The Cooper Point Journal Volume 4, Number 26 (April 22, 1976)

Item

Identifier
Eng cpj0118.pdf
Title
Eng The Cooper Point Journal Volume 4, Number 26 (April 22, 1976)
Date
22 April 1976
Evergreen Subject
Student Organizing and Activism
Native American Studies
Media Studies/Arts
Curriculum
Description
Eng Pg 1: The Cooper Point Journal (front page)Two faculty asked to leave (images:Jim Martinez; Modardo Delgato);
Pg 1: Wanrow Here Tomorrow (image:Yvonne Wanarow;
Pg 1: Where Will S&A Fees Come From?;
Pg 2: Editorial: (image: Eastern Washington Landscape (by Curtis Milton));
Pg 2: Letters: Fresh Faces and Music;
Pg 2: Letters: Happy Dreams;
Pg 2: Letters: Student Societies Excuse for Inactivity;
Pg 2: Letters: Prisoner Wants Correspondence;
Pg 2: Letters: EPIC Seeks Members; Pg 2: (advertisment) Olympia Greenhouses
Pg 3: Lofty Hobby: Evergreen's Kitemaker (images: Two of Stefan's kites. Above, the kite portrait of Dave lmanaka; below, a kite bearing the Rainier beer logo))
Pg 3: Crusty's Coop: A Kiddie Show For Adults (image: Crusty in his coop (by Larry Shlim))
Pg 4: In Brief: From Media Loan;
Pg 4: In Brief: Variety in Summer Curriculum;
Pg 4: In Brief: Summer Bus Run You Decide;
Pg 4: In Brief: Some Student Salaries Soar;
Page 4: Co-op corner;
Page 4: (advertisment) The Cork and Crock;
Page 4: (advertisment) The Duck House;
Page 4: College Campus Representitive;
Page 4: Announcements: Forum Held
Page 4: Classified Ads
Page 4: (advertisment) Sony
Page 6: Tender Care for Plants
Page 6: Linda Waterfall Returns;
Page 6: (advertisment) Summer Jobs
Page 6: (advertisement) Raudenbush Motor Supply
Page 6: (advertisement) Paul's Mobil Service;
Page 7: (Advertisemnt) Overlake Properties;
Page 7: (advertisement) Rainbow Deli;
Page 7: (advertisement) Elrich Stationers;
Page 7: Music and Entertainment;
Page 7: All of the Presidents Ratfuckers;
Page 7: (adverisement) Grace Piano Service;
Page 7: (advertisement) Evergreen Coins and Investments;
Page 8: Handcrafted Boat: Evergreeners Launch Project;
Page 8: Proposal Continued from pg. 6;
Page 8: (advertisment) Cooper Poi nt Journal;
Page 8: (advertisment) Bob's Big Burgers;
Page 8: (advertisement) Farmers Insurance Company of Wash;
Page 8: (advertisement) Paul's Mobil Service;
Page 8: (advertisment) Hendricks Drugs;
Page 8: (advertisement) Petersons Food Town; Page 8: (advertisement) TESC Bookstore;
Creator
Eng Milton, Kurt
Eng Shore, Stan
Eng Riddell, Catherine
Eng Stewart, Jill
Eng Sharpe, Loretta
Eng Firey, Nina
Eng Locke, Ti
Eng Bailey, Butch
Eng Milton, Curtis
Eng Buster, Doug
Eng Pokorny, Brad
Eng Shore, Stan
Contributor
Eng Stewart, Jill
Eng Milton, Curtis
Eng Riddell, Catherine
Eng Groening, Matt
Eng Gendreau, Joe
Eng Buster, Doug
Eng Gilbreath, Ford
Eng Wright, Jim
Eng Cowger, Chris
Eng Feyk, Jim
Eng Judd, David
Eng Schmitt, Mark
Subject
Eng Faculty Firing
Eng Wanrow Visiting
Eng Kite Making
Eng Wanrow, Yvonne
Eng Waterfall, Linda
Eng Martinez, Jin
Eng Delgato, Medardo
Eng The Evergreen State College
Eng KAOS Radio
Eng Shelton-Mason County Journal
Language
Eng eng
Place
Eng Washington State
Eng Thurston County, WA
Publisher
Eng The Evergreen State College Board of Publications and members of the Evergreen community
Extent
Eng 8 pages
Temporal Coverage
Eng 1976
extracted text
Proposal cont.

Two Faculty Asked to Leave

continued from page 6

the solidifica tion of divisional lines if students are not involved in the planning
and implementation of the curriculum. A
working plan must be developed specific ally addressing the extent of student participation in the process of planning and
evaluation, ot herwise that process will revert to the deans and faculty with the
minimal studen t critiquing that has occurred under Quinault I and II.

by Curt Milton
and Stan Shore
In a move unprecedented in Evergreen's
fi ve-year hi story. facu lty members jim
Martinez and Medardo Delgado have
been informed that their contracts will not
be renew ed a t the e nd of their three year
term. The decision not to renew is the
first ever at Evergreen.
The two faculty were informed v ia let ter from Vice-President Ed Kormondy
that !,hey would not be rehired when their
present contracts expi re. Martine'z will be
with the school through September 1977.
The exact date o f De lgado's departure is
not known.
Kormondy cited Martinez' "inabilit y to
work within the coordina ted study mode"
as one reason for the dismissal. Although
Martinez s howed great ski ll in th e areas
of individua l a nd group contracts, Kormondy wrote, the basic unit at Evergreen
is the group (coordinated studies).
"This place is just not for me," Martinez
said philosophically. "I can' t go on reinforCing middle class va lu es." He said that
he doesn ' t want people using the issue of
his non-renewa l as a "vendetta" for
ge tting at President McCann or Kor mondy. " ( can only help so many people,"
he added , "then it 's time to move on."
Faculty member Willi Unsoeld , who
worked with Martinez on the " Ethics and
Polit ics" program fall quarter. felt that
Martinez was probably being let go because of hi s "s potty academic back-

At the same time, tortunately, the
Quinaults were so general that yearly in terpretation led to a relatively wide but
random spect rum of programs being offered. Under the proposed plan, such ran dom select ions will not happen. Specialization implies narrowing of policy; the
result of the specialty areas could be a
narrow and misdirected curriculum if students a re n ot guaranteed a part of the
planning sy nthesis. (Tricky , huh ?)

The launch scene .

HAND CRAFTED BOAT

h' 'C l the ri nc RIJdel1
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,mel ,11 the v e ry end o f the
ci('st rl' l'pel In a lire. Carl
J ~ ob C r<l\vt or d . dnd Rick

1 hl'J11rH. ~'n \ '\' l 're three gun~hn membe rs of
:'.,- I'rp),;r,lIn
\0\ (, 'pc'nt all our time
·, \",1-.111 ),; ,' n Ih 'll
boat . ~Vh('n they
' l'I"rn l'd I.. , chon I I d~ t fall they planned
"11 1\I'rhlll),; in cln a pprent iceship
w ith
H,1I1h. I (1ng . d l(1c ')l b"clt huildN. When
Ilan J.. q(' p peci b uildlll ~ bOilb thl' plan fell
I" , ,''',:h. The t hree decided tn build a
h,,')1 "n their own conlracti ng with Pete
"';,n, Iclll' a nd Byron Youtz .

(,lans for the boat we re from History of
Am ericll" S IIIaI! 5ai lill~ Craft by Howard
C happelle . It's designed as a '17 foot
lapstrake ski ft whi ch could ha ve a sa il.
t hl'u gh it doesn't nl>w.
Thl'se days . most boats are built of
tiber g ldss . R"b rete r s t o them as
lupperware bOdt,. But thi s boat is built of
(e dar . white oak. and coppe r nail s from
S",l ltll' th a t cost $4 d pound. It's built in
th e l.apstrake fa shion , meaning that the
planb. or 'trdkl's. overlap each other.
T Il(' most difficult part was to find tools
clnd d pldct' to work. O nl y th e planr.ing
wa , dnne in the sc hoo l's se t an d model
sfwp . A ceme nt floored tw o car garage
oil campus was used a' it shop.
This type of boat was used o ff the
,hores 01 Newfoundland for sea lin g . "It·s
rl'dl efticient and can hau l a s hit load, "
added Crawfo rd. One sa il o r ilt th e
Iclun ch in g sa id "i t's Ihe fas test rowboat on
thc so und ."
To b ui ld the boat. the p la ns were

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measured and en larged on a grid to full
size and th en transferred to a sheet of
white pai nt ed plywood. Each curve must
be perlect: no e rrors are allowed, no
ma tter h ow sm a ll. The keel and stem are
then ma de . Nex t the mo ld , based on the
inner dimen sions of the boat, is made.
Around thi s m o ld , the boat is built.
Thi s group is no t the only one at
Evergree n building boats. When Marine
Histo ry's boat went up in flame s last
yea r. "a lot of people's a mbition s a'nd
dreams went up too, " according to Rob
C raw ford. Brian Hays is working on
resto ring a full s ize sai lb oat and another
student is building a traditional dory. They
plan to se ll the dory alt h ough they ' re not
rea ll y in tereste d in careers in boat
buildin g . They want to go to boat
bu il ding sc hool. "The thing about
build ing a boat, is you want to build
another. " sa id Crawfo rd . It 's not for a
caree r, it 's k ind of "universal, ambigu-

Another process, that of eva luation,
ha s been consistently a prob lem in developi ng long-range curricul um planning.
The ult ima te measure of evaluation is F.v ergreen's ability to help students to lea rn.
To remain experimental. Evergreen must
constJntly assess it s functioning and progress in achieving in s titutional goa ls - a
p rocess that mu st be student oriented.
(T rickier still?)
T Cl be a truly innovative college, Evergreen must rely on its a bility to evolve
a nd adapt. The proposed curriculum p lan
should be viewed as an arbitrary starting
point from which change is not only expected b ul encouraged. changed, initi ated by a syn thesis of the tota l commun ity.
If a dYllalllic m ean s of se lf-criticism and
s<,lf -co rrec tioll is not an i'ltegral part of
policy ilrliJl e J1l l? lItation. Eve rg reen w ill
ca ntin lie to c!Jall ge by th e pa in ful process
of n'isis inte rvelltioll . the iJolicies will re mai" a iJroduct o f a reflex rea ctioll ratiter
tllQl1 olle of cogll itive reSiJ0 1lse.
U"less tit e OTF writes into its proiJosals
a guaran tee of student involvemellt in all
iJl,ases of curricu lum planning. we find
th e iJrescl1t iJlijll wlQcceiJtable .

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HENDRICKS

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2401 W. Harrison

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Hours 9 - 9 Dajly
Sunday 7 - 7

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including:
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Cannon BaU !Herandnu

Yvonne Wanrow , th e 32 year old Co lvi lle Indian woman convicted of murder ing a man she says threatened herself and
her family, continues in her efforts to
bring her case before the people when s he
comes to speak at Evergreen Friday.

"" CAB 30t> or ca ll 800·6080.

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ground." Martinez does not have a Bachelor of Arts degree but has many years
experience in correct ion s work. "The student s enjoyed him greatly and he was a
fine colleague to work with,"' Unsoeld
said. "What it boiled down to was wheth er
we could afford a specialist or not."
It is unknown what the exact nature of
Delgado's non-renewa l is a nd he has refused to comment.

Faculty members at Evergreen do not
have te nure, unlike professors at most colleges . In stead they are given three -yea r renewab le con tracts. The terms for not renewing the contracts are spelled out specifica ll y in the college's adm inistrative
code. Acco rding to the code . faculty members must be g iven notice by the April 15
previous to the year they are to leave.
The code states that "unwillingness or

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by Catherine Riddell
The tim e is now past to apply
for Services and Activities funds.
These f unds come out of each
student's tuition. everyone I,as a
right to apply for the funds , and
quite a few s tudent s do . This
year's allocatiolls will be done
somewhat differently . Applicants
arl' heing divided into four
grotliJ s : Commun ic atior, s ar,d
Cultural Eve nts; Reaeatiol1 : Studellt G "OIlPS: alld Services . OiJ ,·mtiollS . and Miscellaneol/s .
This article will look at the
tlll'rd area - s tl/dent gro lliJs
tllOse iJeoiJle a ll the third floor of
tile library . Bec all se r{'iJorting on
all the grol.liJ5 is beyond the
sco pe of ail e article . Clrcwn stances hal'£' c hosel1 the Asi,l/1
C oalitioll . th e Faith Cen ter. the
G ay Cel1 tl! r. alld the Womell 's
Cell te '·.
Rob in West of the Asian Coa liti o n feels that 90 percent of
Evergreen are "rich white kids
who come and play at being
oor hippies for two to four

The Evergreen State College . Olympia,Washington 98505

THE COOPER POINT

Vvanrow , whose second deg ree murder
ann first degree assault conv ictions were
handed down by an all-white jury on
May 7, 1973, will speak on "A Woman 's
Right to Defend Herself" at 1 p . m. in LH
one. Accompanying Wanrow will be one
of her attorneys. Carol Schapira. and a
Native American folksinger . Floyd Wes terman .
The convictions, w~ich could total a
maximum of 25 years, were made against
Wanrow for the murder of Will iam Wes ler , a known ch ild molester nicknamed
"C hicken Bill" by the local police.
On the evening of August 11 , 1972.
Yvonne Wanrow was at home resting ·
with a bruken leg while her nine-year-old
son Darren was s taying with Shirley
Hooper , a babysittl'r. Wanrow claims that
while Darren and Hooper's 10- year -oJd
daughter were play in g outside after din ner. We sler ent iced the children into hi s
home , locked the door and threatened
thl'm with a knife .
Bo th c hildr en escaped and Hooper
called the police. The police took a report
which included a statement from Hooper's
younger daughter Mildred. Severa l months
earlier Mildred had been treated at a local
clinic for VD and she now admitted that
Wesler was the man who had "done that
thing to me ." The police made no arrest
and told Hooper to file a complaint on

~
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fI)

M edardo Delgado

Wanrow Here
Tomorrow

GET YOUll pu:scalP11ONS AT

Auto Repair Specialists
Lowest Guaranteed
Labor Rate in Town

Jim Martinez

]

years and go back to their fam ily's money ." Said West , "Yo u'd
thin k at an alternative school,
you'd have some diversity ."
With that, we come to a major
purpose of the Asian Coalition:
To recruit Asian faculty and students in their communities, to
ope n communications with
Asians at ot her schools , a nd to
educate the non -Asian communit y. West exp la ined . ''I'm tired of
the idea that to get a Third
World perspective, you have to
take a Third World program.
Every program sho uld h ave a
Third World perspective. You
shouldn't have to negate yourself to study botany."
Speak in g philosophically. more
or less, abou t the fact that the
offices up on the third floor are
visited so rarely, West compared
student groups to a mountain,
that yo u might never appreciate,
"but you'd miss it if it was
gone. " The Asian Coalition is
asking for $4,819 for next year,

inability to assume responsibilities in both
coord inated studies and contracted studies
teaching modes" is su fficient grounds for
contract " no n-renewaL"
Delgado and Martinez are not the only
facult y who will not be renewing contr ac ts. Although they h ave not been
asked. fiv e o the r faculty have indicated
that they definitely will not b:- r eturnin~
when their present terms expire. They are :
Lem Stepherson. Ed Reyno lds. Naomi
Greenhut, Cruz Esquivel and Karin Syver son.
Comment in g on the fact thaI th p major .
ity of those resigning are either Third
Wo rld or women, Dean Rud y Martin
said. "That 's a bummer. " However, Mar tin cau tioned that he d oesn't feel Ever·
green is losin" its grip on affirmative ac tion.
Officials of UjAMMA and th e Third
World Coa liti on declined to co mment due
to lack of information on the resig nat ion~.
The non-renewals a lso ra ised the question of academic background previou s to
hiring . Only four person s on the Evergreen faculty do n ot have masters or doc tora te degrees. They are Don Jo rda n. Bud
johan se n, Delgado and Martinez. Delgadl'
ha s a BA as does jordan . Th e admini stra tive code does not specify t he lack of ad vanced degrees as sufficie n t gr ounds fo r
firing.
"People who are doing their gig should n't be worried," sai d Martin. " Evergreen
is not turning into a tight -assed place .
this is not a witch - hunt ."

URNAL
Volume IV

April 22, 1976

Number 26

Monday.
Wanrow then c lai m , that Shir ley
Hoope/ l alled hl'r ,md d ,s,sted Wanrow
co me over and bring along the gun she
had purchased earl ier for self-protection.
At midn ight the two women were joined
by Wanrow's brother-in-law and siste r
wit h their three children.
According to Wanrow. at 5 a.m. the
next mornin g a drunke n Wes ler barged
through the front door and lurched to ward Wanrow''i three -yea r-old nephew ,
who was slee ping on the couch . When
Wesler c hanged directions and turned on
Wanrow , she shot him . Wesler's companion . David Ke ll y. e ntered the house. was
wounded by Wanrow and left.
Wanrow and Hooper immediate ly called
the Spokane Crime Check number to report the shoot ing. Unknown to Wanrow ,
that call was being recorded. a standard
procedure. The tape was to become a critical piece of ev idence in the prosecution 's
case. Only after she admitted to the ki ll ing was she read her rights, yet the entire
tape was allowed to be introduced. Three

jurors la ter said it was the deciding factor
in the ca se.
vV a n fOW a pp~aled the co nviction and
her ca se was picked up by the Center tor
Const itution a l Right s in New York. The
Sla te Court of Appeals in a two-to· one
ve rdict ruled that the tape w~ s inadm issable , thu s c1e a rin ~ the way lo r a new
tnal. Th e Spoka ne prosecutor then ap pealed that rtrling to th e State Supreme
Court , where t he ca se now resid es. Th~
cou rt heard th e dr~ument s ot Wanro\\, s
attorneys Feb . 23 and is expected to ru k
in three to si x months .
.Defcn'ie committees io r Wanrow have
been tormin g allover the cou ntry in dn
etf or t to provide mo ney for lega l fee,.
Wanrow ha s been hitting the speaker s
circuit , makin ~ speeches such as the one
here tomorrow. She is divorced now and
must provide for her family as well as
financing the legal battle. Donations for
her defen se fund will be accep ted at to morrow 's speech. which is being spon sored by EPIC, the Speaker's Bureau a nd
the Women 's Center.

..•
which will fund a coordinator at
$2.95 per hour out of institutional funds. and $2,605 in
goods and services, primarily
honorariums for speakers. performe rs, and films.
The Faith Center had a relatively s mall S&:A budg et o f
$] ,400 fo r the past year. Coord inat o r Peggy Pahl serves pr im arily as a coord in a ting center_ for
the various re li gions on campus.
S&A fund s pay for a coordinator. telephone, and printing fees.
Comme nting on pos s ibl e cut backs on S&A funds for next
yea r, Pahl says, " it is important
for the diversity of the student
groups to be maintained. "
At the Faith Center there are
tracts of all kinds, but Pahl em phasized that " this is a place
where people can ask questions.
People have to find answers for
themselves."
Primarily the Faith Center co ordinates sack lunch speakers
and interest groups and retreats.

Not very many people are involved , but it is an available re source, and, according to Pahl ,
those involved appreciate it.
The Gay Resource Center is
applying for $8,233 for ne x t
year, an increase of $4,085 over
thi s year. The increase is for the
eq uiva lent of two additional 15
hour a week positior,s starting a t
$2.95 an hour , to be divided
four ways. The next biggest item
is $3 ,380 for goods and services,
primdrily for honorariums, post age. books, printing, office sup plies , and travel.
The Gay Center's best achieve ments this year include a gay
studies program for next year,
and being published in the Olympia phone book in boldface type
as the only gay contact between
Portland and Seattle. The big gest problem cited in the Gay
Center's budget proposal is their

difficulty setting up social interaction for gay people on a regu lar basis. Also , il is unkn own
who will coordinate the group
next year.
The Women's Ce nt er is a
group that attempts to represent
and se rv e half the people on this
camp u s. They are requesting
$7,859.68, nearl y $3,500 more
than they were budgeted this
year. The extra money would go
to keeping the center open over
the s ummer with a 30 hour per
week staff position . The current
coordinators positions, one institutio na l and one work -study. are
only for the nine month school
year .
I ndividual pre sentations for
studen t groups will be made
Wednesday, May 19, and alloca tions Friday. May 21. Anyone
may come, ask questions , and
voice opinions.

