The Cooper Point Journal Volume 4, Number 27 (April 29, 1976)

Item

Identifier
Eng cpj0119.pdf
Title
Eng The Cooper Point Journal Volume 4, Number 27 (April 29, 1976)
Date
29 April 1976
Evergreen Subject
Student Organizing and Activism
Faculty Hiring and Governance
Environmental Studies
Media Studies/Arts
Description
Eng Pg.1: Campus Reacts To Firings (photo: Tom Rainey);
Pg.1: COG III Members Speak Out (photo: Will Humphreys by: Buster, Doug);
Pg.1: Enrollment Estimates Look Promising;
Pg.2: Letters: EPIC Needs New Name (photo: Person Walking Near Road by: Buster, Doug;
Pg.2: Letters: We Cater To Everybody;
Pg.2: Letters: Faculty Firings Questionable;
Pg.2: Letters: From The Coop;
Pg.2: Letters: Photo Hoaxers Are Turkeys;
Pg.2: (advertisment) Hendricks Drugs;
Pg.2: (advertisment) Bob's Big Burgers;
Pg.2: (advertisment) Farmers Insurance of Washington;
Pg.2: (advertisment) Pauls Mobile Service;
Pg.2: (advertisment) Evergreen Coins and Investments;
Pg.2: (advertisment) Sunrise Mountaineering;
Pg.2: (advertisment) Ruth's Styling Salon;
Pg.3: Heading to Africa: Evergreener Promotes Hydroponics (photo: Fred Garrett by: Buster, Doug);
Pg.3: Firings (continued from pg.1);
Pg.3: COG III (continued form pg.1)(photos: Susan Strasser by: Buster, Doug; Pearl Vincent by: Buster, Doug);
Pg.4: In Brief: Remaining Whales Released;
Pg.4: In Brief: Womans Soccer Victorious (photo: Evergreener enjoys one of Olympia's first sunny days by: Buster, Doug);
Pg.4: In Brief: Food Conference Set May 8-9;
Pg.4: (advertisment) Olympia Sport Shop;
Pg.4: (advertisment) Seamart Drug;
Pg.4: (advertisment) All Ways Travel Service Inc;
Pg.4: (advertisment) The Evergreen State College Bookstore;
Pg.4: (advertisment) Red Apple Natural Foods
Pg.5: Announcements;
Pg.5: Summer Internships Available;
Pg.5: (advertisment) Grace Piano Service;
Pg.5: (advertisment) Desco Electronics;
Pg.5: (advertisment) Peterson's Food Town;
Pg.5: (advertisment) Kochie Box Productions;
Pg.5: (advertisment) South Sound National Bank
Pg.6: Kendo: The Art of Sword Fighting (photo: Performing Kendo in the backyard;
Pg.6: (advertisment) Raudenbush Motor Supply;
Pg.6: (advertisment) MB Audio;
Pg.7: Entertainment: 200 Motels Can Make You Crazy;
Pg.7: (advertisment) Word of Mouth Books;
Pg.7: Classified Ads;
Pg.7: (advertisment) Rainbow Deli;
Pg.8: Evergreeners Irk Local Taverns (photos: Filling out an identification card at a local tavern by: Buster, Doug;
Pg.8: The Colony Inn Apartments;
Creator
Eng Buster, Doug
Eng Harrison, Stephen
Eng McNeil, Earle
Eng Hunter, Sally
Eng Garrett, Fred
Eng Riddell, Catherine
Eng Schuler, Doug
Eng Smithson, Michael T.
Eng Wright, Jim
Eng Groening, Mathew
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 Hydroponics
Eng TESC Campus Firings
Eng Kendo
Eng Zappa, Frank
Eng The Evergreen State College Commity on Governance
Eng Evergreen Political Information Center
Eng The Shelton-Mason County Journal
Language
Eng eng
Place
Eng Washington State
Eng Thurston Aounty, WA
Eng Africa
Publisher
Eng The Evergreen State College Board of Publications and members of the Evergreen community
Extent
Eng 8 pages
extracted text
8

CAMPUS REACTS TO FIRINGS

Evergreeners Irk Local Taverns
Under his cash till Dean has some con fisca ted I.D" Evergreen l.D . and Washington drive r' s licenses, He explained a n
architec t's typewr ite r ca n bl oc k o ut and
rl"-type the numbers, but held to the light
the o ri ginal shows th rough. Dean says
Coyote' s prosecutes two o r three peop le a
week for fa lse l. D. This invo lves "goi ng
ou t to the park ing lot and get ting the ir
dri ver's license number , if necessa ry , and
test ifyin g in court. "
Dea n exp lai ned wh y it is necessary for
l. D. to be checked eve ry time . The o ne
tim e Coyo te's was fined , it was because a
19 year o ld Eve rgreen student had co me
in ori g in a ll y w ith fa lse id e n tificatio n
wh ich was accepted. The student co ntin ued com ing in , a nd as he became known
was no lo nger "ca rded ," until a n off icer of
the liquor board ca rd ed him .
The stud ent was fine d $100 a nd the tavern had the cho ice of clos in g o ne week or
pay ing a fine app rox imate ly equa l to the
profit of one week's sa le of liquor.

by Ca therine Ridde ll
The Li quo r Cont ro l Board a nd undera ge
r"t ro ns Me two of the biggest proble ms
tac ing a tave rn owner try in g to make a
I,vm g.
Rece ntl y. Dave W ilso n became so
ang ry about underage Eve rgreeners drin k ing .:It Dir ty Dave's Gay 90's Pizza Par lour
thilt he wit hdrew his advertisi ng from the
CUll per P"int Journa l.
in cases w here the unde rage pa tron is
di sco ve red by th e Liquor Boa rd exa miner ,
the patron a nd the person se rving a re subjec t tt' fine , a nd th e tavern owne r faces

remova l of a ll alco ho lic beverages tor up
to 30 da ys o r is fined the equiva lent of 30
days' profit from liq uor sa les .
T here is a lso a possibi lit y of canceli ng
the liquor license . Accordi ng to a source
a t the Liquo r Co ntrol Board , pena lties a re
decided "o n a n individual basis," a nd it
"depends on the circumstances of the offense, ..
Henry Dean at Capta in COy0 te's has
prob lems with fa lse ident ificat ion, A driv er's li ce nse w ithout a photo, present ed
w it h an Eve rg reen I.D . ca rd , is not accepta bl e. "You co uld sli p a not her p hoto in
there, co uldn't yo u? " said Dean .

T o avoid thi s kind of prob lem, proprie to rs a re required to maintain a file of "licensee's Cert ificat ion Cards" for a nyone
there is a ny qu est ion on . The certifica te,
w hich mu st be signed by the patron, is a
two part oa th ; one tha t the person serving saw the I. D ., and the o ther tha t th e
customer is of lega l age and the identificatio n is v alid . In the case of Coyo te's wit h
the fa lse I. D. , the fi le of these cards ha d
bee n sto len . The box is now na iled dow n .
Elma Brown , of Spud a nd Elma 's Two
M il e House sa id, "They cha rge us $2.00
fo r so of those ca rd s. We just sta rted asking pe ople to fill th em out because the
co mmiss io n sa id we had to. "
Brow n sa id , he could accept the license
of a ny state rega rdl ess of whether t here
was a picture on it. She said however, "if
there' s an y qu estio n , I turn them out ."

Spud and Elm a's has had onl y one bust
in 23 years of opera tion - also an Ever gree n student - just bef ore Th anksgiv ing
last yea r. Agai n it was a case of fa lse I. D,
The b arma id was fined $100, the wo man
with the false J. D . was fin ed $1 00 and the
business wa s closed fo r 10 days, Peop le
are turned out every ni ght at Spud a nd
Elma's fo r in sufficient J. D.
LJave Wil son a t Dirt y Dave's Pizza
Parlour thi nks the problem isn ' t so much
phony I.D ., bu t that people "don ' t give a
shit ." Wilson says, "They like my place,
but they d o n' t giv e a shit. They m ight be
fined, the person who serves might be
fined, but W ilso n gets nai led,"
He says the ma jority of his emp loyees
a re Evergreen stud ent s work ing their way
throu gh sc hooL He feels that it comes
down to emp loyees los ing a month 's wage
beca use they 've been don e an inju stice by
their peers. He points ou t th a t people rese nt being carded by peop le they know ,
ye t the pena lti es of the law a re the same.
Dave's has been ca ught by liquor otti ce rs four times. Thi s last time he only re ce ived a warn in g. Wilso n exp la in s th at
beer a nd w ine are ·'a convenience for ou r
custo mers , We don't make our mo ney o n
it , People co me in he re a nd dri nk a ll night
and - maybe - have a pizza. " T he
ty p ica l situ a tion is tha t a minor comes in
with a group where everyone else is of
age, and ha ngs back whi le I. D. is checked,
Wilson sa id ano ther comm on practice is
tha t the person who is 21 o rders the beer
and "then yo u come back a nd the min or
is d rinking beer o ut of hi s co ke cup, "
The ma nager
the beer w ill be
d er age d rinks
don 't be li eve it ,
protect io n.

now warns cus tomers th at
tah n away if anyone un it. People ge t upse t a nd
but it' s necessa ry fo r legal

Wilso n summed up hi s a ngry fee lings
abou t the w ho le situ a tion . "[f yo u' re 21
ac t it . If yo u' re 20 , do n't drink at my
place.' ·

by C urt Mi lton
Evergreen Vice President a nd Provost
Ed Kormo ndy ignored the recommendations . of two deans w hen he decided not
to re new contracts for facu lty members
Jim Martinez and Medardo Delgado, the
Cooper Point Journal has learned ,
The decision by Kormondy not to rehire the two fac ulty when thei r present
contracts expire was disclosed in last
week's Jo urnal. The non-renewal s are the
first of their kind in the history of the
sc hooL
Dean Rudy Martin confirmed that rec ommendations hy both he and fellow
dean W illie Parson were overru led by
Kormondy, Martin was concerned tha t Kormondy's decision was opposite that o f
the tw o deans, but emphasized that the
deans only make recommendat ions. Th e
fin al decision belongs to the provost. "Of
course," he added, "it's nice when your
reco mm endati ons are followed, "
Tom Rainey , pres ident of the Evergreen
chapter of the American Federation of
Teachers, is a ttempt in g to determine if the
process for reach ing a non - renewal deci_ -;:-s""
io""n , as ou tlined in the faculty handbook,
has been followed, The union wa nts to
"protect due process," Rainey says ,
That process, the one tha t determines
w het her or not a faculty member will be
retained at Evergreen, is a long, compli cated series of meetings, eva luati ons, reviewing, letter writing and personal anguish , It culminates in a decision not to
be reached lightly .
The fact that there is even a renewa l
process at a ll is pecu liar to Evergreen,
Faculty members here do not have tenure
as they wou ld a t most o ther colleges,
Contracts are renewed every three years
so no one's jo b is ever totally safe, T hat's
one reason many people are nervous
about the Mart inez / Delgado non-renewa ls.
Facu lty a t Everg reen have three eva lua-

A Singles Community
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2 Rooms
4 Rooms

$ 74.50
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All Utilities Paid

Social Rooms

Fully Furnished

Free TV Cable

Laundry Facility

Recreation Room

Wall-to-Wall Carpeting
Easy access to freevvay & City Center
Just dovvn the Road from the Greenvvood Inn

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8GRElN PARK ' DRIVt= • OLYMPIA, WA 98502 • l2 06 ) 94 3 -73 3 0

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

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Tom Rainey: " This can be a judicial
question very quickly ."
tion conferences with a dean d uring thei r
three year contract term , one each year.
The first and third yea r conferences are
known as "grow th" conferences , the purpose being to aid the academic growt h of
the fa culty member, identify hi s strengths
and work on his weaknesses.
Dur ing the first half of winter quarter,
facult y / dean conferences are scheduled
fo r those people in the second year of
th eir contract. T hese are k nown as a "renewa l conference" during which a comprehensive review is made of the fac ulty a nd
wha t that person has done at Eve rgreen.

reach ing a non -renewal decision so faculty could determine if their right s had
been vio lated .
"The uni on isn' t in th e bu si ness of pro tecti ng incompetence," says Rainey, "but
the burden of proof is o n the administra tion ." Neither Martinez nor Delgad o have
asked for un io n support , acco rdin g to
Rainey.
Rainey descr ibes the mood of the faculty as one of "paranoia. T he administ ration has not made any sta temenl. " He
fee ls th at the w hole affai r should have
bee n ha nd led more openly .
" We are suspending judgment on me rit s
of the case" until more info rmation is
ava ilable, Rainey says. He sa id "Thi s can
be a judicial question very quick ly," ex plaining that "No matter how info rmal
the discussions, a ny thing sa id by adm in ·
istrators or fa cult y can eventua lly be a
judicia l questi o n - fi rst ins ide the co ll ege
a nd then in a civil suit. "
Of the several faculty members con tacted by the Jou rnal. most sa id they had
many opini ons but declin ed to comment
o n the recent non -renewa ls. However ,
facult y member Maxine M imms ha d a
great deal to say.
" I k no w bo th men very well. " reco ntmued page j

The Evergreen State College . Olympia,Washington 98505

THE COOPER POINT

RNAL
Volume IV Number 27

April 29, 1976

COG III MEMBERS SPEAK OUT
by Jim Wright

·1

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According to the handbook, one condi tion of reappointment is that the faculty
member must keep a portfo lio of work
"done at and for the co llege" during 'the
co nt ract period, The cumula tive portfolio
"will bec ome the pri ncipal documenta ry
ev idence for a thoro ugh evaluatio ns by
the Deans . .. " and a source for dete rmining reappo int ment. To be included in
the portfolio are a ll evaluations the faculty member has written about himself as
well as evaluations o ther facu lty and stu dents have written about him .
After the renewa l conference, evalua ~
ti ons a nd recommenda tio ns are written
and these are turned over to the Vice President and Provost who makes the final
dec ision , If they are no t to be rehired , fac ult y mu st be informed, in writ ing w it h
reaso ns for the non-renewal , by April IS.
According to the handbook, if the fac ult y
member is not informed, he or she is
automa tically rehi red . A facu lty member
cannot be fired for. reasons he or she was
not info rmed of during a prev ious evaluation conference,
Tom Rainey , acting on beha lf of the
union, issued a memo to a ll facu lty offering uni on help to those who had been
fired or whose jobs are in danger . The
memo outlined the steps to be taken in

f ro m the com muni ty . The co mmittee
!\rew o ut o f student di ssa tishcti on l. , t fall
and l> charged wi th rev isi ng ihe ,chool
govern ance code ,
There seems to be genera l acco rd with in
the com mittee tha t COG III needs to pro vide a mecha nism through which comM

The Co mmitt ee on Gove rn a nce III Disappear ing Task ·Force (COG III DTF ) is
cu rrentl y attempt ing to foc us its efforts
into co ncrete proposa ls fo r · governance
change dnd, according to C hairman Nie ls
Skov, " wi ll shortly be so li citin g feedback

/ENROLLMENT ESTI MATES~
LOOK PROMISING
by jill Stewart
If the fall enro llment here fo ll ows the
same pat tern it has in past years , Evergreen ca n ex pect a n esti mated 2,784 students when, th e doors open next fa ll.
A , po t of approximately $300,000 il"l
state mon ey earma rked for faculty salaries
awaits us if we hit th e numb er right on
th e nose,
At a campus press mee ting Monday,
Vice President and Provost Ed Kormo ndy,
Dean of Enrollment Services Larry Sten berg and Les Eldridge exp la in ed the enrollment situatio n .
The a nnua l ave rage for student enro ll ment next year has been set at 2,632 students, compared to la st year's average of
2,383 students . To meet th at average , Evergree n will need the high fa ll enrollment
of 2,784 students to offset the lower
enrollm ent expected for spring.
Les Eldridge explained that if Evergreen
goes over the estim a ted enro llment number , it st ill ge ts the est imat ed $300,000 in
state money , "but we also get addit iona l
students, so the student! faculty rati o may
go up. "
In the even t th at Evergreen does not
meet its projected enro llment , it will not
receive the entire $300,000, so faculty hi ring w ill be lessened accordingly . However,
there are 17 - 18 teaching posi tion s now
open for next year and, according to Ed
Kormondy, "That estimate may go up as
the enroilment picture becomes clearer ,"
Of the almost 2,800 students expected
next fall, co ntinuing students will probably number about 1,300, leaving 1,500
expected new st udents,
The problem now facing the co ll ege is
how to a ttrac t 1,500 new students by this
fall. Larry Stenberg and Ed Kormondy
have devised some extensive plans for ac\,complishing the feat.

They inclu de:
1 ) In creasin g the " take ra te" the
numbe r of stude nts who app ly to Evergreen who act ua ll y fo llow th ro ugh and
reg ister.
2) Increasing part-time students from
120 to 400 - 600 by offeri ng more modules and programs.
3) Send ca talog to st udents on leave
(a n es timated 700),
4) Make specia l community college visits over summer. Talk to students, coun selo rs and facu lt y abo ut Evergreen.
5) Wri te fo ll ow - up lett ers. Letters have
been composed which represent SO - 60
academic field s here , to be se nt to students w ho inquire about specific fields at
Evergreen .
6) Reta in more st udents by providing
impr oved reg istratio n , academic advising ,
o rientat ion se rvi ces, even after the Aca demic Fa ir (May 19, 10 a,m, - 2 p, m,),
7) Identify a lterna tive cli entele. Make
o fferin gs releva nt to homemakers, state
workers, pr iso ners,
Larry Stenberg emph as ized that aside
from a ny effort s the co llege will make,
st udent s should become involved in the
enroll ment process , He said, "Students
who feel a commitmen t to Evergree n and
have had pos iti ve experiences here should
go hom e to thei r com munities and let
peop le know. "
Stenberg also urged students to read the
Ca talog Supplement with care, a nd make
thei r academic decisions soon , "Students
should do some planning just like the institution does, and enro ll during spring
enrollment. Then we can correct enroll ment prob lems ahead of time,"
The big question now is, will Evergreen
hit th e 2,800 mark? Ed Kormondy thinks
so. ''I' m q uite opt imistic about it," but
Larry Stenberg adds, "If we work damn
hard, "

munity news can be mo re clearly stated
than

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hdS been decideJ 50 far. (The co ~nl it tee
met again yesterday to discuss th is and
ot her issues.) What fo llows then , is a
sy mposium of viewpoints from various
members of COG Ill .
O ne of many co ntrove rsies concern s
two different proposals to replace the
present Sou nding Boa rd, The first ide;l,
offered by student Tom Morrill , would
replace the Sounding Board wi th a body
empowered to or igin ate and term ina te
DTF ' s, to m edi a te d is putes betwee n
DTF's and th eir chargers, a nd to vote acce pta nce or rej ection of DTF findings,
Such a board, Morrill cla im ed, would offer th e comm unity "leverage power" with
which to co nfront administrators . Student
governance would gain respectability and
comm unicati ons flow would be improved,
he felt ,
T h e ot h e r proposa l would rep lace
Sounding Board with a College Cou nci l
"strongly advisory" to the college adm inist ra ti on, according to its originator, facult y member Will Humphreys. Composed
of ten students, ten staff, a nd five faculty,
the council would be advice rather than
forum-oriented as is the current Sounding
Board . " I do n' t b la me anyone for no t being interested in a weekly discussion,"
sa id Humphreys,

If students still consider
their role to be passive
and impotent, then that's
what it's going to be ."
II

He characterized his proposal as strictly
advisory in nature as opposed to Morrill's, which he sa id resemb led a college
administra tive board , Hump h reys also
expressed concern over the lack of student
int e re st in gove rn a n ce procedures . " It
d oesn't matt er h ow you change the
mechan ism - If stu d e nt s still cons id er
their role to be passive and impoten t, then
that's what it's going to be ,"
Neils Skov predicted the detnise o f
Sounding Boa rd and its replacement by

some other bod y . Conc!,rning t he abov e
two proposal s he sa id , " If we had
Morrill 's proposal , it wouldn 't make se nse
to have presidents o r prov osts. Reversa l
power is ultim ate power ,"
Facu lty member Susie Strasser argued
that the key issue was whether COG III
was a ll owed eno u g h time to m ake
"fundamental " governa nce changes she saw
as necessary . She defined fundamental
as a c h a nge " from a system whi c h
attempts to mainta in that th ere is no
co nfli ct to o n e i n which th e re is a
confli ct." St rasser charged that "The old
document (COG II ) pro vides a system in
w hi ch 'co nsen sus ' is maintain ed by
ad min istrative force ."
' Strasser expressed frustration with th e
a mount of tim e COG III ""as given to
revise the governance code, "It seems that
in charging us the way he did , Mc Cann
(Evergreen president) was asking for a
co nfinllcd page J

2

LETTERS

HEADING TO AFRICA

EPIC NEEDS
NEW NAME
To the Editor :
\'\'1' Evergreeners ha ve over iclo keJ a pr ime recycling opporlun ity right here al this very in, tit uti o n . Hu ge posters are plaslered all over principal gathering
p i ace, a ro u:l d ca mpus ; a nd
week ly , Ihes e jumbo monuments
cll J,'gge rel are replaced by post ers idenl ical in ev ery way to
Ihe ir pred ecess ors except two key
word s hJve been changed:
' FRENCH WORKERS TAKE
OV ER CLO T/-I1 N C FACTORY "
riGHT , KILL. POWER TO THE
l'EOI' LE ! I LECTURE HALL 1,
7: 30 r m .. MONDAY (tair ,
" pen d lsc ussi c'n to fo ll ow the
111,1\' hem )' llr G ERMA N WORK1, I{ S T AKE O VER T EX TILE
FACTO RY.
c)r AUSTRIAN
\\'OR K ERS
TAK E
O VER
.\'UnDLF FA CTOI{Y. ." and
'I' lln . Perso na ll y , I wo uld like
I,' 'c'c' these te mpo ril rl' pos ters
rel' l.1Cl'd bl' pe rma nenl I'ixlun's
\\"llh Id f" In the two key wo rd
(", ,,,, ,t li.' n.::;.
I l\c'u IJ als0 li ke III s{'e EP IC,
Ihe [c'e rhrer n l'e diti ed l Inlorm a11,'n Ce nter . ge t a more a ccurate
,I nc! I"s, em h d rra >s ing name.
Hlll\' abll ut E. H. I. C " Evergreen
l\eJun u,lI1t Inlormati o n Center ;
,' r S ,"'-G. A ., Soci ali st Assoc ia t icl n II I G 0 rill a A c t ivis t s : 0 r
r . I.S. T " Federation of Insistent
C;,'c ia lis t Tri v ia;
or even
\ 1.A. 0.1. M. A" M ilit ant Activis ts
tc'r More Mo ney Awards?
Last year , after I found out
hOI\" mu ch S&A money EPIC
had been a warded, I approac hed
Ihe b0ard about the poss ibilit y
" I a four - thousand dollar conIn bution to th e Re -Elect Nixon
Campaign and was flatly refused.
Ln d a unted , I returned two
wee ks later and requested S&A
lunds to provide Evergreen student s with copies of my own
original love poetry. They sug gested that I sell my poetry directly to the students and commented , " If they want it, they'll
bu y it themselves." emon you
guys, I want some money to o.
Stephen Harrison

WE CATER TO
EVERYBODY
To the Editor:
Af ter a recent bloodless coup,
I stepped int o the manager job at
t he Duck House . The Duck
House is supported by st udent
lunds and is currently putting
more dollars into student funds
than it is taking out.
I think it is a fine marketplace
fo r both buyers and sellers,
With a ll the hogwash about
' r ic h hipp ie s" being pitched
a round in the scramb le for S&A
lund s it 's nice that there is a
pla ce that caters to everybody ,
even rich , whit e, male, hetero ,ex ual .
Doug Schuler

FACULTY FIRINGS
QUESTIONABLE
T u the Ed itor :
Th e recent firing of two Ever gree n faculty members has helped
me cl arify two issues to my self
tha t I wo uld like to share.
I rea li ze tha t th ere is a neces"it l' o f dealin g with probl ems of
facult y co mpetence. I a lso real ize th at on e of the form a l "lega l"
requi rement s fo r continued fac-

r
EDITOR

fore the graduati on cere mo nies
o n June 6. Students w ho wish to
purchase th em may order them
at that time.

'H ENDRICKS



DRUGS
" .._CD .........

~

NEWS EDITORS
Curt is Mi Iton
l at herine Ridde ll

.

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ult y statu s at Evergreen is the
ab ilit y tn teac h in coordinated
studies . Even thou gh I've hi sloricallv strong ly supported th ese
poin'ts, I' ve now been faced w it h
events tha t haY(' forced me tp re co nsider the how s and wh ys of
both of them,
I've co nclud ed that the most
fundame nt al question concern ing
the dec ision on retention shoul d
be whether or not a fac ult y
member ca n hol d student s and ,
if in the process nf ho lding st u dents, can demo nstrat e th a t a
,ub, ta ntia l personal / emotional,
intuitive / art ist ic. and / or academic I inte ll ec tu al cha nge ha s occurred , (T here is also a seco nd
issue of ad mini s tr a ti ve paper work that seems irrelevant here ,)
No rheto ric a bo ut qua lit y is
reasonab le unless students are
drawn to a teacher and no rheto ric abo ut numbers matters un less so m eti1lng va luable happens
during the t ime of contact. It just
seems sui cidal (especially during
this time of decreasing enroll ment) to the instit ution to eliminate any faculty member who
fi lls those two criteria. If that
per so n has demonstrated skill as
a teacher and shown sens itivity
to student ed ucational / emotional
needs, what a re we do ing to our se lves when we get rid of him on
points that have to do prima rily
wi th educational, philosophical
differences in style?
Extending from that point, I
ca n' t help aski ng : why are most
of the persons leavi ng (either by
personal or institu tiona l choice )
non-white or women? One of
my co ll eag ue s suggested that
maybe that says something
abou t the nature of our hiring
them . Indeed it does. But that
seems a bit shallow. I know a
coup le of the people who are
leaving well enough to know
that a substantial problem ste ms
from trouble they have in faculty
team teaching, In part icular th ey
hav e tr oub le teaching in the
standard w hite academ ic model.
As one "wag line" on campus
ha s it , "Hell , you hire a non white to teach and when he
teaches like a non - white, you
fire him ."
It is my be li ef that the funda mental problem is not that their

PHOTOGRAPHY
Doug Buster
Ford G ilbreath

BUSINESS MAN.
Jim Feyk
David Judd

ADVERTISING
NEWS STAFF

PRODUCTION

Jim Wright
Chris Cowge r

Joe Gendrea u

-- .

_.

FEATURE EDITOR
Matthew Groenin g

' (~~

Z

JOURNAL STAFF

Jill Stewart

Evergreener Promotes Hydroponics

-~~ IIIIEICaJPI10NB AT

...,
0
...,

Mark Schmitt

PRINTER

a reas of di scip lin ary competence
arc so narrow, nor tha t th ey a re
basica ll y a nti social. Certai nl y no
more so than a number of
others. NO I It seems more to be
iss ues th at ha ve to do with the
nature of learning , the con tent of
educa tion, th e nature of the relat ions hip between ed ucat ion and
the rest of one's life, indeed even
the co ncept of time and how to
use it.
Th ese issues are brou ght to the
h ig hest levels of conFlict in the
in tensity of coo rdinated studies
team s. They are certainl y not
Il/lrely rac ia L cultura l, sexual iss ues . But the unavoidable fact in
my mind is tha t they are also
racial , cu ltura l and sexua l philosophical differences. Thus I cannot avoid the conclusion that
they do include fundamental e le ments of racial, cultural and sexual bias at their deepest , most
unacknowledged levels,
It is my contention that these
eve nts are both fu nctionally irrationa l for the inst itut ion 's survival a nd phi losop hi ca ll y, if not
lega ll y, in violation of affirmative actio n policies.
Sincerely ,
Earle McNeil

FROM THE COOP
To the EDITOR:
BRRRAAAAKK BUK BUK
BUK BRRRAAAKKK!!!!!
Thank yo u
FRIENDS OF THE COOP

PHOTO HOAXERS
ARE TURKEYS
To the Editor: .
During th e second or third
week in April, a group identify-

PAUL'S
MOBIL
SERVICE

~

Auto Repair Specialists

Special
Law n mower
Service
Tune-up - plugs - points
Change oil
and sharpen BladE

$8.00
Till May 31
We service Rot6ti ll er too

0

0

W
UI
N

'C

~

::I

-51
_.

'a

..

If



"'-'

...
UI


::I



~



0
at

(I)

CIt

C
N

If you
you're paying too
much for your insurance talk to

Fred Palermo
for low rates tor
non-smokers & ~ood students
943-9765
FARMERS INSURANCF
OF WASH.
mem, of Farmers
Insurance Group

"Experiments conducted in 1929 supplied the first insight into the tremendous
productive capacity of the new cropping
meth od, ,
Hydroponics is the art and science of
growing crops with out soil, and its applica tion . The word is derived from the
G reek and mea ns literally "wa ter working. " It is thus distinguished from agri culture , "care of the field," Hydroponics is
based on the theory that all the factors of
plant growth naturally supplied by the
soi l can be coordinated ar tificially by the
use of water and chemicals into a cropprod uction meth od capable of com pe ting
w ith agr icu ltu re, With few exceptions,
such as the Eskimos, man in the past has
bee n completely dependent upon the soil
for his food supply.
Hydroponics is agriculture's first rea l
compet itor. - "The Complete Guide to
Soi lless Cardenin)l; ," W.F. Gericke, 1940.

by Catherine Riddell
"With proper support and backing hy·
droponics cou ld be the hottest thing in the
'70s and '80s," says Fred Garrett ,

cO lltinued from page 1

SUNRISE
Ova l Intention 8.5 lbs.
Geodesic

.

patch-up job a nd nothing more, " As
ano th er problem she cited a lack of
comm unicati o ns with in COG III due to its
division into fo ur sub-DTF s,

"McCann was asking for
a patch-up job."

Bl:YING
SIt VER '" GOLD COINS
OOLLARS
RARE COINS
COMPLETE
COLLECTIONS

205 E. 4th Oly

357-4345

(across from Bob's 8i& 8urpnl

352 - 8848

for men and women

New Phone 357 -6245

creating the newest s tyles
We carry and use Redken and Jhirmack

2417 W , Harrison

Ca l l 943-1222

necessary, she felt, to counter-act the
current apolitical nature of Evergreen
politics , She was unsure however, as to
w hether suc h involvement . would be
possib le given the current atmosphere of
disint e rest. "Ideall y I would like to see
decisions made by the comm unit y" ,
Realistically, we're not ready for that."
She cited present curricu lum structure,
student s' interest in academic programs,
and pri o r time comm itm ent s as factors
precluding such participation. A schoolw ide forum was mandatory, she felt , to
communicate the findings of COG III to
the community.
Sim il arly, Program Secretary Pearl
Vincent expressed a strong belieF that any
policy implemented by an administrator
should reflect the interests of the
com munity, "Admini strators shou ld administer to the will of the comm unity
rather than dictating to it ," she asserted,
Vincent cited the current dissatisfaction
w ith DTF's in general to illustrate her
point. "None of them have any power
even iF they are representative of the
peop le, Administrators can disregard
DTFs, T hat's why it's so damn hard to
get people on DTF's," she claimed, ''Too
often their recommendations are ignored, "

lilt's SO damn hard to get
people on DTF's."

RUTH'S STYLING SALON
Specializes In
PRECISION CUTTING
and nucleic perms
TOP STYLIST

Lowest Gua ranteed Labor
Rate in Town

Hydroponics, or garden in g without
soi l, i5 one of the green revolution's modern mira cles, The yield is said to be four
to ten times that of an equivalent amount
of so il. No good soi l is needed . You just
need sand or gravel, water, nutrient , and
light. The water and nutrient can be recycled,
Garrett, a st udent in "Africa and the
United Sta tes" program, became involved
with hydroponics four years ago, "A
friend of mine saw a unit in California
and took me as an assistant." Ga rret t had
never done any gardening or agriculture
before,
Garrett plans to take his hydroponics
ski lls to Africa, "O ur soc iety isn't will ing
to put into pract ice the beneficial things ,
The idea is to feed people, The poor peop le are the ones who need it."
Acco rding to Garrett , agricultural lands
in Africa are used to produce cash crops
lik e cocoa for export, then forced to buy
food from foreigners at high prices, Using
hydropon ics they will have the money
from cash crops and the Food from hydroponics,
For the U, 5" Garrett sees hydroponics
as a way of improving urban environments and breaki ng up the food mon opolies .

continued from page 1

There are many ways to make a hydropon iC unit. Garrett hopes to interest the
African governme nt in huge scale h ydro ponics, He pictures digging shallow basins
in the ground and lining them with polyvinyl or cement. Garrett has made individual units previously and is slill happy
to sell them, .
To make the model illustrated, you
need a o ne-gallon jug to hold water and
liqu id nutrient , plus three o ne-ga llon jugs
fo r planters, After you remove the p lant ers' bases w ith a glass cutter, turn them
ups ide down a nd hang them fro m the ce ilin g in macrame hangers, o r balance them
in coFFee cans. Stop the bott les' spou ts
with rubber stoppe rs and run surgical tub ing to the nutrient bottle. The tubing
should be long eno ugh to allow the nutrient bo ttle to set on a table or on the
floor. Plant seedlings in the planter filled
with poro us material such as sa nd o r
gravel, and water them about every tliree
days. Wa teri ng consists of us ing a squeeze
bulb hand pump to force the wa ter up
through the g ravel to surface level, and
then letting it run out. A gallon of water
with a teaspoon of ferti lizer in it should
last a month,
To summarize, as Fred would say, "a
lo t of people think I'm full of bullshit , a
lot of people are amazed,"

sponded Mimms. " I d o not understand it. '
Mimms has worked with Martinez and
taught him as a st udent. She feels that "if
there was ever a prime candidate for faculty team bui lding, Jim is one, " The college has just received a $55,000 Lilly En dowment to be used to develop facu lt y
teaching competencies and Mimms feels
Martinez sho uld have been co nsidered as
one of the 30 faculty members scheduled
to take part in the program,
We finally have an institution th at is
quite typical, Mimms feels , the min o rit y
ma les are let go and the min ority fem a les
a re retai ned . "The faculty wi ll theoretica ll y d iscuss it , form DTFs and committees. A few white males wi ll come up and
tell me how sorry they a re ; sev eral al ready have. Then I'll go home and call
them a ll a bunch of bad names ."

-=_v ~

PLANT NOW
SUPPLY LlMITEDI

2 root5/'2.50

CORI 'I CROCK
(formerly Vino Fino)

South Sound Center
456-8988

COG III, Continued

EVERGREEN COIN~S
.
AND
'
INVESTMENTS_

1619 W. Harrison

Shelton -Mason
County Journal

The Journal is located in Ihe College Activities Building (CAB) 306 , News phones
866 -6214 . ·6213 . Adver1ising and business 866-6080. Leiters Policy: All letters to
the editor and photographs for lellers page must be received by noon Tuesday for
that week ' s ' publication . Letters must be signed, typed, double-spaced and 400
,"wo rds or less.

ing themse lves as the "S.P.G. "
pu t up posters around the ca mpu s advert ising "se nior portraits"
to be taken o n April 21 , in front
of t he Library Bu ild ing, The
phone number li ste d on the
poster was that of the KAOS
newsroo m (w ho knew nothing
abo ut il l. One spntence o n the
poster read "It's abo ut time Evergreen started taking graduati o n
seriously - her!' is a cha nce to
show some senio r co mmunity
spi rit ,"
T hi s morning (April 21) I' ve
had a dozen phone calls and a
few vi sit s fro m fourth-year st udents who made a spec ial trip
o ut to the ca mpus today for
what they th ought was an "officia l sen ior portrait. " A couple of
them had driven qui te a distance; most fe lt inconvenienced
by so meone's warped sense of
humor. They don' t think the person who placed the posters
a round campus is very funny.
Neit her do I.
I'd like the "S,P,G," to know
that com mun ity sp ir it among
stu d en ts graduating has been
abo unding for the past three
weeks . In Lynn Patterson ' s
absence, I ho ld the graduation
desk for 1976. A Graduation
Planning Group of students has
bee n working to plan a ro ugh
age nda For the ce lebratio n, We
mee t tw ice a week, on Tuesdays
a nd Fridays, from 12: 00 to 1: 00
p.m. in CAB 110, We'd like the
turkeys who put up those signs
to co me a nd do some serious
work with us.
Sa ll y Hunter
Administrative Assistant
to Ed Kor mondy
P .S . By the way, gro up photographs w ill bf' taken - iu st be-

FIRINGS

Student Devi Unsoeld was primarily
interested in community participation in
the governance process, Changes were

. Vincent characterized the present governance structure as a "benevolent dictators hip ," She was especially concerned that
COG 1Il might produce nothing more
than a "re-write" of the COG II
document.
Faculty member Willi Unsoeld defined
his primary interest in COG III as "the
careful and accurate use of language in

'\
.. ~

~, f..
:

~,~~

Pearl Vincent

the document. " He cited phrases such as
"equal status" and "direct representation"
to illustrate the necessi ty for precise
definition of terms. "I don' t see any major
issues coming out of it (COG Ill) because
we haven't understood what we are
proposing," he said .
Unsoeld hesitated, however, to make
himself "accountable" for a definition of
"accountability," A person is accountab le ,
he finally admitted, when the consequences of having made a decision "dre of
d ire eno ugh nature to suit the seriousness
of the decision " that is being made, By
this definition for examp le, he felt that
s tudents should not be summarily
in volved in faculty hiring , Unsoeld
expla ined that the consequences for a
student having made a bad decision could
never be as severe as the consequences
upon a faculty member whose job and
future career may be on the line.

~

.~

HOUSE OF

115 East 5th
Olympia, WA
98501

352 - 7527

STUDENT
DISCOUNT

2

LETTERS

HEADING TO AFRICA

EPIC NEEDS
NEW NAME
To the Editor :
\'\'1' Evergreeners ha ve over iclo keJ a pr ime recycling opporlun ity right here al this very in, tit uti o n . Hu ge posters are plaslered all over principal gathering
p i ace, a ro u:l d ca mpus ; a nd
week ly , Ihes e jumbo monuments
cll J,'gge rel are replaced by post ers idenl ical in ev ery way to
Ihe ir pred ecess ors except two key
word s hJve been changed:
' FRENCH WORKERS TAKE
OV ER CLO T/-I1 N C FACTORY "
riGHT , KILL. POWER TO THE
l'EOI' LE ! I LECTURE HALL 1,
7: 30 r m .. MONDAY (tair ,
" pen d lsc ussi c'n to fo ll ow the
111,1\' hem )' llr G ERMA N WORK1, I{ S T AKE O VER T EX TILE
FACTO RY.
c)r AUSTRIAN
\\'OR K ERS
TAK E
O VER
.\'UnDLF FA CTOI{Y. ." and
'I' lln . Perso na ll y , I wo uld like
I,' 'c'c' these te mpo ril rl' pos ters
rel' l.1Cl'd bl' pe rma nenl I'ixlun's
\\"llh Id f" In the two key wo rd
(", ,,,, ,t li.' n.::;.
I l\c'u IJ als0 li ke III s{'e EP IC,
Ihe [c'e rhrer n l'e diti ed l Inlorm a11,'n Ce nter . ge t a more a ccurate
,I nc! I"s, em h d rra >s ing name.
Hlll\' abll ut E. H. I. C " Evergreen
l\eJun u,lI1t Inlormati o n Center ;
,' r S ,"'-G. A ., Soci ali st Assoc ia t icl n II I G 0 rill a A c t ivis t s : 0 r
r . I.S. T " Federation of Insistent
C;,'c ia lis t Tri v ia;
or even
\ 1.A. 0.1. M. A" M ilit ant Activis ts
tc'r More Mo ney Awards?
Last year , after I found out
hOI\" mu ch S&A money EPIC
had been a warded, I approac hed
Ihe b0ard about the poss ibilit y
" I a four - thousand dollar conIn bution to th e Re -Elect Nixon
Campaign and was flatly refused.
Ln d a unted , I returned two
wee ks later and requested S&A
lunds to provide Evergreen student s with copies of my own
original love poetry. They sug gested that I sell my poetry directly to the students and commented , " If they want it, they'll
bu y it themselves." emon you
guys, I want some money to o.
Stephen Harrison

WE CATER TO
EVERYBODY
To the Editor:
Af ter a recent bloodless coup,
I stepped int o the manager job at
t he Duck House . The Duck
House is supported by st udent
lunds and is currently putting
more dollars into student funds
than it is taking out.
I think it is a fine marketplace
fo r both buyers and sellers,
With a ll the hogwash about
' r ic h hipp ie s" being pitched
a round in the scramb le for S&A
lund s it 's nice that there is a
pla ce that caters to everybody ,
even rich , whit e, male, hetero ,ex ual .
Doug Schuler

FACULTY FIRINGS
QUESTIONABLE
T u the Ed itor :
Th e recent firing of two Ever gree n faculty members has helped
me cl arify two issues to my self
tha t I wo uld like to share.
I rea li ze tha t th ere is a neces"it l' o f dealin g with probl ems of
facult y co mpetence. I a lso real ize th at on e of the form a l "lega l"
requi rement s fo r continued fac-

r
EDITOR

fore the graduati on cere mo nies
o n June 6. Students w ho wish to
purchase th em may order them
at that time.

'H ENDRICKS



DRUGS
" .._CD .........

~

NEWS EDITORS
Curt is Mi Iton
l at herine Ridde ll

.

~'-(0.



;"aJ

"'I
"'I

ult y statu s at Evergreen is the
ab ilit y tn teac h in coordinated
studies . Even thou gh I've hi sloricallv strong ly supported th ese
poin'ts, I' ve now been faced w it h
events tha t haY(' forced me tp re co nsider the how s and wh ys of
both of them,
I've co nclud ed that the most
fundame nt al question concern ing
the dec ision on retention shoul d
be whether or not a fac ult y
member ca n hol d student s and ,
if in the process nf ho lding st u dents, can demo nstrat e th a t a
,ub, ta ntia l personal / emotional,
intuitive / art ist ic. and / or academic I inte ll ec tu al cha nge ha s occurred , (T here is also a seco nd
issue of ad mini s tr a ti ve paper work that seems irrelevant here ,)
No rheto ric a bo ut qua lit y is
reasonab le unless students are
drawn to a teacher and no rheto ric abo ut numbers matters un less so m eti1lng va luable happens
during the t ime of contact. It just
seems sui cidal (especially during
this time of decreasing enroll ment) to the instit ution to eliminate any faculty member who
fi lls those two criteria. If that
per so n has demonstrated skill as
a teacher and shown sens itivity
to student ed ucational / emotional
needs, what a re we do ing to our se lves when we get rid of him on
points that have to do prima rily
wi th educational, philosophical
differences in style?
Extending from that point, I
ca n' t help aski ng : why are most
of the persons leavi ng (either by
personal or institu tiona l choice )
non-white or women? One of
my co ll eag ue s suggested that
maybe that says something
abou t the nature of our hiring
them . Indeed it does. But that
seems a bit shallow. I know a
coup le of the people who are
leaving well enough to know
that a substantial problem ste ms
from trouble they have in faculty
team teaching, In part icular th ey
hav e tr oub le teaching in the
standard w hite academ ic model.
As one "wag line" on campus
ha s it , "Hell , you hire a non white to teach and when he
teaches like a non - white, you
fire him ."
It is my be li ef that the funda mental problem is not that their

PHOTOGRAPHY
Doug Buster
Ford G ilbreath

BUSINESS MAN.
Jim Feyk
David Judd

ADVERTISING
NEWS STAFF

PRODUCTION

Jim Wright
Chris Cowge r

Joe Gendrea u

-- .

_.

FEATURE EDITOR
Matthew Groenin g

' (~~

Z

JOURNAL STAFF

Jill Stewart

Evergreener Promotes Hydroponics

-~~ IIIIEICaJPI10NB AT

...,
0
...,

Mark Schmitt

PRINTER

a reas of di scip lin ary competence
arc so narrow, nor tha t th ey a re
basica ll y a nti social. Certai nl y no
more so than a number of
others. NO I It seems more to be
iss ues th at ha ve to do with the
nature of learning , the con tent of
educa tion, th e nature of the relat ions hip between ed ucat ion and
the rest of one's life, indeed even
the co ncept of time and how to
use it.
Th ese issues are brou ght to the
h ig hest levels of conFlict in the
in tensity of coo rdinated studies
team s. They are certainl y not
Il/lrely rac ia L cultura l, sexual iss ues . But the unavoidable fact in
my mind is tha t they are also
racial , cu ltura l and sexua l philosophical differences. Thus I cannot avoid the conclusion that
they do include fundamental e le ments of racial, cultural and sexual bias at their deepest , most
unacknowledged levels,
It is my contention that these
eve nts are both fu nctionally irrationa l for the inst itut ion 's survival a nd phi losop hi ca ll y, if not
lega ll y, in violation of affirmative actio n policies.
Sincerely ,
Earle McNeil

FROM THE COOP
To the EDITOR:
BRRRAAAAKK BUK BUK
BUK BRRRAAAKKK!!!!!
Thank yo u
FRIENDS OF THE COOP

PHOTO HOAXERS
ARE TURKEYS
To the Editor: .
During th e second or third
week in April, a group identify-

PAUL'S
MOBIL
SERVICE

~

Auto Repair Specialists

Special
Law n mower
Service
Tune-up - plugs - points
Change oil
and sharpen BladE

$8.00
Till May 31
We service Rot6ti ll er too

0

0

W
UI
N

'C

~

::I

-51
_.

'a

..

If



"'-'

...
UI


::I



~



0
at

(I)

CIt

C
N

If you
you're paying too
much for your insurance talk to

Fred Palermo
for low rates tor
non-smokers & ~ood students
943-9765
FARMERS INSURANCF
OF WASH.
mem, of Farmers
Insurance Group

"Experiments conducted in 1929 supplied the first insight into the tremendous
productive capacity of the new cropping
meth od, ,
Hydroponics is the art and science of
growing crops with out soil, and its applica tion . The word is derived from the
G reek and mea ns literally "wa ter working. " It is thus distinguished from agri culture , "care of the field," Hydroponics is
based on the theory that all the factors of
plant growth naturally supplied by the
soi l can be coordinated ar tificially by the
use of water and chemicals into a cropprod uction meth od capable of com pe ting
w ith agr icu ltu re, With few exceptions,
such as the Eskimos, man in the past has
bee n completely dependent upon the soil
for his food supply.
Hydroponics is agriculture's first rea l
compet itor. - "The Complete Guide to
Soi lless Cardenin)l; ," W.F. Gericke, 1940.

by Catherine Riddell
"With proper support and backing hy·
droponics cou ld be the hottest thing in the
'70s and '80s," says Fred Garrett ,

cO lltinued from page 1

SUNRISE
Ova l Intention 8.5 lbs.
Geodesic

.

patch-up job a nd nothing more, " As
ano th er problem she cited a lack of
comm unicati o ns with in COG III due to its
division into fo ur sub-DTF s,

"McCann was asking for
a patch-up job."

Bl:YING
SIt VER '" GOLD COINS
OOLLARS
RARE COINS
COMPLETE
COLLECTIONS

205 E. 4th Oly

357-4345

(across from Bob's 8i& 8urpnl

352 - 8848

for men and women

New Phone 357 -6245

creating the newest s tyles
We carry and use Redken and Jhirmack

2417 W , Harrison

Ca l l 943-1222

necessary, she felt, to counter-act the
current apolitical nature of Evergreen
politics , She was unsure however, as to
w hether suc h involvement . would be
possib le given the current atmosphere of
disint e rest. "Ideall y I would like to see
decisions made by the comm unit y" ,
Realistically, we're not ready for that."
She cited present curricu lum structure,
student s' interest in academic programs,
and pri o r time comm itm ent s as factors
precluding such participation. A schoolw ide forum was mandatory, she felt , to
communicate the findings of COG III to
the community.
Sim il arly, Program Secretary Pearl
Vincent expressed a strong belieF that any
policy implemented by an administrator
should reflect the interests of the
com munity, "Admini strators shou ld administer to the will of the comm unity
rather than dictating to it ," she asserted,
Vincent cited the current dissatisfaction
w ith DTF's in general to illustrate her
point. "None of them have any power
even iF they are representative of the
peop le, Administrators can disregard
DTFs, T hat's why it's so damn hard to
get people on DTF's," she claimed, ''Too
often their recommendations are ignored, "

lilt's SO damn hard to get
people on DTF's."

RUTH'S STYLING SALON
Specializes In
PRECISION CUTTING
and nucleic perms
TOP STYLIST

Lowest Gua ranteed Labor
Rate in Town

Hydroponics, or garden in g without
soi l, i5 one of the green revolution's modern mira cles, The yield is said to be four
to ten times that of an equivalent amount
of so il. No good soi l is needed . You just
need sand or gravel, water, nutrient , and
light. The water and nutrient can be recycled,
Garrett, a st udent in "Africa and the
United Sta tes" program, became involved
with hydroponics four years ago, "A
friend of mine saw a unit in California
and took me as an assistant." Ga rret t had
never done any gardening or agriculture
before,
Garrett plans to take his hydroponics
ski lls to Africa, "O ur soc iety isn't will ing
to put into pract ice the beneficial things ,
The idea is to feed people, The poor peop le are the ones who need it."
Acco rding to Garrett , agricultural lands
in Africa are used to produce cash crops
lik e cocoa for export, then forced to buy
food from foreigners at high prices, Using
hydropon ics they will have the money
from cash crops and the Food from hydroponics,
For the U, 5" Garrett sees hydroponics
as a way of improving urban environments and breaki ng up the food mon opolies .

continued from page 1

There are many ways to make a hydropon iC unit. Garrett hopes to interest the
African governme nt in huge scale h ydro ponics, He pictures digging shallow basins
in the ground and lining them with polyvinyl or cement. Garrett has made individual units previously and is slill happy
to sell them, .
To make the model illustrated, you
need a o ne-gallon jug to hold water and
liqu id nutrient , plus three o ne-ga llon jugs
fo r planters, After you remove the p lant ers' bases w ith a glass cutter, turn them
ups ide down a nd hang them fro m the ce ilin g in macrame hangers, o r balance them
in coFFee cans. Stop the bott les' spou ts
with rubber stoppe rs and run surgical tub ing to the nutrient bottle. The tubing
should be long eno ugh to allow the nutrient bo ttle to set on a table or on the
floor. Plant seedlings in the planter filled
with poro us material such as sa nd o r
gravel, and water them about every tliree
days. Wa teri ng consists of us ing a squeeze
bulb hand pump to force the wa ter up
through the g ravel to surface level, and
then letting it run out. A gallon of water
with a teaspoon of ferti lizer in it should
last a month,
To summarize, as Fred would say, "a
lo t of people think I'm full of bullshit , a
lot of people are amazed,"

sponded Mimms. " I d o not understand it. '
Mimms has worked with Martinez and
taught him as a st udent. She feels that "if
there was ever a prime candidate for faculty team bui lding, Jim is one, " The college has just received a $55,000 Lilly En dowment to be used to develop facu lt y
teaching competencies and Mimms feels
Martinez sho uld have been co nsidered as
one of the 30 faculty members scheduled
to take part in the program,
We finally have an institution th at is
quite typical, Mimms feels , the min o rit y
ma les are let go and the min ority fem a les
a re retai ned . "The faculty wi ll theoretica ll y d iscuss it , form DTFs and committees. A few white males wi ll come up and
tell me how sorry they a re ; sev eral al ready have. Then I'll go home and call
them a ll a bunch of bad names ."

-=_v ~

PLANT NOW
SUPPLY LlMITEDI

2 root5/'2.50

CORI 'I CROCK
(formerly Vino Fino)

South Sound Center
456-8988

COG III, Continued

EVERGREEN COIN~S
.
AND
'
INVESTMENTS_

1619 W. Harrison

Shelton -Mason
County Journal

The Journal is located in Ihe College Activities Building (CAB) 306 , News phones
866 -6214 . ·6213 . Adver1ising and business 866-6080. Leiters Policy: All letters to
the editor and photographs for lellers page must be received by noon Tuesday for
that week ' s ' publication . Letters must be signed, typed, double-spaced and 400
,"wo rds or less.

ing themse lves as the "S.P.G. "
pu t up posters around the ca mpu s advert ising "se nior portraits"
to be taken o n April 21 , in front
of t he Library Bu ild ing, The
phone number li ste d on the
poster was that of the KAOS
newsroo m (w ho knew nothing
abo ut il l. One spntence o n the
poster read "It's abo ut time Evergreen started taking graduati o n
seriously - her!' is a cha nce to
show some senio r co mmunity
spi rit ,"
T hi s morning (April 21) I' ve
had a dozen phone calls and a
few vi sit s fro m fourth-year st udents who made a spec ial trip
o ut to the ca mpus today for
what they th ought was an "officia l sen ior portrait. " A couple of
them had driven qui te a distance; most fe lt inconvenienced
by so meone's warped sense of
humor. They don' t think the person who placed the posters
a round campus is very funny.
Neit her do I.
I'd like the "S,P,G," to know
that com mun ity sp ir it among
stu d en ts graduating has been
abo unding for the past three
weeks . In Lynn Patterson ' s
absence, I ho ld the graduation
desk for 1976. A Graduation
Planning Group of students has
bee n working to plan a ro ugh
age nda For the ce lebratio n, We
mee t tw ice a week, on Tuesdays
a nd Fridays, from 12: 00 to 1: 00
p.m. in CAB 110, We'd like the
turkeys who put up those signs
to co me a nd do some serious
work with us.
Sa ll y Hunter
Administrative Assistant
to Ed Kor mondy
P .S . By the way, gro up photographs w ill bf' taken - iu st be-

FIRINGS

Student Devi Unsoeld was primarily
interested in community participation in
the governance process, Changes were

. Vincent characterized the present governance structure as a "benevolent dictators hip ," She was especially concerned that
COG 1Il might produce nothing more
than a "re-write" of the COG II
document.
Faculty member Willi Unsoeld defined
his primary interest in COG III as "the
careful and accurate use of language in

'\
.. ~

~, f..
:

~,~~

Pearl Vincent

the document. " He cited phrases such as
"equal status" and "direct representation"
to illustrate the necessi ty for precise
definition of terms. "I don' t see any major
issues coming out of it (COG Ill) because
we haven't understood what we are
proposing," he said .
Unsoeld hesitated, however, to make
himself "accountable" for a definition of
"accountability," A person is accountab le ,
he finally admitted, when the consequences of having made a decision "dre of
d ire eno ugh nature to suit the seriousness
of the decision " that is being made, By
this definition for examp le, he felt that
s tudents should not be summarily
in volved in faculty hiring , Unsoeld
expla ined that the consequences for a
student having made a bad decision could
never be as severe as the consequences
upon a faculty member whose job and
future career may be on the line.

~

.~

HOUSE OF

115 East 5th
Olympia, WA
98501

352 - 7527

STUDENT
DISCOUNT

IN BRIEF
OLYMPIA SPORT SHOP
STOCK REDUCTION SALE
20% off on .
flY TYING SUPPLIES
ASSORTED RAINWEAR
BACKP ACKlNG ITEMS
MANY OTHER ITEMS
ON SALE
"come in and browse" HOURS
Wed . thru Sat.
10 to 5:30
719 East 4th
357-7580

Now

20%
Discount on all

Regular
Film Developing
506 N Capito l Way
943-3820

REMAINING
WHALES
RELEASED
T he two remaining Budd Inlet
wha les in ca ptivity were released
by their human custodians Monday.
The w ha les, captured in Budd
In let March 7 by Sea World , Inc.
were turned over to the University of Washington 's Dr. AI
Erickson by court order March
23. Eri ckson moved them to a
netted-off cove o n, the west side
of Sa n Juan Island where tracking radios were surgicall y atta ched to their dorsal fins.
Acco rdin g to Erickson. he and
two other researchers plan to fo llow the wha les' radio bea m day
and night fo r a month. They will
then mak e periodi c checks on the
wha les for a bout a year, afte r
which time th e radios are expected to stop working a nd fall
off.
The wha les were the subject of
loud public outcry and furor ,
much of it com ing from the Evergreen co mmunity, aft er they
were ca ptured on Budd Inlet
March 7 by Don Go ldsberry a nd
his Sea World crew. Many of the
whale lovers, especia lly those attending the First International
Orca (Kille r whale) Symposium
held at Evergreen March 12 and
13, claimed the wha les had been
harassed and possibly harmed
during th e capture operation.
Go ldsberry claimed otherwise.
The fight to free the whales
was taken to court when suits
were fil ed by both the state Atto rn ey General and Evergreen
stud ent Mark Overland. T.he
cuurt ordered the whales turned

ALL WAYS TRAVEL SERVICE. lilt:.

WESTSIDE SMDPPING CENTER

OLYMPIA. WASHINGTON

943.8700

ANNOUNCEMENTS
over to the custody of Dr. Erickso n fo r release within 60 da ys .
Erickson claims the whales and
the rad io packs get alo ng to ge th er "beautifully. " He isn't sure
just wha t they'lI do after relea se
but expects them to cruise San
Juan waters for a few days to
"get their beari ngs ."
T he possibility that the whales
might rejoin their old pod (family) has been raised by recent
sightings of killer whales near the
Sa n Juan cove . It is thought by
some that these might be the old
pod awaiting their co mrades' re lease.

resent a tives, consumer representati ves, and alternative organizers.
Organizers of the conference
are John Adams, Carla Becker,
Tom Clingman, Bill Knowles,
Tessa Martinez, Cathy Paulson,
Tom Robinson , and Thorn
Thacker.
For chi ld care information call
866 -0303 . For other quest ions
call 943-6772 .

. THIRD WORLD
CONFERENCE rIN MAY

WOMEN'S SOCCER
VICTORIOUS
The Evergreen Women's Soccer Team won their game against
th e Renton Mudders at the
Renton Stadium last weekend.
The game was a close 2 to 1 victo ry . Bot h goals were scored by
player / coach Barbara Wooton,
The first goal was scored off a
rebound from a shot by Pat
Moodie. The ball went straight
to Wooton and she pounded it
in, The second score was made
when a slide tackle passed an opposing fullback to push the ball
into the goal.
The tea m is looking forward
to their next game Saturday
against the University of Washington Huskies on the Evergreen
playfield at noon.

FOOD CONFERENCE
SET MAY 8 - 9
The Food Conference, May 8
and 9 at Olympia Community
Center isn't going to be a "gathering of the tribes," says Thorn
Thacker spokesman for the Community Resource Conference.
Thacker says this conference is
for Olympia , to bring resources
studen ts have out to the community. The Food Conference is
the first in a continuing series of
conferences to build community
by giving people the opportun it y
to meet each other and organize.
Future plans a re for child ca re
and health care conferences .

On May 22 a conference entitled " Third World People and
the American Legal System: Immigration , Citizenship, and
Treaty Rights and Laws" will be
held at the Olympia YMCA
Friendship Hall.
The purposes of the conference are: 1) to educate the surrounding community (Olympia,
Lacey, Tumwater, etc.) about
racist and discriminatory laws
that America has had in the
past, 2) to find out about current laws and legal hassles, 3) to
educate Third World people to
the commonalities of our history , to build stronger Third
World community ties, 4) to put
together a follow-up paper
wh ich includes highlights from
the conference, methods for
making positive legal changes,
and community organizations
and social services that can help
in making those changes.
At this time, a core group of
people have been organizing the
conference, contacting speakers,
ordering films, etc. We'd like to
see more people get involved
with this project since it has relevancy for all community members,
All persons who are interested
in the conference are enco uraged
to come to a n organizational
meeting on Tuesday , April 27 at
noon in Lib. 3205 , or drop by
the Third World Coa lition office
(lib. 3236) or the Asian Coaliti on office (lib . 3209) for more
informa tion .

Evergreener enjoys one of Olym pia 's first sunny spring days.
A written statement to participants says, "We have all seen
major changes in the food industry in the last few years,
what with the rising food prices
and virtual disappearance of the
corner grocery store. Most cons umers don't understand why
food shortages exist and why
they are paying more and more
for less and less food. And it's
hard to see who is involved in
the increase in food prices,
w hether it be the farmer, the
wholesaler or the retailer. It's
hard to know what effect we as
consumers can have on the food
industry."
Panel discussions are titled:
"Why are our food prices so
high 7", "Cooperative food distribution ", and "Cooperative approaches to food production a nd
supply, " The Theater of the Unemployed will perform "That's
Agri - Biz. " Groups will be organ ized for commun it y gardens, recycling , farmer's market , and
food co -o ps.
Pa rti cipant s include retail rep-

S

I'4f3S
0
_'"FOot Tfft S

P

•••••



N

ALBUMS
JAZZ
FOLK

ROCK
over
800 Titles

• Planning and informational
meetings for next fall's Community Advocacy Program will be
held with Russ Fox and Hap
Freund every Wednesday 1 - 3 in
Lab 3065,
• Sunday, May 2, Burlington
Northern Railroad represen tatives will present their plans for
deveopment 01 the Nisqually
Delta to an open meeting. The
presentation will be at 5 :30 at
the United Church .of Christ,
11th and Capitol Way.
Saturday, May 1, