
EVERGREEN WORK VALUABLE
"Hood Canal: Priorities for tomorrow ,"
a n O-page report written by 30 Evergreen
studen ts and five fac ulty members in 1972
has recently been pub lished by the United
States Department of the Interior .
The land use study culminated seven
mon th s of int ens ive eco logica l f ield
research in 1972. The st udents and facu lty
members , part of the coordinated st udies
program Poli tical Ecology, were funded
by a grant from the National Sc ience
Founda tion.

Almost four dozen art and recreation
workshops are b e in g offered spring
quarter by t he Office of Recreation and
Campus Activities . Registration for the
non -c red it workshops lasts five day s
. b.eginning April 7 a t 7 a.m . in college
Recreation Bldg. room 302 . Workshops
with limited enrollme nt will be filled on a
first -come, first-served basis.
A n orienta tion session with instructors
present w ill be held from 6:30-8:30 p.m.
Apri l 3 in CAB rm. 108. For more
informat io n abou t the workshops call
866-6531.

SUMMER PROGRAMS RELEASED
Summer qua rter programs will begin
June 23, except for C urriculum Works h op : Elementary Scie n ce which will
begin June 16, a nd Wagner's Ring Cycle
w hich begins Jul y 7, Evergreen's deans
have a nn o unced.
Registration for the summ er will be
May 19 a nd 20. Program enrollment will
' be lim i te d , so early registration is
recommended. A final walk-in registra tion
w ill be held June ,23, for those who
can not m ake the early registration .
A copy of the brochure for the summer
is available in the informa tion center.
Only one copy is available, so it can not
leave the kiosk . S umm er coordinated
studies programs a nd faculty will be: The
Good Earth , Neil Skov; la France Entre
G uerres : Espagne Y America Sur Entre
las Gue.rras Mondiales, Susan Fiksdal;
and Wagner' s Ring Cycle, Charlie Teske.
Group con tracts wi ll be : America Folk
Music: An Overview For Teachers, Tom
Foote; ·Ba c kpacks, Monumen ts and
Museum s , Gordon Beck; Curriculum
Worksh o p : Ele mentary Science, Don

Cooper. Point Journal

Humphrey; Ecology And Chemistry of
Pollution , Steve Herman ; Elementary
Mathematics , Puzzles and Computer
Science, Richard Brian; Evergreen Env ironment , Al Wiedemann; Invitation To
The Theatre: How to Read And Stage
The Modern Play , Andrew H a nfma n ;
Utopia: A Study of Plato's Republic ,
Marl l evensky; The Meaning of life a nd
Death, Carol Olexa ; Native American
Studies: The Squashblossom Project,
Cru z Exq ui ve l ; Natural H istory of
Washington 's Ma rin e Coasts, Pe ter
Taylor; Philosophy A to Z, Wi ll
Humphreys; Photo Skills, Kirk Thompson ; Sex a nd The Historical Sense In
American Li terature, Dave Marr ; T heatre
East and West, Andrew Tsai; Women In
Communications, Margare t Gribskov;
Two Modules for Teachers, Counselors,
and School Administrators, Bill Aldridge;
Education In Contemporary American
Society, Bill Aldridge ; a nd P rinciples a nd
Practices of Guidance , Bill Aldridge .
Th e individual con t ract pool wil l
consist of Jeann e Hahn , Jim M a rtinez,
Mary Nelson, Greg Portnoff , Jacob
Romero, Pau l Sparks, Carol Spence, Lem
Stepherson, and Nancy Taylor.

RAPIST APPREHENDED
Twenty-two year-old Willi a m Regan of
Olympia was charged last week with
rapes, occurring Sept. 26, Nov . 22, a nd
March 11, inv olvin'g three Evergreen
students.
The ra pe incident s occurred on the
Steamboat Island Road and th e O lympia
West Side area. A ll three women were
reportedly hitchhi king when a man
offered them a ride and later threa tened
them with a small calibre handgun . A
weapon h as been confiscated and is being
held as evidence. The last rape victim
gave the a uthoriti es valuable information
from a vehicle registration card leading to
Regan's arrest,
Regan , recently d ischarged from the
U .S . Army, was working at Ft. lew is as a

civilian employee. He is presently waiting
trial in Thurston County Jail. Bail has not
been set.

Ken Donohue

DTF REPORTS
A DTF o n cooperative educa tion has
entered its findings to the department's
head Ken Donohue . The 18 person task
force suggested several guidelines for the
department including a "reverse internsh ip
application" and a limit on the to tal
number of internship units.
Reverse interns (those operating entirely
off campus) would fill out a special
ap plication to be screened by a five
person board. The DTF specifies areas for
the boa rd to consider such as: is the
internship a lea rning experience; is the
student ready to work without facu lty
support; will the faculty have the
resources to make a n evalua tion . The
DTF decided this form should also apply
to any st udents interning in their first
year here.
O ther proposals by the DTF are: a
normal limit of 24 units (six full quarters)
of intern credit ; rejection of the proposed
card system ; a nd emph asized the importance o f advance notifica tion by faculty in
coordina ted studies a nd group contracts
utilizing internships as a part of the
program .
Th e Administrative Procedures DTF
was c h arged by Pres id e nt C h arles
McCann d u ri n g a speec h to the

community o n Feb. 28 following a two
day meeting of a specially appointed
"advi sory group" which considered the
implications of the Tr ustees decision
reinsta tin g Jo hn Mo ss as director of
Aux iliary Services a nd Personnel.
The DTFs goa ls are to exa mine and
develop policy regarding screening p rocedures utilized in the Affirmative Action
office; hiring of exempt administrators;
pro moting open compet ition for classified
staff; a nd combi ning function s for exempt
ad ministrative positions.
A t th e second of three proposed
meetings held last Tuesday a subcommittee reco mmended it was "absolutely
essential that the President a nd Vice-President have complete fl exibility to combine
or c h a n ge th e sco p e of a ll exe m p t
admin istrative positions." They stated
severa l reasons including "efficiency of
opera ti o n, eco nomy a nd f unction a l
cha n ges, and capabilities of current
exempt admin istra tors. " The report adds
that the searc h whether conducted
internally or on an open competitive basis
must comply with the Affirma tive Action
policy.
The subco mmittee on exempt personnel
employment policy suggested a "specific
p lan for recruitment a nd selection" by the
employ ing official be submitted to the
Affirmative Action Officer for a pproval.
Still to be discussed at the next meeting
scheduled for Tuesday, April 8 at 1 p.m .
in lib. rm. 1612 a re a n Affirmative
Action revision , combination of administrative positions, selection a nd recruitm e nt of exe mpt ad mini s tr a tors ; and
proposed policy o n Open Competitive
Classified posi tio ns. The DTF plans to
report to Presiden t McCann on Apri l 11.
A group of women trying to get toge ther a self-defense class needs a
woman instructor qualified to teach
it : A nyone interested call the women's centre at 866-6162 or Nora at
943-7186.

POLVNESIAN DANCE CLASSES
AT COLLECE RECREATION CENTER

HULA
TUESDAY 12-1 PM
LEHUA TOOMEY

AND

6:30-7:30 PM
PUA CHUN

TAHITIAN
WEDNESDAYS 1-2:30 PM
LEHUA TOOMEY

AND

THURSDAYS 6 : 30-8 PM
LEI TOOMEY
,

Learn the graceful Hawaiian hula movements and nine intricate hip movements of Tahitian
dancing from native instructors who have danced professionally in las Vegas, Hawaii,
Japan and USA.

REGISTRATION APRIL 7-11
CLASSES BEGIN APRIL 15
INFORMATION AT THE RECREATION CENTER OR 357-3573 EVENINGS.
A nr;l

.~

1975

WANT TO:
Use the library until late?
Go .shopping at night?
Attend an evening event on or off campus?
Eat Dinner out?
Visit a friend without having to slee p over?

WHILE YOU AVOID HITCHING AND SAVE ON GAS?

10 ce nts gets yo u to / from Campus,
West sid e , Downtown ,
Sout h Sound Cente r
Area , and all POints between .'

bus
leaves campus at 6: 10,

Leo

8: 10,10: 10, & 11: 10.

L eo D a u g h erty , li ler<.llure dn J i ing l listics
facullY mt'mber <.II E v ergreen . hd~ beelJ
named to a I hret'-Yt'dr term a ~ acaJe m ic
dean . Hi s appuintmenl be c() me ~ e£tectiv£'
Julyl , ) 075 .

Return 50 minutes later.
Copy of nevv route and

Accordin g It I Vi L l' - l'r e~ iJl'nl and Prc)vos t Ed Kor m llndy l he Dean Scrcen i ng
Disappearin g T J-;k Force (I nT ) n l1t.: d Ihal
Da u g h hty di srlJ Yo; ·(, \ ·)(Ie n ce ot ~ ll'On g
ab ilit y tu he lp p e ople co ll abo r a tl>,
co miderahle p rg .lnl z,llinn cti abil it y . ca lm
integrity a nd ge nlle tirm l1e~s . is artiCllJ.~ tl'
i1nd cunc i st· . <In l'xC(>l lenl IIQ en £' r . hd~ li rm
ideal s. i~ J sulld dcad em ic . an d vdllle~
crea li v il y Jnd i ll1Jg in .Hi,)Jl In probl em

schedule available at the Information Center.

Dauglll'rl \' repl .l( c~ C h<.lrle ~

Tt·s ke .

Id sl

l'i t h e I"u l' origi n'll EVl'rg('t'll deans . wlto
a~-; i s led in l 'd r l y llll legt' and c ur~i c lllurrl
I ,1 n n i n h . U
n ( 0 m pie I io n 0 I hi s
t o ur - ye.H lerm JS d!',lll . Tt'c;kc will rot atc'
into Ihl' Evergrel'll IJ cu l l y.
'Thl' 'Inl }' ,l\\l ul p.!rt ahuut f:'l('( nll1 ing .1
de.ln 'is Ih ,ll I wIll mi ...... It·.lch i n g ."
I l,lllgh('rl y ~I.lit'd. iiI' I pnlll1ul' d . Jd Jing .
II"WI '\'IT, I "I .ln I'l l Il'l l u rl ' I'd r li tipa t p i ll

r

r ()

s l · Tllin.lr ~

I' age t'

C uoper Point Journal

un i I1vil,ltillll ,In ll I'.lrt i, ir,tll'
!"l'g ul.lrl \' il l 1.1l ul l \' ~t ·nlln.li~
I ~t'" "
tI,·.1I 1
1" "" 11 I. >!) Ill'r', · ,t ... l 'l' i l',g .1 I,J( II !I \'
A ...·; I 1

10 7.<;

Declared

Dean
Rv i\1!! LIE

BR01\.lI3ACHI:.I{

- ,I J ' l' r~ (ln wh() k('l'p~ nn r(,d d l ill~.
wrIling dill! IhlllJ..ing . A mi ~ I .1J..t: CO Tllll1 (l1l
I" il1.II1 ',' (ll l lcgt' .-lJminl.,lr .lIn r~ I" th ,1t
Ih·y ~t(lJl '> t'e ing thel11 sdvt·... . h
l eJ <.. h el"
.m , J ... I;,r l Sl'l·ill ).; I he lll selvl·... ,1S SllII1t' w eird
kind p i wht'l'ie l ,Ic.tll'l'
I <l ll i \' I" Y \)[>IiIll i st l c b('(".lll~e .II
FVl·r~ II ·I ' n . 1.1111 d·,,· , 'lhl'l In s lilull (ln~ . tlll' r l'
I '" d Ill)ldbl, · .J!',,'·n\'(' ,-·1 dl'<l)!.Il Il S lil .:Jt n('~' d
, I,ll j :1 ~ i ~( 'l' I h" I( , b ,.... Lw illg Pill' "I
""'I'k Ill g \\':i h 1\',' nJ ,' riul ~ 'llk·, \\·ho Sh Jr,'
,I n ' ,J I II '> .Il 1" l! l (" J lI' " t I" n .
[) ,lll g It I' r I \.

111(':1'1(1\' 1 -

~'l : \'ing ."

(THE DRIVER WILL STOP ANYWHERE ALONG THE '
ROUTE. JUST SIGNAL OR TELL HER/HIM WHERE.)

Daugherty

, , '>I \I

11I,1t-t! .

! h(' y; It ·.r r -t .jd K"nlll,kl,ln ): r£1dll .lll·d
I , , 'i 11 \ 1.. - ~ 'i d I,. ,' I ~ Ill , ~ ,. 11 , ' Ill\' III \'. I:

Sll,"td . tht'n \vl'nl "11 II' l'arn h i~ Bac h elt)r
tI l Ar l S Je g r c l' III A r l .It \V rs tl'rn
K t' n l u c l v U ni v IT ... i tv. 11[' a lte nd ed Iht,
U nivl'r~ -i lv "f Arl·.lfls;]~ III .1L h l('\'C a
Il1.h tel' · ~ d ~'g T'f?" in t:ngli~ ,lnd Ea.;1 Tcx a ~
SI.ll<, L ' ni \' e r ~ilY l or hl ~ dl'clllrdll' In
!\ IIlt'rIl d n li l e:r,lIurc . Ill' JI ~, n complrll·d
J'l'~ t doc I oral ~I lid !> ,... In i ingll i ~ t i (" ~ ,it
I-I.HvJrd l!ni\'LT~il' · .
[ ' ri,'r I," .n r l v in g ill'r l' In
10 7 '
. D ,1lI g !:t' rt ~ I ,I l: )..: h t lit \'l' .1I ;: I l' . C r l'.J( I 1, ' ( .
1\ I'll ing .tn-l Itn ~ll!~ 1 ie .. •11 ~l'''·'' r . ,J lI n i\'l'l~i l il", i !l c! ud,j ng I hl' 1. :[1 i\'t'h l I Y ,,1 V Irgl! lI.1
:"~llrll,Jk :-;1.11, ' (,,, III,t:I' ,lI1d t hl' \\'i .. c "n~ln
SI .ltl· Ulll\,(T"l l y.
WhIl,' le.ll' h ing in l\:, lrt ll lf... . \ ' . 1 .
1 ) ~lllghl ' lt\ ~l'l'I'C'd t hrt'\'· \,l'.H ~ . l ~ Ih!'
, \;rl'ct,)r 'If til l' ;\i (' ril,lk \/ 15'1'1\ prug ra rn
I" Cl rg.Illi/ l' .Jlld SII Jlpr VI" (' It , V lllul1 tt' l~ l ~ ,
S ill (f' hi ·, I. \' l'r g r l ' C' n . 1 r r i V.l I . h l' ~1.",
r,Jrl i( Ir.;ll'-i l 'll I hl' Ac! v I511ry HOdr J :u
~"\O c., , r-:~l r "d ll' ~ t.1til'n and tht' f- v(·r),n"_'11 11.1)
( ' ,Hl' (enlt' r
BIl.l :- d , · f
1 '::' \"I 'lf ~
P II", ,·ntl y. J).l\ l);hl' r: \, I'> a
Llll :II I !llt ' Il1I~ I 'r elf It ll' H um a n l~ f' ,. p(lf!"' "
I" I l u III ;11l D l'cUll it' :lt" (" , ' r.iln; ,I t'( J
<-;1 1I.i1(·~ I ' r , '~;rdrn .In.j
I" ' I )() 'l ""r l n~
d['I "' IlX ITl:,l t .,I,· 20 II ' ! ' I I,.JU .1 i ' I l: d\

WANT TO:
Use the library until late?
Go .shopping at night?
Attend an evening event on or off campus?
Eat Dinner out?
Visit a friend without having to slee p over?

WHILE YOU AVOID HITCHING AND SAVE ON GAS?

10 ce nts gets yo u to / from Campus,
West sid e , Downtown ,
Sout h Sound Cente r
Area , and all POints between .'

bus
leaves campus at 6: 10,

Leo

8: 10,10: 10, & 11: 10.

L eo D a u g h erty , li ler<.llure dn J i ing l listics
facullY mt'mber <.II E v ergreen . hd~ beelJ
named to a I hret'-Yt'dr term a ~ acaJe m ic
dean . Hi s appuintmenl be c() me ~ e£tectiv£'
Julyl , ) 075 .

Return 50 minutes later.
Copy of nevv route and

Accordin g It I Vi L l' - l'r e~ iJl'nl and Prc)vos t Ed Kor m llndy l he Dean Scrcen i ng
Disappearin g T J-;k Force (I nT ) n l1t.: d Ihal
Da u g h hty di srlJ Yo; ·(, \ ·)(Ie n ce ot ~ ll'On g
ab ilit y tu he lp p e ople co ll abo r a tl>,
co miderahle p rg .lnl z,llinn cti abil it y . ca lm
integrity a nd ge nlle tirm l1e~s . is artiCllJ.~ tl'
i1nd cunc i st· . <In l'xC(>l lenl IIQ en £' r . hd~ li rm
ideal s. i~ J sulld dcad em ic . an d vdllle~
crea li v il y Jnd i ll1Jg in .Hi,)Jl In probl em

schedule available at the Information Center.

Dauglll'rl \' repl .l( c~ C h<.lrle ~

Tt·s ke .

Id sl

l'i t h e I"u l' origi n'll EVl'rg('t'll deans . wlto
a~-; i s led in l 'd r l y llll legt' and c ur~i c lllurrl
I ,1 n n i n h . U
n ( 0 m pie I io n 0 I hi s
t o ur - ye.H lerm JS d!',lll . Tt'c;kc will rot atc'
into Ihl' Evergrel'll IJ cu l l y.
'Thl' 'Inl }' ,l\\l ul p.!rt ahuut f:'l('( nll1 ing .1
de.ln 'is Ih ,ll I wIll mi ...... It·.lch i n g ."
I l,lllgh('rl y ~I.lit'd. iiI' I pnlll1ul' d . Jd Jing .
II"WI '\'IT, I "I .ln I'l l Il'l l u rl ' I'd r li tipa t p i ll

r

r ()

s l · Tllin.lr ~

I' age t'

C uoper Point Journal

un i I1vil,ltillll ,In ll I'.lrt i, ir,tll'
!"l'g ul.lrl \' il l 1.1l ul l \' ~t ·nlln.li~
I ~t'" "
tI,·.1I 1
1" "" 11 I. >!) Ill'r', · ,t ... l 'l' i l',g .1 I,J( II !I \'
A ...·; I 1

10 7.<;

Declared

Dean
Rv i\1!! LIE

BR01\.lI3ACHI:.I{

- ,I J ' l' r~ (ln wh() k('l'p~ nn r(,d d l ill~.
wrIling dill! IhlllJ..ing . A mi ~ I .1J..t: CO Tllll1 (l1l
I" il1.II1 ',' (ll l lcgt' .-lJminl.,lr .lIn r~ I" th ,1t
Ih·y ~t(lJl '> t'e ing thel11 sdvt·... . h
l eJ <.. h el"
.m , J ... I;,r l Sl'l·ill ).; I he lll selvl·... ,1S SllII1t' w eird
kind p i wht'l'ie l ,Ic.tll'l'
I <l ll i \' I" Y \)[>IiIll i st l c b('(".lll~e .II
FVl·r~ II ·I ' n . 1.1111 d·,,· , 'lhl'l In s lilull (ln~ . tlll' r l'
I '" d Ill)ldbl, · .J!',,'·n\'(' ,-·1 dl'<l)!.Il Il S lil .:Jt n('~' d
, I,ll j :1 ~ i ~( 'l' I h" I( , b ,.... Lw illg Pill' "I
""'I'k Ill g \\':i h 1\',' nJ ,' riul ~ 'llk·, \\·ho Sh Jr,'
,I n ' ,J I II '> .Il 1" l! l (" J lI' " t I" n .
[) ,lll g It I' r I \.

111(':1'1(1\' 1 -

~'l : \'ing ."

(THE DRIVER WILL STOP ANYWHERE ALONG THE '
ROUTE. JUST SIGNAL OR TELL HER/HIM WHERE.)

Daugherty

, , '>I \I

11I,1t-t! .

! h(' y; It ·.r r -t .jd K"nlll,kl,ln ): r£1dll .lll·d
I , , 'i 11 \ 1.. - ~ 'i d I,. ,' I ~ Ill , ~ ,. 11 , ' Ill\' III \'. I:

Sll,"td . tht'n \vl'nl "11 II' l'arn h i~ Bac h elt)r
tI l Ar l S Je g r c l' III A r l .It \V rs tl'rn
K t' n l u c l v U ni v IT ... i tv. 11[' a lte nd ed Iht,
U nivl'r~ -i lv "f Arl·.lfls;]~ III .1L h l('\'C a
Il1.h tel' · ~ d ~'g T'f?" in t:ngli~ ,lnd Ea.;1 Tcx a ~
SI.ll<, L ' ni \' e r ~ilY l or hl ~ dl'clllrdll' In
!\ IIlt'rIl d n li l e:r,lIurc . Ill' JI ~, n complrll·d
J'l'~ t doc I oral ~I lid !> ,... In i ingll i ~ t i (" ~ ,it
I-I.HvJrd l!ni\'LT~il' · .
[ ' ri,'r I," .n r l v in g ill'r l' In
10 7 '
. D ,1lI g !:t' rt ~ I ,I l: )..: h t lit \'l' .1I ;: I l' . C r l'.J( I 1, ' ( .
1\ I'll ing .tn-l Itn ~ll!~ 1 ie .. •11 ~l'''·'' r . ,J lI n i\'l'l~i l il", i !l c! ud,j ng I hl' 1. :[1 i\'t'h l I Y ,,1 V Irgl! lI.1
:"~llrll,Jk :-;1.11, ' (,,, III,t:I' ,lI1d t hl' \\'i .. c "n~ln
SI .ltl· Ulll\,(T"l l y.
WhIl,' le.ll' h ing in l\:, lrt ll lf... . \ ' . 1 .
1 ) ~lllghl ' lt\ ~l'l'I'C'd t hrt'\'· \,l'.H ~ . l ~ Ih!'
, \;rl'ct,)r 'If til l' ;\i (' ril,lk \/ 15'1'1\ prug ra rn
I" Cl rg.Illi/ l' .Jlld SII Jlpr VI" (' It , V lllul1 tt' l~ l ~ ,
S ill (f' hi ·, I. \' l'r g r l ' C' n . 1 r r i V.l I . h l' ~1.",
r,Jrl i( Ir.;ll'-i l 'll I hl' Ac! v I511ry HOdr J :u
~"\O c., , r-:~l r "d ll' ~ t.1til'n and tht' f- v(·r),n"_'11 11.1)
( ' ,Hl' (enlt' r
BIl.l :- d , · f
1 '::' \"I 'lf ~
P II", ,·ntl y. J).l\ l);hl' r: \, I'> a
Llll :II I !llt ' Il1I~ I 'r elf It ll' H um a n l~ f' ,. p(lf!"' "
I" I l u III ;11l D l'cUll it' :lt" (" , ' r.iln; ,I t'( J
<-;1 1I.i1(·~ I ' r , '~;rdrn .In.j
I" ' I )() 'l ""r l n~
d['I "' IlX ITl:,l t .,I,· 20 II ' ! ' I I,.JU .1 i ' I l: d\

WANT TO:
Use the library until late?
Go shopping at night?
Attend an evening event on or off campus?
Eat Dinner out?
Visit a friend without having to sleep over?

WHlLE YOU AVOID HITCHING AND SAVE ON GAS?

10 cents gets you to/from Campus,
Westside, Downtown,
South Sound Center
Area, and a ll points between.

bus
leaves campus at 6: 10,

Leo Daugherty

8: 10, 10: 10, & 11: 10.
Return 50 minutes later.
Copy .of nevv route and
schedule available at the Information Center.

(THE DRIVER WILL STOP ANYWHERE ALONG THE
ROUTE. JUST SIGNAL OR TELL HER / HIM WHERE.)

Page

~

Cooper Point Journal

Leo Daugherty, literature and linguistics
faculty member a t Evergreen , has been
named to a three-year term as academic
dean . His appointment beco mes effective
luly 1, 1975.
According to Vice-President and Provost Ed Kormondy , the Dean Screening
Disappearing Task Force (DTF) noted that
Daugherty displa ys "evidence of strong
a bility to h e lp people collaborate,
considerable o rga nizat iona l a bilit y, calm
integrity and gentle firmness , is articul ate
a nd conc ise, a n excellent li stener, has firm
ideals , is a so lid academic, a nd values
crea tivity a nd imagination in prob lem
so lv in g."
Da ughe rt y rep laces C harles Teske; last
of the fo ur o rigi na l Evergeen deans, who
assisted in ea rly co llege a nd curricu lu m
planning . Upon c'ompletion of hi s
four-year term as dean , Teske will rotate
into the Evergreen fac ulty .
'The on ly awfu l part abou t becoming a
dean is th at I will mi ss teaching ,"
Da ugherty stated. He co ntinued , adding,
"However , I pl a n to lecture, pa rt icipa te in
seminars on in vitatio n a nd part ici pate
regul a rl y in f.lcu lt y semi nars. I see a
dc.In ·'" p".., il i,'n he re as heing a (a cuity
A ..... ;1 .1

1075

Declared
Dean
By MILLIE BROMBACHER
member---a perso n w ho keeps on reading,
wri ting and thinking. A mistake common
to many co llege administ ra to rs is th at
they stop seeing themselves as teachers
a nd start seei ng themselves as some weird
kind of w heeler-dealer.
" I am very opti mi s ti c because a t
Evergreen. unl ike o ther in stitutio ns, th ere
is a notable absence of dragons th a t need
slaying . I see the job as being one of
worki ng wit h wo nderfu l folks who share
dream s about educatio n ," Daughert y
co ncluded.
T he 35-yea r-o ld Kentuckian gradua ted
Irpm Mv O ld Kf'nt ll cky Hom e Hi g h

Schoo l, then went o n to earn his Bachelor
of Ar ts ' degree in A rt at Western
Kentucky Univers ity. He attended the
Un iversi t y of Arkansas t o achieve a
master's degree in English and East Texas
Sta te University for his doctorate in
American literature. He a lso completed
post doctoral studies in lingui stics a t
Harvard University.
Pr io r t o arr iving here in 1972 ,
Daugherty ta u ght literature , creative
writing, and linguistics a t severa l uni versities in cluding the Universi ty of Virginia ,
Norfo lk Sta te Co llege a nd the Wisco nsin
State Unive rsity.
Whil e teaching in Norfolk, Va.,
Dau g h erty se rv ed t h ree ·-years as th e
d irector of the Norfolk VISTA program
to o rganize a nd supervise its volunteers.
Since hi s Eve rgree n arr iv a l, he has
pa rti cipated o n the Ad visory Board to
KAOS-FM radi o station a nd the Everg reen Day Care Ce nt er Board of
Directors . Pre se ntly, Daugherty is a
facu lt y me m ber of th e Human Responses
to Human D oc um e nts Coord inated
St udi es Program and is sponsori ng
a pproximately 20 individual s tudy
co ntra ct... .

WANT TO:
Use the library until late?
Go shopping at night?
Attend an evening event on or off campus?
Eat Dinner out?
Visit a friend without having to sleep over?

WHlLE YOU AVOID HITCHING AND SAVE ON GAS?

10 cents gets you to/from Campus,
Westside, Downtown,
South Sound Center
Area, and a ll points between.

bus
leaves campus at 6: 10,

Leo Daugherty

8: 10, 10: 10, & 11: 10.
Return 50 minutes later.
Copy .of nevv route and
schedule available at the Information Center.

(THE DRIVER WILL STOP ANYWHERE ALONG THE
ROUTE. JUST SIGNAL OR TELL HER / HIM WHERE.)

Page

~

Cooper Point Journal

Leo Daugherty, literature and linguistics
faculty member a t Evergreen , has been
named to a three-year term as academic
dean . His appointment beco mes effective
luly 1, 1975.
According to Vice-President and Provost Ed Kormondy , the Dean Screening
Disappearing Task Force (DTF) noted that
Daugherty displa ys "evidence of strong
a bility to h e lp people collaborate,
considerable o rga nizat iona l a bilit y, calm
integrity and gentle firmness , is articul ate
a nd conc ise, a n excellent li stener, has firm
ideals , is a so lid academic, a nd values
crea tivity a nd imagination in prob lem
so lv in g."
Da ughe rt y rep laces C harles Teske; last
of the fo ur o rigi na l Evergeen deans, who
assisted in ea rly co llege a nd curricu lu m
planning . Upon c'ompletion of hi s
four-year term as dean , Teske will rotate
into the Evergreen fac ulty .
'The on ly awfu l part abou t becoming a
dean is th at I will mi ss teaching ,"
Da ugherty stated. He co ntinued , adding,
"However , I pl a n to lecture, pa rt icipa te in
seminars on in vitatio n a nd part ici pate
regul a rl y in f.lcu lt y semi nars. I see a
dc.In ·'" p".., il i,'n he re as heing a (a cuity
A ..... ;1 .1

1075

Declared
Dean
By MILLIE BROMBACHER
member---a perso n w ho keeps on reading,
wri ting and thinking. A mistake common
to many co llege administ ra to rs is th at
they stop seeing themselves as teachers
a nd start seei ng themselves as some weird
kind of w heeler-dealer.
" I am very opti mi s ti c because a t
Evergreen. unl ike o ther in stitutio ns, th ere
is a notable absence of dragons th a t need
slaying . I see the job as being one of
worki ng wit h wo nderfu l folks who share
dream s about educatio n ," Daughert y
co ncluded.
T he 35-yea r-o ld Kentuckian gradua ted
Irpm Mv O ld Kf'nt ll cky Hom e Hi g h

Schoo l, then went o n to earn his Bachelor
of Ar ts ' degree in A rt at Western
Kentucky Univers ity. He attended the
Un iversi t y of Arkansas t o achieve a
master's degree in English and East Texas
Sta te University for his doctorate in
American literature. He a lso completed
post doctoral studies in lingui stics a t
Harvard University.
Pr io r t o arr iving here in 1972 ,
Daugherty ta u ght literature , creative
writing, and linguistics a t severa l uni versities in cluding the Universi ty of Virginia ,
Norfo lk Sta te Co llege a nd the Wisco nsin
State Unive rsity.
Whil e teaching in Norfolk, Va.,
Dau g h erty se rv ed t h ree ·-years as th e
d irector of the Norfolk VISTA program
to o rganize a nd supervise its volunteers.
Since hi s Eve rgree n arr iv a l, he has
pa rti cipated o n the Ad visory Board to
KAOS-FM radi o station a nd the Everg reen Day Care Ce nt er Board of
Directors . Pre se ntly, Daugherty is a
facu lt y me m ber of th e Human Responses
to Human D oc um e nts Coord inated
St udi es Program and is sponsori ng
a pproximately 20 individual s tudy
co ntra ct... .

I

.

_ )

r··· ..... · · . ·. ·. .·. · · ....·······························Djm··DAvE·'s·GAy·90';···········I~·-~;;;~N~
i
SA VE 51 .50
'
• OffiCI! 5upplj~5
.

BUY TWO COMPLETE SPAGHETTI

~!

DINNERS $3.50
includes salad and garlic bread
HAPPY HOUR 8-10 TUES, WED & THURS
4045 Pacific
Phone 456-1560

IAYI

~



.

orqitirKj eqUIp.
Date btXJkS

• FYee porkit19
9112 .. 83#

Cou~~.~...~.:~~~~~...~~~.~~:._~ .................. _............... " .... ......:
L aCf: Y

SUITS
TUXEDO

RENTALS

OPEN SEVEN
DAYS PER WEEK
MEXICAN FOOD-BEER-WINE

120 OLYMPIA AVE.

BRING THIS COUPON
; .................................................................................
..

11.12' ot h AVt! !lll ~ S . E:

MORENO'S .
EXICAN RESTAURAN

SOUTH SOUND CENTER
OPEN WEEK NIGHTS TO SERVE
YOU TIL 9:00

Hi Dad

1807 W. HarrisoD
Olympia

943-0777
. MON.-FRI.

&.

Phone 491-7010

Mund"y thr o uqh Friday

10' 00 - - 6 : 0 0

I lX)K I( I( {

rill

I he

l · ~h

()l· ...•.. t..Il·

{ 1... 011

IH I "

..·'

111 ' \\

I"

"'I lIl lp l lllll.'l l l

t\l,

\\.I.l k [
1 .1l 11.lIpl

iS C.l1l1 !I III

ll lIp . , ~1

".I ll!

rUI

uul

I\.t"
[,'I

ll.ll..

... t ' l h.: I ;· I~hr l . ;.- rlllt'

RI II r ·\ \, .

.110. '

pol

l

I Il l·, ....
t

, - I "IL~

,t •• I"

.... J 11 [II ..' !

({"' fi l l.lI

p~' l ll' ,,-1

r il l '

II

lh ; l'l' !

i dtln l

I q ~~ I I '

\\ l Ib

99.

1,

" .11 1 :-'- 1111..

h Id" II

P'H.:l· 1'1 "I .:~

3'57-47'55"

fdforTtourtt ~nc.ket5
~ew releases on sQle
park lane

HOISERY

SI ' I'H~

SALI: "
"p . . ·U ,' 1 !"\\ 1" ',.(.' . .
J\ T . ,\Llt:l , .,oJ PIONt-.l· R

, p l.'. lIlt! ·..

ph ", ! II"

"1,,,',

111 111 .... I I,

I "

1<

\

l)

l

I<

' l tl

I ~H
1,(1

t r.I.,, · I""
\I'l"

...II,II I ~t.'1.

" .' 1.,' I . d 1,,·1, I l. 'l' t·

lI'lI n ll l, ·

l , ,'~tll ..

1000 COLLEGE ST.,
491-3280
LACEY.
11-6 Tues.-Sat.

contour sandal."

S1495

_

S2rs

ft
NATURAL FOODS tIl

1I111" tl \ ' II IP \ " 111 .l uhll ll.L ll l

Wi th' IH..' ql:~'III..:'

"like dancing
in your skin"

JOURNAL NEEDS WRITERS
Th e Journ a l is look in g fo r peop le
wh o a re int eres ted in wri ting. Th ere
is a need fo r individual s w h o wa nt
to w rit e a nd are w illing to lea rn
how to write news stories fo r the
ca mpu s new s secti o n as w ell a s
lo nge r investiga ti ve stories ; fea ture
stories dea li ng wi th th e ca mpu s and
the immed ia te area ; edi to ri a ls an d
co mm e nt a ri es ; co lumn s a nd . r eview s; a nd prof iles of interesting
mem bers o f the ca mpu s co mmunit y.

REDAPPlE

Cooper Pt " Harrison
Lacey - 817 Sleater-kinnev

WORD

of

943-8086
491-4340

MOUTH

, FULL DANCE
BALLET STORE

' ....... p. II ,...,

.. t1 tl p k ~ \\ II II !; t" "d I.d .... \1, p I lL' I
.
d ,:..tlll ll lhi ... t~ I" ... I, ,, . .· ·(I,.l..'Ih.: 1I 1 ' l· , lo ll ,.

1.1" ,'

II \UI'1I0,\ 1· I X II 'SI()' lOR I) ". " ,, " "", '

SYSTEWI ONE

FMP I RE 2000E
STE REO CARTR I DG
REGULAR PRICE

DtPI.fE

r l /\ I( I ) \1/ i\ I' I.

l.k.rll ' l!

,,-PrJ ,\1. ('

"The only natural

Danskin

i, . . '

( , 'II .t'" II I dt, j , ~'l' .IUI 1l 11i (.' [ I l l·,llI. IIJ"U ....
" " .lllv,·, , ",.1 REI! I 1\ (. S l l rll~ SI' H I,\LS

I \\ '\ I( l

"NOW FEATURING
PIKE PLACE MARKET TEA"

Westside Center - Olympia

· , ' .' H.' " '1 1:;' 111 11 " \\ '

~'1I ~~\· ... ~ t'l i

• FINE WINES
• CHEESE
• IMPORTED BEER • GIFTS

W"f;:ST,5l0 E

~,)7-73~8

L ,\\ p t [\.l

\ , , ( ..: 11\

, p \ ' ,lk l' !

.£VJ{r\fto~

,II . \ .I l1 n d .11

\ Lit j' IL\I II l.!

''': ~ ''I \ (i

.111 \

[ \\I.'l" \,.':

. II U h

"THURSTON COUNTY'S
OLDEST WINE SHOP"
GOURMET VINTNERS

i!ytJ~\\

lJl ·I)Il II. "·

rW ~)l . (l I . jll. ~

.1

I ) , ,,

10:00-9:00
10:00-6 :00
Noon-S:OO

SAT.
SUN.

T" I"!l11l)I1 " 4 91 0991

Sd l",day

PANTS
SHIRTS
SWEATERS

All (hi, am..! i O' ;

~t\

jng... . lUo' ~!

K F_"M'I X )1)
PICK FlU i\X ;
;ARI U\RI )

I

" lARK II

'.\ "

,I '"

,,'f \ l'It ' 1I.!

I"

. 01 I l '



"\1

1" ,,\ ,1 I,

' 10 ,'

'II" ·,, ,111 01, ,,

,·. ,, "1'11 ' ...·111

II ," ,' h ,," , 'I ll . " .. 11 ' 1.1" •. 1 11,,\. , .1,,, ,,,11 I .1
~ 1' .·' !.III )
, ,· 1.... 1.· 01
,,,, , . p tlfd ' ir C' lI lIl "'" . .· ,I' """ 'tt 1.11 \ . , '\ ,
I , f(' I" " " ' I , h
1I 1,lhl } " t lll l\l\l , ,'I .I( ( " I' , 1, dl. , 1 \ till
I II I , f\I ..
' 01 It.,. " .t-!h. · ~l I ..li l t' t" r

• LEOTARDS
• TIGHTS
• SHOES

36t h &: Ow·rhul se
866-1252
"

10 to 6
Mon. thru Sat.

.

;' 151 SOUTH SOUND
~

__-==_

\ ' ''11 '' q,,' I, , . I" ,t , " . , ~ , ,
." 1' " , .",' 1\ ·,·,,, 11 \ . , , \ 1

$497
S.·\ \ I· \ I I ~

CENTER

491-3021

BOOKS

~ t)

Page 10

Cooper Point Journal

April ", 197!)

Page 14

I

.

_ )

r··· ..... · · . ·. ·. .·. · · ....·······························Djm··DAvE·'s·GAy·90';···········I~·-~;;;~N~
i
SA VE 51 .50
'
• OffiCI! 5upplj~5
.

BUY TWO COMPLETE SPAGHETTI

~!

DINNERS $3.50
includes salad and garlic bread
HAPPY HOUR 8-10 TUES, WED & THURS
4045 Pacific
Phone 456-1560

IAYI

~



.

orqitirKj eqUIp.
Date btXJkS

• FYee porkit19
9112 .. 83#

Cou~~.~...~.:~~~~~...~~~.~~:._~ .................. _............... " .... ......:
L aCf: Y

SUITS
TUXEDO

RENTALS

OPEN SEVEN
DAYS PER WEEK
MEXICAN FOOD-BEER-WINE

120 OLYMPIA AVE.

BRING THIS COUPON
; .................................................................................
..

11.12' ot h AVt! !lll ~ S . E:

MORENO'S .
EXICAN RESTAURAN

SOUTH SOUND CENTER
OPEN WEEK NIGHTS TO SERVE
YOU TIL 9:00

Hi Dad

1807 W. HarrisoD
Olympia

943-0777
. MON.-FRI.

&.

Phone 491-7010

Mund"y thr o uqh Friday

10' 00 - - 6 : 0 0

I lX)K I( I( {

rill

I he

l · ~h

()l· ...•.. t..Il·

{ 1... 011

IH I "

..·'

111 ' \\

I"

"'I lIl lp l lllll.'l l l

t\l,

\\.I.l k [
1 .1l 11.lIpl

iS C.l1l1 !I III

ll lIp . , ~1

".I ll!

rUI

uul

I\.t"
[,'I

ll.ll..

... t ' l h.: I ;· I~hr l . ;.- rlllt'

RI II r ·\ \, .

.110. '

pol

l

I Il l·, ....
t

, - I "IL~

,t •• I"

.... J 11 [II ..' !

({"' fi l l.lI

p~' l ll' ,,-1

r il l '

II

lh ; l'l' !

i dtln l

I q ~~ I I '

\\ l Ib

99.

1,

" .11 1 :-'- 1111..

h Id" II

P'H.:l· 1'1 "I .:~

3'57-47'55"

fdforTtourtt ~nc.ket5
~ew releases on sQle
park lane

HOISERY

SI ' I'H~

SALI: "
"p . . ·U ,' 1 !"\\ 1" ',.(.' . .
J\ T . ,\Llt:l , .,oJ PIONt-.l· R

, p l.'. lIlt! ·..

ph ", ! II"

"1,,,',

111 111 .... I I,

I "

1<

\

l)

l

I<

' l tl

I ~H
1,(1

t r.I.,, · I""
\I'l"

...II,II I ~t.'1.

" .' 1.,' I . d 1,,·1, I l. 'l' t·

lI'lI n ll l, ·

l , ,'~tll ..

1000 COLLEGE ST.,
491-3280
LACEY.
11-6 Tues.-Sat.

contour sandal."

S1495

_

S2rs

ft
NATURAL FOODS tIl

1I111" tl \ ' II IP \ " 111 .l uhll ll.L ll l

Wi th' IH..' ql:~'III..:'

"like dancing
in your skin"

JOURNAL NEEDS WRITERS
Th e Journ a l is look in g fo r peop le
wh o a re int eres ted in wri ting. Th ere
is a need fo r individual s w h o wa nt
to w rit e a nd are w illing to lea rn
how to write news stories fo r the
ca mpu s new s secti o n as w ell a s
lo nge r investiga ti ve stories ; fea ture
stories dea li ng wi th th e ca mpu s and
the immed ia te area ; edi to ri a ls an d
co mm e nt a ri es ; co lumn s a nd . r eview s; a nd prof iles of interesting
mem bers o f the ca mpu s co mmunit y.

REDAPPlE

Cooper Pt " Harrison
Lacey - 817 Sleater-kinnev

WORD

of

943-8086
491-4340

MOUTH

, FULL DANCE
BALLET STORE

' ....... p. II ,...,

.. t1 tl p k ~ \\ II II !; t" "d I.d .... \1, p I lL' I
.
d ,:..tlll ll lhi ... t~ I" ... I, ,, . .· ·(I,.l..'Ih.: 1I 1 ' l· , lo ll ,.

1.1" ,'

II \UI'1I0,\ 1· I X II 'SI()' lOR I) ". " ,, " "", '

SYSTEWI ONE

FMP I RE 2000E
STE REO CARTR I DG
REGULAR PRICE

DtPI.fE

r l /\ I( I ) \1/ i\ I' I.

l.k.rll ' l!

,,-PrJ ,\1. ('

"The only natural

Danskin

i, . . '

( , 'II .t'" II I dt, j , ~'l' .IUI 1l 11i (.' [ I l l·,llI. IIJ"U ....
" " .lllv,·, , ",.1 REI! I 1\ (. S l l rll~ SI' H I,\LS

I \\ '\ I( l

"NOW FEATURING
PIKE PLACE MARKET TEA"

Westside Center - Olympia

· , ' .' H.' " '1 1:;' 111 11 " \\ '

~'1I ~~\· ... ~ t'l i

• FINE WINES
• CHEESE
• IMPORTED BEER • GIFTS

W"f;:ST,5l0 E

~,)7-73~8

L ,\\ p t [\.l

\ , , ( ..: 11\

, p \ ' ,lk l' !

.£VJ{r\fto~

,II . \ .I l1 n d .11

\ Lit j' IL\I II l.!

''': ~ ''I \ (i

.111 \

[ \\I.'l" \,.':

. II U h

"THURSTON COUNTY'S
OLDEST WINE SHOP"
GOURMET VINTNERS

i!ytJ~\\

lJl ·I)Il II. "·

rW ~)l . (l I . jll. ~

.1

I ) , ,,

10:00-9:00
10:00-6 :00
Noon-S:OO

SAT.
SUN.

T" I"!l11l)I1 " 4 91 0991

Sd l",day

PANTS
SHIRTS
SWEATERS

All (hi, am..! i O' ;

~t\

jng... . lUo' ~!

K F_"M'I X )1)
PICK FlU i\X ;
;ARI U\RI )

I

" lARK II

'.\ "

,I '"

,,'f \ l'It ' 1I.!

I"

. 01 I l '



"\1

1" ,,\ ,1 I,

' 10 ,'

'II" ·,, ,111 01, ,,

,·. ,, "1'11 ' ...·111

II ," ,' h ,," , 'I ll . " .. 11 ' 1.1" •. 1 11,,\. , .1,,, ,,,11 I .1
~ 1' .·' !.III )
, ,· 1.... 1.· 01
,,,, , . p tlfd ' ir C' lI lIl "'" . .· ,I' """ 'tt 1.11 \ . , '\ ,
I , f(' I" " " ' I , h
1I 1,lhl } " t lll l\l\l , ,'I .I( ( " I' , 1, dl. , 1 \ till
I II I , f\I ..
' 01 It.,. " .t-!h. · ~l I ..li l t' t" r

• LEOTARDS
• TIGHTS
• SHOES

36t h &: Ow·rhul se
866-1252
"

10 to 6
Mon. thru Sat.

.

;' 151 SOUTH SOUND
~

__-==_

\ ' ''11 '' q,,' I, , . I" ,t , " . , ~ , ,
." 1' " , .",' 1\ ·,·,,, 11 \ . , , \ 1

$497
S.·\ \ I· \ I I ~

CENTER

491-3021

BOOKS

~ t)

Page 10

Cooper Point Journal

April ", 197!)

Page 14

--_._- ._ .. ---

- -'-- '"

l

Ii
I

LOllR flncs in front of South Sound Nationa l Bank are one example of changes that have caused the
of mallager Marie Leland.

rCS1,!< :lIatIOIl

Long waiting lines will continue at
South Sound National Bank's Evergreen
branch , according to South Sound's
chairman of the board of director') .
Problems have plagued ' t he branch , t hI'
latest precipitating the resignation of th e
branch's manager .
As a result of the financ ial problem~
that have bothered the Evergreen branch
since its inception , Marie Leland, vice ·
president and manager of the Evergre cp
office has resigned from her position ac; of
March 31, a position she held since th p
branch opened.
Citing the reasons for her resignat ion as
the dissolution of her job as a bank
officer by bank administrators, the Feb.
18 reduction in banking hours, and the
lack of time to finish wo rk bvecause of
the reduced hours, Leland said that she
could not continue to work under the
present conditions . Arrangeme nts made
by bank administrastors were to dissolve
Leland 's job and hire clerks as replacements . Currently, there are four person s
working at the branch , though due to the
board of directors' decision , nolne o lf
them are officers. The branch is n ')\'11
operasting as a depository branch o n lv,
no t offering a full line of se rvi n'c;.
.
"I enj oyed working there , but under th('
new time restriction s, there wasn 't tim e tn
a s ~ocia t e with th e peop le, ' Leland said .
She added that "the bran ch should be ru n
as a "ma ll hll ~lnF'i<; ,I<'i n)!, ('~' rr \ tI'!n f: j '
p~""

,,,

oldd to ge t a long with the community."
There h as also been an increasing
amo unt of student dissatisfaction with
decreased bankikng services. Though the
eXil ct number was not available, some
~ tudents and faculty have closed their
accn unts and transferred them to other
nanks because of South Sound's decreased
se rvices and increased charges for writing
c hecke; , wh ich recen tly rose from 13 to 15
Ct~ n t e; per check .
One student, Andy
\{Ycln , sa id , "I don't see why anyone
woul d wan t to bank there under the
prce;ent circumstances," and disagreement
with banking
policies has also been
voiled by others.
D uring a telephone interview with Ross
hwin , c hairman of the board of directors
o f Sout h Sound , the at titude of the
bilflk 's management co lncerning tghe
[·.\,('rgreen branch was clarified.
Erwin
.,a id , " The position (Le land's) was
eliminated and ho urs reduced because the
hranch had been operating at a loss for
tllree yea rs. Serv ices had to be reduced
to c,ta y in businf'ss.
The bank was
prepared to subsidi ze the branch for a
reas onable le n g th of time, but , a
1 (>;).,o nable length of time had passed , and
thp branch was ~ till operating at a loss."
1 he fart th a t the bank was o'perating a t
,I lo lss was not a reflection of Leland's
carabi lities, bu t of the unu sual nature o f
banking at the co ll ege whpre th ere is a
large numbe r of small depositors, but not
rl gre<lt amou nt of dollar flow. "
At thi s
I il' l(
" j ... nJos t diffi <li lt to m ilkr a rrofit
l

lo~g

line of students in front

President Hucks Demands More Exposure I

Bank Manager Resigns
By KIM GOODMAN

Student Dough President Roland Hucks generally exposes himself as a
of Soufh Sound Nationa l Bank looks on.

in the bankikng business," Erwin con tinu~d , "for the amount of money handled,
the profit is very small.
To make a
profit, large amounts of money have to
be handled." Citing the bank's commitment to its stockholders, . Erwin said that
to fujlfill this responsibility, the bank
must make a profit, though not a great
one. "Soluth Sound set out in its charter
that it would serve the community and
gain a modest profit. "
The effects of inflation on the bank
were also pointed out by Erwin, and were
offered as an explanation as to why
checking charges had been increased .
According to Erwin, the charges were
increased at all Soluth So lund olffices,
He
Inot just the Evergreen Branch .
exp lained that the bank "holds off as long
as- it can" ~nd then makes modest
increases which he termed to be "even to
if not lower than that of the competition."
Asked if the Directors h ad any
intentions of c1osin-g the branch at this
time, Erwin replied that they ' did not.
According to Erwin, the c utback in
serv ices "is no t a dead issue ' with the
board of directors al all. The matter will
be reviewed m o lnthly. If there is any
way we ca n in crease ho urs a t the branch,
we'll do it. If th e branch just reached the
break eve n point. we'd be sa ti sf ied ." If
th at did take place se rvices would
probab ly be expa nded again , he sa id .
C ommen t ing on what ~ he will do now
Leland said, 'Tm ju~t go ing to coo l my
br..lin for a while ," then probdhly work
I(lr J;lCl llll' r h,l nf
<"; hl' ,H ld('ci
I h.ld

Student Dough President Roland Hucks
said today he was "appalled and shocked"
at the biased way the Cooper Point journal has been handling the presidential
campaign - giving the newspaper's cover
over to "that damn ape" and generally ignoring Hucks' platform . Hucks issued a
commun ique demanding more general exposure - his secretary recommended the
best way to achieve this, so he went over
to the Activities building and generally exposed himself to about 40 students and
faculty milling around the area until he
was forcibly removed by a crowd of large
white men.
Out on bail, Hucks addressed the
Union flf Gruel and Softhead Workers
where he claimed that Rick Kurp, his opponent, was a media pet and this couldn' t
be co nsidered a fair race at all unless
Kurp and all hi s supporters, which, he
said included "t hree fourths of the (Point)
staff and one half of (radio) KAOS
(-FM)," were "shot and / or killed."
Rick Kurp 's tamous, or intamous
speech, which drew him a lot of new supporters as well as quite a number of
"pick le the ape" letters, caused a tremor
of a nger to run over President Hucks' face
as he declared that Kurp "is making a
mockery of cummu nit y responsibility , of
justi ce, Llir pl ay, the American Way , so ur
good assoc ia tion<; with 99 percent of the
pcuple I - met <1 1 Eve rgbreen, a lo t of
friends , <lllt! WdS a lways received warmly .
I'll r('.J1 lv rlli ..... th,lt "

cream, the Glorius Proletariat, lungfish,
and he is attacking the most sacred cow
ever to fly over the clock tower and spill
milk at high noon - our great tradition
since Godawful nose win Boredum
Incommunicado - our creed has been
flung about and dashed lifeless against his
hairy chest like an old alleycat - I hope
he gets hit by a truck ."
Here is the full, semi-unexpurgated text
of the Kurp speech - readers are asked
to judge for themselves:
"Good evening lazies and generals,
"I've got a few things to say and I hope
you'll bear with me . We're all here together and we're all basically in the same
boat. We have basically the same past.
We all graduated from Makesome Moron
High School, quite possibly with honors.
Personally, I was kicked out of Make.
some Moron because I continually refused
to wear clothes. They were very uncomfortable, and I didn't need them anyway,
what with my naturally curly hair, and
besides, it was almost always warm
weather.
" We were admitted to Makesome
Moron when we were around five or six
years old and came out when we were
about 17 or 18. During that time most of
us were, in fact, made . And now all most
a ll of us are doing is learning how to
make the most morons at the least possible expense. Most of us are developing
skill s th a t w ill allow us to be teachers and
administrators a nd janitors at all the new
Makesome Moron High Schools that are
spri nging up like cra zed H-bombs all over

the world . People are standing in bread
lines to get jobs that will build bigger and
better morons for tomorrow - so that
our children and our children's children
will be able to enjoy the unwashed fruits
of a growing mornocracy. How fondly I
re~ember our dead really cheer at
the pig game, the piggest game of
the season! Makesome Mo-ron,
Make-some Mo-ron , Moron Moron
Rah Rah Rah! Nostalgia, nostalgia!
Ah, yes.

"Well, now that everybody's long since
graduated and the controlling body of
Makesome Moron is no longer sitting on
top of their heads and has been buried
most of them (us) have gone out and du~
it up and put it back on top of their heads
and called it Maturity when in fact it's
only the putrifying corpse of a dead
moron - they walk around like that
blOWing up bridges and defacing grea;
works of art. And people who don't like
wearing a moron corpse on their head
and doing those kinds of things are usually considered to be insane and are
treated with the hatred and disgust fitting
to the children that they in fact are.
"This is why I decided to run. It wasn ' t
for the exercise, friends - it's because I
want to win - and you'll win with me.
Give me the ovens and I'll bake you ' the
bread! We demand our Bread! Good
night! "
-

Aubrey Dawn
Page 13

--_._- ._ .. ---

- -'-- '"

l

Ii
I

LOllR flncs in front of South Sound Nationa l Bank are one example of changes that have caused the
of mallager Marie Leland.

rCS1,!< :lIatIOIl

Long waiting lines will continue at
South Sound National Bank's Evergreen
branch , according to South Sound's
chairman of the board of director') .
Problems have plagued ' t he branch , t hI'
latest precipitating the resignation of th e
branch's manager .
As a result of the financ ial problem~
that have bothered the Evergreen branch
since its inception , Marie Leland, vice ·
president and manager of the Evergre cp
office has resigned from her position ac; of
March 31, a position she held since th p
branch opened.
Citing the reasons for her resignat ion as
the dissolution of her job as a bank
officer by bank administrators, the Feb.
18 reduction in banking hours, and the
lack of time to finish wo rk bvecause of
the reduced hours, Leland said that she
could not continue to work under the
present conditions . Arrangeme nts made
by bank administrastors were to dissolve
Leland 's job and hire clerks as replacements . Currently, there are four person s
working at the branch , though due to the
board of directors' decision , nolne o lf
them are officers. The branch is n ')\'11
operasting as a depository branch o n lv,
no t offering a full line of se rvi n'c;.
.
"I enj oyed working there , but under th('
new time restriction s, there wasn 't tim e tn
a s ~ocia t e with th e peop le, ' Leland said .
She added that "the bran ch should be ru n
as a "ma ll hll ~lnF'i<; ,I<'i n)!, ('~' rr \ tI'!n f: j '
p~""

,,,

oldd to ge t a long with the community."
There h as also been an increasing
amo unt of student dissatisfaction with
decreased bankikng services. Though the
eXil ct number was not available, some
~ tudents and faculty have closed their
accn unts and transferred them to other
nanks because of South Sound's decreased
se rvices and increased charges for writing
c hecke; , wh ich recen tly rose from 13 to 15
Ct~ n t e; per check .
One student, Andy
\{Ycln , sa id , "I don't see why anyone
woul d wan t to bank there under the
prce;ent circumstances," and disagreement
with banking
policies has also been
voiled by others.
D uring a telephone interview with Ross
hwin , c hairman of the board of directors
o f Sout h Sound , the at titude of the
bilflk 's management co lncerning tghe
[·.\,('rgreen branch was clarified.
Erwin
.,a id , " The position (Le land's) was
eliminated and ho urs reduced because the
hranch had been operating at a loss for
tllree yea rs. Serv ices had to be reduced
to c,ta y in businf'ss.
The bank was
prepared to subsidi ze the branch for a
reas onable le n g th of time, but , a
1 (>;).,o nable length of time had passed , and
thp branch was ~ till operating at a loss."
1 he fart th a t the bank was o'perating a t
,I lo lss was not a reflection of Leland's
carabi lities, bu t of the unu sual nature o f
banking at the co ll ege whpre th ere is a
large numbe r of small depositors, but not
rl gre<lt amou nt of dollar flow. "
At thi s
I il' l(
" j ... nJos t diffi <li lt to m ilkr a rrofit
l

lo~g

line of students in front

President Hucks Demands More Exposure I

Bank Manager Resigns
By KIM GOODMAN

Student Dough President Roland Hucks generally exposes himself as a
of Soufh Sound Nationa l Bank looks on.

in the bankikng business," Erwin con tinu~d , "for the amount of money handled,
the profit is very small.
To make a
profit, large amounts of money have to
be handled." Citing the bank's commitment to its stockholders, . Erwin said that
to fujlfill this responsibility, the bank
must make a profit, though not a great
one. "Soluth Sound set out in its charter
that it would serve the community and
gain a modest profit. "
The effects of inflation on the bank
were also pointed out by Erwin, and were
offered as an explanation as to why
checking charges had been increased .
According to Erwin, the charges were
increased at all Soluth So lund olffices,
He
Inot just the Evergreen Branch .
exp lained that the bank "holds off as long
as- it can" ~nd then makes modest
increases which he termed to be "even to
if not lower than that of the competition."
Asked if the Directors h ad any
intentions of c1osin-g the branch at this
time, Erwin replied that they ' did not.
According to Erwin, the c utback in
serv ices "is no t a dead issue ' with the
board of directors al all. The matter will
be reviewed m o lnthly. If there is any
way we ca n in crease ho urs a t the branch,
we'll do it. If th e branch just reached the
break eve n point. we'd be sa ti sf ied ." If
th at did take place se rvices would
probab ly be expa nded again , he sa id .
C ommen t ing on what ~ he will do now
Leland said, 'Tm ju~t go ing to coo l my
br..lin for a while ," then probdhly work
I(lr J;lCl llll' r h,l nf
<"; hl' ,H ld('ci
I h.ld

Student Dough President Roland Hucks
said today he was "appalled and shocked"
at the biased way the Cooper Point journal has been handling the presidential
campaign - giving the newspaper's cover
over to "that damn ape" and generally ignoring Hucks' platform . Hucks issued a
commun ique demanding more general exposure - his secretary recommended the
best way to achieve this, so he went over
to the Activities building and generally exposed himself to about 40 students and
faculty milling around the area until he
was forcibly removed by a crowd of large
white men.
Out on bail, Hucks addressed the
Union flf Gruel and Softhead Workers
where he claimed that Rick Kurp, his opponent, was a media pet and this couldn' t
be co nsidered a fair race at all unless
Kurp and all hi s supporters, which, he
said included "t hree fourths of the (Point)
staff and one half of (radio) KAOS
(-FM)," were "shot and / or killed."
Rick Kurp 's tamous, or intamous
speech, which drew him a lot of new supporters as well as quite a number of
"pick le the ape" letters, caused a tremor
of a nger to run over President Hucks' face
as he declared that Kurp "is making a
mockery of cummu nit y responsibility , of
justi ce, Llir pl ay, the American Way , so ur
good assoc ia tion<; with 99 percent of the
pcuple I - met <1 1 Eve rgbreen, a lo t of
friends , <lllt! WdS a lways received warmly .
I'll r('.J1 lv rlli ..... th,lt "

cream, the Glorius Proletariat, lungfish,
and he is attacking the most sacred cow
ever to fly over the clock tower and spill
milk at high noon - our great tradition
since Godawful nose win Boredum
Incommunicado - our creed has been
flung about and dashed lifeless against his
hairy chest like an old alleycat - I hope
he gets hit by a truck ."
Here is the full, semi-unexpurgated text
of the Kurp speech - readers are asked
to judge for themselves:
"Good evening lazies and generals,
"I've got a few things to say and I hope
you'll bear with me . We're all here together and we're all basically in the same
boat. We have basically the same past.
We all graduated from Makesome Moron
High School, quite possibly with honors.
Personally, I was kicked out of Make.
some Moron because I continually refused
to wear clothes. They were very uncomfortable, and I didn't need them anyway,
what with my naturally curly hair, and
besides, it was almost always warm
weather.
" We were admitted to Makesome
Moron when we were around five or six
years old and came out when we were
about 17 or 18. During that time most of
us were, in fact, made . And now all most
a ll of us are doing is learning how to
make the most morons at the least possible expense. Most of us are developing
skill s th a t w ill allow us to be teachers and
administrators a nd janitors at all the new
Makesome Moron High Schools that are
spri nging up like cra zed H-bombs all over

the world . People are standing in bread
lines to get jobs that will build bigger and
better morons for tomorrow - so that
our children and our children's children
will be able to enjoy the unwashed fruits
of a growing mornocracy. How fondly I
re~ember our dead really cheer at
the pig game, the piggest game of
the season! Makesome Mo-ron,
Make-some Mo-ron , Moron Moron
Rah Rah Rah! Nostalgia, nostalgia!
Ah, yes.

"Well, now that everybody's long since
graduated and the controlling body of
Makesome Moron is no longer sitting on
top of their heads and has been buried
most of them (us) have gone out and du~
it up and put it back on top of their heads
and called it Maturity when in fact it's
only the putrifying corpse of a dead
moron - they walk around like that
blOWing up bridges and defacing grea;
works of art. And people who don't like
wearing a moron corpse on their head
and doing those kinds of things are usually considered to be insane and are
treated with the hatred and disgust fitting
to the children that they in fact are.
"This is why I decided to run. It wasn ' t
for the exercise, friends - it's because I
want to win - and you'll win with me.
Give me the ovens and I'll bake you ' the
bread! We demand our Bread! Good
night! "
-

Aubrey Dawn
Page 13

-GUEST COMMENTARY----------

Eartll.asters
Waste tile Mil ...
BY NORMAN SOLOMON
It was an "international symposium on the environment" which
pretended that greed could be balanced with ecology, corporate
power with nature, profit-hunger with humanity, dehumanizing
systems with sensitivity ; its organizers constructed as a sage
fulcrum a tolerant and professionalized theorem for apocalyptic
compromise . The US Government, the National Science
Foundation and a huge metals corporation provided funds and
purchased planners for the conference, and their power interests
were solicitously respected; the ways were carefully refined and
thinly (pseudo) eclectic, and the plunder of life on earth seemed
to be helped just a little bit more.

.

..

.

Scene: The start of the Expo '74 International Symposium on
"The Dilemma Facing Humanity," in Spokane, Washington. A
Simon and Garfunkel record plays during registraHon . A
symposium staffer tapes a picture of the earth on the podium.
Mikes being tested, video tapers setting up their equipment.
Simon and Garfunkel are singing about "Keeping the customer
satisfied." People in expensive clothes filter in.

Moss Case Blasts Into C?w~,~t~y ,
BY MARY HESTER
Setting several precedents durin)~ its five
month history, Administrative VicePresident Dean Clabaugh's controversial
appointment of John Moss ·as director of
Personnel and Auxiliary Services entered
a new realm Wednesday, March 26 when
the issue was taken to Thurston County
Superior Court.
Six Evergreeners, half of the original
group who first brought the issue to the
All Campus Hearing Board last January,
have requested a judicial . review of the
Trustees' Feb. 26 decision which overruled
the Hearing Board and reinstated Moss as
. dual director.
Six evergreeners, half of the original
group who first brought the issue to the
All Campus Hearing Board la~t January,
have requested a judicial review of the
Trustees' Feb. 26 decision which overruled
the Hearing Board and reinstated Moss as
dual director. Each member of the Board
f Trustees has been named in the
o
lawsuit. They are: Thomas D'lxon,
Herbert Hadley, Halvor Halvorson, Janet
P. Tourte\1otte, and Trueman Schmidt.
The petitioners include faculty members
Nancy Allen and Naomi Greenhut, staff
members Lee Chambers and Ed Evans and
students Tina Wear and Perry Pittman.
The All Campus Hearing Board
supported the original petitioners who
contended that Clabaugh had violated the
Affinnative Action document which states
that all job vacancies must be filled from
a non-discriminatory applicant pool.
Clabaugh had stated from the beginning

there was not a vacancy; that in
combining the directorship of Personnel
and Auxiliary Services, Moss (formerly
Director of Auxiliary Services) was the
incumbant to the consolidated position.
27 the Trustees in a 4-1
O n Fe b .
,
'
decision with Thomas D ixon dissenting,
overrul~d the Hearing Board an? ~oun~
Cl b
h'
pointment "was wlthm hiS
~h a~~y sasa~ne of the chief administraau on . .
"
tivLe °ttfflclalse'r'e' exchanged before the court
e ers w
H
aFction b~\;;e:ctfi~~ul:~to~:~b~~r t~~
reun d ,
b
I
etitioners, and the Trustee mem ers. n a
tt dated March 7 Freund suggested the
;r~:tees "consult immediately': with '
Richard Monteccucco, the college. s legal
l regarding possible violatIOns of
coun se ,
. F b 26
t te law surrounding their e.
sa . .
deClSlOn.
Freund stated he believed their decision
"was made on facts not presented, not on
th
ecord You failed to address the
iss:e: pres'ented and ignored uncontrod f t "
veg~ . a~:.~. of the Trustees Thomas
Dixo:l~esponded on March 17 advising
Freund that after consulting Monteccucco,
the Board did "not deem it proper to hear
or reconsider its decision involving the
.
t"
Moss appomtmen .
D' on added a note relating that
lXugh he had signed the letter as
a Itho
.
Chairman he had "abstained from votmg
't
"
.
.
f
on the Issuance 0 I .
Freund expanded upon those violations
in the petition for judicial review . The
petitioners say the Trustees violated state

f

- "ignored the specific is~ue ~rought to
their attention," namely vIOlatIOn of . the
Human Rights (Affirmative Action)
policy,
.
.
-decided on "an Issue not. before hit,
and based that decision on eVlde.nce dt at
t d v'dence which oes
was not presen e , e 1 "
not ~?pear
thedrec~r~'ted the Human
- Ignore an VIO a
h
Rights Policy of the Cqllege" whic was
a roved by the Board of Trustees,
P~and that the decision was "arbitrary
.,
"
an~~:p;~~:~~~'ers al~o state thadt ~ontec,,,
ltatlOn and a Vice was
cucco s consu.
d'
the delibersolicited and recelve~ unng.
b th
ations' : without pnor notice to 0
parties.
..
.
dd'f
to asking
The petltlOners, 10 a Tl Ion d"
f ' d' . I
. w of the rustee eC1Slon
or JU \CIa reVle
h d ..
I ask the court to reverse t e eC1Slon
a so
.
h d ..
f
of the Trustees, remstat~ t e eC~Sl,?n 0 t
the All-Campus Hearing oard an gr~

0;

such other relief as it may deem prop;r. h
No court date hads ;i~~n2;~aya; of ~h:
Trustees must respon
date the petition was fil~d. Monteccucco
states that if .the case IS acc:~~~, !~:
judge co~~ ~f~lrm, reverse, or
fy
Trustees eClSlOn.
..
h
According to one petltlO~elr ~ e" r:~~ngey
for bringing the case to tna IS c
k t " The attorney's
out of our own poe e s.
.
fees for the Trustee members, accordmg
M ' l l b paid fot by Evergreen.
to
oss WI
e
h T stees'
Monteccucco may serve as t e ru
attorney .

"What we are almmg for," a PR release quotes a Symposia
Series staff member as saying, " is to get businessmen,
environmentalists, scientists, teachers and laymen to agree on
what we have to do to reclaim and preserve the environment."
It was a "harmonzing" theme sounded, in various ways, by
most of the invited speakers as well as in the Symposium Series
materiaL "We have been screaming at each other far too long,"
Robert Theobald was quoted in a press release titled: Conferences
on Environmental Issues Emphasize Expo '74 World's Fair's
Theme. "It is not working. The environmental situation is getting
worse, not better. We cannot go on merely blaming busines~. or
industry or anyone else for what has happened to our
environment. We must come together on these issues . There is no
alternative. "
It is a theme certain to find many hopeful supporters. Such talk
is extremely attractive to many liberals who have seen the Great
Society illusions come unglued over the last few years. - The
unpleasantness of radical analysis and action is bypassed, as are
the blatantly Pollyanna Chamber of Commerce contentions. A
peaceful solution to the 1970's problem. Let us reason together.
Reasonably. No need to get weirdly upset. As Dr. Wiener of the
counter-insurgency think-tank Hudson Institute said, "everyone is
right. "
It is a call for an "honor;;tble settle!l'ent" on the ecological front.
Peace with honor. Fish and hUrl1{\ns and Minnesota Mining and
Manufacturing can all sit down to\gether and earnestly seek to iron
out their differences. There is no significant room in this scene for
those who seem to get bizarrely hysterical over asbestos in the
lakes, or mercury in the rivers, or the increasing prospect of
nuclear plant disasters. "Peace with honor." Big business has its
position. So do "extremist environmentalists," a term used at the
symposium by "harmonizing" speaker Roger Hansen, executive
director of the Rocky Mountain Center on Enviromnent in
Denver, who cited as his idea of "citizen input" a committee in
one Mid-Western state which helped decide where to put a nuclear
power plant .
"The reason we cannot make decisions is that people have
widely different viewpoints which are almost totally unconscious', "
Robert Theobald said in a speech wrapping up the symposium
May 21. He criticized the idea that there is any "we / they" split:
April 3, 1975

r

"We have got to give up believing that 'they' are the enemy."
There was a lot of progressive-sounding wrapping for the
presentation given by Theobald, who is also a consul~ant to the
Government-backed US Bicentennial and whose magazme Futures
Conditional recently received a grant from the National Science
Foundation. 'We are educating people as if there were not limits
to growth," western culture "is locked into a system in which
unlimited growth is required," and this must change.
As a way for correcting the problems with hierarchical
authority structures, Theobald suggested the use of "task forces"
created to deal with specific problems as they arise ; he spoke of
the "task force models" as being more effective means to solve
problems, "and I believe within this conference it is starting to
happen ... Our hope is that we may begin to define the real issues."
The ':real issues," as they were being defined however, were
filled with pablum and cast into institutional stone, with a
backdrop of unchallenged corporate power. If, as Theobald
himself suggested, the symposium program was any kind of model
for a task force approach, it held out promises for "dispassionate"
technocrats-almost entirely white males- discussing how to run
the world.
Significantly, the only speaker whose position Theobald
bothered to attack by name in his speech was David Brower.
Taking a statement of Brower's out of its context, Theobald
stated: "I don't believe, as opposed to Mr. Brower, that the first
step is backwards." It was a cheap, and revealing shot. .
Theobald, a major consultant to the Expo EnVironmental
Symposium Series who seemed to be dO.ing a lo.t of its t~eoreti~al
ghost-writing, was very uninterested 10 publicly deal 109 With
questions of power : who has it, and who doesn't, and why. The
pretense was that if you could just rationally show those in power
what's wrong with present policies, significant changes could come
about. That of course if a useful fiction for governmental and
business officials, but that kind of mythology has been laid to
rest, by many people-Reinhold Neibuhr for one-and by much
experience.
Shulamith Firestone states in The Dialetic of Sex: The Case for
Feminist Revolution, "Power, however it has evolved, whatever
its origins, will not be given up without a struggle ." Would that it
were otherwrse, but wish~s do not truth make.
If we are to be tumbling over an ecological abyss, it will be
with choruses of liberal-sounding sociological pap that rich
institutions will be glad to finance .
Norman Solomon is a native of Turtle Island . His novels include
Cockroach and Now . He can be contacted ci a Jon Halper,
Sunnymuffin Farm. Rt. 11 Box 217, Olympia, Washington 98502.

-GUEST COMMENTARY----------

Eartll.asters
Waste tile Mil ...
BY NORMAN SOLOMON
It was an "international symposium on the environment" which
pretended that greed could be balanced with ecology, corporate
power with nature, profit-hunger with humanity, dehumanizing
systems with sensitivity ; its organizers constructed as a sage
fulcrum a tolerant and professionalized theorem for apocalyptic
compromise . The US Government, the National Science
Foundation and a huge metals corporation provided funds and
purchased planners for the conference, and their power interests
were solicitously respected; the ways were carefully refined and
thinly (pseudo) eclectic, and the plunder of life on earth seemed
to be helped just a little bit more.

.

..

.

Scene: The start of the Expo '74 International Symposium on
"The Dilemma Facing Humanity," in Spokane, Washington. A
Simon and Garfunkel record plays during registraHon . A
symposium staffer tapes a picture of the earth on the podium.
Mikes being tested, video tapers setting up their equipment.
Simon and Garfunkel are singing about "Keeping the customer
satisfied." People in expensive clothes filter in.

Moss Case Blasts Into C?w~,~t~y ,
BY MARY HESTER
Setting several precedents durin)~ its five
month history, Administrative VicePresident Dean Clabaugh's controversial
appointment of John Moss ·as director of
Personnel and Auxiliary Services entered
a new realm Wednesday, March 26 when
the issue was taken to Thurston County
Superior Court.
Six Evergreeners, half of the original
group who first brought the issue to the
All Campus Hearing Board last January,
have requested a judicial . review of the
Trustees' Feb. 26 decision which overruled
the Hearing Board and reinstated Moss as
. dual director.
Six evergreeners, half of the original
group who first brought the issue to the
All Campus Hearing Board la~t January,
have requested a judicial review of the
Trustees' Feb. 26 decision which overruled
the Hearing Board and reinstated Moss as
dual director. Each member of the Board
f Trustees has been named in the
o
lawsuit. They are: Thomas D'lxon,
Herbert Hadley, Halvor Halvorson, Janet
P. Tourte\1otte, and Trueman Schmidt.
The petitioners include faculty members
Nancy Allen and Naomi Greenhut, staff
members Lee Chambers and Ed Evans and
students Tina Wear and Perry Pittman.
The All Campus Hearing Board
supported the original petitioners who
contended that Clabaugh had violated the
Affinnative Action document which states
that all job vacancies must be filled from
a non-discriminatory applicant pool.
Clabaugh had stated from the beginning

there was not a vacancy; that in
combining the directorship of Personnel
and Auxiliary Services, Moss (formerly
Director of Auxiliary Services) was the
incumbant to the consolidated position.
27 the Trustees in a 4-1
O n Fe b .
,
'
decision with Thomas D ixon dissenting,
overrul~d the Hearing Board an? ~oun~
Cl b
h'
pointment "was wlthm hiS
~h a~~y sasa~ne of the chief administraau on . .
"
tivLe °ttfflclalse'r'e' exchanged before the court
e ers w
H
aFction b~\;;e:ctfi~~ul:~to~:~b~~r t~~
reun d ,
b
I
etitioners, and the Trustee mem ers. n a
tt dated March 7 Freund suggested the
;r~:tees "consult immediately': with '
Richard Monteccucco, the college. s legal
l regarding possible violatIOns of
coun se ,
. F b 26
t te law surrounding their e.
sa . .
deClSlOn.
Freund stated he believed their decision
"was made on facts not presented, not on
th
ecord You failed to address the
iss:e: pres'ented and ignored uncontrod f t "
veg~ . a~:.~. of the Trustees Thomas
Dixo:l~esponded on March 17 advising
Freund that after consulting Monteccucco,
the Board did "not deem it proper to hear
or reconsider its decision involving the
.
t"
Moss appomtmen .
D' on added a note relating that
lXugh he had signed the letter as
a Itho
.
Chairman he had "abstained from votmg
't
"
.
.
f
on the Issuance 0 I .
Freund expanded upon those violations
in the petition for judicial review . The
petitioners say the Trustees violated state

f

- "ignored the specific is~ue ~rought to
their attention," namely vIOlatIOn of . the
Human Rights (Affirmative Action)
policy,
.
.
-decided on "an Issue not. before hit,
and based that decision on eVlde.nce dt at
t d v'dence which oes
was not presen e , e 1 "
not ~?pear
thedrec~r~'ted the Human
- Ignore an VIO a
h
Rights Policy of the Cqllege" whic was
a roved by the Board of Trustees,
P~and that the decision was "arbitrary
.,
"
an~~:p;~~:~~~'ers al~o state thadt ~ontec,,,
ltatlOn and a Vice was
cucco s consu.
d'
the delibersolicited and recelve~ unng.
b th
ations' : without pnor notice to 0
parties.
..
.
dd'f
to asking
The petltlOners, 10 a Tl Ion d"
f ' d' . I
. w of the rustee eC1Slon
or JU \CIa reVle
h d ..
I ask the court to reverse t e eC1Slon
a so
.
h d ..
f
of the Trustees, remstat~ t e eC~Sl,?n 0 t
the All-Campus Hearing oard an gr~

0;

such other relief as it may deem prop;r. h
No court date hads ;i~~n2;~aya; of ~h:
Trustees must respon
date the petition was fil~d. Monteccucco
states that if .the case IS acc:~~~, !~:
judge co~~ ~f~lrm, reverse, or
fy
Trustees eClSlOn.
..
h
According to one petltlO~elr ~ e" r:~~ngey
for bringing the case to tna IS c
k t " The attorney's
out of our own poe e s.
.
fees for the Trustee members, accordmg
M ' l l b paid fot by Evergreen.
to
oss WI
e
h T stees'
Monteccucco may serve as t e ru
attorney .

"What we are almmg for," a PR release quotes a Symposia
Series staff member as saying, " is to get businessmen,
environmentalists, scientists, teachers and laymen to agree on
what we have to do to reclaim and preserve the environment."
It was a "harmonzing" theme sounded, in various ways, by
most of the invited speakers as well as in the Symposium Series
materiaL "We have been screaming at each other far too long,"
Robert Theobald was quoted in a press release titled: Conferences
on Environmental Issues Emphasize Expo '74 World's Fair's
Theme. "It is not working. The environmental situation is getting
worse, not better. We cannot go on merely blaming busines~. or
industry or anyone else for what has happened to our
environment. We must come together on these issues . There is no
alternative. "
It is a theme certain to find many hopeful supporters. Such talk
is extremely attractive to many liberals who have seen the Great
Society illusions come unglued over the last few years. - The
unpleasantness of radical analysis and action is bypassed, as are
the blatantly Pollyanna Chamber of Commerce contentions. A
peaceful solution to the 1970's problem. Let us reason together.
Reasonably. No need to get weirdly upset. As Dr. Wiener of the
counter-insurgency think-tank Hudson Institute said, "everyone is
right. "
It is a call for an "honor;;tble settle!l'ent" on the ecological front.
Peace with honor. Fish and hUrl1{\ns and Minnesota Mining and
Manufacturing can all sit down to\gether and earnestly seek to iron
out their differences. There is no significant room in this scene for
those who seem to get bizarrely hysterical over asbestos in the
lakes, or mercury in the rivers, or the increasing prospect of
nuclear plant disasters. "Peace with honor." Big business has its
position. So do "extremist environmentalists," a term used at the
symposium by "harmonizing" speaker Roger Hansen, executive
director of the Rocky Mountain Center on Enviromnent in
Denver, who cited as his idea of "citizen input" a committee in
one Mid-Western state which helped decide where to put a nuclear
power plant .
"The reason we cannot make decisions is that people have
widely different viewpoints which are almost totally unconscious', "
Robert Theobald said in a speech wrapping up the symposium
May 21. He criticized the idea that there is any "we / they" split:
April 3, 1975

r

"We have got to give up believing that 'they' are the enemy."
There was a lot of progressive-sounding wrapping for the
presentation given by Theobald, who is also a consul~ant to the
Government-backed US Bicentennial and whose magazme Futures
Conditional recently received a grant from the National Science
Foundation. 'We are educating people as if there were not limits
to growth," western culture "is locked into a system in which
unlimited growth is required," and this must change.
As a way for correcting the problems with hierarchical
authority structures, Theobald suggested the use of "task forces"
created to deal with specific problems as they arise ; he spoke of
the "task force models" as being more effective means to solve
problems, "and I believe within this conference it is starting to
happen ... Our hope is that we may begin to define the real issues."
The ':real issues," as they were being defined however, were
filled with pablum and cast into institutional stone, with a
backdrop of unchallenged corporate power. If, as Theobald
himself suggested, the symposium program was any kind of model
for a task force approach, it held out promises for "dispassionate"
technocrats-almost entirely white males- discussing how to run
the world.
Significantly, the only speaker whose position Theobald
bothered to attack by name in his speech was David Brower.
Taking a statement of Brower's out of its context, Theobald
stated: "I don't believe, as opposed to Mr. Brower, that the first
step is backwards." It was a cheap, and revealing shot. .
Theobald, a major consultant to the Expo EnVironmental
Symposium Series who seemed to be dO.ing a lo.t of its t~eoreti~al
ghost-writing, was very uninterested 10 publicly deal 109 With
questions of power : who has it, and who doesn't, and why. The
pretense was that if you could just rationally show those in power
what's wrong with present policies, significant changes could come
about. That of course if a useful fiction for governmental and
business officials, but that kind of mythology has been laid to
rest, by many people-Reinhold Neibuhr for one-and by much
experience.
Shulamith Firestone states in The Dialetic of Sex: The Case for
Feminist Revolution, "Power, however it has evolved, whatever
its origins, will not be given up without a struggle ." Would that it
were otherwrse, but wish~s do not truth make.
If we are to be tumbling over an ecological abyss, it will be
with choruses of liberal-sounding sociological pap that rich
institutions will be glad to finance .
Norman Solomon is a native of Turtle Island . His novels include
Cockroach and Now . He can be contacted ci a Jon Halper,
Sunnymuffin Farm. Rt. 11 Box 217, Olympia, Washington 98502.

.- ,

Food/Nanette Westerrnan
HOUSE OF

You survived
the cafeteria lunch.

N()SI~
"student discounts on
all darkroom equipment"

115 East 5th

You, owe yourself an Oly.

Olympia, Wa.

352-7527
01y rll p ' d Brc vIIIlt} CL,rnpany (Jlvrnpla. W a s tl ln g l on · OLY " rA"!

"The Surliest Mechanics in Town"

h ll O IYI11 PI.l ,' l np ll C' s ale rec yc lab l e

222 W. 4th
943-1997
20% off

Mon. -Sat.
open 10-6

on all raingear and
winter garments

TURIN
:fd;~

1he

"a new concept in living"

COLONY INN
Adult Singles Communit y

l)TVI:' ~
..JJ1..n.L GROUp, LTD.

S
ACME
UPHOL.STERY
SUPPLY CO.
" W e stock 1", 2", 3 ", 4 " foam
cut to your specifications "

a month

TWO WEEKS FREE
RENT WITH SIX
MONTHS LEASE

1818 Evergreen Dr.
Olympia, Wash .
98501

943-7330

FOAM RUBBER
SPECIAL
wholesale _

retail

••

;;;r

~316

E 4th

352 -8383

r-" ... _ _ _ _

"

_

t._ .

t _ •• __

,

In our community, as elsewhere, there
seems to be a growing food awareness,
More and more people are concerned
about the food they are eating, and are
turning away from nutritionally low value
foods' for a variety of reasons which range
from the desire to avoid contributing to
multi-national
corporate
interests
(Hostess, for example, is owned by ITT),
to wanting to avoid the unknown effect
of some additives , A quick survey of
labeled ingredients can arouse concern for·
what is actually being put into one's
body , "Enriched" flour is encouraging, for
when one realizes that approximately 21
nutrients are removed in processing white
flour and ' enrichment means replacing
four or five of those nutrients, the term
"enriched flour" takes on new meaning .
However, some people are hesitant to
change their eating habits because they
have the impression that. eating only
foods which are nutritionally valuable
means eliminat.ing favorite foods . to
someone with a powerful sweet tooth the
thought can be frightening, for it is as La
Rochfoucauld has said: "Preserving the
health by too strict a regimen is a
wearisome malady."
Those who cannot live without sweets
will be heartened to learn that there are
alternatives to the sweet and gooey empty
calories now commercially available .
There are for instance Peanut Butter
April 3, 1975

15anana Bars. Combine the following
ingredients thoroughly : 2 well beaten
eggs, 113 ' cup peanut butter, 114 cup
molasses, 1 / 2 cup whole wheat flour or
wheat germ, 1 / 2 cup chopped peanuts or
other nuts, 1 ripe banana , mashed, 1
teaspoon cinnamon and 114 teaspoon salt.
Turn the mixture into a buttered 8-inch
pan and bake 15 minutes at 350 degrees,
Cut into bars while still warm .
Many favorite recipes can be made
more nutritious by substituting whole
wheat flour for white flour. Although
-whole wheat flour is usually heavier than
white flour, there are available some
finely ground whole wheat flours which
have all the nutrients of the coarser flour
but are nearly as light as white flour.
Substituting untoasted wheat germ for
part of the flour in a recipe will also
increase the nutritional value of cookies,
breads and quick breads . The final
product will be a little heavier and will
have a more nut-like flavor when made
with wheat germ , Adding dry milk to the
dry ingredients of a recipe will not only
add protein, but will also produce a richer
product. Brewer's yeast can be added too,
but care should be taken not to add too
much, as its bitter flavor can easily
dominate the other flavors.
Some bread and cake recipes are made
more nutritious by using fruit s or
vegetables, as an ingredient, making lise

of their natural sweetness, as in Carro t
Cake , In a large bowl combine the
following ingredients: 1 cup gra ted raw
carrot, 11/ 4 cups whole wheat flour , 1 egg,
li z cup honey, 1 cup melted butter, l ',
teaspoon cinnamon, 1 teaspoon baking
soda, 2 teaspoons baking powder and 1/.1
cup lemon juice. (Pineapple or gra ted
apple can be used for part of the gra ted
carrot, and the recipe can be further
varied by adding raisins, nuts, grated
orange or lemon rind , gi nger , o r
cardamom .)
Another. way to increase the nutritional
value of cookies, cakes and breads is t o
take advantage of the protein available in
nuts and seeds. Sunflower seed cookies
are an example : Cream together 1 cu p
butter and 11/ 4 cups brown sugar un til
light and fluffy . Beat in 2 lightly beaten
eggs and 2 teaspoons vanilla. Into the
creamed mixture sift 1 V3 cups w ho le
wheat flour , 1 teaspoon salt and % cup
sunflower seeds and li z cup wheat germ .
Place teaspoonfuls of batter 2 inches apart
on ungreased cookie sheets, and bake fo r
10-12 minutes in a 375 degree oven.
Ice cream is the particular weakness of
many people and cravings for ice cream
can create a conflict if one wishes to
avoid the various algin derivitives a nd
artificial flavorings found in many brands
of ice cream . One solution is to ma ke ice
cream at home, where one can be certain
of the worth of the ingredients. These ice
cream recipes do not require a1\ ice cream
maker , "Honey Ice Cream: In a sa uce
pan place 2 cups of milk, 2 lightl y beaten
eggs, 1 tablespoon unflavored gelatin , 2
tablespoons arrowroot and I/ Z cup honey .
Bring to a boil and st ir until thickened .
Cool the mixture and stir in 2 cups heav y
cream, 2 tablespoon s vanilla and l/ Z cup
nonfat dry milk solids. Pour into two
freezer trays and freeze about 1 Vz hou rs,
until mixture is frozen at least 1 inch from
the edges. Transfer mixture to a mixing
bowl and beat until smoot h , (an electric
blender can be used) Return to freezer
trays and freeze agai n . Banana Ice
Cream: Beat 1 cup milk into 2 lightly
beaten eggs. Add ZIJ cup honey and mix
well. Stir in 2 teaspoons vani lla . W hip 1
cup heavy cream and fold into milk
mixture along with 1 ripe m ashed banana .
Turn mixture into an ice cube tray and
freeze until solid about 1 inch from eJges.
Turn into mixing bowl and beat until
smooth , Return to the ice cube tra y and
freeze again .
Page 17

~.

••

.- ,

Food/Nanette Westerrnan
HOUSE OF

You survived
the cafeteria lunch.

N()SI~
"student discounts on
all darkroom equipment"

115 East 5th

You, owe yourself an Oly.

Olympia, Wa.

352-7527
01y rll p ' d Brc vIIIlt} CL,rnpany (Jlvrnpla. W a s tl ln g l on · OLY " rA"!

"The Surliest Mechanics in Town"

h ll O IYI11 PI.l ,' l np ll C' s ale rec yc lab l e

222 W. 4th
943-1997
20% off

Mon. -Sat.
open 10-6

on all raingear and
winter garments

TURIN
:fd;~

1he

"a new concept in living"

COLONY INN
Adult Singles Communit y

l)TVI:' ~
..JJ1..n.L GROUp, LTD.

S
ACME
UPHOL.STERY
SUPPLY CO.
" W e stock 1", 2", 3 ", 4 " foam
cut to your specifications "

a month

TWO WEEKS FREE
RENT WITH SIX
MONTHS LEASE

1818 Evergreen Dr.
Olympia, Wash .
98501

943-7330

FOAM RUBBER
SPECIAL
wholesale _

retail

••

;;;r

~316

E 4th

352 -8383

r-" ... _ _ _ _

"

_

t._ .

t _ •• __

,

In our community, as elsewhere, there
seems to be a growing food awareness,
More and more people are concerned
about the food they are eating, and are
turning away from nutritionally low value
foods' for a variety of reasons which range
from the desire to avoid contributing to
multi-national
corporate
interests
(Hostess, for example, is owned by ITT),
to wanting to avoid the unknown effect
of some additives , A quick survey of
labeled ingredients can arouse concern for·
what is actually being put into one's
body , "Enriched" flour is encouraging, for
when one realizes that approximately 21
nutrients are removed in processing white
flour and ' enrichment means replacing
four or five of those nutrients, the term
"enriched flour" takes on new meaning .
However, some people are hesitant to
change their eating habits because they
have the impression that. eating only
foods which are nutritionally valuable
means eliminat.ing favorite foods . to
someone with a powerful sweet tooth the
thought can be frightening, for it is as La
Rochfoucauld has said: "Preserving the
health by too strict a regimen is a
wearisome malady."
Those who cannot live without sweets
will be heartened to learn that there are
alternatives to the sweet and gooey empty
calories now commercially available .
There are for instance Peanut Butter
April 3, 1975

15anana Bars. Combine the following
ingredients thoroughly : 2 well beaten
eggs, 113 ' cup peanut butter, 114 cup
molasses, 1 / 2 cup whole wheat flour or
wheat germ, 1 / 2 cup chopped peanuts or
other nuts, 1 ripe banana , mashed, 1
teaspoon cinnamon and 114 teaspoon salt.
Turn the mixture into a buttered 8-inch
pan and bake 15 minutes at 350 degrees,
Cut into bars while still warm .
Many favorite recipes can be made
more nutritious by substituting whole
wheat flour for white flour. Although
-whole wheat flour is usually heavier than
white flour, there are available some
finely ground whole wheat flours which
have all the nutrients of the coarser flour
but are nearly as light as white flour.
Substituting untoasted wheat germ for
part of the flour in a recipe will also
increase the nutritional value of cookies,
breads and quick breads . The final
product will be a little heavier and will
have a more nut-like flavor when made
with wheat germ , Adding dry milk to the
dry ingredients of a recipe will not only
add protein, but will also produce a richer
product. Brewer's yeast can be added too,
but care should be taken not to add too
much, as its bitter flavor can easily
dominate the other flavors.
Some bread and cake recipes are made
more nutritious by using fruit s or
vegetables, as an ingredient, making lise

of their natural sweetness, as in Carro t
Cake , In a large bowl combine the
following ingredients: 1 cup gra ted raw
carrot, 11/ 4 cups whole wheat flour , 1 egg,
li z cup honey, 1 cup melted butter, l ',
teaspoon cinnamon, 1 teaspoon baking
soda, 2 teaspoons baking powder and 1/.1
cup lemon juice. (Pineapple or gra ted
apple can be used for part of the gra ted
carrot, and the recipe can be further
varied by adding raisins, nuts, grated
orange or lemon rind , gi nger , o r
cardamom .)
Another. way to increase the nutritional
value of cookies, cakes and breads is t o
take advantage of the protein available in
nuts and seeds. Sunflower seed cookies
are an example : Cream together 1 cu p
butter and 11/ 4 cups brown sugar un til
light and fluffy . Beat in 2 lightly beaten
eggs and 2 teaspoons vanilla. Into the
creamed mixture sift 1 V3 cups w ho le
wheat flour , 1 teaspoon salt and % cup
sunflower seeds and li z cup wheat germ .
Place teaspoonfuls of batter 2 inches apart
on ungreased cookie sheets, and bake fo r
10-12 minutes in a 375 degree oven.
Ice cream is the particular weakness of
many people and cravings for ice cream
can create a conflict if one wishes to
avoid the various algin derivitives a nd
artificial flavorings found in many brands
of ice cream . One solution is to ma ke ice
cream at home, where one can be certain
of the worth of the ingredients. These ice
cream recipes do not require a1\ ice cream
maker , "Honey Ice Cream: In a sa uce
pan place 2 cups of milk, 2 lightl y beaten
eggs, 1 tablespoon unflavored gelatin , 2
tablespoons arrowroot and I/ Z cup honey .
Bring to a boil and st ir until thickened .
Cool the mixture and stir in 2 cups heav y
cream, 2 tablespoon s vanilla and l/ Z cup
nonfat dry milk solids. Pour into two
freezer trays and freeze about 1 Vz hou rs,
until mixture is frozen at least 1 inch from
the edges. Transfer mixture to a mixing
bowl and beat until smoot h , (an electric
blender can be used) Return to freezer
trays and freeze agai n . Banana Ice
Cream: Beat 1 cup milk into 2 lightly
beaten eggs. Add ZIJ cup honey and mix
well. Stir in 2 teaspoons vani lla . W hip 1
cup heavy cream and fold into milk
mixture along with 1 ripe m ashed banana .
Turn mixture into an ice cube tray and
freeze until solid about 1 inch from eJges.
Turn into mixing bowl and beat until
smooth , Return to the ice cube tra y and
freeze again .
Page 17

~.

••

"Goings On
OLYMPIA
Cinema
Friday 4-4

Friday Nite Film : The 5,000
Fingers of Dr. T, 1953. Dr. Seuss'
adaptation of his story about a
young boy who falls asleep at a
piano and dreams he is a
prisoner in the enchanted castle
of Dr. Terwilliker. Dr. T has impri soned 500 boys at a giant
piano where they perform a concerto for 5,000 fingers . Shows at
7 and 9:30.
Sat. 4-5

. Evergreen Villages: hsy Street
and The Pawnshop, both Charlie
Chaplin flicks, and a Betty Boop
cartoon . Admission is free, bring
a small sack or bowl for free pop'
corn . Shows at 7:30 in the recreation center, across from the manager's office.
O ngoing

State Theater : The Four Musk~
teers. The second half of the
book .
In Concert
Friday 4-4

Applejam Coffeehouse: Local
cou ntry vocalists Teasy Ryken
and Lori Hyman , supported by
banjo, guitar, fiddle and autoharp
start off the evening. Sandy Bradley of the Gypsy Gyppo String
Band will be down from Seattle
with Jill Johnson to perform some
Balk.an music . They will sing
mostly unaccompanied women's
songs from Yugoslavia and Bulgaria . Admission S1 .
Saturday 4·5

KAOS-FM presents the Old
Coast Highway Orchestra and
Tatoo Parlor with Road Apple in
a dance and concert in the Library lobby at 8 p.m. The concert
wi ll benefit the KAOS Transmitter Fund .
App lejam Coffeehouse: Tall
Timber, a Northwest traditional
bluegrass string band performs
tonight. Admission : S1 .
TACOMA

• • • • • • •
In Concert
Thursday 4-3

The Tacoma Philharmonic will
pr ese nt th e Seattle Symphony
Orchestra i:lnd conductor Milton
K,1\lms. the Seattle Chorale and
gu est so loists Gloria Lane, Nedda
C.1<e l. William Harness and
Archi e Drake in a performance of
\ 't' rdl ' ~ "Requiem" at 8 p.m. in
01';1'11 Aud it Oriu m on the campus
or p,\( Itl(, lllth ~ ran University

Tickets available at the Tacoma
Symphony office and Bon Marche.
Wednesday 4-9

Tenor George Shirley will be
guest soloist with the Tacoma
Symphony Orchestra and conductor Edward Seferian in the
last concert of the 1974-75 series
at 8:30 p.m. at the Temple Theater. The concert is free.
Thursday , 3-6 ...

Court C Coffeehouse: Folk and
blues variety night; music begins
at 9.
On Stage
Ongoing . ..

The Tacoma Little Theatre presents The Miracle Worker, by
William Gibson, a dramati zation
of Helen Keller's childhood. Starring Debbie Whitesell as Keller
and Elizabeth Smith as Annie .
The American Film Theater.
which gives subscribers to it a
chance to see great plays put on
film, begins it s second season . .
The five films in this year's series
are Galileo, Jaques Buel 15 Alive
And Well And Living in Paris, In
Celebration, The Man in the
Glass Booth. a nd The Maids.
Stars in c lud e Glenda Jack so n ,
Topol. Maximilian Schell, - Elly
Stone. John Gielgud. Susznnah
York. and Alan Bates. S~ ri es begins Monday with Galileo; check
papers for theaters and times .

Stage. Curtain time is 8 p.m .
Tu es day through Frid ay. 8 .30
p.m . Saturday. 7 p.m. Sunday,
matinees at 2:30 p.m. Saturday
Andy Devine stars in the Seattle Cirque Dinn er Theater product
production What Did We Do
Wrong . Luncheon at 11 :30 a.m. is
followed by a 1 p.m. cu rtain , dinner at 6 p.m. followed by a 7:45
p.m . curtain Saturday and Sunday; Dinner at 6:30 p.m. ,is fnllowed by an 8 p.m. curtain Tuesday through Friday.
Cinema
The Rose Bud Movie Palace :
Private Lives, Norma Shearer and
Robert Montgomery in a movie
adaptation of Noel Coward 's
play.
Edgemont Theatre : Harold and
Maude and Love and Pain and
The Whole Damn Thing - Two
tales of young men falling in love
with older women .
Broadway Theatre : Amarcord.
a 74 Fellini flick about hi s childhood in fascist Italy.
Harvard Exit : Shampoo.
King Theatre: Tommy - Ken
Russell's film version of the
Who's rock opera .
Music Box :Lenny - The story
of .comedian Lenny Bruce.
Varsity Theatre : The Harrad Experiment and Emanuelle.
University Theatre : Parallax
View and Paper Moon.

Kismet will be presented by
the Tacoma Opera Society for its
Spring production at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and at 2:30
p.m. Ap[il 6 in Eastvold Auditorium on the Pacific Lutheran University campus. Tickets avai labl e
at Bon Marche.

Cinema
Lakewood Theater: The King of
Hearts, Phillipe de Broca's classic
film.
Narrows: Young Frankenstein,
shows at 2:30, 4:30, &:30 and
8:30.
Tacoma Mall Twin 1: Murder
on the Orient Express.
Tacoma Mall Twin 2: Lenny.
SEATILE

• • •On •Stage• • •
Lomt'di es hy Tom Stoppard arl'
\howing at the Seattlt' Rep's 2nd

• • • • • • •
Performing Arts Marathon : the
second annual Performing Arts
Marathon will begin at the Contact Center, 1532 S.W. Morrison,
at 8 p.m. Back to back, around
the clock performances are
schedu led to run over 100 hours,
breaking last year's record by a
full day . Performances will include dance, theater, jazz, Japanese shadow puppets, a magician
and poetry readings . A children's
event on Saturday will include a
juggling workshop, string figures .
the Family Circus children's play ,
music and dancing. The Glass Orchestra will play at midnight Sunday . Severa l workshops are
sc heduled . A video-bank will be
set up in the lobby where tapes
made by loca l video artists can
be checked out and watched on
the television . Money raised will
be used towards publishing a Performing Artist Index. Adm ission
is $2, for four days.

• Frank Pestana, Los Angeles attorney
and officer in the U.S.--China People's
Friendship ·Association, will discuss
"criminal law and juvenile delinquency in
China" during a free, public address April
9 at 7:30 p.m. in Lee. Hall 3 .
• The Men's Resource Center spring
activities include a weekly potluck
business meeting, a workshop on Self and
Politics, a retreat at Mt. Rainier, a
daycare collective, rap sessions, and
general counseling . . Spring hours for the
center are Monday through Wednesday,
12 to 2 p.m. Interested students are urged
to drop by Lib . .rm. 3211.., or call
866-6569.

• The Ceramics Student Voluntary Fund
is having a pottery sale on Wednesday
and Thursday , April 9 and 10 on the second floor of the Adivities building. from
9 a.m. until they're sold out.

LATE ADDITIONS

Pink Floyd wi ll be performing
at The Seattle Col iseum in their
first tour of the Western United
States. The concert is so ld out .
Herb Alpert and the Tijuana
Brass will be at the Seatt le Opera
House at 8:30 p.m. Two of the
original six members of the Tt B
are back with Alpert. Bob Edmondson (trombone) and John
Pisano (guitar) . Newcomers are
Bob Findley (trumpet). Dave
Frishberg (piano). Vince Charles
(percussion). Steve Schaeffer
(drums) and Papito Hernandez
(bass) .

Art Exhibits
Apri / 4-May 11

• The Evergreen Board of Publications
will meet tomorrow, April 4, at 2 p.m. in
the Board Room. Among agenda items
will be selection of a business manager for
the Cooper Point Journal spring quarter.

On Stage
Frida y 4-4 through Wednesday 4-9

Thursda y 4-10

!1

Friday 4-4
Evergreen
Coffeehouse,
ASH Commons, live music,
8:30 - 12.
Sunday 4-6
Evergre-en Coffeehouse
Films: The Showboat, starring Kathryn Grayson, Ava
Gardner and Howard Keel.
1950's MGM musical spectacular . Shows at 7 and 9 p.m.
Ongoing
Capi tol Theater: Jeremiah
Johnson, shows at 7: 30 and
9 :30 p.m.
Olympic Theater: aadge
373 shows at 7: 30 p . m.,
Deathwish at 9:15 p.m.

• Beginning and intermediate yoga classes
will be held on Tuesdays, starting April
15 and continuing through June 3. The
courses will cost $15 for students and $20
for non-students and will be limited to 15
p~rsons. Anyone- interested may sign up
WIth Patty Allen in Counseling Services
'
Lib. rm. 1220.
• There will be a KAOS general staff
meeting Monday. April 7, at 7:30 p.m. in
CAB rm. 110. The KAOS radio workshop series starts next week. Those interested should sign up on the third floor of
the Activities building.



• The Sounding Board will meet
Wednesday, April 9 in CAB nn. 108 at 8
a.m. to discuss making moderators pay
equal to recorders, developing guidelines
for the moderators, and South Sound
National Banking service.
• Wes Uhlman, Mayor of Seattle, will
address problems concerning city and
local government on Tuesday, April 8 in
Lee. Hall 3 at 2: 30 p. m. The public 'is
invited with no charge for admission.

• Budget proposals for the Services and
Activities groups ' (S&A) for '75-76 must
be submitted by May 2. Each proposal
must have an evaluation and fiscal report
accompanying it. Hearings on the proposals will be held May 7-9 and 14-16.
All proposals will be heard before any
allocations are decided upon.
.• There are . open volleyball games in the
steamplimt 'with pointers on - rules given
by Greg Starling every Wednesday at
6:30 p.m .
• The Health Services SurveY 'is being distributed starting Friday, April 4. A group
of concerned students have put it together, hoping to obtain input from
others. Every student is encouraged to
complete it, as it concerns the future of
Health Services. Copies are available at
the Information Center on the second
floor of the Activities building.

• The Self Help Legal Aid Office has
changed its location and hours. Now in
Lib. rm. 3223 (telephone 6107), their
hours are: Monday', noon to 4:30 p.m.;
Tuesday, closed; Wednesday, 9 a.m. to
4:30 p.m .; Thursday, noon to 1:30
p.m.; Friday, 9 a.m. to 4: 30 p.m.

l1ick*~



3,1·151;:;

Wednesday 4 -g

Linda Allen, folk singer. will be
appea ring at Highline Community
College at noon . She is both i:I
tomposer of folk songs and il
April 3, 1975

• An eight week activities program for
pre-schoolers begins April 15 at Timberland Regional Library. The 90-minute .
programs will be held on Tuesdays and
Thursdays at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. Each
child may attend only one program per
week. Registration began yesterday, April
2, at the library.
• The registrar's office has a number of
students not yet fully enrolled and is urging students to check with faculty members immediately to make sure their
names are on the program roster. The
next action taken will be disenrollment of
those students whose names do not
appear on official program rosters.
• Education Job Information Day is Wednesday, April 9 in the Board Room, Lib.
rm. 3109. Students will have the opportunity to talk to employed professionals
in teaching, administration, and counseling. Activities begin at 9: 15 a.m. Also, a
special preparation , ~()rkshop is scheduled
for Friday, April 4 at 1 p.m. in the Career
Resource Center, Lib. rm. 1221. Students
should contact the Placement Office to
sign up for Job Day.
• Health Services will be without a fu ll
time receptionist or registered nurse for
the first week or two of spring quarter.
The school is searching for replacements
and hopes to have the positions filled
soon. Two work-study students and a
half-time physician will fill the openings
temporarily. Office hours will be: Monday-Friday, 9-11:30 a.m. and 1:30-4 p.m.
Physician s clinics will be held on Tuesday
and Thursday from 2 to 4 p.m.

FOR SALE

1964 VW CAMPER

$400
Call 943-8338 after 6

-

Seattle Art Museum. in Volun·
teer Park, will be show ing photographs by David Watanaf)e in the
Museum's Gould Ga llery . Over 30
photographs of the arti st's persona l interpretation ot the western landscape wi ll be on display .
All Me for sale.
In Concert

Through Sunday, 4-H
Aller Margritte and The Real
In~pettor Hound. two one-act

PORTLAND

In Concert

Saturda y 4-26

Opera

Announcements---------

singe r of traditional American
and British folk songs which she
accompanies on autoharp, dulcimer or gu itar. Admission is free .

"Goings On
OLYMPIA
Cinema
Friday 4-4

Friday Nite Film : The 5,000
Fingers of Dr. T, 1953. Dr. Seuss'
adaptation of his story about a
young boy who falls asleep at a
piano and dreams he is a
prisoner in the enchanted castle
of Dr. Terwilliker. Dr. T has impri soned 500 boys at a giant
piano where they perform a concerto for 5,000 fingers . Shows at
7 and 9:30.
Sat. 4-5

. Evergreen Villages: hsy Street
and The Pawnshop, both Charlie
Chaplin flicks, and a Betty Boop
cartoon . Admission is free, bring
a small sack or bowl for free pop'
corn . Shows at 7:30 in the recreation center, across from the manager's office.
O ngoing

State Theater : The Four Musk~
teers. The second half of the
book .
In Concert
Friday 4-4

Applejam Coffeehouse: Local
cou ntry vocalists Teasy Ryken
and Lori Hyman , supported by
banjo, guitar, fiddle and autoharp
start off the evening. Sandy Bradley of the Gypsy Gyppo String
Band will be down from Seattle
with Jill Johnson to perform some
Balk.an music . They will sing
mostly unaccompanied women's
songs from Yugoslavia and Bulgaria . Admission S1 .
Saturday 4·5

KAOS-FM presents the Old
Coast Highway Orchestra and
Tatoo Parlor with Road Apple in
a dance and concert in the Library lobby at 8 p.m. The concert
wi ll benefit the KAOS Transmitter Fund .
App lejam Coffeehouse: Tall
Timber, a Northwest traditional
bluegrass string band performs
tonight. Admission : S1 .
TACOMA

• • • • • • •
In Concert
Thursday 4-3

The Tacoma Philharmonic will
pr ese nt th e Seattle Symphony
Orchestra i:lnd conductor Milton
K,1\lms. the Seattle Chorale and
gu est so loists Gloria Lane, Nedda
C.1<e l. William Harness and
Archi e Drake in a performance of
\ 't' rdl ' ~ "Requiem" at 8 p.m. in
01';1'11 Aud it Oriu m on the campus
or p,\( Itl(, lllth ~ ran University

Tickets available at the Tacoma
Symphony office and Bon Marche.
Wednesday 4-9

Tenor George Shirley will be
guest soloist with the Tacoma
Symphony Orchestra and conductor Edward Seferian in the
last concert of the 1974-75 series
at 8:30 p.m. at the Temple Theater. The concert is free.
Thursday , 3-6 ...

Court C Coffeehouse: Folk and
blues variety night; music begins
at 9.
On Stage
Ongoing . ..

The Tacoma Little Theatre presents The Miracle Worker, by
William Gibson, a dramati zation
of Helen Keller's childhood. Starring Debbie Whitesell as Keller
and Elizabeth Smith as Annie .
The American Film Theater.
which gives subscribers to it a
chance to see great plays put on
film, begins it s second season . .
The five films in this year's series
are Galileo, Jaques Buel 15 Alive
And Well And Living in Paris, In
Celebration, The Man in the
Glass Booth. a nd The Maids.
Stars in c lud e Glenda Jack so n ,
Topol. Maximilian Schell, - Elly
Stone. John Gielgud. Susznnah
York. and Alan Bates. S~ ri es begins Monday with Galileo; check
papers for theaters and times .

Stage. Curtain time is 8 p.m .
Tu es day through Frid ay. 8 .30
p.m . Saturday. 7 p.m. Sunday,
matinees at 2:30 p.m. Saturday
Andy Devine stars in the Seattle Cirque Dinn er Theater product
production What Did We Do
Wrong . Luncheon at 11 :30 a.m. is
followed by a 1 p.m. cu rtain , dinner at 6 p.m. followed by a 7:45
p.m . curtain Saturday and Sunday; Dinner at 6:30 p.m. ,is fnllowed by an 8 p.m. curtain Tuesday through Friday.
Cinema
The Rose Bud Movie Palace :
Private Lives, Norma Shearer and
Robert Montgomery in a movie
adaptation of Noel Coward 's
play.
Edgemont Theatre : Harold and
Maude and Love and Pain and
The Whole Damn Thing - Two
tales of young men falling in love
with older women .
Broadway Theatre : Amarcord.
a 74 Fellini flick about hi s childhood in fascist Italy.
Harvard Exit : Shampoo.
King Theatre: Tommy - Ken
Russell's film version of the
Who's rock opera .
Music Box :Lenny - The story
of .comedian Lenny Bruce.
Varsity Theatre : The Harrad Experiment and Emanuelle.
University Theatre : Parallax
View and Paper Moon.

Kismet will be presented by
the Tacoma Opera Society for its
Spring production at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and at 2:30
p.m. Ap[il 6 in Eastvold Auditorium on the Pacific Lutheran University campus. Tickets avai labl e
at Bon Marche.

Cinema
Lakewood Theater: The King of
Hearts, Phillipe de Broca's classic
film.
Narrows: Young Frankenstein,
shows at 2:30, 4:30, &:30 and
8:30.
Tacoma Mall Twin 1: Murder
on the Orient Express.
Tacoma Mall Twin 2: Lenny.
SEATILE

• • •On •Stage• • •
Lomt'di es hy Tom Stoppard arl'
\howing at the Seattlt' Rep's 2nd

• • • • • • •
Performing Arts Marathon : the
second annual Performing Arts
Marathon will begin at the Contact Center, 1532 S.W. Morrison,
at 8 p.m. Back to back, around
the clock performances are
schedu led to run over 100 hours,
breaking last year's record by a
full day . Performances will include dance, theater, jazz, Japanese shadow puppets, a magician
and poetry readings . A children's
event on Saturday will include a
juggling workshop, string figures .
the Family Circus children's play ,
music and dancing. The Glass Orchestra will play at midnight Sunday . Severa l workshops are
sc heduled . A video-bank will be
set up in the lobby where tapes
made by loca l video artists can
be checked out and watched on
the television . Money raised will
be used towards publishing a Performing Artist Index. Adm ission
is $2, for four days.

• Frank Pestana, Los Angeles attorney
and officer in the U.S.--China People's
Friendship ·Association, will discuss
"criminal law and juvenile delinquency in
China" during a free, public address April
9 at 7:30 p.m. in Lee. Hall 3 .
• The Men's Resource Center spring
activities include a weekly potluck
business meeting, a workshop on Self and
Politics, a retreat at Mt. Rainier, a
daycare collective, rap sessions, and
general counseling . . Spring hours for the
center are Monday through Wednesday,
12 to 2 p.m. Interested students are urged
to drop by Lib . .rm. 3211.., or call
866-6569.

• The Ceramics Student Voluntary Fund
is having a pottery sale on Wednesday
and Thursday , April 9 and 10 on the second floor of the Adivities building. from
9 a.m. until they're sold out.

LATE ADDITIONS

Pink Floyd wi ll be performing
at The Seattle Col iseum in their
first tour of the Western United
States. The concert is so ld out .
Herb Alpert and the Tijuana
Brass will be at the Seatt le Opera
House at 8:30 p.m. Two of the
original six members of the Tt B
are back with Alpert. Bob Edmondson (trombone) and John
Pisano (guitar) . Newcomers are
Bob Findley (trumpet). Dave
Frishberg (piano). Vince Charles
(percussion). Steve Schaeffer
(drums) and Papito Hernandez
(bass) .

Art Exhibits
Apri / 4-May 11

• The Evergreen Board of Publications
will meet tomorrow, April 4, at 2 p.m. in
the Board Room. Among agenda items
will be selection of a business manager for
the Cooper Point Journal spring quarter.

On Stage
Frida y 4-4 through Wednesday 4-9

Thursda y 4-10

!1

Friday 4-4
Evergreen
Coffeehouse,
ASH Commons, live music,
8:30 - 12.
Sunday 4-6
Evergre-en Coffeehouse
Films: The Showboat, starring Kathryn Grayson, Ava
Gardner and Howard Keel.
1950's MGM musical spectacular . Shows at 7 and 9 p.m.
Ongoing
Capi tol Theater: Jeremiah
Johnson, shows at 7: 30 and
9 :30 p.m.
Olympic Theater: aadge
373 shows at 7: 30 p . m.,
Deathwish at 9:15 p.m.

• Beginning and intermediate yoga classes
will be held on Tuesdays, starting April
15 and continuing through June 3. The
courses will cost $15 for students and $20
for non-students and will be limited to 15
p~rsons. Anyone- interested may sign up
WIth Patty Allen in Counseling Services
'
Lib. rm. 1220.
• There will be a KAOS general staff
meeting Monday. April 7, at 7:30 p.m. in
CAB rm. 110. The KAOS radio workshop series starts next week. Those interested should sign up on the third floor of
the Activities building.



• The Sounding Board will meet
Wednesday, April 9 in CAB nn. 108 at 8
a.m. to discuss making moderators pay
equal to recorders, developing guidelines
for the moderators, and South Sound
National Banking service.
• Wes Uhlman, Mayor of Seattle, will
address problems concerning city and
local government on Tuesday, April 8 in
Lee. Hall 3 at 2: 30 p. m. The public 'is
invited with no charge for admission.

• Budget proposals for the Services and
Activities groups ' (S&A) for '75-76 must
be submitted by May 2. Each proposal
must have an evaluation and fiscal report
accompanying it. Hearings on the proposals will be held May 7-9 and 14-16.
All proposals will be heard before any
allocations are decided upon.
.• There are . open volleyball games in the
steamplimt 'with pointers on - rules given
by Greg Starling every Wednesday at
6:30 p.m .
• The Health Services SurveY 'is being distributed starting Friday, April 4. A group
of concerned students have put it together, hoping to obtain input from
others. Every student is encouraged to
complete it, as it concerns the future of
Health Services. Copies are available at
the Information Center on the second
floor of the Activities building.

• The Self Help Legal Aid Office has
changed its location and hours. Now in
Lib. rm. 3223 (telephone 6107), their
hours are: Monday', noon to 4:30 p.m.;
Tuesday, closed; Wednesday, 9 a.m. to
4:30 p.m .; Thursday, noon to 1:30
p.m.; Friday, 9 a.m. to 4: 30 p.m.

l1ick*~



3,1·151;:;

Wednesday 4 -g

Linda Allen, folk singer. will be
appea ring at Highline Community
College at noon . She is both i:I
tomposer of folk songs and il
April 3, 1975

• An eight week activities program for
pre-schoolers begins April 15 at Timberland Regional Library. The 90-minute .
programs will be held on Tuesdays and
Thursdays at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. Each
child may attend only one program per
week. Registration began yesterday, April
2, at the library.
• The registrar's office has a number of
students not yet fully enrolled and is urging students to check with faculty members immediately to make sure their
names are on the program roster. The
next action taken will be disenrollment of
those students whose names do not
appear on official program rosters.
• Education Job Information Day is Wednesday, April 9 in the Board Room, Lib.
rm. 3109. Students will have the opportunity to talk to employed professionals
in teaching, administration, and counseling. Activities begin at 9: 15 a.m. Also, a
special preparation , ~()rkshop is scheduled
for Friday, April 4 at 1 p.m. in the Career
Resource Center, Lib. rm. 1221. Students
should contact the Placement Office to
sign up for Job Day.
• Health Services will be without a fu ll
time receptionist or registered nurse for
the first week or two of spring quarter.
The school is searching for replacements
and hopes to have the positions filled
soon. Two work-study students and a
half-time physician will fill the openings
temporarily. Office hours will be: Monday-Friday, 9-11:30 a.m. and 1:30-4 p.m.
Physician s clinics will be held on Tuesday
and Thursday from 2 to 4 p.m.

FOR SALE

1964 VW CAMPER

$400
Call 943-8338 after 6

-

Seattle Art Museum. in Volun·
teer Park, will be show ing photographs by David Watanaf)e in the
Museum's Gould Ga llery . Over 30
photographs of the arti st's persona l interpretation ot the western landscape wi ll be on display .
All Me for sale.
In Concert

Through Sunday, 4-H
Aller Margritte and The Real
In~pettor Hound. two one-act

PORTLAND

In Concert

Saturda y 4-26

Opera

Announcements---------

singe r of traditional American
and British folk songs which she
accompanies on autoharp, dulcimer or gu itar. Admission is free .

~"~
t. , ,,",,f~

.

,,~ "
f ' ,.' '.

r---------------------------,
(M) PIONEER

8

As It Is
continued from page 7

PL-10
STEREO TURNTABLE

.

,.-• .... .
,

.

Despite its simplified 2-control
operation , this versatile unit
contains a high degree of sophistication with advanced features li ke: 4-po le , belt-driven
synchronous motor; ' static-ba la nced S·shaped tonearm; ultrali ght tracking; oil damped cuein g; anti-skating control; 12-inch
dynamically balanced die cast
platter ; wa lnut base, hinged
d u s t c 0 v e r: 3,3 113 - 4 5 rpm
speeds,

LIST PRICE $99.95

NaJ ONLY

Roaco's

STEREO*CB*ALARM SYSTEMS
N.w-USID-ftADIUlNANCING-IXPIIIT UPAID

4M3 'PACIPIC AVE. MON -I=~'. Il-b

SAT

Il-S

7'.'15

A Disappearing Task Force (DTF) on a
tuition and fees collection schedule has
entered its recommendation according to
DTF chairman Al Spence. The recommendations were given to the Sounding
Board on March 12,
The DTF recommended:
a) the final payment and registration
date be the sixth instructional day of the
quarter;
b) tuition and fees only be accepted
with registration card. If mailed they be
accepted, but not processed, without the
card;
c) after the deadline, nothing be
accepted without authorization and $15
late payment fee;
d) two documents be made up, one on
how to get into, Evergreen and one on
how to get out of Evergreen.
Vice President and Provost Ed
Kormondy feels that carrying the payments beyond the sixth day deadline,
would "promote a kind of fiscal behavior

·-at
SEA-MART ff

PIANO SERVICE
TUNER & TECHNICIAN

DRUGS

Tuning - Cleaning
Refelting -

AU

~~~~t~NEW
i:Poii)
P"."".

"R,,,,J., CIT,

CALL JOHN GRACE
115 N CAPITOL WY

coupon

GAF

··•
;
~

"' . ,
;

,.

·

943-3712

coupon
IIVPORT CAR SERVICE

bCi¢

'VOLVO SPEaAUSTS"

COMPARE TO EASTMAN KODAK AT $1.f>0

i

613 East State
Olympia, Wash.

PHONE:

943-4353

OLYMPIA SPORT SHOP

\

,\
;.

ROd, Reel & Gun Repair

also featuring:

KNIVES -

" LOWEST PRESCRIPTION PRICES IN TOWN"

,
C, •

LEATKER GOODS

Fly Tying Materials
Wed. thru Sat.
o AM - 5:30 PM

SE A -MART SHOPPING CENTER
DOWNTOWN OLYMPIA

OPEN
The Cooper Point Journal has
immediate openings for the following paid and unpaid positions:
Business Manager - responsibilities include accounting of revenue
and expenses , collection of ad
revenue, formulating an operating
budget, and supervising the business
affairs of the newspaper. Paid for
15 hours per week. Apply with
Margaret Gribskov, Lib. rm, 1602,
and prepare to be interviewed at
,Publications Board meeting tomorrow, April 4, at 2 p.m. in the Board
Room.
Classified ad manager in
charge of soliciting, organizing and
typing classified ads. Should have
typing skills. 15 hours per week,
work study only. Also to operate
typositer (headline) machine for
about six of the 15 hours.
Photographers - to take creative
photos for a revitalized graphic
layout. No pay, but free use of
darkroom equipment is provided.

saAln

'.

21 VARIETIES OF

.943 7575
ft

#1

e357·7575

107S.''''S'.
lu"' ..... ....

HAItRlsON DlVISIOI
I
.
#2Wn••0.,.,..'
tsld. c.ntw
&

.,.,.,.. City ....

TOWNHOUSE PILLOW
FURNITURE
. I

3630

Martin Way
466-3100

,.I 'J

'"----....;:

~. ~

-;:-.- -..' ::::::-~.:-:....,/,.---::--.::~
....
!r'
IIi!!;O
-' .. -~

- - -' _. ,-..
~----: . -

- f'

..

.;...---...;;~~!h_--

--:-;'. - ~--- .• #":. _ .- . __ . --

WATER BEDS - PILLOW FURNITURE
5 .. 10 YEAR GUARANTEE
M·F 11-8
SAT 10.6

ACCESSORIES
SUN 12-5

Letters

12 EXPOSURE

"

••

dDaB

1'.1.1.""'1
Ii I

Bob Bickers

COLOR ' PRINT FILM
126 -

C..,I, R.,i,·

UIED PlIlOS - SALES I _mALI

in students that is not responsible," as
well as compounding present collection
problems . . "The only in stance a late
payment fee should be honored," he adds,
"is when a student has reason to appeal to
the Student Fees Review Panel and that
pane l elects to allow the student to
register." Then, Kormondy feels, a late
payment fee would be in order.
No final decisions have been made on
the schedule.

943-3820

~

,719 E. 4th
357-7580

continued from page 3
contempt towards their critics and their
uncanny ability to sidestep very important issues.
The managing editor, Aubrey Dawn,
presents tho-se who have taken time to
criticize the direction of the paper as rabid
malcontents opposed to innovation in ' any
form, be it journalistic or academic. These
persons, so Mr. Dawn informs us, are
happy only when they are able to force
their views on the community in what
they see as the community's "best interest."
The major bone of contention between
the editors and their critics is in their
attitude towards Evergreen. They see the
continued on next page

Recording facilities are now available for the semi-pro, amateur, or hopeful
musician or group to cut demo tapes. If you or your band need this service
but couldn't afford studio time before, now is the time to do it.
We have semi-professional multi-track studio equ ipmer)t, engineers, and
other special services at

INCREDIBLE PRICE$.
Studio time is by appointment only at convenient hours . For informatip
call Don at 491 - 0991 from 1-8 p.m . o r 943 -9485 after 10 p.m.

Page 21

~"~
t. , ,,",,f~

.

,,~ "
f ' ,.' '.

r---------------------------,
(M) PIONEER

8

As It Is
continued from page 7

PL-10
STEREO TURNTABLE

.

,.-• .... .
,

.

Despite its simplified 2-control
operation , this versatile unit
contains a high degree of sophistication with advanced features li ke: 4-po le , belt-driven
synchronous motor; ' static-ba la nced S·shaped tonearm; ultrali ght tracking; oil damped cuein g; anti-skating control; 12-inch
dynamically balanced die cast
platter ; wa lnut base, hinged
d u s t c 0 v e r: 3,3 113 - 4 5 rpm
speeds,

LIST PRICE $99.95

NaJ ONLY

Roaco's

STEREO*CB*ALARM SYSTEMS
N.w-USID-ftADIUlNANCING-IXPIIIT UPAID

4M3 'PACIPIC AVE. MON -I=~'. Il-b

SAT

Il-S

7'.'15

A Disappearing Task Force (DTF) on a
tuition and fees collection schedule has
entered its recommendation according to
DTF chairman Al Spence. The recommendations were given to the Sounding
Board on March 12,
The DTF recommended:
a) the final payment and registration
date be the sixth instructional day of the
quarter;
b) tuition and fees only be accepted
with registration card. If mailed they be
accepted, but not processed, without the
card;
c) after the deadline, nothing be
accepted without authorization and $15
late payment fee;
d) two documents be made up, one on
how to get into, Evergreen and one on
how to get out of Evergreen.
Vice President and Provost Ed
Kormondy feels that carrying the payments beyond the sixth day deadline,
would "promote a kind of fiscal behavior

·-at
SEA-MART ff

PIANO SERVICE
TUNER & TECHNICIAN

DRUGS

Tuning - Cleaning
Refelting -

AU

~~~~t~NEW
i:Poii)
P"."".

"R,,,,J., CIT,

CALL JOHN GRACE
115 N CAPITOL WY

coupon

GAF

··•
;
~

"' . ,
;

,.

·

943-3712

coupon
IIVPORT CAR SERVICE

bCi¢

'VOLVO SPEaAUSTS"

COMPARE TO EASTMAN KODAK AT $1.f>0

i

613 East State
Olympia, Wash.

PHONE:

943-4353

OLYMPIA SPORT SHOP

\

,\
;.

ROd, Reel & Gun Repair

also featuring:

KNIVES -

" LOWEST PRESCRIPTION PRICES IN TOWN"

,
C, •

LEATKER GOODS

Fly Tying Materials
Wed. thru Sat.
o AM - 5:30 PM

SE A -MART SHOPPING CENTER
DOWNTOWN OLYMPIA

OPEN
The Cooper Point Journal has
immediate openings for the following paid and unpaid positions:
Business Manager - responsibilities include accounting of revenue
and expenses , collection of ad
revenue, formulating an operating
budget, and supervising the business
affairs of the newspaper. Paid for
15 hours per week. Apply with
Margaret Gribskov, Lib. rm, 1602,
and prepare to be interviewed at
,Publications Board meeting tomorrow, April 4, at 2 p.m. in the Board
Room.
Classified ad manager in
charge of soliciting, organizing and
typing classified ads. Should have
typing skills. 15 hours per week,
work study only. Also to operate
typositer (headline) machine for
about six of the 15 hours.
Photographers - to take creative
photos for a revitalized graphic
layout. No pay, but free use of
darkroom equipment is provided.

saAln

'.

21 VARIETIES OF

.943 7575
ft

#1

e357·7575

107S.''''S'.
lu"' ..... ....

HAItRlsON DlVISIOI
I
.
#2Wn••0.,.,..'
tsld. c.ntw
&

.,.,.,.. City ....

TOWNHOUSE PILLOW
FURNITURE
. I

3630

Martin Way
466-3100

,.I 'J

'"----....;:

~. ~

-;:-.- -..' ::::::-~.:-:....,/,.---::--.::~
....
!r'
IIi!!;O
-' .. -~

- - -' _. ,-..
~----: . -

- f'

..

.;...---...;;~~!h_--

--:-;'. - ~--- .• #":. _ .- . __ . --

WATER BEDS - PILLOW FURNITURE
5 .. 10 YEAR GUARANTEE
M·F 11-8
SAT 10.6

ACCESSORIES
SUN 12-5

Letters

12 EXPOSURE

"

••

dDaB

1'.1.1.""'1
Ii I

Bob Bickers

COLOR ' PRINT FILM
126 -

C..,I, R.,i,·

UIED PlIlOS - SALES I _mALI

in students that is not responsible," as
well as compounding present collection
problems . . "The only in stance a late
payment fee should be honored," he adds,
"is when a student has reason to appeal to
the Student Fees Review Panel and that
pane l elects to allow the student to
register." Then, Kormondy feels, a late
payment fee would be in order.
No final decisions have been made on
the schedule.

943-3820

~

,719 E. 4th
357-7580

continued from page 3
contempt towards their critics and their
uncanny ability to sidestep very important issues.
The managing editor, Aubrey Dawn,
presents tho-se who have taken time to
criticize the direction of the paper as rabid
malcontents opposed to innovation in ' any
form, be it journalistic or academic. These
persons, so Mr. Dawn informs us, are
happy only when they are able to force
their views on the community in what
they see as the community's "best interest."
The major bone of contention between
the editors and their critics is in their
attitude towards Evergreen. They see the
continued on next page

Recording facilities are now available for the semi-pro, amateur, or hopeful
musician or group to cut demo tapes. If you or your band need this service
but couldn't afford studio time before, now is the time to do it.
We have semi-professional multi-track studio equ ipmer)t, engineers, and
other special services at

INCREDIBLE PRICE$.
Studio time is by appointment only at convenient hours . For informatip
call Don at 491 - 0991 from 1-8 p.m . o r 943 -9485 after 10 p.m.

Page 21

continued from preceding page

BUY YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS

AT
HENDRICK'S

DRUGS
943 -3111

WESTSIDE CENTER

BOB'S

BIG BURGERS
1707 WEST HAR'RISON

It's Not
Required Reading.

The Free Paper
Look For It!

All your
textbooks were
paperbacks
this quarter.
You owe yourself an Oly.
Ql

y " ,) ! £!rr! ,',

/1 ')

(Urr' ;Ja Il Y, OIYITlr'ld , Wa sllt fl q l urJ ' Ul ( 0

AI, Ol ym p Ia cmpt l (15 Or(.:

rp c yr ,l~d )I I '

RI

college as the fruition of progressive
thought which a ll ows individuals full
growth "encouraged and cultivated with
loving care." Furthermore, the "roadblocks" which have arisen to impede
Evergreen's complete realization of its
ideals are not concrete problems at the
col lege but rather are the obstinate
thoughts of "rhetorical gourmets" who
ga in pleasure only by destroying what is
progressive and not under their control.
However , we do not believe that the
problems at Evergreen exist only in the
rr:ind s of tho se who are vocally
discontent. We do not believe that if these
people on ly "matured" that Evergreen
would progress into harmonious bliss,
The criticisms that are made of Evergreen
are not conjured up in the minds of
per~ons with dictatorial ambitions but
grow out of real conflicts in the concrete
wor ld of Evergreen. The role of a
n ewspaper is not to dismiss these
criticisms as childish illusions but rather
to report on the rea l causes of discontent.
The role of the Cooper Point Journal is
not to be a cheerleader for the "Evergreen
Philosophy" but rather to report the
practica l reasons why that "philosophy" is
so far from reality. The Evergreen
community wi ll be served far better in its
efforts to improve itself by a newspaper
which hon estly analyzes its shortcomings
than by a newspaper which buries those
problems under a barrage of euphemistsic
pep talks.
When Spiro T. Agnew was Vice-President he cri tici zed the media for printing
only "bad news." This was the reason,
according to Agnew, that people were so
unhappy with the status quo , He could
n o t accept that people's anger and
frustrations grew out of real problems but
thought that they were dissatisfied only
because the media did not tell them that
this is th e "best of all possible worlds ."
Read ing the editoria l position of the
Cooper Point Journal as stated in
"Forever G reen" we are impressed by the
remarkable s imilarity between their
conception of a newspaper and that of the
former v ice-president ,
We are chastized by the editors for
wan ting the paper to fulfill its "community respo nsibili ties." Thus, according
to the editors we are reactionaries
opposed to inn ovat ion, change and
progress. What the present editors of the
Cooper Point Journal should try to
understand is that when a paper avoids
the important conflicts on our campus
and in the larger world, it serves none
bett er than those who prosper by the
better that those who prosp~r by the
status quo a nd are dedicated to its
preservat io n .
Robert W . McChesney
Mary Hester
Kraig Peck
Eva Usadi
David Bley

Editors reply '
Last quarter saw an outbreak of attacks
and counterattacks, ugly insults and uglier
insults, and because of these bitter battles
not much happened for anybody . and
everyone stood dissatisfied. Your letter
only serves to prolong the agony. Behind
the vocal disagreements of both "sides"
there is a lot , of agreement.
We have never stated or believed as
you hinted that if these peop le only
"matured" that Evergreen would progress
into "harmonious bliss. " If you think
about it you know that you have twisted
what we said until it is totally
unrecognizable. And where does all the
anger leave us but in Nowhereland?
At no time have we criticized people
for pointing out and trying to make right
Evergreen's problems, in fact, that is the
main thing we want to try and do . The
page 2 feature was a public response to a
privately raging conflict and was really
directed only at one individual who was
in fact quoted in the article.
Perhaps you are not aware of exactly
what Forevtr Green was in response to.
The paper was in fact threatened with, in
the words of its attacker , "anything,
including sabotage, to keep the paper
from coming out spring quarter. " With
that kind of fanatical fervor in the air can
you blame us for our moment of
weakness when we gave vent to some of
our anger? If you read the page 3 article
then you would know that "honestly
analyzing" Evergreen's shortcomings is
exactly what we have in mind.
You end by calling us Spiro Agnew and
saying we are opposed to "community
responsibilities," which is of course,
unmitigated bullshit. We want to tell
what's going on and we are served best in
our efforts when we are not being
attacked by fellow students who agree
with much of what we say, The time has
come to bury-the petty bickering, join
hands and get down to business-there's a
lot of work to be done ,
Sam Solomon
Aubrey Dawn

The Journal welcomes a ll letters to
the editor, and wi ll print all letters
as space permits . To be considered
for publication in the sa me week as
it is submitted , a letter must be received no later than 5 p.m. on the
Monday preceding the Thursday of
publication. Letters received after
this deadline will be considered for
the following week's issue . Anything that is typewritten , doublespaced has a better chance to get in .

ALL WAYS TRAtI£L S£RtI'C£,'NC.

WESTSIDE SHOPPING CENTER

943·8701

OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON

943-8700

Playing Tennis?
TENNIS ACCESSORIES
CARRY ALLS, SHORTS, SH IRTS.

O I L NYLON - CUT
1 DAY SERVICE

3530 Martin Way

JEO<EL AND SOI\S SlCVO ES

COMPLETE
ASSEMBLY









OPEN 10-6 MON-SAT

Hitensi le steel frame
Sun tour Honor Rear-derailer
Chrome· tipped forks and stays
27" x 1 'I." ARAYA polished rims
Centerpull brakes by Cherry International
Suntour Stern Mounted Shifters
3 Piece Cotterell Cr~nk

3935 Pacific Ave., Lacey

491-3377

(ACROSS FROM SOUTH SOUND CENTER)

PAI NT

co.

Students:
10% discount on ALL art supplies
501 E 4th
943-1170

April 3, 1975

. STRINGING SERVICE

Special Order Service Available

continued from preceding page

BUY YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS

AT
HENDRICK'S

DRUGS
943 -3111

WESTSIDE CENTER

BOB'S

BIG BURGERS
1707 WEST HAR'RISON

It's Not
Required Reading.

The Free Paper
Look For It!

All your
textbooks were
paperbacks
this quarter.
You owe yourself an Oly.
Ql

y " ,) ! £!rr! ,',

/1 ')

(Urr' ;Ja Il Y, OIYITlr'ld , Wa sllt fl q l urJ ' Ul ( 0

AI, Ol ym p Ia cmpt l (15 Or(.:

rp c yr ,l~d )I I '

RI

college as the fruition of progressive
thought which a ll ows individuals full
growth "encouraged and cultivated with
loving care." Furthermore, the "roadblocks" which have arisen to impede
Evergreen's complete realization of its
ideals are not concrete problems at the
col lege but rather are the obstinate
thoughts of "rhetorical gourmets" who
ga in pleasure only by destroying what is
progressive and not under their control.
However , we do not believe that the
problems at Evergreen exist only in the
rr:ind s of tho se who are vocally
discontent. We do not believe that if these
people on ly "matured" that Evergreen
would progress into harmonious bliss,
The criticisms that are made of Evergreen
are not conjured up in the minds of
per~ons with dictatorial ambitions but
grow out of real conflicts in the concrete
wor ld of Evergreen. The role of a
n ewspaper is not to dismiss these
criticisms as childish illusions but rather
to report on the rea l causes of discontent.
The role of the Cooper Point Journal is
not to be a cheerleader for the "Evergreen
Philosophy" but rather to report the
practica l reasons why that "philosophy" is
so far from reality. The Evergreen
community wi ll be served far better in its
efforts to improve itself by a newspaper
which hon estly analyzes its shortcomings
than by a newspaper which buries those
problems under a barrage of euphemistsic
pep talks.
When Spiro T. Agnew was Vice-President he cri tici zed the media for printing
only "bad news." This was the reason,
according to Agnew, that people were so
unhappy with the status quo , He could
n o t accept that people's anger and
frustrations grew out of real problems but
thought that they were dissatisfied only
because the media did not tell them that
this is th e "best of all possible worlds ."
Read ing the editoria l position of the
Cooper Point Journal as stated in
"Forever G reen" we are impressed by the
remarkable s imilarity between their
conception of a newspaper and that of the
former v ice-president ,
We are chastized by the editors for
wan ting the paper to fulfill its "community respo nsibili ties." Thus, according
to the editors we are reactionaries
opposed to inn ovat ion, change and
progress. What the present editors of the
Cooper Point Journal should try to
understand is that when a paper avoids
the important conflicts on our campus
and in the larger world, it serves none
bett er than those who prosper by the
better that those who prosp~r by the
status quo a nd are dedicated to its
preservat io n .
Robert W . McChesney
Mary Hester
Kraig Peck
Eva Usadi
David Bley

Editors reply '
Last quarter saw an outbreak of attacks
and counterattacks, ugly insults and uglier
insults, and because of these bitter battles
not much happened for anybody . and
everyone stood dissatisfied. Your letter
only serves to prolong the agony. Behind
the vocal disagreements of both "sides"
there is a lot , of agreement.
We have never stated or believed as
you hinted that if these peop le only
"matured" that Evergreen would progress
into "harmonious bliss. " If you think
about it you know that you have twisted
what we said until it is totally
unrecognizable. And where does all the
anger leave us but in Nowhereland?
At no time have we criticized people
for pointing out and trying to make right
Evergreen's problems, in fact, that is the
main thing we want to try and do . The
page 2 feature was a public response to a
privately raging conflict and was really
directed only at one individual who was
in fact quoted in the article.
Perhaps you are not aware of exactly
what Forevtr Green was in response to.
The paper was in fact threatened with, in
the words of its attacker , "anything,
including sabotage, to keep the paper
from coming out spring quarter. " With
that kind of fanatical fervor in the air can
you blame us for our moment of
weakness when we gave vent to some of
our anger? If you read the page 3 article
then you would know that "honestly
analyzing" Evergreen's shortcomings is
exactly what we have in mind.
You end by calling us Spiro Agnew and
saying we are opposed to "community
responsibilities," which is of course,
unmitigated bullshit. We want to tell
what's going on and we are served best in
our efforts when we are not being
attacked by fellow students who agree
with much of what we say, The time has
come to bury-the petty bickering, join
hands and get down to business-there's a
lot of work to be done ,
Sam Solomon
Aubrey Dawn

The Journal welcomes a ll letters to
the editor, and wi ll print all letters
as space permits . To be considered
for publication in the sa me week as
it is submitted , a letter must be received no later than 5 p.m. on the
Monday preceding the Thursday of
publication. Letters received after
this deadline will be considered for
the following week's issue . Anything that is typewritten , doublespaced has a better chance to get in .

ALL WAYS TRAtI£L S£RtI'C£,'NC.

WESTSIDE SHOPPING CENTER

943·8701

OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON

943-8700

Playing Tennis?
TENNIS ACCESSORIES
CARRY ALLS, SHORTS, SH IRTS.

O I L NYLON - CUT
1 DAY SERVICE

3530 Martin Way

JEO<EL AND SOI\S SlCVO ES

COMPLETE
ASSEMBLY









OPEN 10-6 MON-SAT

Hitensi le steel frame
Sun tour Honor Rear-derailer
Chrome· tipped forks and stays
27" x 1 'I." ARAYA polished rims
Centerpull brakes by Cherry International
Suntour Stern Mounted Shifters
3 Piece Cotterell Cr~nk

3935 Pacific Ave., Lacey

491-3377

(ACROSS FROM SOUTH SOUND CENTER)

PAI NT

co.

Students:
10% discount on ALL art supplies
501 E 4th
943-1170

April 3, 1975

. STRINGING SERVICE

Special Order Service Available

COOPER

Live Among
the Forest Happenings
Trees surround
our living units
on all sides.
Gaze
across a sea of. treetops
watch the branches
sway
against your window Or stroll
home through forest paths.

HOUSING
Bldg. A, Rm 220 866-6132
rooms 'range from
61.60 - 18.80
I

.

I



I

.

JOURNAL
Media
cpj0078.pdf