EDITORIAL
by Jill Stewa rt
A ltho ugh the S&A Board has estimated a budget of only
S300,OOO in S&A funds for the '76 - '77 schoo l year, student and
c<lmpus groups and orga nizat io n s have zea lo usly requested a total
"I $745 ,588 .
Money allocated to these groups is not state money or federal
mon e y . It is the students' money , taken directly o ut of tuition
each quarter.
A few organiza tions req uest ing money seem to have completely
I""t ;)11 sense of their importance to the s tudents and community
p i thi s coll ege.
TI' keep each group in proper perspective, a rat ional group of
qll ~" llnns must be asked : How many students w ill b~l ong to the
grl'ur or orga nization 7 H ow many other students wIll attend or
Ll td ,Z~ thi s group's offe rings? Using that totaL how much money
r er 'Iudent w ill be spent if the ent ire request is gra nted? Is that
dJ1) "lInt pe r "Iudenl rea li stic ?
The organizat ions who are asking for more than their fa ir share
111" Ye';C are th e Ga\' Center, asking for $8,233 (com pared to
S3 i i ~ th l' \' received tor '75 - '70, a n in crease of 164 percent );
Fr l C. ask'ing lor $9,943
(ul' from last year's a ll otme nt of
S~ 004 , an in crease of 116 percent ); N ASA , asking for $12,548
c<'",pared to SS 870.38 received ,ast year, an increase of 113 per\. l'nt \.

r he G d\' Ce nt er in particu lar , perhaps hoping to cap italize o n
:h,.. ,tra lght g uilt " en gulfin g th is commun it y , ha s asked for an
'u'.ragl'<lll> budget increase .
Alt h" ugh Ih e ce nter IS unable to name an act ual st udent meml'c r,h rr c,)un t, the Il gure of 30 total pa rticipants has been used by
'l'llW \'I) ca; members from the center. They also claim an outS id e
.
'l1t'lll h "rshlp 01 up Il' 2110 pe op le.
I h',,·c\'er . the o ut siJ, membcrship should not be an " rgume nt In
Ihe lt· tav o r . Alt hough co mmu nity participation can be included in
Ihe u,e 01 S&A lunds , it is b y no means the main part or even a
large rart 0f the aim o f these funds.
LISt year th e Gay Center received $3,118 in S&A funds , That
t,gure is 51. 100 less than the Women 's Center, a nd mO,re th,an
I",icc as much as th e Men ', Center received for the 75 - 76
,chool year.
The Gay Cent er shou ld receive a higher amount per student
than many ot her campus grou ps, because they have a larger ta,sk
than many: mak in g people more aware of the problems of a diScriminated against group. However, the amount they have asked
tor is fa r above a nd beyond a ny honest rationalization for need.
Iro nicall y eno ug h, one of the few groups requesting less money
this year is the Wome n's Clinic - an organization that efficiently
se rves almost half the population at Evergreen.
W ith drastic c uts unavoidable , some of the groups should be
comp lete ly left out: A "Forensics" group requesting $5,646.82, a
moun tai n club asking for $4 ,198.48, ' and a film resource bank
'lced ing S7,500 .
At tend the open S&A meetings thi s month that w ill discuss a llol atJo n possib ilit ies. Presen t your fpelings. It's your m o ney .

· LETTERS
FRESH FACES
AND MUSIC
To the Editor:
I hav e I()und it strange to no tlCl' the react ions one invar iably
ge t '. u pon mentioning s quare
JcHJCtng. Some pal e visibl y w hile
ul her, excu se themse lves , flatl y
rl'ius ing 10 di sc uss it.
b it the exposure given us In
gr ade sc hool. "com 'on kiddies ,
we' re go nna dance ," the record
,c ratching out tire less tunes to
ro w s ot untamable beast s who
had bet ter th in gs to do t ha n
dance w ilh the opposi te sex?
Cou ld it be th e high schoo l mem orie" makeup in th e can, wonderin g if he was gonna ask if she
would? I, th e fear of ineptness,
fat teet with no brains that keep
the masses away from the
week Iy squa re da nce s held a t
Applej<1m?
Th e fir st time for me was a
force jo b. I was we ll int o my
filth beer at the Inside Passage
w hen I found myself dragged
onto the rowdie dance floor .
"Leggo you fughpig, I can't, I
won ' t"
I did . It wa s g reat
but ,,0 mething had ke pt me from
It
Sunda\"
tind me h e adin g
dt'wntl,wn du ll ar in hand tl'

EDITOR

laugh till m y sides ache am id
mixed ha nds a nd bodies. The
damper i, w he n n ot e n ough
people show to fo rm a square.
Transpor tat io n ? I wa lk, it ge ts
me outside . People at sc hool
have a problem unless those w ith
cars cou ld arra nge a t ime and
place. Sta rts at 2 :30 , las ts till 5.
For those so in cl ined there are
occas iona l sew ing bees afterward.
Co me on down and INrn how
t o bal<1nce a n d sw in g, every
dance is ta ugh t be foreha nd so no
o ne will be lost. T here's cid er
a nd coffee, fresh faces a nd
music. Pretend you're living in a
sma ll tow n a nd there isn' t much
to do 'cept ro ll back the ca rpet
and dance .
Loretta Sharpe

HAPPY DREAMS
To the Ed itor :
To t he orga ni zer(s) of the " Last
Annua l Teresa Imfeld Memorial
Art isans Competiti on:"
W hen I first saw your "paintin-the-number" cartoon posters,
I thought t hat perhaps Teresa
was getting back at artistic snobs .
However, on seco nd thought,
realized th at Teresa isn ' t o n
campus right now .
So who is respons ibl e?
P eo ple w ith brui se d feelin)?s

JOURNAL STAFF

Jdl ') t('wart

NEWS EDITORS
L IJrtb Mdton
(,Itlwrme Ridde ll

FEATURE EDITOR
Mdtthl'w Gruenln g

PRODUCTION

PHOTOGRAPHY
Doug Bu ,tpr
I o rr! G ilb rea th

BUSINESS MAI\.
Jim Feyk
DaVid Judd

ADVERTISING
NEWS STAFF
Jim Wfl ght
Chri s Cowge l

Mark Sc hm itt '

PRINTER

She lton -Mason
Cou nty Journal
The Journal IS located In the College Activities Buitding (CAB) 306. News phones
866·62t 4. -621J . Advertising.and business 866 -6080 , Letters Policy: All telters to
the edi tor and pholographs for letters page must be received by noon Tuesday for
thai week's pub licat ion. Letters must be sig ned, typed , double -spaced and 400
,"words or less

loe Cl' nclrl'cl U'

3

LOFTY HOBBY

tra m last qu arter's Art is t C lass
show th at Te resa re viewed? ( Her
rev iew was of the " this is w hat I
like" variety - one she was seve rely criticized for.)
Sympat hizers with the a b ove?
Who k nows.
but whoever
you are, co ntest orga ni zers, you
a re chi ldish and maliciou s . Your
hum or is roughly equ a tab le w ith
la ugh ing a t someone fo r hav in g
a foreign accent (i.e.) being "different" from yo urself o r your
fr ie nds.
Artis ts may like their a rt , and
their friends may think that it's
the grea test thing since chocolate
ice c ream. But people (yo ur "ordin ary bozo") don't like it , a nd
won' t pay $2,000 for it , then a ll
the art ist will have is d reams of
chocola te ice crea m .
Hap py dreams .
T i Locke

ho pes tha t yo ur paper wi ll pub li sh my name, stating tha t I am a
pri soner desiring co rrespo ndence
with any young lady a t Everg reen Sta te C oll ege. I am lone ly
and desperate for out side femal e
co mmun ica ti o n.
Sin ce m y imprisonment (over
fo ur and a half years) I have
been t ota ll y re jec ted by a ll
w hom lance considered friends,
lo ved ones and fa mily. So, in
my desperatio n I am appea ling
to yo u and anyo ne on your staff
to assist and help me to ho ld fa st
to the reality of the o utside life,
If it bears a ny significance I
a m a poet. I have been writing
for the past 10 years. If a ny female wou ld like to read some o f
my m any poe m s, I am w ill ing to
share th em .
Tha nk yo u,
Butch Ba iley #36982
Box #]000
S teila coom, WA 98388

STUDENT SOCIETIES
EXCUSE FOR
EPIC SEEKS
INACTIVITY
MEMBERS
To the Editor:
"Universit ies, like cat hedra ls
a nd parl iamen ts, a re a p rodu ct
of the M iddl e Ages. " But we su re
don' t make them like we used
to: " The m edieva l u niv e rs ity
was, in the fin e old phrase of
rasqu ier, 'b uilt of men' - bat ie
e n h o m mes. Suc h a universit y
had no boa rd of tru stees and
pub lished no cat alogue ; it had
no student societies - except so
far as the university itse lf was
fundamenta ll y a soc iet y of stu dents - no co llege journalism,
no d ramat ics, no a thle ti cs, none
of tho se 'outside acl iviti es' w hi ch
a re the chief excuse for inside in acti v ity in the American co ll ege. "
The universit y was not run by
the State (the admini stra tion), or
the C hurch (th o ugh th ey exer cised their influ ence)' but by the
lea rners themselves . Think about
it.
(Quo tes taken from " The Rise of
Univers il ies"
CHHaskins, pp
I and 21
Nina Firey

PRISONER WANTS
CORRESPONDENCE
T o th e Edit or :
Food for thought - " When you
t rv to mak .. dn impression that
i, -th e impression ynu make. "
My name i.. Hutch Bailey . I am
prese ntly inca rce ra ted at th e federa l pri so n ca mp on McNeil
Isla nd here in Wa shington. I am
29 ye<1 rs old , b lack and born un der the sign of Aquarius. In ad d it ion , I am 5' 10 I , " tall , 169
Ibs. My eyes are brown and my
hair is b lack. I also wear a beard.
I ha il from Washi ngton D.C.
I a m writing this letter in

To the Edit or :
Dea r Evergree n Commun ity,
We st udents who have been
work in g as the Evergreen Political Info rmat ion Cen ter (E PI C)
wou ld like to th ank all of you
w ho have made our events successful. T hroughout th e fa ll a nd
w inter q uarters we've been ab le
to present a broad spectrum of
left a nd rad ical perspectives to
h undreds of students a nd O lympia reside nts, often in cooperation with o ther campus groups.
The Mo nd ay night film I speaker ser ies has been o ur main focus
t his year and attendance for it
h as been increasin g steadily. We
ho pe th at bot h the movies and
the discussio ns h ave been as
st imulatin g for you as they have
b een for us. Each Monday night
we try to present one of man y
issues we are concerned w ith ,
from local affairs like protective
legisla ti on a nd Sena te Bill 1, to
internat ional issues like "Wo men
in Vie tnam" and the hi story of
U . S . in volve ment in Spa in and
Chile.

D uring this quarter we've begun a letter writing campa ign for
the re lease of Chilean po litical
prisoners wh o are brutally trea ted
under Chile's d ictatorship. This
is o ne way th at we, as studen ts,
can work in support of international pressure for th eir release.
This kind of pressure has already
succeeded in forcing the Ch ilea n
govern m en t t o release several
prisoners.
If you have a ny suggestions
for improving the series in the
future or a ny activ ities you'd like
to see in support of local, national, or internationa l issues,
we'd s ure appreciate h eari ng
from yo u o r work in g with you,
At our la rgest event, the Holly
Near-Jeff Langley concert, which
was co-spo n so red with th e
Women's Center, we co ll ected
$121.00 for the Yvo nn e Wanrow
lega l defense fund and $21.00 for
Sea ttl e N ICH (Non - Intervention
in C hile). The money for Yvonne
goes to ass ist her in her court
battle that w ill determine whether
o r no t women have th e right to
pro tect their children from molesters. The money for NICH
w ill go to support their act ivities
in opposit ion to th e C hilean dicta t orship, Bot h gro ups have
asked us to relay their t hanks to
the peop le who made cont ributi o ns.
W e of EPIC hope that these
activ it ies ca n continue next year.
However, sev eral of us are grad uating and in order to have comparab le en tertainment and informatio n next yea r, we need new
me mbers. Because of this , we are
pu tting a lot of effort into find in g a nd tal king w ith people who
would be interested in working
as a leftist information center
next year.
Once again, thanks to yo u al l.
If you'd like to talk over th e pOSl
sibilit ies for next year, we are
hav ing a potluck dinner get-together for a ll interested people. It
wi ll be Ihis Sunday, April 25th,
at 5 p.m . The address is ]005
Vine Ave. West. Come or call
357 -4448 or 943-5077 and let 's
see w here we can go from here.
Members of EPIC

by Christina Cowger
K it e-fly ing in the springt ime is like leafraking in the fa ll - a nat ural and inevitab le pasti me.
One of its chief practit ioners at Evergreen it; Stefan Sch inzinger, a student in
Murals and Architec tu re th is q u arter.
Stefan cre<1tes his own mult i-co lored m asterp ieces and ca n ofte n be observed flighttes ting them on campus.
K it e- fl y in g has brou ght not on ly p leasure but hon o r to Stefan. O ne' of hi s fleet
was recentl y named most creative kite at
a mon thl y co ntest in a Seat tle city pa rk .
" I don' t trea t kite- fl ying as an end," he
says, "so I wouldn't buy one just to fly it.
The work is in two portio ns - buildin g
a nd fly in g - a nd making th em is a n e nd
in itself."
S tefa n concocts his kites from four different bas ic structure recipes, uSing a vari ety of in g redien ts : the "big bird ," made
from tissue .paper ; the sled kite, o ut of
newsprint paper ; the diamond eddy k it e;
and his lates t crea tio n, a cylindri cal kite
made from rip-stop nyl on, Wooden
dowe ls form the framework, or the
"spars," of his kites. He h as been experimenting wi th a clear plastic product called
M ilar, since sections can be ironed together or onto tissue paper.
Stefan rea ll y started making kites last
summer here a t school - simple mode ls
to begin w ith. Now he says, "I'd like to
make so me money if I can ."
'
Stefan has recently produced kites in
several designs wi th the Rainie r Beer logo
the ,fancy " R "
prominently
di splayed. This fact was drawn to Rain ie r' s a ttention by a Post- Int e lligencer
pho to of one of hi s kites in the Sea ttle
co nt est. Stefa n p lans to propose that the
compa ny hire h im to a dv e rti se t h e ir
produ c t in hi s own unique fas hion thi s
su mmer at fa irs a nd spo rtin g eve nt s
arou nd the sta te .
The newspaper p hot o e nc o ur age d
Stefa n, "The corpora te sy mb ol is so me thing everyone can identify with, " he
says.
The cylind ri ca l kite w ill be co mp le ted
in the like ness o f a Rainier beer ca n ,
Stefa n has expe rim ented with differen t internal struc tures. A lways before, this design has emp loyed lo ngitud in al spa rs,

Evergreens Kitemaker
.

,

lJi~
I

"'

'.

.~

Two of Stefan's kites. Above, the kite portrait of Dave
lmanaka ; below, a kite bearing the Rainier beer logo.

w hich would make lines through his design.
Stefa n's tria l runs w ith the big stil\wh ite beer ca n kite have met with so me
derision, he says. Those fligh ts provoke
comment s such as : " Looks like a cha ng ing booth" or "Yo u're tryin g to fl y a
shower stall! "
Anothe r 01 Stefa n's kites sports the
smiling face of Evergreen graphics de'.ig ner
Dav id I ma naka . The kite crafter bl" w up
Iman aka's photograph w it h a n o paqu e
pro jec tor and painted it on the kI te as a
birthday present.
Stefa n has spent a nywhere trom 20
minut es to 48 hours turning out a kite ,
the average bei ng a ro und six o r ,e ven
ho urs . Th e materia l resu lt s are fleetin g
th ough, si nce each samp le will only la<t
for five or six fl ights befo re cra sh in g to ''''
demi se in the clutch es of a t ree.
" You get a feel fo r how certai n form s
fly ," Stefan says. "Th is o ne, for insta nce,
behaves like a jelly fi sh - it undula tes, it
glistens, it shines like ice in th e su n sometimes."
.. His favo rite lau nch ing sites are Red
Square he re on campus, Budd Inlet and
Capitol Lake. Red Square is actually th e
best though, he explains, because hot a ir
reflected off the til es combined with cool
air from the s urro unding forest form s a
thermal updraft .
Stefan is full of advice on kite construc t io n a nd ha ndling . He says most people
start w it h the diamo nd -shaped kite, Dul
that it is actu a ll y the most difficult. Mi s·
in for mation also leads the public to conelude that a kite ta il is fo r we igh t, when
actua lly its fut1ttion is as a rudder .
A big tissue paper kite can cost ,)s :i t tie as 50 cents, Stefan claims. He c.civ", ....
go in g to Ernst Hardware to bu y Jpwel ,
since it's " the best for the ledst. "
He recommend s books in Evergreen , ii·
brary on kites, and says he' s w ill ing tn
give advice on weekends about ki te-tlv,ng
or kite-doctor ing. S tefan ' s add re" ic
Dorm C-303, Ph, 5125.
"I'd like to see more people flying kit(',
at Everg reen," says Stetan Sch in zin ger.
A ll it takes is so me basic mat e rials , <ome
wind, and t he urge to se nd your creatioll"
alof t ,

Crusty's COOp: A Kiddie Show For Adults
po tentia l audience of 27,000 in Thurston
Co unt y . Classic movies, ser ials, and home
mov ies are scheduled regu la rly . Recent
oddit ies included the home movies of a
500 pound chicken , "White Zombie ," and
"T he Terror of Tiny Town, " a 1933 West ern wi th a cast consisting so le ly of midgets riding Shet land ponies.
Th is Friday's movi es include the 1935
sc ience fiction classic "The Shape of
Things to Co me," and a rarely seen si lent
horror mov ie , "The Golem ." Also sched uled each week are successive chapters of
the serial "The Phantom Creeps," starring
Bela Lugosi as the mad Doctor Zo rba.
Other features of CR USTY 'S COOP
include guest appea rances by local musicia ns a nd film-makers, a nd an irregul ar
segment ca lled Dave's Fix-it Shop. This
week " How to fi x a si nk trap " is sched uled. "We li ke variety, " explained Cook.
The program is put together by stude nts for academ ic credit at Evergree n.
Students involved are Aaron Sonego
Produ cti o n Manager, James Moore -

by Matt Groening
" Howd y, folk s," sho uts the lively o ld
prospector on the TV screen. He waves to
the cam e ra and babbles away , strok in g a
live c hi cken in his lap, apparently unwarned that senili ty is a lready sett ing in .
CRUSTY 'S COOP is the nam e of the
new week ly TV show produced and di rected entire ly by Evergreen students, It is
broadcast Irom 11 p.m. to 3 a.m. on
C hannel 6 as a much-needed alternative
to Johnny Carson and the Midnight Special.
The program comes live from Crusty's
reside nce, a well-li t ch icken coop at the
Olympia Telecable Stud io. Crusty is
played by Carl Cook , w ho created the
show. "Crusty used to be a Pony Express
rider," says Cook. "His full name is

C ru sty Pitt s, wh ich we don 't mention o n
t he air for reasons of taste ."
Cook introduced Crusty on KAOS-FM
two years ago. Since then he has become
<1 familiar voice to regular li steners, ap pear in g on various radio shows and making many public serv ice announcements.
Crusty played a crucial role in Evergreen
stude nts l.ee Meister and Dav id Worman 's
1975 fi lm "Let the Voice of the Peop le Be
Heard ," abo ut a madman threa ten ing to
blow up the O lymp ia bus stat ion. An actua l FBI inves tigation ensued when the
dummy bomb used as a prop for the
movie looked a little too rea l to the
st udent who inadvertently discovered it in
a locker in Building A .
CRUSTY 'S COOP is broadcast to subscribers of Telecable Television and has a

Technica l Director, R ichard Walsh
Flo or Direc to r, Ra ndy Harrison - A udio ,
Jack Hoffman Camera, and Margo
Westfall - Second Camera.
The hectic spo ntaneity of a live show
often makes things te nse - and very
funny . When Crusty asks for ca lls from
viewers on the air, the phone lie s dead.
But in the midst of a live commerc ial for
a loca l merchant, the ph on e rings in sisten t y in the background .
In the tiny st ud io that serves as the
coop, uninvited guests troop in a nd out ,
ignoring t he threats and p lead ings of the
s tudent technicia ns trying to do their jobs.
Wires are tripped over and drinks spilled
as th ey scramble to get things readv for a
li ve seg ment of the show.
"How much time?" someone yells.
"Who the hell knows? " someone else
replies. By the time the show is over at 3
a. m " everyone is exhausted. "This s how
is hard work and a lot of fun ," says
Cook, "The re is no other program like it.
CR USTY'S COOP is a kiddie show for
<1dults ."

Watching Crusty in an O lympia bar,

EDITORIAL
by Jill Stewa rt
A ltho ugh the S&A Board has estimated a budget of only
S300,OOO in S&A funds for the '76 - '77 schoo l year, student and
c<lmpus groups and orga nizat io n s have zea lo usly requested a total
"I $745 ,588 .
Money allocated to these groups is not state money or federal
mon e y . It is the students' money , taken directly o ut of tuition
each quarter.
A few organiza tions req uest ing money seem to have completely
I""t ;)11 sense of their importance to the s tudents and community
p i thi s coll ege.
TI' keep each group in proper perspective, a rat ional group of
qll ~" llnns must be asked : How many students w ill b~l ong to the
grl'ur or orga nization 7 H ow many other students wIll attend or
Ll td ,Z~ thi s group's offe rings? Using that totaL how much money
r er 'Iudent w ill be spent if the ent ire request is gra nted? Is that
dJ1) "lInt pe r "Iudenl rea li stic ?
The organizat ions who are asking for more than their fa ir share
111" Ye';C are th e Ga\' Center, asking for $8,233 (com pared to
S3 i i ~ th l' \' received tor '75 - '70, a n in crease of 164 percent );
Fr l C. ask'ing lor $9,943
(ul' from last year's a ll otme nt of
S~ 004 , an in crease of 116 percent ); N ASA , asking for $12,548
c<'",pared to SS 870.38 received ,ast year, an increase of 113 per\. l'nt \.

r he G d\' Ce nt er in particu lar , perhaps hoping to cap italize o n
:h,.. ,tra lght g uilt " en gulfin g th is commun it y , ha s asked for an
'u'.ragl'<lll> budget increase .
Alt h" ugh Ih e ce nter IS unable to name an act ual st udent meml'c r,h rr c,)un t, the Il gure of 30 total pa rticipants has been used by
'l'llW \'I) ca; members from the center. They also claim an outS id e
.
'l1t'lll h "rshlp 01 up Il' 2110 pe op le.
I h',,·c\'er . the o ut siJ, membcrship should not be an " rgume nt In
Ihe lt· tav o r . Alt hough co mmu nity participation can be included in
Ihe u,e 01 S&A lunds , it is b y no means the main part or even a
large rart 0f the aim o f these funds.
LISt year th e Gay Center received $3,118 in S&A funds , That
t,gure is 51. 100 less than the Women 's Center, a nd mO,re th,an
I",icc as much as th e Men ', Center received for the 75 - 76
,chool year.
The Gay Cent er shou ld receive a higher amount per student
than many ot her campus grou ps, because they have a larger ta,sk
than many: mak in g people more aware of the problems of a diScriminated against group. However, the amount they have asked
tor is fa r above a nd beyond a ny honest rationalization for need.
Iro nicall y eno ug h, one of the few groups requesting less money
this year is the Wome n's Clinic - an organization that efficiently
se rves almost half the population at Evergreen.
W ith drastic c uts unavoidable , some of the groups should be
comp lete ly left out: A "Forensics" group requesting $5,646.82, a
moun tai n club asking for $4 ,198.48, ' and a film resource bank
'lced ing S7,500 .
At tend the open S&A meetings thi s month that w ill discuss a llol atJo n possib ilit ies. Presen t your fpelings. It's your m o ney .

· LETTERS
FRESH FACES
AND MUSIC
To the Editor:
I hav e I()und it strange to no tlCl' the react ions one invar iably
ge t '. u pon mentioning s quare
JcHJCtng. Some pal e visibl y w hile
ul her, excu se themse lves , flatl y
rl'ius ing 10 di sc uss it.
b it the exposure given us In
gr ade sc hool. "com 'on kiddies ,
we' re go nna dance ," the record
,c ratching out tire less tunes to
ro w s ot untamable beast s who
had bet ter th in gs to do t ha n
dance w ilh the opposi te sex?
Cou ld it be th e high schoo l mem orie" makeup in th e can, wonderin g if he was gonna ask if she
would? I, th e fear of ineptness,
fat teet with no brains that keep
the masses away from the
week Iy squa re da nce s held a t
Applej<1m?
Th e fir st time for me was a
force jo b. I was we ll int o my
filth beer at the Inside Passage
w hen I found myself dragged
onto the rowdie dance floor .
"Leggo you fughpig, I can't, I
won ' t"
I did . It wa s g reat
but ,,0 mething had ke pt me from
It
Sunda\"
tind me h e adin g
dt'wntl,wn du ll ar in hand tl'

EDITOR

laugh till m y sides ache am id
mixed ha nds a nd bodies. The
damper i, w he n n ot e n ough
people show to fo rm a square.
Transpor tat io n ? I wa lk, it ge ts
me outside . People at sc hool
have a problem unless those w ith
cars cou ld arra nge a t ime and
place. Sta rts at 2 :30 , las ts till 5.
For those so in cl ined there are
occas iona l sew ing bees afterward.
Co me on down and INrn how
t o bal<1nce a n d sw in g, every
dance is ta ugh t be foreha nd so no
o ne will be lost. T here's cid er
a nd coffee, fresh faces a nd
music. Pretend you're living in a
sma ll tow n a nd there isn' t much
to do 'cept ro ll back the ca rpet
and dance .
Loretta Sharpe

HAPPY DREAMS
To the Ed itor :
To t he orga ni zer(s) of the " Last
Annua l Teresa Imfeld Memorial
Art isans Competiti on:"
W hen I first saw your "paintin-the-number" cartoon posters,
I thought t hat perhaps Teresa
was getting back at artistic snobs .
However, on seco nd thought,
realized th at Teresa isn ' t o n
campus right now .
So who is respons ibl e?
P eo ple w ith brui se d feelin)?s

JOURNAL STAFF

Jdl ') t('wart

NEWS EDITORS
L IJrtb Mdton
(,Itlwrme Ridde ll

FEATURE EDITOR
Mdtthl'w Gruenln g

PRODUCTION

PHOTOGRAPHY
Doug Bu ,tpr
I o rr! G ilb rea th

BUSINESS MAI\.
Jim Feyk
DaVid Judd

ADVERTISING
NEWS STAFF
Jim Wfl ght
Chri s Cowge l

Mark Sc hm itt '

PRINTER

She lton -Mason
Cou nty Journal
The Journal IS located In the College Activities Buitding (CAB) 306. News phones
866·62t 4. -621J . Advertising.and business 866 -6080 , Letters Policy: All telters to
the edi tor and pholographs for letters page must be received by noon Tuesday for
thai week's pub licat ion. Letters must be sig ned, typed , double -spaced and 400
,"words or less

loe Cl' nclrl'cl U'

3

LOFTY HOBBY

tra m last qu arter's Art is t C lass
show th at Te resa re viewed? ( Her
rev iew was of the " this is w hat I
like" variety - one she was seve rely criticized for.)
Sympat hizers with the a b ove?
Who k nows.
but whoever
you are, co ntest orga ni zers, you
a re chi ldish and maliciou s . Your
hum or is roughly equ a tab le w ith
la ugh ing a t someone fo r hav in g
a foreign accent (i.e.) being "different" from yo urself o r your
fr ie nds.
Artis ts may like their a rt , and
their friends may think that it's
the grea test thing since chocolate
ice c ream. But people (yo ur "ordin ary bozo") don't like it , a nd
won' t pay $2,000 for it , then a ll
the art ist will have is d reams of
chocola te ice crea m .
Hap py dreams .
T i Locke

ho pes tha t yo ur paper wi ll pub li sh my name, stating tha t I am a
pri soner desiring co rrespo ndence
with any young lady a t Everg reen Sta te C oll ege. I am lone ly
and desperate for out side femal e
co mmun ica ti o n.
Sin ce m y imprisonment (over
fo ur and a half years) I have
been t ota ll y re jec ted by a ll
w hom lance considered friends,
lo ved ones and fa mily. So, in
my desperatio n I am appea ling
to yo u and anyo ne on your staff
to assist and help me to ho ld fa st
to the reality of the o utside life,
If it bears a ny significance I
a m a poet. I have been writing
for the past 10 years. If a ny female wou ld like to read some o f
my m any poe m s, I am w ill ing to
share th em .
Tha nk yo u,
Butch Ba iley #36982
Box #]000
S teila coom, WA 98388

STUDENT SOCIETIES
EXCUSE FOR
EPIC SEEKS
INACTIVITY
MEMBERS
To the Editor:
"Universit ies, like cat hedra ls
a nd parl iamen ts, a re a p rodu ct
of the M iddl e Ages. " But we su re
don' t make them like we used
to: " The m edieva l u niv e rs ity
was, in the fin e old phrase of
rasqu ier, 'b uilt of men' - bat ie
e n h o m mes. Suc h a universit y
had no boa rd of tru stees and
pub lished no cat alogue ; it had
no student societies - except so
far as the university itse lf was
fundamenta ll y a soc iet y of stu dents - no co llege journalism,
no d ramat ics, no a thle ti cs, none
of tho se 'outside acl iviti es' w hi ch
a re the chief excuse for inside in acti v ity in the American co ll ege. "
The universit y was not run by
the State (the admini stra tion), or
the C hurch (th o ugh th ey exer cised their influ ence)' but by the
lea rners themselves . Think about
it.
(Quo tes taken from " The Rise of
Univers il ies"
CHHaskins, pp
I and 21
Nina Firey

PRISONER WANTS
CORRESPONDENCE
T o th e Edit or :
Food for thought - " When you
t rv to mak .. dn impression that
i, -th e impression ynu make. "
My name i.. Hutch Bailey . I am
prese ntly inca rce ra ted at th e federa l pri so n ca mp on McNeil
Isla nd here in Wa shington. I am
29 ye<1 rs old , b lack and born un der the sign of Aquarius. In ad d it ion , I am 5' 10 I , " tall , 169
Ibs. My eyes are brown and my
hair is b lack. I also wear a beard.
I ha il from Washi ngton D.C.
I a m writing this letter in

To the Edit or :
Dea r Evergree n Commun ity,
We st udents who have been
work in g as the Evergreen Political Info rmat ion Cen ter (E PI C)
wou ld like to th ank all of you
w ho have made our events successful. T hroughout th e fa ll a nd
w inter q uarters we've been ab le
to present a broad spectrum of
left a nd rad ical perspectives to
h undreds of students a nd O lympia reside nts, often in cooperation with o ther campus groups.
The Mo nd ay night film I speaker ser ies has been o ur main focus
t his year and attendance for it
h as been increasin g steadily. We
ho pe th at bot h the movies and
the discussio ns h ave been as
st imulatin g for you as they have
b een for us. Each Monday night
we try to present one of man y
issues we are concerned w ith ,
from local affairs like protective
legisla ti on a nd Sena te Bill 1, to
internat ional issues like "Wo men
in Vie tnam" and the hi story of
U . S . in volve ment in Spa in and
Chile.

D uring this quarter we've begun a letter writing campa ign for
the re lease of Chilean po litical
prisoners wh o are brutally trea ted
under Chile's d ictatorship. This
is o ne way th at we, as studen ts,
can work in support of international pressure for th eir release.
This kind of pressure has already
succeeded in forcing the Ch ilea n
govern m en t t o release several
prisoners.
If you have a ny suggestions
for improving the series in the
future or a ny activ ities you'd like
to see in support of local, national, or internationa l issues,
we'd s ure appreciate h eari ng
from yo u o r work in g with you,
At our la rgest event, the Holly
Near-Jeff Langley concert, which
was co-spo n so red with th e
Women's Center, we co ll ected
$121.00 for the Yvo nn e Wanrow
lega l defense fund and $21.00 for
Sea ttl e N ICH (Non - Intervention
in C hile). The money for Yvonne
goes to ass ist her in her court
battle that w ill determine whether
o r no t women have th e right to
pro tect their children from molesters. The money for NICH
w ill go to support their act ivities
in opposit ion to th e C hilean dicta t orship, Bot h gro ups have
asked us to relay their t hanks to
the peop le who made cont ributi o ns.
W e of EPIC hope that these
activ it ies ca n continue next year.
However, sev eral of us are grad uating and in order to have comparab le en tertainment and informatio n next yea r, we need new
me mbers. Because of this , we are
pu tting a lot of effort into find in g a nd tal king w ith people who
would be interested in working
as a leftist information center
next year.
Once again, thanks to yo u al l.
If you'd like to talk over th e pOSl
sibilit ies for next year, we are
hav ing a potluck dinner get-together for a ll interested people. It
wi ll be Ihis Sunday, April 25th,
at 5 p.m . The address is ]005
Vine Ave. West. Come or call
357 -4448 or 943-5077 and let 's
see w here we can go from here.
Members of EPIC

by Christina Cowger
K it e-fly ing in the springt ime is like leafraking in the fa ll - a nat ural and inevitab le pasti me.
One of its chief practit ioners at Evergreen it; Stefan Sch inzinger, a student in
Murals and Architec tu re th is q u arter.
Stefan cre<1tes his own mult i-co lored m asterp ieces and ca n ofte n be observed flighttes ting them on campus.
K it e- fl y in g has brou ght not on ly p leasure but hon o r to Stefan. O ne' of hi s fleet
was recentl y named most creative kite at
a mon thl y co ntest in a Seat tle city pa rk .
" I don' t trea t kite- fl ying as an end," he
says, "so I wouldn't buy one just to fly it.
The work is in two portio ns - buildin g
a nd fly in g - a nd making th em is a n e nd
in itself."
S tefa n concocts his kites from four different bas ic structure recipes, uSing a vari ety of in g redien ts : the "big bird ," made
from tissue .paper ; the sled kite, o ut of
newsprint paper ; the diamond eddy k it e;
and his lates t crea tio n, a cylindri cal kite
made from rip-stop nyl on, Wooden
dowe ls form the framework, or the
"spars," of his kites. He h as been experimenting wi th a clear plastic product called
M ilar, since sections can be ironed together or onto tissue paper.
Stefan rea ll y started making kites last
summer here a t school - simple mode ls
to begin w ith. Now he says, "I'd like to
make so me money if I can ."
'
Stefan has recently produced kites in
several designs wi th the Rainie r Beer logo
the ,fancy " R "
prominently
di splayed. This fact was drawn to Rain ie r' s a ttention by a Post- Int e lligencer
pho to of one of hi s kites in the Sea ttle
co nt est. Stefa n p lans to propose that the
compa ny hire h im to a dv e rti se t h e ir
produ c t in hi s own unique fas hion thi s
su mmer at fa irs a nd spo rtin g eve nt s
arou nd the sta te .
The newspaper p hot o e nc o ur age d
Stefa n, "The corpora te sy mb ol is so me thing everyone can identify with, " he
says.
The cylind ri ca l kite w ill be co mp le ted
in the like ness o f a Rainier beer ca n ,
Stefa n has expe rim ented with differen t internal struc tures. A lways before, this design has emp loyed lo ngitud in al spa rs,

Evergreens Kitemaker
.

,

lJi~
I

"'

'.

.~

Two of Stefan's kites. Above, the kite portrait of Dave
lmanaka ; below, a kite bearing the Rainier beer logo.

w hich would make lines through his design.
Stefa n's tria l runs w ith the big stil\wh ite beer ca n kite have met with so me
derision, he says. Those fligh ts provoke
comment s such as : " Looks like a cha ng ing booth" or "Yo u're tryin g to fl y a
shower stall! "
Anothe r 01 Stefa n's kites sports the
smiling face of Evergreen graphics de'.ig ner
Dav id I ma naka . The kite crafter bl" w up
Iman aka's photograph w it h a n o paqu e
pro jec tor and painted it on the kI te as a
birthday present.
Stefa n has spent a nywhere trom 20
minut es to 48 hours turning out a kite ,
the average bei ng a ro und six o r ,e ven
ho urs . Th e materia l resu lt s are fleetin g
th ough, si nce each samp le will only la<t
for five or six fl ights befo re cra sh in g to ''''
demi se in the clutch es of a t ree.
" You get a feel fo r how certai n form s
fly ," Stefan says. "Th is o ne, for insta nce,
behaves like a jelly fi sh - it undula tes, it
glistens, it shines like ice in th e su n sometimes."
.. His favo rite lau nch ing sites are Red
Square he re on campus, Budd Inlet and
Capitol Lake. Red Square is actually th e
best though, he explains, because hot a ir
reflected off the til es combined with cool
air from the s urro unding forest form s a
thermal updraft .
Stefan is full of advice on kite construc t io n a nd ha ndling . He says most people
start w it h the diamo nd -shaped kite, Dul
that it is actu a ll y the most difficult. Mi s·
in for mation also leads the public to conelude that a kite ta il is fo r we igh t, when
actua lly its fut1ttion is as a rudder .
A big tissue paper kite can cost ,)s :i t tie as 50 cents, Stefan claims. He c.civ", ....
go in g to Ernst Hardware to bu y Jpwel ,
since it's " the best for the ledst. "
He recommend s books in Evergreen , ii·
brary on kites, and says he' s w ill ing tn
give advice on weekends about ki te-tlv,ng
or kite-doctor ing. S tefan ' s add re" ic
Dorm C-303, Ph, 5125.
"I'd like to see more people flying kit(',
at Everg reen," says Stetan Sch in zin ger.
A ll it takes is so me basic mat e rials , <ome
wind, and t he urge to se nd your creatioll"
alof t ,

Crusty's COOp: A Kiddie Show For Adults
po tentia l audience of 27,000 in Thurston
Co unt y . Classic movies, ser ials, and home
mov ies are scheduled regu la rly . Recent
oddit ies included the home movies of a
500 pound chicken , "White Zombie ," and
"T he Terror of Tiny Town, " a 1933 West ern wi th a cast consisting so le ly of midgets riding Shet land ponies.
Th is Friday's movi es include the 1935
sc ience fiction classic "The Shape of
Things to Co me," and a rarely seen si lent
horror mov ie , "The Golem ." Also sched uled each week are successive chapters of
the serial "The Phantom Creeps," starring
Bela Lugosi as the mad Doctor Zo rba.
Other features of CR USTY 'S COOP
include guest appea rances by local musicia ns a nd film-makers, a nd an irregul ar
segment ca lled Dave's Fix-it Shop. This
week " How to fi x a si nk trap " is sched uled. "We li ke variety, " explained Cook.
The program is put together by stude nts for academ ic credit at Evergree n.
Students involved are Aaron Sonego
Produ cti o n Manager, James Moore -

by Matt Groening
" Howd y, folk s," sho uts the lively o ld
prospector on the TV screen. He waves to
the cam e ra and babbles away , strok in g a
live c hi cken in his lap, apparently unwarned that senili ty is a lready sett ing in .
CRUSTY 'S COOP is the nam e of the
new week ly TV show produced and di rected entire ly by Evergreen students, It is
broadcast Irom 11 p.m. to 3 a.m. on
C hannel 6 as a much-needed alternative
to Johnny Carson and the Midnight Special.
The program comes live from Crusty's
reside nce, a well-li t ch icken coop at the
Olympia Telecable Stud io. Crusty is
played by Carl Cook , w ho created the
show. "Crusty used to be a Pony Express
rider," says Cook. "His full name is

C ru sty Pitt s, wh ich we don 't mention o n
t he air for reasons of taste ."
Cook introduced Crusty on KAOS-FM
two years ago. Since then he has become
<1 familiar voice to regular li steners, ap pear in g on various radio shows and making many public serv ice announcements.
Crusty played a crucial role in Evergreen
stude nts l.ee Meister and Dav id Worman 's
1975 fi lm "Let the Voice of the Peop le Be
Heard ," abo ut a madman threa ten ing to
blow up the O lymp ia bus stat ion. An actua l FBI inves tigation ensued when the
dummy bomb used as a prop for the
movie looked a little too rea l to the
st udent who inadvertently discovered it in
a locker in Building A .
CRUSTY 'S COOP is broadcast to subscribers of Telecable Television and has a

Technica l Director, R ichard Walsh
Flo or Direc to r, Ra ndy Harrison - A udio ,
Jack Hoffman Camera, and Margo
Westfall - Second Camera.
The hectic spo ntaneity of a live show
often makes things te nse - and very
funny . When Crusty asks for ca lls from
viewers on the air, the phone lie s dead.
But in the midst of a live commerc ial for
a loca l merchant, the ph on e rings in sisten t y in the background .
In the tiny st ud io that serves as the
coop, uninvited guests troop in a nd out ,
ignoring t he threats and p lead ings of the
s tudent technicia ns trying to do their jobs.
Wires are tripped over and drinks spilled
as th ey scramble to get things readv for a
li ve seg ment of the show.
"How much time?" someone yells.
"Who the hell knows? " someone else
replies. By the time the show is over at 3
a. m " everyone is exhausted. "This s how
is hard work and a lot of fun ," says
Cook, "The re is no other program like it.
CR USTY'S COOP is a kiddie show for
<1dults ."

Watching Crusty in an O lympia bar,

ANNOUNCEMENTS

IN BRIEF
State Representative John Hendricks for the first dist rict seat of
the 22nd legislative district.
Emory Kramer announced his
bid to un_eat Republican State
Senator Hdrr y Lewis, also of the
22nd legisi.ltiw district.
The platform approved by the
Democrats Saturday ca lled for
changes in sc hool funding, comprehensive ta x reform , bi ke
paths, improved mass transit.
manditory deposits o n beer and
soft drink con tainers, support of
th e Supreme Court dec ision on
abor tion . legalization of mari~ juana, legalization, regulation
§
a nd taxation of prost itu tion and
to tal and uncond iti onal amnestv
for Vietnam war resisters and
deserters.
AltlWl/gl1 mallY srl/denfs di,ln 'f realize it, last Friday was
The convention also called for
Cl1"d Friday , the day all which some religions believe Jesus
changes at the s tate and loca l
<1'<7 5 crllcified. This grollp of Evergreeners made up a strange
gove rnment level includin g a
processi,,,, fhat begall rlear fhe SemilJar building Friday at 3
new state constitution, hiring of
,1IId elided lIear file 1I0rrl1 ( lid of CAB.
an
adm inistrator for the county
Tile gro li P said they were attempting to "ma ke people
go vernment and creation of local
1II 0 re aUlarc abollt Good Friday. "
community councils to act as adFrOIl1 leff to ngllf. Romall soldier (Joseph Gil), Easter
vi so ry b0d ies.
BIIIIII .V (Rm'c II OToole), !esus (ian Chrisfopolis).
Nex t stop for the delegates and
the ir platform is the third dis trict
co nvention , to be followed b y
THURSTON COUNTY pledged to Senator Henry Jackthe state convention in June. The
S0 n, with 14 delegates going to
DEMOS HOLD
s la te Democratic party will
the co nvention unco :l1mitted. The
cho(lse 53 delegates to send to
CONVENTION
majority uncommitt~d delegation
the national convention in Jul y.
res ult ed fr om a decision b y supTh llr, tl'll CO;J llt y Democrats
porters
of
Arizona
Representative
:wlt! thl' ir com'ention last SaturMorris Udall to switch to onFROM MEDIA LOAN
.1."
April 17th . The democrat,
commi
tted status.
-,· I,'ctl·" delegate, for the dis tri ct
Remember that Media Loan
A minor credentia l fig ht oc.lnt! ,' .H t' cc1n\'e lltioll and aphas four 4x5 view cameras avail curred when an attempt was
1'1' ,,\ l,d their 10 76 platform .
ab le for checkout. The cameras
made tl' seat Evergreen faculty
Th e ,-"u nt v'" 26-member de learc la rge and bulky and require
member Russ l.idman as a dele..:..Jll \1n t\) the ~ta t (" Ct-,nvention
a tripod for use, but produce
gate from Tumwater's third pre., ,II c" n,i,t "t 12 de legates
high qualit y negatives .
cinct. Lidman a nd hi s wife
Four by five cameras are often
Raven tried to attend their pre used for photos of landscapes ,
OLYMPIA SPORT SHOP
cin ct caucus last March 2 but
architecture. close up work and
found t he door locked and the
portraiture. Th ey are good for
lights ('ut at tht' location they
Quality K-KORE
a n y si tu a ti o n requiring large ,
were t" ld tn go t" by local DemRainwear
high quality negatives or quality
l'crdt ic pa rt y lea ders. It turned
pi c tures of stat ion ary objects.
Day Packs
out that the prec in ct chairperson
Their many co ntrol s correct per was in Ca lif ornia at the time.
8. 0 51014.95
spective and lens di stortion and
Two vn les were taken a t the
a id when taking ext reme close Kerosene Lamps
C(ln vent i"n Saturday to sea t lidUp'.
I~q.;. 5.95 No\\' 4.80
man. He was accep ted by the
Check (lut a Po laroid pck ,
con ve ntilln as ~ fl" llit of the first
too .
yo u ca n use spec ial Po vote. How ever, he only briefly
laroid film with these ca meras . If
en joyed de legate , tatu, bef0re a
y"u need ext ra light while shootmotion to reconsider was passed
ing , borrow th e SU'1 Gun. It run s
a nd a sub,equent vote tak en
on . ba t ter ies so you can use it
. which resulted in the denial of
a nywh ere. Remember a changing
his sea t by the conven tion. Th e
ba g. so yo u'll be ab le to load
delegates were swaved by the arlilm intn the. s het't film holder
gument t hat the en lire delegati0n
out sid e a da rkroom
might b", thrown ,'ut at the state
Your adv isor flatly ret used to
level beca use of th e irregular prowatc h tho se 205 porta-pak tapes
ced ures. Four yea rs ago a pro on yesterday's book seminar a nd
Mc(;ovt'rn c"unty delegation
Vl'U (" >n't
know what to do?
was thnlwn out at tht' state level
S ign up in Mini-Media for
and many delegates apparent ly
Wyatt Cates' video editing workle<l red the same thing might hapshop and learn how to use th e
pen aga in if the y deviated from
edi t in g bench. Un less he receives
the ru le, a t a ll.
more demand, t he last Monday
The convention wa s addressed
eve ning workshop will be held
by seve ra l candidates for pub lic
April 26 from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m.
oftiee who I<'ok advantage of the
ga therin g to make themselves
VARIETY IN
better known.
SUPPL Y LlMITEDI
SUMMER
Threi' ca ndidat es for the state
Democra tic gubernatorial nomiCURRICULUM
nat ion spoke . Sea ttle Mayor Wes
If yo u've made up your mind
Uhlman , King Co unty labor
to stay on and brave Olympia
leader Jim Bender and attorney
through Summer Quarter whil e
Marv in Durning.
(formerly Vino Fino)
pick ing up more Evergreen credit,
In loca l races, Mike Kriedler
you should be pleased to know
of Nort h Thurston announced
that the summ er program dethat he is o pposing Republican
456-8988
sc ripti ons hav e just been publi shed.
The lin eup for Sum mer Quarter includes one coordinated
study and 20 group contracts.
There will be seven faculty ava il able for the entire quarter to
take individual contracts and 16

,0

PLANT NOW
2 roots/'2.50

CORK 'N CROCK

South Sound Center

faculty available part -time.
Among the programs being offered this summer are:

BRING HER BACK ALIVE':
Hers /o ry Ollt of the Books Onto
th e Stage . For five and a half
weeks th e Co- Respondents Readers Theatre will be on campus
working with this co ntract. The
co ntract will research 19th cen tury fe mini st history and present
it on stage, television , etc.
FIRST THINGS FIRST.' This
contract is intended for fir st year
. st ud ents . Students wi ll do a researc h pro jec t, take part in semin a rs a nd rea dings, develop cr itica l thinking and analysis skill s
and will take a writing tut oria l.
Besides new Evergree ners, stu den ts enrolled in co ll eges other
than Evergreen for Fall Quarter
are welcome to join the one
quarter program.
THE IMAGE OF ETHNIC MI-

NORITIES IN CONTEMPO RARY DRAMA: "T he group
wi ll study the image of ethnic
minorities as reflected in contem porary theatre , film and televisio n. We will trace: 1) The represe<ltation of ethnic minorities
on stage and screen. . . 2) The
emergence a nd evo lution of the
et hnic minority drama .

THEATRE PERFORMANCE
AND THE SENIOR CITIZEN·
" The purpose of th is gro up contract is to open com munica tion s
and to look for mutual en joymen t between co llege students
a nd th e Olympia area sen ior cit ize n groups." The goa l of the
grnup is to form a Theatre Interest Group ~or sen ior citize ns . Activitie s wi ll include reading
plays. discussing plays, casting a
readers' theatre, etc.

-

WOMEN IN MANAGEMENT
A Significallt Differe>lce, will

olfer "mat ure" women a chance
to acqu ire manageme nt skills , get
expos ure to local profess ional
women, and learn to crea te a
nonprofit (lrganization.
Perhaps the most int erestin g
aspect of the descr iption is the
warn Ing that "No person in blue
jeans will be a ll owed to enter th e
g roup or its activi ties ."
O ther programs are: Intensive
Ru ssian La nguage Studi es, Basic
l'vIa thema l ics and Computer Sciences, Cerami cs, Elements o f Design, The Epic, Field and Labora-

tory Studies in Animal Behavior,
Medieval and Renaissance Museums and Monuments, Natural
History of Washington's Marine
Coasts, Organic Gardening, An
Overview of American Folkmusic, Squash blossom II, Undergradua te Major in Psychology ,
Women a nd Psycho logy, Words
- Im ages - and Magic, and
Writing: Places.

SUMMER BUS RUN
- YOU DECIDE
It has been proposed that
TESC Bus System provide all
public transportation to anI,!
from Evergreen throughout the
summer months because the intercity transit system will not be
running. In our efforts to appraise the Bus System, we hope
that this survey will help to improve the efficiency and the utilization of the summer bus by the
Evergreen Community.
If you plan to use the bus this
summer, please circle your responses and return them to CAB
305,
1.1 You are a: [AI student, [BI
staff, [C !.faculty, [D I other
2.1 At present there are two
different routes : one provided
by intercity transit, and the
other by TESC Evening Bus System.
Question : Would you prefer .. .
[A I the present intercity transit route.
[B] the present TESC Evening
Bus route,
[C I I want to propose an alternative route .
3.1 If necessary, we will provide
more than one route.
Question: If you circled A in
question number 2, what
hourly departures from TESC
suit you best:
7am 8am 9am 10 am l1am
12nn 1pm 2pm 3pm 4pm 5pm
6pm 7pm 8pm 9pm lOpm
If you cirdt,d B in question 2:
7am 8am 9am lOam l1am
12nn 1pm 2pm 3pm 4pm 5pm
6pm 7pm 8pm 9pm lOpm
4.1 Additional comments about
TESC Sumn;rer Bus are welcome.
Result s from this sur"ey will
be used. If you want your needs
to ue fu Ifi ll ed, please let us know
about them now .
Thank you ,
Kate Steele
T ESC Bus System Coo rdin ator

• Kendo is the Japanese art of
fencing, Its roots reach far into
Japanese history and culture .
The Bushido of Samuari Swordsman was its forefather and the
mental and spiritua l training
have carried through to the sport
of Kendo. Master Rod Omoto,
7th degree black belt, will demonstrate Kendo Thursday, April
29 at 2 p .m. in the Library
Lobby or. hopefully, Red Square.
Mr. Omoto will also be our
a teacher on Thursdays for the
g Kendo Workshop. Check with
""cc the Campus Recreation Center
1.i for more information.

FORUM HELD
Approximately 30 persons addressed the idea that "Evergreen's
not for everyone" at yesterday's
Curriculum Planning stud~nt
forum . Comments ranged from
concern w ith student apathy regarding curriculum matters to interest in long - term program
planning through the proposed
Curriculum Review Board,
A major concern expressed by
stude nts at the meeting was that
" Evergreen is a place where faculty do what they want to ,"
without, or in spite of input
from students in their programs.
Some students reported a fee ling
of "powerlessness" to influence
the actual planning and implementation of a program once it
is past the initial input stages.
Another focal point was a fear
that the proposed Experimental
curricular mode would become
"a dumping ground " for Individual Contracts if other options
proved less successful. It was felt
that individually contracted work
would become increasingly more
isolated from the mainstream college curriculum. Correspondingly
as faculty became comm itted to
such work, potential for true experimentatio n would be great ly
reduced.
Continuity of curricu lum was
a lso discussed in depth. Some
st udents feared -th a t a mappedout, sequential, future curriculum in the Advanced Specialty
Areas wou ld decrease rather
than increase cont inui ty. Curricu la r options for incomi ng students missing basic or primary
stages of such sequences would
be drastica lly reduced , they felt.
It wa s explain ed however, that a
cen tral core of related curricu la

if

Hypnotist Gregory
at his performance last Thursday.
would be offered each year to
accommodate such stude nts .
Finally, concern was expressed
over the increasing definition of
subject area by traditiona l academic discipline . One student
noted the growing d istinction between science and art offerings
with progressively fewer interdisciplinary links connecting the
two fields.
• Any student employee who
has not co mpleted a new 1976
W-4E can not receive a paycheck
for April work. Please come in
to the payroll office and help
them pay you.
• To all students who were in
winter quarter's Love in the
Western World program: Working in America students need to
borrow your copies of Zaretsky's
Capitalism, the Family, and Personal Life. Please leave them
with Joyce Kubose in library
1402 before April 28.

• Self Help Legal Aid

w ill be
open Spring Quarter on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday 9
a.m. - 5 p.m. SHLAP's office is
Library 3223 and their phone
number is 6107.
• The Organic Farming group is
looking for 20 students interested
in learning how to build log
cabin structures. Skip Ellsworth
of Redmond will teach us at a
discount of $15.00 each if we go
as a group. If interested please
contact Jeff Bernards at 866-5185 .
• There will be a planning meeting for The Changing Status of
Homosexuals, a gro up contract
to be offered next fall , on Monday, Apr il 26 at 2 in Lib. 1509.
All interested students, gay or
straight, a re urged to attend . If
you can't make the meeting and
want to help, contact Nancy
A ll en, Lib. 1604.

1816.

FOR SALE.' FISCHER XPSS .
Stereo Speakers 540. 001 pr ..
call Sue - 866-1327 or 7538878.

• Carl Fawcett is organizing an
on- ca mpus Morris Udall for
President campa ign today, April
22. at 12: 30 in Library 2610.

ER.NIES
· DELI


,

, I

'

f"";'"

• Students who believe they will
have enough Evergreen units to
graduate at ei ther the end of
spring or summer quarter should
apply formally for graduation
now to make sure there are no
compli cations later.

HOT ' SANDWICHE'S
PlUS A
FULL MENlT

AT SOUTH SOUND
CENTER

- -

FM STEREO/FM-AM RECEIVER

SON"¥.

·..

10%g~~~

Counselor f Hou separen t : Work with about three boys in a
group home for delinquent boys. Counseling and Behavior Sci.
background . Room , Board , Medica l and Dental benefits . $300. /
mo . 21 +

Thru May 2nd.

Co mmunication s Planner: A strong background in radio terminology will land you in a position revising and updating
Thurston County's Emergency Communica tions Assessment
a nd Planning Report.

Reg. 700
NoVY

Don't forget to
ge t a faculty
sponsor.

$516

..
·
Remember: Now is the time to start looking for your summer
Internship position.

COLLEGE CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE
*****************************
Needed to sell Brand Name Stereo Components
to Students at lowest prices. High Commission,
NO INVESTIVlENT REQUIRED. Serious inquiries only!
FAD Oomponents, Inc., 20 PAssaic Ave.,
Fairfield, New Jersey 07006.
' Arlene Muzyka 201-227-6884
******************

Chevy Pickup , 1960 w i 1967
v-8 engine, 'I z ton good condition , $650 or best offer, 866-

SONY
STR-7065

Learn the Art of Landscaping from a professional. Designing,
so il tes ting, plant identification and selection. A genuine interest
in la ndsca ping and willingness to work hard are all you need
for thi s internship. $3 .00 + f hr.

··
·

6983.

~

Here are so me of the Internships we now have avai lable:

Women's research assistant,
Administration assistant,
a nd many more .

Dual 601 w i Stanton 681 EEE
$200. 4 m l aId, new $340. 943-

.

News from the Office of Cooperat,ive Education

·

CLASSIFIED ADS

-. -.... -...-..
.---

Co-op Comer

. .
·
Resource Center Director

• Recovery , Inc. the Association of Nervous and Former
Mental Patients meets every
Monday evening at 7:30 at
Un ited Churches, 11 th and Capitol Way. Recovery is a self-help
organization, operated, managed,
supported and controlled by patients and former patients.
Through will training and mutual aid this group helps people
recent ly discharged from mental
institutions, people under the
care of psychiatrists , nervou s
people , tense people, se lf-conscious people, and people who
have difficulty controlling their
temper.

• Wednesday , April 28th Rud v
Martin and Stone Thoma s wiil
attend Sounding Board tll talk
abou t the hi sto ry and res ult ~ 01
the Non-White DTF which met
from Jan . 1974 to Oct. 1975.
Th is is to be the second in J
series of di scussio ns on (w hat ever beca'me of those) Grea t
DTFs of the Pa st, where the y
came from and how they end ed
up . Anyone who has questinn~'
or sugges tions on thi s most noble
as pect of Evergreen 's decision makin g process sh ould contact
the Journal or ca ll Ma rv in Young
at 866-5209 .

,-

~:~ ~~~[;J ':'

Tape Machines and Accessorie~
Cassette Machines
10% Over Cost

SONY

TC-558 3-MOTOR

AUTOMATIC REVERSE
STEREO TAPE DECK

all
Mixers, Microphones
and Blank tapes
10% over cost
All 4 Channel Decks
10% OVER COST

Special
25" Stereo Headphone
Extension
Reg. $5,98
$1.99
quantity limited
TC - 270
$400
TC - 280
250
TC - 353D
300
TC - 377
400
TC - 645
500
TC - 756
900
TC-756 - 2900
TC - 756
1,000

Sug. List. 560

Now only
and

$406

Electronics
STR
STR
STR
STR
STR
STR

.
-

7015
7025
7035
7045
7055
7055A

reg .
$220
260
300
370
450
460

All Integrated Amplifiers & Tuners
10 % ove r cost

Turntables
PS
PS
PS
PS

- ItOO
- 5520
- 2350
- 4750

$100
190
160

300
and more

$335

193
231
336
369
752
752
836

10%

$160
169
225
276
336
345

mb audio
4422 6th lVE. U. IN lACEY aWl
~~~ 491 -0991

$77
142
120
216

ANNOUNCEMENTS

IN BRIEF
State Representative John Hendricks for the first dist rict seat of
the 22nd legislative district.
Emory Kramer announced his
bid to un_eat Republican State
Senator Hdrr y Lewis, also of the
22nd legisi.ltiw district.
The platform approved by the
Democrats Saturday ca lled for
changes in sc hool funding, comprehensive ta x reform , bi ke
paths, improved mass transit.
manditory deposits o n beer and
soft drink con tainers, support of
th e Supreme Court dec ision on
abor tion . legalization of mari~ juana, legalization, regulation
§
a nd taxation of prost itu tion and
to tal and uncond iti onal amnestv
for Vietnam war resisters and
deserters.
AltlWl/gl1 mallY srl/denfs di,ln 'f realize it, last Friday was
The convention also called for
Cl1"d Friday , the day all which some religions believe Jesus
changes at the s tate and loca l
<1'<7 5 crllcified. This grollp of Evergreeners made up a strange
gove rnment level includin g a
processi,,,, fhat begall rlear fhe SemilJar building Friday at 3
new state constitution, hiring of
,1IId elided lIear file 1I0rrl1 ( lid of CAB.
an
adm inistrator for the county
Tile gro li P said they were attempting to "ma ke people
go vernment and creation of local
1II 0 re aUlarc abollt Good Friday. "
community councils to act as adFrOIl1 leff to ngllf. Romall soldier (Joseph Gil), Easter
vi so ry b0d ies.
BIIIIII .V (Rm'c II OToole), !esus (ian Chrisfopolis).
Nex t stop for the delegates and
the ir platform is the third dis trict
co nvention , to be followed b y
THURSTON COUNTY pledged to Senator Henry Jackthe state convention in June. The
S0 n, with 14 delegates going to
DEMOS HOLD
s la te Democratic party will
the co nvention unco :l1mitted. The
cho(lse 53 delegates to send to
CONVENTION
majority uncommitt~d delegation
the national convention in Jul y.
res ult ed fr om a decision b y supTh llr, tl'll CO;J llt y Democrats
porters
of
Arizona
Representative
:wlt! thl' ir com'ention last SaturMorris Udall to switch to onFROM MEDIA LOAN
.1."
April 17th . The democrat,
commi
tted status.
-,· I,'ctl·" delegate, for the dis tri ct
Remember that Media Loan
A minor credentia l fig ht oc.lnt! ,' .H t' cc1n\'e lltioll and aphas four 4x5 view cameras avail curred when an attempt was
1'1' ,,\ l,d their 10 76 platform .
ab le for checkout. The cameras
made tl' seat Evergreen faculty
Th e ,-"u nt v'" 26-member de learc la rge and bulky and require
member Russ l.idman as a dele..:..Jll \1n t\) the ~ta t (" Ct-,nvention
a tripod for use, but produce
gate from Tumwater's third pre., ,II c" n,i,t "t 12 de legates
high qualit y negatives .
cinct. Lidman a nd hi s wife
Four by five cameras are often
Raven tried to attend their pre used for photos of landscapes ,
OLYMPIA SPORT SHOP
cin ct caucus last March 2 but
architecture. close up work and
found t he door locked and the
portraiture. Th ey are good for
lights ('ut at tht' location they
Quality K-KORE
a n y si tu a ti o n requiring large ,
were t" ld tn go t" by local DemRainwear
high quality negatives or quality
l'crdt ic pa rt y lea ders. It turned
pi c tures of stat ion ary objects.
Day Packs
out that the prec in ct chairperson
Their many co ntrol s correct per was in Ca lif ornia at the time.
8. 0 51014.95
spective and lens di stortion and
Two vn les were taken a t the
a id when taking ext reme close Kerosene Lamps
C(ln vent i"n Saturday to sea t lidUp'.
I~q.;. 5.95 No\\' 4.80
man. He was accep ted by the
Check (lut a Po laroid pck ,
con ve ntilln as ~ fl" llit of the first
too .
yo u ca n use spec ial Po vote. How ever, he only briefly
laroid film with these ca meras . If
en joyed de legate , tatu, bef0re a
y"u need ext ra light while shootmotion to reconsider was passed
ing , borrow th e SU'1 Gun. It run s
a nd a sub,equent vote tak en
on . ba t ter ies so you can use it
. which resulted in the denial of
a nywh ere. Remember a changing
his sea t by the conven tion. Th e
ba g. so yo u'll be ab le to load
delegates were swaved by the arlilm intn the. s het't film holder
gument t hat the en lire delegati0n
out sid e a da rkroom
might b", thrown ,'ut at the state
Your adv isor flatly ret used to
level beca use of th e irregular prowatc h tho se 205 porta-pak tapes
ced ures. Four yea rs ago a pro on yesterday's book seminar a nd
Mc(;ovt'rn c"unty delegation
Vl'U (" >n't
know what to do?
was thnlwn out at tht' state level
S ign up in Mini-Media for
and many delegates apparent ly
Wyatt Cates' video editing workle<l red the same thing might hapshop and learn how to use th e
pen aga in if the y deviated from
edi t in g bench. Un less he receives
the ru le, a t a ll.
more demand, t he last Monday
The convention wa s addressed
eve ning workshop will be held
by seve ra l candidates for pub lic
April 26 from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m.
oftiee who I<'ok advantage of the
ga therin g to make themselves
VARIETY IN
better known.
SUPPL Y LlMITEDI
SUMMER
Threi' ca ndidat es for the state
Democra tic gubernatorial nomiCURRICULUM
nat ion spoke . Sea ttle Mayor Wes
If yo u've made up your mind
Uhlman , King Co unty labor
to stay on and brave Olympia
leader Jim Bender and attorney
through Summer Quarter whil e
Marv in Durning.
(formerly Vino Fino)
pick ing up more Evergreen credit,
In loca l races, Mike Kriedler
you should be pleased to know
of Nort h Thurston announced
that the summ er program dethat he is o pposing Republican
456-8988
sc ripti ons hav e just been publi shed.
The lin eup for Sum mer Quarter includes one coordinated
study and 20 group contracts.
There will be seven faculty ava il able for the entire quarter to
take individual contracts and 16

,0

PLANT NOW
2 roots/'2.50

CORK 'N CROCK

South Sound Center

faculty available part -time.
Among the programs being offered this summer are:

BRING HER BACK ALIVE':
Hers /o ry Ollt of the Books Onto
th e Stage . For five and a half
weeks th e Co- Respondents Readers Theatre will be on campus
working with this co ntract. The
co ntract will research 19th cen tury fe mini st history and present
it on stage, television , etc.
FIRST THINGS FIRST.' This
contract is intended for fir st year
. st ud ents . Students wi ll do a researc h pro jec t, take part in semin a rs a nd rea dings, develop cr itica l thinking and analysis skill s
and will take a writing tut oria l.
Besides new Evergree ners, stu den ts enrolled in co ll eges other
than Evergreen for Fall Quarter
are welcome to join the one
quarter program.
THE IMAGE OF ETHNIC MI-

NORITIES IN CONTEMPO RARY DRAMA: "T he group
wi ll study the image of ethnic
minorities as reflected in contem porary theatre , film and televisio n. We will trace: 1) The represe<ltation of ethnic minorities
on stage and screen. . . 2) The
emergence a nd evo lution of the
et hnic minority drama .

THEATRE PERFORMANCE
AND THE SENIOR CITIZEN·
" The purpose of th is gro up contract is to open com munica tion s
and to look for mutual en joymen t between co llege students
a nd th e Olympia area sen ior cit ize n groups." The goa l of the
grnup is to form a Theatre Interest Group ~or sen ior citize ns . Activitie s wi ll include reading
plays. discussing plays, casting a
readers' theatre, etc.

-

WOMEN IN MANAGEMENT
A Significallt Differe>lce, will

olfer "mat ure" women a chance
to acqu ire manageme nt skills , get
expos ure to local profess ional
women, and learn to crea te a
nonprofit (lrganization.
Perhaps the most int erestin g
aspect of the descr iption is the
warn Ing that "No person in blue
jeans will be a ll owed to enter th e
g roup or its activi ties ."
O ther programs are: Intensive
Ru ssian La nguage Studi es, Basic
l'vIa thema l ics and Computer Sciences, Cerami cs, Elements o f Design, The Epic, Field and Labora-

tory Studies in Animal Behavior,
Medieval and Renaissance Museums and Monuments, Natural
History of Washington's Marine
Coasts, Organic Gardening, An
Overview of American Folkmusic, Squash blossom II, Undergradua te Major in Psychology ,
Women a nd Psycho logy, Words
- Im ages - and Magic, and
Writing: Places.

SUMMER BUS RUN
- YOU DECIDE
It has been proposed that
TESC Bus System provide all
public transportation to anI,!
from Evergreen throughout the
summer months because the intercity transit system will not be
running. In our efforts to appraise the Bus System, we hope
that this survey will help to improve the efficiency and the utilization of the summer bus by the
Evergreen Community.
If you plan to use the bus this
summer, please circle your responses and return them to CAB
305,
1.1 You are a: [AI student, [BI
staff, [C !.faculty, [D I other
2.1 At present there are two
different routes : one provided
by intercity transit, and the
other by TESC Evening Bus System.
Question : Would you prefer .. .
[A I the present intercity transit route.
[B] the present TESC Evening
Bus route,
[C I I want to propose an alternative route .
3.1 If necessary, we will provide
more than one route.
Question: If you circled A in
question number 2, what
hourly departures from TESC
suit you best:
7am 8am 9am 10 am l1am
12nn 1pm 2pm 3pm 4pm 5pm
6pm 7pm 8pm 9pm lOpm
If you cirdt,d B in question 2:
7am 8am 9am lOam l1am
12nn 1pm 2pm 3pm 4pm 5pm
6pm 7pm 8pm 9pm lOpm
4.1 Additional comments about
TESC Sumn;rer Bus are welcome.
Result s from this sur"ey will
be used. If you want your needs
to ue fu Ifi ll ed, please let us know
about them now .
Thank you ,
Kate Steele
T ESC Bus System Coo rdin ator

• Kendo is the Japanese art of
fencing, Its roots reach far into
Japanese history and culture .
The Bushido of Samuari Swordsman was its forefather and the
mental and spiritua l training
have carried through to the sport
of Kendo. Master Rod Omoto,
7th degree black belt, will demonstrate Kendo Thursday, April
29 at 2 p .m. in the Library
Lobby or. hopefully, Red Square.
Mr. Omoto will also be our
a teacher on Thursdays for the
g Kendo Workshop. Check with
""cc the Campus Recreation Center
1.i for more information.

FORUM HELD
Approximately 30 persons addressed the idea that "Evergreen's
not for everyone" at yesterday's
Curriculum Planning stud~nt
forum . Comments ranged from
concern w ith student apathy regarding curriculum matters to interest in long - term program
planning through the proposed
Curriculum Review Board,
A major concern expressed by
stude nts at the meeting was that
" Evergreen is a place where faculty do what they want to ,"
without, or in spite of input
from students in their programs.
Some students reported a fee ling
of "powerlessness" to influence
the actual planning and implementation of a program once it
is past the initial input stages.
Another focal point was a fear
that the proposed Experimental
curricular mode would become
"a dumping ground " for Individual Contracts if other options
proved less successful. It was felt
that individually contracted work
would become increasingly more
isolated from the mainstream college curriculum. Correspondingly
as faculty became comm itted to
such work, potential for true experimentatio n would be great ly
reduced.
Continuity of curricu lum was
a lso discussed in depth. Some
st udents feared -th a t a mappedout, sequential, future curriculum in the Advanced Specialty
Areas wou ld decrease rather
than increase cont inui ty. Curricu la r options for incomi ng students missing basic or primary
stages of such sequences would
be drastica lly reduced , they felt.
It wa s explain ed however, that a
cen tral core of related curricu la

if

Hypnotist Gregory
at his performance last Thursday.
would be offered each year to
accommodate such stude nts .
Finally, concern was expressed
over the increasing definition of
subject area by traditiona l academic discipline . One student
noted the growing d istinction between science and art offerings
with progressively fewer interdisciplinary links connecting the
two fields.
• Any student employee who
has not co mpleted a new 1976
W-4E can not receive a paycheck
for April work. Please come in
to the payroll office and help
them pay you.
• To all students who were in
winter quarter's Love in the
Western World program: Working in America students need to
borrow your copies of Zaretsky's
Capitalism, the Family, and Personal Life. Please leave them
with Joyce Kubose in library
1402 before April 28.

• Self Help Legal Aid

w ill be
open Spring Quarter on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday 9
a.m. - 5 p.m. SHLAP's office is
Library 3223 and their phone
number is 6107.
• The Organic Farming group is
looking for 20 students interested
in learning how to build log
cabin structures. Skip Ellsworth
of Redmond will teach us at a
discount of $15.00 each if we go
as a group. If interested please
contact Jeff Bernards at 866-5185 .
• There will be a planning meeting for The Changing Status of
Homosexuals, a gro up contract
to be offered next fall , on Monday, Apr il 26 at 2 in Lib. 1509.
All interested students, gay or
straight, a re urged to attend . If
you can't make the meeting and
want to help, contact Nancy
A ll en, Lib. 1604.

1816.

FOR SALE.' FISCHER XPSS .
Stereo Speakers 540. 001 pr ..
call Sue - 866-1327 or 7538878.

• Carl Fawcett is organizing an
on- ca mpus Morris Udall for
President campa ign today, April
22. at 12: 30 in Library 2610.

ER.NIES
· DELI


,

, I

'

f"";'"

• Students who believe they will
have enough Evergreen units to
graduate at ei ther the end of
spring or summer quarter should
apply formally for graduation
now to make sure there are no
compli cations later.

HOT ' SANDWICHE'S
PlUS A
FULL MENlT

AT SOUTH SOUND
CENTER

- -

FM STEREO/FM-AM RECEIVER

SON"¥.

·..

10%g~~~

Counselor f Hou separen t : Work with about three boys in a
group home for delinquent boys. Counseling and Behavior Sci.
background . Room , Board , Medica l and Dental benefits . $300. /
mo . 21 +

Thru May 2nd.

Co mmunication s Planner: A strong background in radio terminology will land you in a position revising and updating
Thurston County's Emergency Communica tions Assessment
a nd Planning Report.

Reg. 700
NoVY

Don't forget to
ge t a faculty
sponsor.

$516

..
·
Remember: Now is the time to start looking for your summer
Internship position.

COLLEGE CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE
*****************************
Needed to sell Brand Name Stereo Components
to Students at lowest prices. High Commission,
NO INVESTIVlENT REQUIRED. Serious inquiries only!
FAD Oomponents, Inc., 20 PAssaic Ave.,
Fairfield, New Jersey 07006.
' Arlene Muzyka 201-227-6884
******************

Chevy Pickup , 1960 w i 1967
v-8 engine, 'I z ton good condition , $650 or best offer, 866-

SONY
STR-7065

Learn the Art of Landscaping from a professional. Designing,
so il tes ting, plant identification and selection. A genuine interest
in la ndsca ping and willingness to work hard are all you need
for thi s internship. $3 .00 + f hr.

··
·

6983.

~

Here are so me of the Internships we now have avai lable:

Women's research assistant,
Administration assistant,
a nd many more .

Dual 601 w i Stanton 681 EEE
$200. 4 m l aId, new $340. 943-

.

News from the Office of Cooperat,ive Education

·

CLASSIFIED ADS

-. -.... -...-..
.---

Co-op Comer

. .
·
Resource Center Director

• Recovery , Inc. the Association of Nervous and Former
Mental Patients meets every
Monday evening at 7:30 at
Un ited Churches, 11 th and Capitol Way. Recovery is a self-help
organization, operated, managed,
supported and controlled by patients and former patients.
Through will training and mutual aid this group helps people
recent ly discharged from mental
institutions, people under the
care of psychiatrists , nervou s
people , tense people, se lf-conscious people, and people who
have difficulty controlling their
temper.

• Wednesday , April 28th Rud v
Martin and Stone Thoma s wiil
attend Sounding Board tll talk
abou t the hi sto ry and res ult ~ 01
the Non-White DTF which met
from Jan . 1974 to Oct. 1975.
Th is is to be the second in J
series of di scussio ns on (w hat ever beca'me of those) Grea t
DTFs of the Pa st, where the y
came from and how they end ed
up . Anyone who has questinn~'
or sugges tions on thi s most noble
as pect of Evergreen 's decision makin g process sh ould contact
the Journal or ca ll Ma rv in Young
at 866-5209 .

,-

~:~ ~~~[;J ':'

Tape Machines and Accessorie~
Cassette Machines
10% Over Cost

SONY

TC-558 3-MOTOR

AUTOMATIC REVERSE
STEREO TAPE DECK

all
Mixers, Microphones
and Blank tapes
10% over cost
All 4 Channel Decks
10% OVER COST

Special
25" Stereo Headphone
Extension
Reg. $5,98
$1.99
quantity limited
TC - 270
$400
TC - 280
250
TC - 353D
300
TC - 377
400
TC - 645
500
TC - 756
900
TC-756 - 2900
TC - 756
1,000

Sug. List. 560

Now only
and

$406

Electronics
STR
STR
STR
STR
STR
STR

.
-

7015
7025
7035
7045
7055
7055A

reg .
$220
260
300
370
450
460

All Integrated Amplifiers & Tuners
10 % ove r cost

Turntables
PS
PS
PS
PS

- ItOO
- 5520
- 2350
- 4750

$100
190
160

300
and more

$335

193
231
336
369
752
752
836

10%

$160
169
225
276
336
345

mb audio
4422 6th lVE. U. IN lACEY aWl
~~~ 491 -0991

$77
142
120
216

h

ENTERTAINMENT

Tender Care For Plants

~----------------~------------------,

am ids t th e dry hea ted rooms in
yo ur home.
House p lant s most often suffer
fro m the usua l symp toms of too
much light or not enoug h . or too
m uc h wa ter o r not enough . By
finding out what the p lant's
needs a re s pecifically in the way
of wate r . lig ht a nd humidity yo u
ca n overcome some of the ob, t acles in maintaining indoor
hoose plan ts. The indiviuu al re qu iremen ts for each p la nt should
be obtained from the plant s~ore
upon purchase.
Here are S(1me hou se plants to
co n sider tha t are easy to grow
with t he ri g ht co nd ition s,
Wa nde ring Jew (Tradescantia
and Zcbrina) are ' the two
m o nl y k n own va r ieties. Wander ing Jew is easy to root by c ut t in g stem s jus t be low the leaf
no d e a nd placing them in water.
Th e bigges t hassle to overcom e is
kee ping th e fo li age bushy , When
the s tem s o f the plant ge t too
long they nee d to be pinched.
Otherwise yo u have good g rowth
a t the bottom of the plant and
nothing o n top . If yo u are having t h is troub le right now take
cuttings from the bottom of the
p lant and pl ace them in the so il
on top .
All variet ies of Wanderin g Jew
need b right indirect light.

c(m-

by Dav iu ludu
h i ng is more fr u s tr a tin g
I h,ln buv ing a lu sh , g reen , house
"i,l nl In'd wa tch in g it slow ly die,
Iwl knL,wing what to do to make
II co me back 10 life, The too-dry
en\' ir0nment o f m ost homes is
(l tten t he cause,
But how do you bring the
mt'is l Iropical environme nt that
Ih e pl ant is used to into yo u r
h" ll1e wi th ou t peeling th e paint
,111 thc walls?

When po ss ible . improvise for
ce rt a in conditions needed for the
p l a nt to g row . Fo r exa mple .
some p lants need a g reat deal of
humidity in the ai r. and mis ting
the m d oes n o t a lways help , An
easy so lution to the problem is
t o put a saucer of rocks or pebbles partly fill ed with wa ter un derneath or near the pl a nt. This
creates a r i n g of humid i ty
aro und the plant an oas is

~,' 1

Maidenhair fern (Adiantum) I
refe rs to a gro up of tropical ferns
that are difficult to keep alive in
homes that have low humidity ,
T hese thin. light - leafed plants ,
thri ve o n a m ois t atmos phere . I
Fo r this reason a well-l it bathroom or k it c he n is best suited for
this type of plant. The spec tac u - ;
Ia r Il'afed Pacific Maid (Adian- I
tum raddia num ) is a very low ,
g rowing. d ensely shaped Ma id en- ,
hai r . A ll Maidenhairs requ ir e l
low to medium light and can :
be st be propagated by di v ision. '
Baby's Tea rs (He lxi ne so leirolii l
is ano the r plant that surv ives l
w~ ll under humid conditions and l
o ften grows best in kitchens a nd
ba throom s. T his minia t ure leafe d
creepin g g ro und -cover can be
diffic ult to g row when the humi dit y is t oo low,
Coleus (Labiatae) refers to a
wide a sso rtment of well-known
exo tic foliage pla nts. The colorfu l leafed fo liage experiences difficulty surviving the low natural
lig ht found in most h omes during
the w inter months . But t hey
flouri sh in the high indirect light
during the spring and summer
months. or underneath gro - Iu x
lig hts , Often the stems on
Coleuses get too leggy and
shou ld be pinched to keep the

Arts and Entertainment
.- FILMS
ON CAMPUS
Friday. April 23
TOUCH OF EVIL (1958. 108 min,)
Orson Wel les direc ted and stars in
th is nig ht ma rish thri ll er about a
Mexican police ofl;cial (Charlton
Heston) and hi s new wi le (Janet
Leigh) invo lved in a murder Irameup in a Mexi can- Am p. ri can border

town . Ma rle ne Dietrich gives good
advice as a lort une·tell ing cafe
hos tess. tel li ng Well es he should
"lay olf the candy bars." W i t~ Jose ph Cotton . Mercedes McCam bridge . Zsa Zsa GaDor. and Ak im
Tamiroif. Also' " The Filth One ." a
ca rloon from YugoslaVia by Paven
Stalter and Ziatko Grg ic, and "Begone Du ll Care" by Norman McLaren. LH one, 3. 7. and 9:30 p.m ..
50 cent s ,
Mo nday . Ap ril 26
3000 YEARS AND LIFE (U ,S .
1974, 42 min.) About pri soners who
ra n the s late prison al Walpo le .
Mass, for three months in 1973 during a s trike by guards . Jim Martinez. Evergreen leac he r. will s peak
folia ge bushy . These cuttings ca n
be u sed to propagate the plant,
Condition s in the home change
radically as summer approaches.
Don't neglec t the indoor house
p lan ts ove r the outdoor garden .
Pl an ts that were placed close to
the window over the d a rk w inter
month s co uld be susceptibl e to
fo lia ge burn in direct sunlight.

Linda Waterfall Returns
~

I

. '

LU ll/a IVal crfali. fOrllll'r '"(''''I l I t Elllr0J1~1 Se ri., ire, u)ill giLl f::!
~\) j( l pcrfnn nan c(1 nt

·i, ,· LJimll'!1

8 ].J . n!. ill
Mnlll Lol'/1l1 - Sal -

.\1".11

,i,/I.

lSI . A/50 appc"rilll\
c; in gr> r
, ,'" ', ,Il'r l" lill Clriclo' L

,··1,1 1,1.'

.\1a ~s Ll cJl u 5e tt s

h\' :-'1 iehat' l No rdst rom
h'r Ih,'se of )"' U who d iun ' t
Ilw oppo rt u n ity t() hear a nd
' c''' I he t hrt'e mu,ic lans collectl\c ly J..nown a s En tropy Service
.J lew "ea rs back when t hey were
rO(l ted in O lymp ia, they were a ll
t' xc el l ~nt m usicia ns. songwriters.
"rrangers, and inte rpreters. They
' :,1\'(,

Summer
Jobs
T ESC H ous ing is lo ok-

Ing for Summer Workers
- general cus tod i al pay
$2.84 an hour . Lots of
time and a half . Work
s tudy preferred

Call 0 r see Bob Ca rl so n
866-6147 Dorm A
room 205

Classical

..

Linda Waterfall: "A lways search ing out the positive."
performed every thing from b lue grass to re - worked tunes from
the 20's a nd 30's to a see mingly
end less and varied repertoire of
origi n a ls.
Unfortunate ly . the mu s ic b u siness is o ne not just of ta le nt . but
of breaks as well. They gave it a
tr y. but nothing m u ch happened

Music Buffs -

beyond a reg ular g ig for !:loston
aficionados . The effort became
an o rdea l and Entropy Service
reluctantly y ielde d to what they
at tempted to service so well.
A ll t h ree co ntinue to liv e in
the East. J. B. White is st udyin g
music. Peter Langston is d o ing
computer work at H a rva rd and

probably mus ic in so m e form .
w h il e Linda Waterfall s in g ula r ly
perse veres.
Lo n g a se ri o u s s tud e nt o f
music. Linda acco mpanies he rself
o n both piano and gu itar. in stru ments o n wh ic h her co mpe tence
un derl ies much exp ressio n . A lt hough she is most co mfortab le
wit h th e ba ll ad fo rm, Linda manages to .in corpora te w ithin it not
o nl y fo lk a nd b luegrass idiom s.
bu t jazz. blues, a nd c lass ical
o nes as we ll.
As a so ngw rite r linda o ften
draws o n the world a ro und her.
Sometimes she ca tches the most
o rdinary of occurrences. as w ith
" Birdson g. " or "Mary's Garden ."
w ith it s lazy summe r afternoon
mood .
So m et im es s he finds h e rself
captivated by a special circums tance as with "Gary." a blackjack dea ler with magic hands. Or
reveren t ial yet contemplative
about a wise o ld e r friend in "S ister Mary, " Or is moved by the
world w ithin as with "Comin'
Across the Blues." The las t piece
she wrote before leaving Olym pia. " Birdsong." was a surprising
development, for it was much
m o re impressionistic than previous efforts,
Th e likes o f Emmylou H a rri s
and Bonnie Raitt come to mind
w hen sea rc hing for comparisons.
Bu t. of course. direct com pari so ns with suc h stylists is tricky
business. because they are finally

RAUDENBUSH MOTOR SUPPLY

uniqu e s ty lists. What is suggested
by su c h comparisons are the
qualities Lind a sha res w ith them :
exp ressive a nd wide-ranged
vo ice. so lid a r ra n gem ents. musical co mpetence . and espec ia ll y a
se nsitivit y for we ll - phrased lyrics
and moving rpsponses.
Underlyi n g
the s e
diverse
,,)u rces. Linda brings to bear a
cons istent point of v iew. Stated
most s imply. she is a lways
sea rching out the positive. Th e
lyr ics tend not to be plat itud es
but are us ua lly tentative or questi o nin g, whi le infu sed with h ope,
Th is admirable a pproach is
amply ex pressed b y "Over the
Mountain." perhaps Linda's finest
so ng. It is a song of beco ming.
of th e twofold male / female
nature we all share - the recognition of which requires change.
a struggle that hopefu ll y will
lead to our rebi rth . It could only
h ave been written by one who is
b eco ming. It begins:

Rachel take your children.
Ja ckie bring your gun.
Pack today. we 'll find the
way.
The trail goes a ll . we canno t
stay.
Did you see the Snow Goose
fly ?
Can you learn to say her
name?
Once you've come. you're
gall e for good.
You will never be tlt e same.

PAUL'S
MOBIL

SERVICE

~

Auto Repair Specialists

on

co rrec ti ons

and

rehab ili tat ion

lo ll owi ng the movie. Presented by
EP IC. LH one. 7 :30 p,m FREE
Tuesda y. Apri l 27
CHARULATA (The Lonely Wife)
(Ind ia, 1965. 11 5 min .) An educated .
sens itive woman. neg lected by her
husband who is immersed in po li·
tics and iournali sm. fee ls drawn toward hi s you nger cou si n. with
whom she shares an interest in litera!ure.

Dire ct i o n and musica l

score by Satyaj it Ray, like al l of
Ray's fi lms. th is one moves very
s lowly. Presented by The Academic
Fil m Series . LH one, 2 and 7 : 30
p,m. FREE .
Friday, Ap ril 30
200 MOTELS (U ,S,. 1971. 99
min.) Frank Zappa's surrea li stic
movie abo ut a touring rock group
(The Mothers) st uck in Centerv il le.
Starri ng Ringo Starr as Larry the
Dwarf . Wi th Theodore Bike l, The
Roya l Phi lharmon ic Orchestra, Mark
Vo lman, Howa rd Kay ta n. and J immy
Carl Black. Also : rarely seen an i·
matio n by Cal Schenkel . and " Popeye the Sai lor Meets Si nbad the
Sailor" by Dave Fleischer. LH one .
3.7, and 9 :30 p.m . . 50 cen1s.
IN OLYMPIA
ALL THE PRES t DENT'S MEN
(See review thi s page) Capi tol The·
atre.357-7161.
ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCK.
OO'S NEST. not to be confused
with "The Final Days ." Olymp ic
Theatre. 357 -3422 .
ART
ON CA MPUS
CAL SCHENKEL and DON VAN
VLIET (Captai n Beefheart). exh ibition of more than 70 draw ings and
pain tings . Th rough April 23. Library
Art Gal lery .
AFRtCAN TRIBAL SCULPTURE
Twe nty-fiv e wood-carved wo rks
Irom tribes in Ihe area between
Sierra Leone and the Congo in Central Africa. April 26 through May 7,
Library Art Gallery,
ART FROM CHINA
Selected posters . chi ldren's art.
and s tamps from the collection of
Lacey resident Jea n Towne . Through
April. Library Upper Gallery.
PUP ART Wa x fig urines in the
shape of young dogs by local artists . Joe Bemis Memorial Gal lery.
open 24 ho urs,
IN OLYMPIA
FORD GILBREATH PHOTO GRAPHS and STEVEN WRIGHT
MIXED MEDIA SCULPTURES
Through April 23. Artemis Gallery.
218 W, 4th , Wed . - Sun .. 12 - 6,
CATHERINE THOMPSON PAINTINGS and RHODA FLEISCHMAN
CERAMIC SCULPTURE Thompson
is an Evergreen graduate and
Fleischman is an Evergreen student .
Artemis Ga lle ry , Starts April 25 .
SANDRO GUILIANI PRINTS.
MICHAEL KEENAN POTTERY . and
JOHNATHAN EZIEKEL COLOR
PHOTOGRAPHS. through the end
of th e mo nth . Chi ldho od's End
Gallery. 507 S. Capitol Way , Mon , Sat .. 11 - 5 :30 p.m.

Special
La wn mower
Service
Tune -up - p lug s - points
Change oil
and sharpen B lade

$8.00
Ti ll May 31
We se rvice Rototiller too

Watch Out for Collegium

412 S. Cherry
943-3650
Open 8 - 8 daily & Sunday

Lowest Guaranteed Labor
Ratein Town

evv Phone 357-6245

REALTOR
a tradE' nam e
ior professiona l

IReal Estate People I
OVERLAKE
PROPERTIES
Your Wests id e realtor

943-7111

MUSIC
ON CAMPUS
Thursday. April 22
BALLET NORTHWEST . d irected
by Eve rgreen facu lt y member Bud
Joha nsen. perf orms fo ur ballets :
"Western ." with brass music by
Vincent Peris Persichetti ; a contemporary interpreta tion of Brah ms'
"Liebesli eder ;" a da nce based on
Tomita's electronic rea lizat ion 0 1
Mo ussorgsky'S "Pi ctures at an Ex·
hibi tion ;" and the third act 01
Tchaikovsky 's "S leeping Beauty."
Voca l accompanime nt by " Opu s
Ni ne," an Olym\:l ia Ensemble, Li ·
brary Lobby, 8 p.m. Tickets : Pa·
trons $5, adu lts $3. and students
$1, Re peat performances Ap ril 23
a nd 24 ,
DAY LATE AND A DOLLAR
SHORT (Io rmerly th e New Blue
Devi ls) play jazz. ASH Colf eehau s,
8 p.m. FREE ,
Su nday. April 25
MONA CLARK. Olympia High
Schoo l st ude nt. present s a piano
reC ita l with work s by Bach, Bee·
thoven , Debussy. and Barber . li brary Lobby. 2 p,m , FREE .
WtND . Seattle-based tr io plays
origi na l' lolk and classical mus ic .
Wi t h former Everg reen s tudent
Ra ndy Mead on flutes and recorders. Ginger Huggins on bassoon.
bass c larinet. and saxophone. and
David Sch roeder on g ui tar and
voca ls. ASH Coffeehau 3, 8 p.m ..
75 cent s donat ion,
Monday. Apri l 26
JEFF MILLER AND HIS HOTSHOTS . an Eve rgreen blueg rass
group. and Seattle lolks inger Pat
Gill . AS H Coffeeha us. 8 p.m. Open
mike after 10 : 30. FREE .
Tuesday, ApriI 27
THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE CHAMBER SINGERS AND
JAZZ ENSEMBLE present the ir annual Spring Quarter concert. The
Chamber Si ngers wi ll offer th ree
songs from the American Revolu tion, a piece by co ntem porary
Ame rican composer Sam uet Barber,
and a "Jazz Can lata fo r Chorus and
Jazz Trio." The Jazz Ensemble features vocalist Linda Cox. library
Lobby . 8 p.m. FREE.
Thursday. April 29
JORGEN KRUSE. a jazz-rock trio
featuring Jorgen Kruse on electric
keyboard and synthes ize r. Dean
Tsapralis on percussion and Chuck
Deardorf on e lect ric bass, "Day
Late and a Dollar Short " wi ll fol low .
ASH Coffeehaus. 8 p.m, . 75 cents.
IN OLYMPIA
Friday , Ap ril 23
LINDA WATERFALL Singer I
gu itarist, formerl y with "Ent ropy
Service." jus t back from record ing
in England. App lejam Folk Center.
220 East Union. Doors open 8
p,m., act starts 8:25 , $1,
Sat urday. Apri l 24
CALLIOPE . a local musical commun e, plays o ld Eng li sh madrigals.
el e~ tri c lo lk music, a nd orig inal s,
Apple jam Coffee haus . Doors ooen
8 p.m .. act start s 8 :25.
POETRY
Thu rsday. Apri l 22
OPEN READING sponsored by
The Center for Poetry in Perform ance. LH one Ro tunda. 7 p.m.
FREE.
Thursday. April 29
ROBYN LlPNER and HUGH NIC·
OLL reading their poetry , Library
Board Room. Lib . 3112. 7 p,m,
FREE .
RADIO AND TELEVtSION
Friday. Apri l 23
CRUSTY'S COOP with hos t Carl
Cook. Films include "The Shape 01
Things to Come" (1935). and "The
Golem" (1920) , Channel 6 (t elecable), 11 p.m, to 3 a.m.
Sunday. April 25
FRENCH LANGUAGE PROGRAM
with Jan anne Gaver. 6:30 - 7:30
p.m .. KAOS-FM.
THE NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC
CONCERT BROADCAST. Andre
Prev in conduc tin g. Berlioz : Be a t(l ce a nd Benedict Overture ;
Grieg : Piano Concerto in A; and
Strauss: E in Heldenleben, 7 : 30
p.m .. KAOS-FM .

UIN
. OW
'DELI
100 west

"II! 357·6616

.(

Brad P o k orm

All The President's
'Rotfuckers'
"Ratfucking" is the term for
"dirty tricks." the infiltration of
the Democratic Party. and other
political sabotage . as used by
Donald Segretti and other members of CREEP.
by Stan Shore

THE PRESIDENT'S MEN .

ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN
depicts how tw o Wa s /lington
Post reporters, Carl Be rnstein
and Bob Woodward. uncovered
the Wate rgate cove r-up. Director
Alan Pakula. work ing from the
reporters bestseller of the same
title. ha s created a brisk. straightforwa rd documentary-like film
that ga rners its substantial im pact not from cinema tic shenani gaT!S but from the story itself .
The performances of Robert
Redford . who plays the stra igh t
Republican reporter Woodward.
and Dustin Hoffma n . who plays
the politically radi ca l. street-wise
Bernstein. are b o th low - k ey;
pe rfec t performances maybe. but
no t particularly noticeable ones.
It is a ppropria te that these a nd
o ther part s of the film are sub jugated to the s tory itself. That
is how newspapers do it : It' s not
the fla shy graphics or prose s tyle
tha t made Woodward and Bern stein's Wa shington Post articles
hi storic. It was their content.
The fi lm begins with the Wate rga te brea k - in and ends a year
la ter just as the Senate Watergate
Committee was formed . It was
during this to rtuous period that
the Washington Post a lm ost
s in g le- h a nd ed ly connected the
break - in with the White House.
making it a n atio nal issue.
Woodward and Bernstei n were
both low echelon repor ters at the
Po st. wo rking out of the local
"c it y " desk instead of the more
presti gio us " National" desk . The

4--·_·· . _-_ . __ . ······"
_ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . oo • •



fi lm reconstructs the loneliness
and paranoia that they felt in
taking on the federa l government. " Pakula is a man that understands paranoia." Hoffman
commented when asked why
Pakula was chosen to direc t ALL
The subt le clarity of that paranoia shows chillingly in one of
the la st scenes whpn. a fter being
warned by an anonymous source
tha t his life is in danger , Woodward (Redford) leaves a dese rted
ga rage at night. He first walks.
then. becoming more a nd more
frightened. runs away from the
meeting place. Finally. obviously
terrified . he turn s around to confront the ob jec t of hi s fear.
Nothing is there.
Althoug h som e peop le m ay
have for g ott en . our present President . Gera ld Ford . took off ice
because of Waterga te. He was
Nixon's c h o ice for a successor.
The film reminds the v iewer of
t his fact: It was Fo rd wh o nom inated Ni xo n at the 1972 Republican convention . In the e nd.
when Nixon's resignation is
flashed on the teletype. Fo rd's
name as the new president is inexo rably connected to Ni xon·s.
Coming at the same time as
Woodward a nd Berns tein's new
book. Tile Fil1al Days. this film
co uld cause serious campaig n
problem s for Gerald Ford in the
months ahead. As a piece of politica l thea tre the film is easy to
understand and enjoyable for
c itizens of a ll political persuasions.
Beyond that . t he film can be
understood as a case s tudy of
worki ng w ithin systems to ove rturn them. The process can be
spell ed out wit h the simp licity of
headline s: SMALL-TIME REPORTERS UNCOVER BIGGEST

STORY OF CENTURY. ACTOR
( REDFORD) FINANCES OWN
FILM ABOUT WATERGATE,
CREEP BOOKKEE PER BRIN GS
GOVERNMENT TO KNEES .
SENA TE FORCES PRESIDEN·
TIAL RESIGNATION ,
The only headline no t in c luded
in the film is o ne that the fil m
seeks to bring about : LAS T
REMNANTS OF NIXON ADMINISTRA nON VOTED OUT
OF OFFICE : FORD LOSE S
ELECTION.
Work with in the Sys tem, t he
film seems to b e say ing. 11 ,
lonely. it's tough, but it work;. ,

Patterson Speaks
"N ine Dyak Nigh ts: Re lig ion
My th a n d Magic o f a Borneo
People" will b e the topic of presen tation by a nthropologist Lynn
D. Patterson Apri l 28 in th e C0n t in uin g "We dnesday Evening
Lecture Series" at The Evergreen
State College .
Th e program , open to thE'
public free of charge . will beg in
at 8 p . m . in LH one .
Ms. Patterson , a for m er Ever green academic dean a nd m ember of the facu lty, will discu ss
the magic. myth, and re ligio n of
the Dyaks of Sarawak . Ma laysia
through a color s lide and tape
presenta t ion, the result of .1
recent visit to Borneo.
Ms . Pa tterson ha s taughl dn thropology a t Bellevue Com mur. ity College and the Universit v ot
Wash in gton and has been an In s t ructor in the Oregon System "I
Hi gher Education .
A s t udent of anthropologv
M s. Patterson rece ived her ba ch·
elor's degree irom Ohio Sia l,·
Un iversity a n u he r ma ,te(, Uegree tr om th e Uni\'ersity (11
W~ s hington .

EVERGREEN COIN~S
AND
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INVESTMENT S \Y'J

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ERLICH STATIONERS

• Offtce ...... .
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Tuning - Cleaning
Refelting Reguloti'!'i_-:. Repairing

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943-3712

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Bl:YING

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OOLL6.RS

RARE COINS
COMPLETE
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16]9 W , Harrison
t"ross from Bob's Bis Burpnl
352 - 8848

h

ENTERTAINMENT

Tender Care For Plants

~----------------~------------------,

am ids t th e dry hea ted rooms in
yo ur home.
House p lant s most often suffer
fro m the usua l symp toms of too
much light or not enoug h . or too
m uc h wa ter o r not enough . By
finding out what the p lant's
needs a re s pecifically in the way
of wate r . lig ht a nd humidity yo u
ca n overcome some of the ob, t acles in maintaining indoor
hoose plan ts. The indiviuu al re qu iremen ts for each p la nt should
be obtained from the plant s~ore
upon purchase.
Here are S(1me hou se plants to
co n sider tha t are easy to grow
with t he ri g ht co nd ition s,
Wa nde ring Jew (Tradescantia
and Zcbrina) are ' the two
m o nl y k n own va r ieties. Wander ing Jew is easy to root by c ut t in g stem s jus t be low the leaf
no d e a nd placing them in water.
Th e bigges t hassle to overcom e is
kee ping th e fo li age bushy , When
the s tem s o f the plant ge t too
long they nee d to be pinched.
Otherwise yo u have good g rowth
a t the bottom of the plant and
nothing o n top . If yo u are having t h is troub le right now take
cuttings from the bottom of the
p lant and pl ace them in the so il
on top .
All variet ies of Wanderin g Jew
need b right indirect light.

c(m-

by Dav iu ludu
h i ng is more fr u s tr a tin g
I h,ln buv ing a lu sh , g reen , house
"i,l nl In'd wa tch in g it slow ly die,
Iwl knL,wing what to do to make
II co me back 10 life, The too-dry
en\' ir0nment o f m ost homes is
(l tten t he cause,
But how do you bring the
mt'is l Iropical environme nt that
Ih e pl ant is used to into yo u r
h" ll1e wi th ou t peeling th e paint
,111 thc walls?

When po ss ible . improvise for
ce rt a in conditions needed for the
p l a nt to g row . Fo r exa mple .
some p lants need a g reat deal of
humidity in the ai r. and mis ting
the m d oes n o t a lways help , An
easy so lution to the problem is
t o put a saucer of rocks or pebbles partly fill ed with wa ter un derneath or near the pl a nt. This
creates a r i n g of humid i ty
aro und the plant an oas is

~,' 1

Maidenhair fern (Adiantum) I
refe rs to a gro up of tropical ferns
that are difficult to keep alive in
homes that have low humidity ,
T hese thin. light - leafed plants ,
thri ve o n a m ois t atmos phere . I
Fo r this reason a well-l it bathroom or k it c he n is best suited for
this type of plant. The spec tac u - ;
Ia r Il'afed Pacific Maid (Adian- I
tum raddia num ) is a very low ,
g rowing. d ensely shaped Ma id en- ,
hai r . A ll Maidenhairs requ ir e l
low to medium light and can :
be st be propagated by di v ision. '
Baby's Tea rs (He lxi ne so leirolii l
is ano the r plant that surv ives l
w~ ll under humid conditions and l
o ften grows best in kitchens a nd
ba throom s. T his minia t ure leafe d
creepin g g ro und -cover can be
diffic ult to g row when the humi dit y is t oo low,
Coleus (Labiatae) refers to a
wide a sso rtment of well-known
exo tic foliage pla nts. The colorfu l leafed fo liage experiences difficulty surviving the low natural
lig ht found in most h omes during
the w inter months . But t hey
flouri sh in the high indirect light
during the spring and summer
months. or underneath gro - Iu x
lig hts , Often the stems on
Coleuses get too leggy and
shou ld be pinched to keep the

Arts and Entertainment
.- FILMS
ON CAMPUS
Friday. April 23
TOUCH OF EVIL (1958. 108 min,)
Orson Wel les direc ted and stars in
th is nig ht ma rish thri ll er about a
Mexican police ofl;cial (Charlton
Heston) and hi s new wi le (Janet
Leigh) invo lved in a murder Irameup in a Mexi can- Am p. ri can border

town . Ma rle ne Dietrich gives good
advice as a lort une·tell ing cafe
hos tess. tel li ng Well es he should
"lay olf the candy bars." W i t~ Jose ph Cotton . Mercedes McCam bridge . Zsa Zsa GaDor. and Ak im
Tamiroif. Also' " The Filth One ." a
ca rloon from YugoslaVia by Paven
Stalter and Ziatko Grg ic, and "Begone Du ll Care" by Norman McLaren. LH one, 3. 7. and 9:30 p.m ..
50 cent s ,
Mo nday . Ap ril 26
3000 YEARS AND LIFE (U ,S .
1974, 42 min.) About pri soners who
ra n the s late prison al Walpo le .
Mass, for three months in 1973 during a s trike by guards . Jim Martinez. Evergreen leac he r. will s peak
folia ge bushy . These cuttings ca n
be u sed to propagate the plant,
Condition s in the home change
radically as summer approaches.
Don't neglec t the indoor house
p lan ts ove r the outdoor garden .
Pl an ts that were placed close to
the window over the d a rk w inter
month s co uld be susceptibl e to
fo lia ge burn in direct sunlight.

Linda Waterfall Returns
~

I

. '

LU ll/a IVal crfali. fOrllll'r '"(''''I l I t Elllr0J1~1 Se ri., ire, u)ill giLl f::!
~\) j( l pcrfnn nan c(1 nt

·i, ,· LJimll'!1

8 ].J . n!. ill
Mnlll Lol'/1l1 - Sal -

.\1".11

,i,/I.

lSI . A/50 appc"rilll\
c; in gr> r
, ,'" ', ,Il'r l" lill Clriclo' L

,··1,1 1,1.'

.\1a ~s Ll cJl u 5e tt s

h\' :-'1 iehat' l No rdst rom
h'r Ih,'se of )"' U who d iun ' t
Ilw oppo rt u n ity t() hear a nd
' c''' I he t hrt'e mu,ic lans collectl\c ly J..nown a s En tropy Service
.J lew "ea rs back when t hey were
rO(l ted in O lymp ia, they were a ll
t' xc el l ~nt m usicia ns. songwriters.
"rrangers, and inte rpreters. They
' :,1\'(,

Summer
Jobs
T ESC H ous ing is lo ok-

Ing for Summer Workers
- general cus tod i al pay
$2.84 an hour . Lots of
time and a half . Work
s tudy preferred

Call 0 r see Bob Ca rl so n
866-6147 Dorm A
room 205

Classical

..

Linda Waterfall: "A lways search ing out the positive."
performed every thing from b lue grass to re - worked tunes from
the 20's a nd 30's to a see mingly
end less and varied repertoire of
origi n a ls.
Unfortunate ly . the mu s ic b u siness is o ne not just of ta le nt . but
of breaks as well. They gave it a
tr y. but nothing m u ch happened

Music Buffs -

beyond a reg ular g ig for !:loston
aficionados . The effort became
an o rdea l and Entropy Service
reluctantly y ielde d to what they
at tempted to service so well.
A ll t h ree co ntinue to liv e in
the East. J. B. White is st udyin g
music. Peter Langston is d o ing
computer work at H a rva rd and

probably mus ic in so m e form .
w h il e Linda Waterfall s in g ula r ly
perse veres.
Lo n g a se ri o u s s tud e nt o f
music. Linda acco mpanies he rself
o n both piano and gu itar. in stru ments o n wh ic h her co mpe tence
un derl ies much exp ressio n . A lt hough she is most co mfortab le
wit h th e ba ll ad fo rm, Linda manages to .in corpora te w ithin it not
o nl y fo lk a nd b luegrass idiom s.
bu t jazz. blues, a nd c lass ical
o nes as we ll.
As a so ngw rite r linda o ften
draws o n the world a ro und her.
Sometimes she ca tches the most
o rdinary of occurrences. as w ith
" Birdson g. " or "Mary's Garden ."
w ith it s lazy summe r afternoon
mood .
So m et im es s he finds h e rself
captivated by a special circums tance as with "Gary." a blackjack dea ler with magic hands. Or
reveren t ial yet contemplative
about a wise o ld e r friend in "S ister Mary, " Or is moved by the
world w ithin as with "Comin'
Across the Blues." The las t piece
she wrote before leaving Olym pia. " Birdsong." was a surprising
development, for it was much
m o re impressionistic than previous efforts,
Th e likes o f Emmylou H a rri s
and Bonnie Raitt come to mind
w hen sea rc hing for comparisons.
Bu t. of course. direct com pari so ns with suc h stylists is tricky
business. because they are finally

RAUDENBUSH MOTOR SUPPLY

uniqu e s ty lists. What is suggested
by su c h comparisons are the
qualities Lind a sha res w ith them :
exp ressive a nd wide-ranged
vo ice. so lid a r ra n gem ents. musical co mpetence . and espec ia ll y a
se nsitivit y for we ll - phrased lyrics
and moving rpsponses.
Underlyi n g
the s e
diverse
,,)u rces. Linda brings to bear a
cons istent point of v iew. Stated
most s imply. she is a lways
sea rching out the positive. Th e
lyr ics tend not to be plat itud es
but are us ua lly tentative or questi o nin g, whi le infu sed with h ope,
Th is admirable a pproach is
amply ex pressed b y "Over the
Mountain." perhaps Linda's finest
so ng. It is a song of beco ming.
of th e twofold male / female
nature we all share - the recognition of which requires change.
a struggle that hopefu ll y will
lead to our rebi rth . It could only
h ave been written by one who is
b eco ming. It begins:

Rachel take your children.
Ja ckie bring your gun.
Pack today. we 'll find the
way.
The trail goes a ll . we canno t
stay.
Did you see the Snow Goose
fly ?
Can you learn to say her
name?
Once you've come. you're
gall e for good.
You will never be tlt e same.

PAUL'S
MOBIL

SERVICE

~

Auto Repair Specialists

on

co rrec ti ons

and

rehab ili tat ion

lo ll owi ng the movie. Presented by
EP IC. LH one. 7 :30 p,m FREE
Tuesda y. Apri l 27
CHARULATA (The Lonely Wife)
(Ind ia, 1965. 11 5 min .) An educated .
sens itive woman. neg lected by her
husband who is immersed in po li·
tics and iournali sm. fee ls drawn toward hi s you nger cou si n. with
whom she shares an interest in litera!ure.

Dire ct i o n and musica l

score by Satyaj it Ray, like al l of
Ray's fi lms. th is one moves very
s lowly. Presented by The Academic
Fil m Series . LH one, 2 and 7 : 30
p,m. FREE .
Friday, Ap ril 30
200 MOTELS (U ,S,. 1971. 99
min.) Frank Zappa's surrea li stic
movie abo ut a touring rock group
(The Mothers) st uck in Centerv il le.
Starri ng Ringo Starr as Larry the
Dwarf . Wi th Theodore Bike l, The
Roya l Phi lharmon ic Orchestra, Mark
Vo lman, Howa rd Kay ta n. and J immy
Carl Black. Also : rarely seen an i·
matio n by Cal Schenkel . and " Popeye the Sai lor Meets Si nbad the
Sailor" by Dave Fleischer. LH one .
3.7, and 9 :30 p.m . . 50 cen1s.
IN OLYMPIA
ALL THE PRES t DENT'S MEN
(See review thi s page) Capi tol The·
atre.357-7161.
ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCK.
OO'S NEST. not to be confused
with "The Final Days ." Olymp ic
Theatre. 357 -3422 .
ART
ON CA MPUS
CAL SCHENKEL and DON VAN
VLIET (Captai n Beefheart). exh ibition of more than 70 draw ings and
pain tings . Th rough April 23. Library
Art Gal lery .
AFRtCAN TRIBAL SCULPTURE
Twe nty-fiv e wood-carved wo rks
Irom tribes in Ihe area between
Sierra Leone and the Congo in Central Africa. April 26 through May 7,
Library Art Gallery,
ART FROM CHINA
Selected posters . chi ldren's art.
and s tamps from the collection of
Lacey resident Jea n Towne . Through
April. Library Upper Gallery.
PUP ART Wa x fig urines in the
shape of young dogs by local artists . Joe Bemis Memorial Gal lery.
open 24 ho urs,
IN OLYMPIA
FORD GILBREATH PHOTO GRAPHS and STEVEN WRIGHT
MIXED MEDIA SCULPTURES
Through April 23. Artemis Gallery.
218 W, 4th , Wed . - Sun .. 12 - 6,
CATHERINE THOMPSON PAINTINGS and RHODA FLEISCHMAN
CERAMIC SCULPTURE Thompson
is an Evergreen graduate and
Fleischman is an Evergreen student .
Artemis Ga lle ry , Starts April 25 .
SANDRO GUILIANI PRINTS.
MICHAEL KEENAN POTTERY . and
JOHNATHAN EZIEKEL COLOR
PHOTOGRAPHS. through the end
of th e mo nth . Chi ldho od's End
Gallery. 507 S. Capitol Way , Mon , Sat .. 11 - 5 :30 p.m.

Special
La wn mower
Service
Tune -up - p lug s - points
Change oil
and sharpen B lade

$8.00
Ti ll May 31
We se rvice Rototiller too

Watch Out for Collegium

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943-3650
Open 8 - 8 daily & Sunday

Lowest Guaranteed Labor
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evv Phone 357-6245

REALTOR
a tradE' nam e
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Your Wests id e realtor

943-7111

MUSIC
ON CAMPUS
Thursday. April 22
BALLET NORTHWEST . d irected
by Eve rgreen facu lt y member Bud
Joha nsen. perf orms fo ur ballets :
"Western ." with brass music by
Vincent Peris Persichetti ; a contemporary interpreta tion of Brah ms'
"Liebesli eder ;" a da nce based on
Tomita's electronic rea lizat ion 0 1
Mo ussorgsky'S "Pi ctures at an Ex·
hibi tion ;" and the third act 01
Tchaikovsky 's "S leeping Beauty."
Voca l accompanime nt by " Opu s
Ni ne," an Olym\:l ia Ensemble, Li ·
brary Lobby, 8 p.m. Tickets : Pa·
trons $5, adu lts $3. and students
$1, Re peat performances Ap ril 23
a nd 24 ,
DAY LATE AND A DOLLAR
SHORT (Io rmerly th e New Blue
Devi ls) play jazz. ASH Colf eehau s,
8 p.m. FREE ,
Su nday. April 25
MONA CLARK. Olympia High
Schoo l st ude nt. present s a piano
reC ita l with work s by Bach, Bee·
thoven , Debussy. and Barber . li brary Lobby. 2 p,m , FREE .
WtND . Seattle-based tr io plays
origi na l' lolk and classical mus ic .
Wi t h former Everg reen s tudent
Ra ndy Mead on flutes and recorders. Ginger Huggins on bassoon.
bass c larinet. and saxophone. and
David Sch roeder on g ui tar and
voca ls. ASH Coffeehau 3, 8 p.m ..
75 cent s donat ion,
Monday. Apri l 26
JEFF MILLER AND HIS HOTSHOTS . an Eve rgreen blueg rass
group. and Seattle lolks inger Pat
Gill . AS H Coffeeha us. 8 p.m. Open
mike after 10 : 30. FREE .
Tuesday, ApriI 27
THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE CHAMBER SINGERS AND
JAZZ ENSEMBLE present the ir annual Spring Quarter concert. The
Chamber Si ngers wi ll offer th ree
songs from the American Revolu tion, a piece by co ntem porary
Ame rican composer Sam uet Barber,
and a "Jazz Can lata fo r Chorus and
Jazz Trio." The Jazz Ensemble features vocalist Linda Cox. library
Lobby . 8 p.m. FREE.
Thursday. April 29
JORGEN KRUSE. a jazz-rock trio
featuring Jorgen Kruse on electric
keyboard and synthes ize r. Dean
Tsapralis on percussion and Chuck
Deardorf on e lect ric bass, "Day
Late and a Dollar Short " wi ll fol low .
ASH Coffeehaus. 8 p.m, . 75 cents.
IN OLYMPIA
Friday , Ap ril 23
LINDA WATERFALL Singer I
gu itarist, formerl y with "Ent ropy
Service." jus t back from record ing
in England. App lejam Folk Center.
220 East Union. Doors open 8
p,m., act starts 8:25 , $1,
Sat urday. Apri l 24
CALLIOPE . a local musical commun e, plays o ld Eng li sh madrigals.
el e~ tri c lo lk music, a nd orig inal s,
Apple jam Coffee haus . Doors ooen
8 p.m .. act start s 8 :25.
POETRY
Thu rsday. Apri l 22
OPEN READING sponsored by
The Center for Poetry in Perform ance. LH one Ro tunda. 7 p.m.
FREE.
Thursday. April 29
ROBYN LlPNER and HUGH NIC·
OLL reading their poetry , Library
Board Room. Lib . 3112. 7 p,m,
FREE .
RADIO AND TELEVtSION
Friday. Apri l 23
CRUSTY'S COOP with hos t Carl
Cook. Films include "The Shape 01
Things to Come" (1935). and "The
Golem" (1920) , Channel 6 (t elecable), 11 p.m, to 3 a.m.
Sunday. April 25
FRENCH LANGUAGE PROGRAM
with Jan anne Gaver. 6:30 - 7:30
p.m .. KAOS-FM.
THE NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC
CONCERT BROADCAST. Andre
Prev in conduc tin g. Berlioz : Be a t(l ce a nd Benedict Overture ;
Grieg : Piano Concerto in A; and
Strauss: E in Heldenleben, 7 : 30
p.m .. KAOS-FM .

UIN
. OW
'DELI
100 west

"II! 357·6616

.(

Brad P o k orm

All The President's
'Rotfuckers'
"Ratfucking" is the term for
"dirty tricks." the infiltration of
the Democratic Party. and other
political sabotage . as used by
Donald Segretti and other members of CREEP.
by Stan Shore

THE PRESIDENT'S MEN .

ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN
depicts how tw o Wa s /lington
Post reporters, Carl Be rnstein
and Bob Woodward. uncovered
the Wate rgate cove r-up. Director
Alan Pakula. work ing from the
reporters bestseller of the same
title. ha s created a brisk. straightforwa rd documentary-like film
that ga rners its substantial im pact not from cinema tic shenani gaT!S but from the story itself .
The performances of Robert
Redford . who plays the stra igh t
Republican reporter Woodward.
and Dustin Hoffma n . who plays
the politically radi ca l. street-wise
Bernstein. are b o th low - k ey;
pe rfec t performances maybe. but
no t particularly noticeable ones.
It is a ppropria te that these a nd
o ther part s of the film are sub jugated to the s tory itself. That
is how newspapers do it : It' s not
the fla shy graphics or prose s tyle
tha t made Woodward and Bern stein's Wa shington Post articles
hi storic. It was their content.
The fi lm begins with the Wate rga te brea k - in and ends a year
la ter just as the Senate Watergate
Committee was formed . It was
during this to rtuous period that
the Washington Post a lm ost
s in g le- h a nd ed ly connected the
break - in with the White House.
making it a n atio nal issue.
Woodward and Bernstei n were
both low echelon repor ters at the
Po st. wo rking out of the local
"c it y " desk instead of the more
presti gio us " National" desk . The

4--·_·· . _-_ . __ . ······"
_ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . oo • •



fi lm reconstructs the loneliness
and paranoia that they felt in
taking on the federa l government. " Pakula is a man that understands paranoia." Hoffman
commented when asked why
Pakula was chosen to direc t ALL
The subt le clarity of that paranoia shows chillingly in one of
the la st scenes whpn. a fter being
warned by an anonymous source
tha t his life is in danger , Woodward (Redford) leaves a dese rted
ga rage at night. He first walks.
then. becoming more a nd more
frightened. runs away from the
meeting place. Finally. obviously
terrified . he turn s around to confront the ob jec t of hi s fear.
Nothing is there.
Althoug h som e peop le m ay
have for g ott en . our present President . Gera ld Ford . took off ice
because of Waterga te. He was
Nixon's c h o ice for a successor.
The film reminds the v iewer of
t his fact: It was Fo rd wh o nom inated Ni xo n at the 1972 Republican convention . In the e nd.
when Nixon's resignation is
flashed on the teletype. Fo rd's
name as the new president is inexo rably connected to Ni xon·s.
Coming at the same time as
Woodward a nd Berns tein's new
book. Tile Fil1al Days. this film
co uld cause serious campaig n
problem s for Gerald Ford in the
months ahead. As a piece of politica l thea tre the film is easy to
understand and enjoyable for
c itizens of a ll political persuasions.
Beyond that . t he film can be
understood as a case s tudy of
worki ng w ithin systems to ove rturn them. The process can be
spell ed out wit h the simp licity of
headline s: SMALL-TIME REPORTERS UNCOVER BIGGEST

STORY OF CENTURY. ACTOR
( REDFORD) FINANCES OWN
FILM ABOUT WATERGATE,
CREEP BOOKKEE PER BRIN GS
GOVERNMENT TO KNEES .
SENA TE FORCES PRESIDEN·
TIAL RESIGNATION ,
The only headline no t in c luded
in the film is o ne that the fil m
seeks to bring about : LAS T
REMNANTS OF NIXON ADMINISTRA nON VOTED OUT
OF OFFICE : FORD LOSE S
ELECTION.
Work with in the Sys tem, t he
film seems to b e say ing. 11 ,
lonely. it's tough, but it work;. ,

Patterson Speaks
"N ine Dyak Nigh ts: Re lig ion
My th a n d Magic o f a Borneo
People" will b e the topic of presen tation by a nthropologist Lynn
D. Patterson Apri l 28 in th e C0n t in uin g "We dnesday Evening
Lecture Series" at The Evergreen
State College .
Th e program , open to thE'
public free of charge . will beg in
at 8 p . m . in LH one .
Ms. Patterson , a for m er Ever green academic dean a nd m ember of the facu lty, will discu ss
the magic. myth, and re ligio n of
the Dyaks of Sarawak . Ma laysia
through a color s lide and tape
presenta t ion, the result of .1
recent visit to Borneo.
Ms . Pa tterson ha s taughl dn thropology a t Bellevue Com mur. ity College and the Universit v ot
Wash in gton and has been an In s t ructor in the Oregon System "I
Hi gher Education .
A s t udent of anthropologv
M s. Patterson rece ived her ba ch·
elor's degree irom Ohio Sia l,·
Un iversity a n u he r ma ,te(, Uegree tr om th e Uni\'ersity (11
W~ s hington .

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Proposal cont.

Two Faculty Asked to Leave

continued from page 6

the solidifica tion of divisional lines if students are not involved in the planning
and implementation of the curriculum. A
working plan must be developed specific ally addressing the extent of student participation in the process of planning and
evaluation, ot herwise that process will revert to the deans and faculty with the
minimal studen t critiquing that has occurred under Quinault I and II.

by Curt Milton
and Stan Shore
In a move unprecedented in Evergreen's
fi ve-year hi story. facu lty members jim
Martinez and Medardo Delgado have
been informed that their contracts will not
be renew ed a t the e nd of their three year
term. The decision not to renew is the
first ever at Evergreen.
The two faculty were informed v ia let ter from Vice-President Ed Kormondy
that !,hey would not be rehired when their
present contracts expi re. Martine'z will be
with the school through September 1977.
The exact date o f De lgado's departure is
not known.
Kormondy cited Martinez' "inabilit y to
work within the coordina ted study mode"
as one reason for the dismissal. Although
Martinez s howed great ski ll in th e areas
of individua l a nd group contracts, Kormondy wrote, the basic unit at Evergreen
is the group (coordinated studies).
"This place is just not for me," Martinez
said philosophically. "I can' t go on reinforCing middle class va lu es." He said that
he doesn ' t want people using the issue of
his non-renewa l as a "vendetta" for
ge tting at President McCann or Kor mondy. " ( can only help so many people,"
he added , "then it 's time to move on."
Faculty member Willi Unsoeld , who
worked with Martinez on the " Ethics and
Polit ics" program fall quarter. felt that
Martinez was probably being let go because of hi s "s potty academic back-

At the same time, tortunately, the
Quinaults were so general that yearly in terpretation led to a relatively wide but
random spect rum of programs being offered. Under the proposed plan, such ran dom select ions will not happen. Specialization implies narrowing of policy; the
result of the specialty areas could be a
narrow and misdirected curriculum if students a re n ot guaranteed a part of the
planning sy nthesis. (Tricky , huh ?)

The launch scene .

HAND CRAFTED BOAT

h' 'C l the ri nc RIJdel1
\ , ' .'IHI we ll 25 p enple. drank
."nl'.If,:Ill· ,m d Cl·ll'bl clt cd ii' ,I ho a l wa ,
" Ill'" !wd ,n O l\'m p l..l t h" weeb>nu a t
:l'dl, 11,. 1l1 '\ IMi na . T flP b 0.11 had nll
".I1·11' "U'
(" .H! "'<I ~ h l;>llwr than .l kit e."
.l\l\lnlln~ It, Rl lh C ra \'\'!nrJ

II ' ~ a

red l

Il' ll,,'~. Tlw rl' w r rl' de l"' n people and
... ,\ h ,I ,],,),; ,lnd a b a by in Iheft' t,)o. "

!'."

~ ,1'" l
" •. !:I
\

I

\'l J

.1

,I

.11

t~ I . , ~ \

r

b l \<lt
\ \ t"!'

il.., t l ' 1 " ,

\!,)fIIW Hi stc)rv a nd c r,lft,
,mel ,11 the v e ry end o f the
ci('st rl' l'pel In a lire. Carl
J ~ ob C r<l\vt or d . dnd Rick

1 hl'J11rH. ~'n \ '\' l 're three gun~hn membe rs of
:'.,- I'rp),;r,lIn
\0\ (, 'pc'nt all our time
·, \",1-.111 ),; ,' n Ih 'll
boat . ~Vh('n they
' l'I"rn l'd I.. , chon I I d~ t fall they planned
"11 1\I'rhlll),; in cln a pprent iceship
w ith
H,1I1h. I (1ng . d l(1c ')l b"clt huildN. When
Ilan J.. q(' p peci b uildlll ~ bOilb thl' plan fell
I" , ,''',:h. The t hree decided tn build a
h,,')1 "n their own conlracti ng with Pete
"';,n, Iclll' a nd Byron Youtz .

(,lans for the boat we re from History of
Am ericll" S IIIaI! 5ai lill~ Craft by Howard
C happelle . It's designed as a '17 foot
lapstrake ski ft whi ch could ha ve a sa il.
t hl'u gh it doesn't nl>w.
Thl'se days . most boats are built of
tiber g ldss . R"b rete r s t o them as
lupperware bOdt,. But thi s boat is built of
(e dar . white oak. and coppe r nail s from
S",l ltll' th a t cost $4 d pound. It's built in
th e l.apstrake fa shion , meaning that the
planb. or 'trdkl's. overlap each other.
T Il(' most difficult part was to find tools
clnd d pldct' to work. O nl y th e planr.ing
wa , dnne in the sc hoo l's se t an d model
sfwp . A ceme nt floored tw o car garage
oil campus was used a' it shop.
This type of boat was used o ff the
,hores 01 Newfoundland for sea lin g . "It·s
rl'dl efticient and can hau l a s hit load, "
added Crawfo rd. One sa il o r ilt th e
Iclun ch in g sa id "i t's Ihe fas test rowboat on
thc so und ."
To b ui ld the boat. the p la ns were

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measured and en larged on a grid to full
size and th en transferred to a sheet of
white pai nt ed plywood. Each curve must
be perlect: no e rrors are allowed, no
ma tter h ow sm a ll. The keel and stem are
then ma de . Nex t the mo ld , based on the
inner dimen sions of the boat, is made.
Around thi s m o ld , the boat is built.
Thi s group is no t the only one at
Evergree n building boats. When Marine
Histo ry's boat went up in flame s last
yea r. "a lot of people's a mbition s a'nd
dreams went up too, " according to Rob
C raw ford. Brian Hays is working on
resto ring a full s ize sai lb oat and another
student is building a traditional dory. They
plan to se ll the dory alt h ough they ' re not
rea ll y in tereste d in careers in boat
buildin g . They want to go to boat
bu il ding sc hool. "The thing about
build ing a boat, is you want to build
another. " sa id Crawfo rd . It 's not for a
caree r, it 's k ind of "universal, ambigu-

Another process, that of eva luation,
ha s been consistently a prob lem in developi ng long-range curricul um planning.
The ult ima te measure of evaluation is F.v ergreen's ability to help students to lea rn.
To remain experimental. Evergreen must
constJntly assess it s functioning and progress in achieving in s titutional goa ls - a
p rocess that mu st be student oriented.
(T rickier still?)
T Cl be a truly innovative college, Evergreen must rely on its a bility to evolve
a nd adapt. The proposed curriculum p lan
should be viewed as an arbitrary starting
point from which change is not only expected b ul encouraged. changed, initi ated by a syn thesis of the tota l commun ity.
If a dYllalllic m ean s of se lf-criticism and
s<,lf -co rrec tioll is not an i'ltegral part of
policy ilrliJl e J1l l? lItation. Eve rg reen w ill
ca ntin lie to c!Jall ge by th e pa in ful process
of n'isis inte rvelltioll . the iJolicies will re mai" a iJroduct o f a reflex rea ctioll ratiter
tllQl1 olle of cogll itive reSiJ0 1lse.
U"less tit e OTF writes into its proiJosals
a guaran tee of student involvemellt in all
iJl,ases of curricu lum planning. we find
th e iJrescl1t iJlijll wlQcceiJtable .

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Yvonne Wanrow , th e 32 year old Co lvi lle Indian woman convicted of murder ing a man she says threatened herself and
her family, continues in her efforts to
bring her case before the people when s he
comes to speak at Evergreen Friday.

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ground." Martinez does not have a Bachelor of Arts degree but has many years
experience in correct ion s work. "The student s enjoyed him greatly and he was a
fine colleague to work with,"' Unsoeld
said. "What it boiled down to was wheth er
we could afford a specialist or not."
It is unknown what the exact nature of
Delgado's non-renewa l is a nd he has refused to comment.

Faculty members at Evergreen do not
have te nure, unlike professors at most colleges . In stead they are given three -yea r renewab le con tracts. The terms for not renewing the contracts are spelled out specifica ll y in the college's adm inistrative
code. Acco rding to the code . faculty members must be g iven notice by the April 15
previous to the year they are to leave.
The code states that "unwillingness or

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The tim e is now past to apply
for Services and Activities funds.
These f unds come out of each
student's tuition. everyone I,as a
right to apply for the funds , and
quite a few s tudent s do . This
year's allocatiolls will be done
somewhat differently . Applicants
arl' heing divided into four
grotliJ s : Commun ic atior, s ar,d
Cultural Eve nts; Reaeatiol1 : Studellt G "OIlPS: alld Services . OiJ ,·mtiollS . and Miscellaneol/s .
This article will look at the
tlll'rd area - s tl/dent gro lliJs
tllOse iJeoiJle a ll the third floor of
tile library . Bec all se r{'iJorting on
all the grol.liJ5 is beyond the
sco pe of ail e article . Clrcwn stances hal'£' c hosel1 the Asi,l/1
C oalitioll . th e Faith Cen ter. the
G ay Cel1 tl! r. alld the Womell 's
Cell te '·.
Rob in West of the Asian Coa liti o n feels that 90 percent of
Evergreen are "rich white kids
who come and play at being
oor hippies for two to four

The Evergreen State College . Olympia,Washington 98505

THE COOPER POINT

Vvanrow , whose second deg ree murder
ann first degree assault conv ictions were
handed down by an all-white jury on
May 7, 1973, will speak on "A Woman 's
Right to Defend Herself" at 1 p . m. in LH
one. Accompanying Wanrow will be one
of her attorneys. Carol Schapira. and a
Native American folksinger . Floyd Wes terman .
The convictions, w~ich could total a
maximum of 25 years, were made against
Wanrow for the murder of Will iam Wes ler , a known ch ild molester nicknamed
"C hicken Bill" by the local police.
On the evening of August 11 , 1972.
Yvonne Wanrow was at home resting ·
with a bruken leg while her nine-year-old
son Darren was s taying with Shirley
Hooper , a babysittl'r. Wanrow claims that
while Darren and Hooper's 10- year -oJd
daughter were play in g outside after din ner. We sler ent iced the children into hi s
home , locked the door and threatened
thl'm with a knife .
Bo th c hildr en escaped and Hooper
called the police. The police took a report
which included a statement from Hooper's
younger daughter Mildred. Severa l months
earlier Mildred had been treated at a local
clinic for VD and she now admitted that
Wesler was the man who had "done that
thing to me ." The police made no arrest
and told Hooper to file a complaint on

~
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M edardo Delgado

Wanrow Here
Tomorrow

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years and go back to their fam ily's money ." Said West , "Yo u'd
thin k at an alternative school,
you'd have some diversity ."
With that, we come to a major
purpose of the Asian Coalition:
To recruit Asian faculty and students in their communities, to
ope n communications with
Asians at ot her schools , a nd to
educate the non -Asian communit y. West exp la ined . ''I'm tired of
the idea that to get a Third
World perspective, you have to
take a Third World program.
Every program sho uld h ave a
Third World perspective. You
shouldn't have to negate yourself to study botany."
Speak in g philosophically. more
or less, abou t the fact that the
offices up on the third floor are
visited so rarely, West compared
student groups to a mountain,
that yo u might never appreciate,
"but you'd miss it if it was
gone. " The Asian Coalition is
asking for $4,819 for next year,

inability to assume responsibilities in both
coord inated studies and contracted studies
teaching modes" is su fficient grounds for
contract " no n-renewaL"
Delgado and Martinez are not the only
facult y who will not be renewing contr ac ts. Although they h ave not been
asked. fiv e o the r faculty have indicated
that they definitely will not b:- r eturnin~
when their present terms expire. They are :
Lem Stepherson. Ed Reyno lds. Naomi
Greenhut, Cruz Esquivel and Karin Syver son.
Comment in g on the fact thaI th p major .
ity of those resigning are either Third
Wo rld or women, Dean Rud y Martin
said. "That 's a bummer. " However, Mar tin cau tioned that he d oesn't feel Ever·
green is losin" its grip on affirmative ac tion.
Officials of UjAMMA and th e Third
World Coa liti on declined to co mment due
to lack of information on the resig nat ion~.
The non-renewals a lso ra ised the question of academic background previou s to
hiring . Only four person s on the Evergreen faculty do n ot have masters or doc tora te degrees. They are Don Jo rda n. Bud
johan se n, Delgado and Martinez. Delgadl'
ha s a BA as does jordan . Th e admini stra tive code does not specify t he lack of ad vanced degrees as sufficie n t gr ounds fo r
firing.
"People who are doing their gig should n't be worried," sai d Martin. " Evergreen
is not turning into a tight -assed place .
this is not a witch - hunt ."

URNAL
Volume IV

April 22, 1976

Number 26

Monday.
Wanrow then c lai m , that Shir ley
Hoope/ l alled hl'r ,md d ,s,sted Wanrow
co me over and bring along the gun she
had purchased earl ier for self-protection.
At midn ight the two women were joined
by Wanrow's brother-in-law and siste r
wit h their three children.
According to Wanrow. at 5 a.m. the
next mornin g a drunke n Wes ler barged
through the front door and lurched to ward Wanrow''i three -yea r-old nephew ,
who was slee ping on the couch . When
Wesler c hanged directions and turned on
Wanrow , she shot him . Wesler's companion . David Ke ll y. e ntered the house. was
wounded by Wanrow and left.
Wanrow and Hooper immediate ly called
the Spokane Crime Check number to report the shoot ing. Unknown to Wanrow ,
that call was being recorded. a standard
procedure. The tape was to become a critical piece of ev idence in the prosecution 's
case. Only after she admitted to the ki ll ing was she read her rights, yet the entire
tape was allowed to be introduced. Three

jurors la ter said it was the deciding factor
in the ca se.
vV a n fOW a pp~aled the co nviction and
her ca se was picked up by the Center tor
Const itution a l Right s in New York. The
Sla te Court of Appeals in a two-to· one
ve rdict ruled that the tape w~ s inadm issable , thu s c1e a rin ~ the way lo r a new
tnal. Th e Spoka ne prosecutor then ap pealed that rtrling to th e State Supreme
Court , where t he ca se now resid es. Th~
cou rt heard th e dr~ument s ot Wanro\\, s
attorneys Feb . 23 and is expected to ru k
in three to si x months .
.Defcn'ie committees io r Wanrow have
been tormin g allover the cou ntry in dn
etf or t to provide mo ney for lega l fee,.
Wanrow ha s been hitting the speaker s
circuit , makin ~ speeches such as the one
here tomorrow. She is divorced now and
must provide for her family as well as
financing the legal battle. Donations for
her defen se fund will be accep ted at to morrow 's speech. which is being spon sored by EPIC, the Speaker's Bureau a nd
the Women 's Center.

..•
which will fund a coordinator at
$2.95 per hour out of institutional funds. and $2,605 in
goods and services, primarily
honorariums for speakers. performe rs, and films.
The Faith Center had a relatively s mall S&:A budg et o f
$] ,400 fo r the past year. Coord inat o r Peggy Pahl serves pr im arily as a coord in a ting center_ for
the various re li gions on campus.
S&A fund s pay for a coordinator. telephone, and printing fees.
Comme nting on pos s ibl e cut backs on S&A funds for next
yea r, Pahl says, " it is important
for the diversity of the student
groups to be maintained. "
At the Faith Center there are
tracts of all kinds, but Pahl em phasized that " this is a place
where people can ask questions.
People have to find answers for
themselves."
Primarily the Faith Center co ordinates sack lunch speakers
and interest groups and retreats.

Not very many people are involved , but it is an available re source, and, according to Pahl ,
those involved appreciate it.
The Gay Resource Center is
applying for $8,233 for ne x t
year, an increase of $4,085 over
thi s year. The increase is for the
eq uiva lent of two additional 15
hour a week positior,s starting a t
$2.95 an hour , to be divided
four ways. The next biggest item
is $3 ,380 for goods and services,
primdrily for honorariums, post age. books, printing, office sup plies , and travel.
The Gay Center's best achieve ments this year include a gay
studies program for next year,
and being published in the Olympia phone book in boldface type
as the only gay contact between
Portland and Seattle. The big gest problem cited in the Gay
Center's budget proposal is their

difficulty setting up social interaction for gay people on a regu lar basis. Also , il is unkn own
who will coordinate the group
next year.
The Women's Ce nt er is a
group that attempts to represent
and se rv e half the people on this
camp u s. They are requesting
$7,859.68, nearl y $3,500 more
than they were budgeted this
year. The extra money would go
to keeping the center open over
the s ummer with a 30 hour per
week staff position . The current
coordinators positions, one institutio na l and one work -study. are
only for the nine month school
year .
I ndividual pre sentations for
studen t groups will be made
Wednesday, May 19, and alloca tions Friday. May 21. Anyone
may come, ask questions , and
voice opinions.
Source
Eng US-WaOE.A.1973-01
Media
cpj0118.pdf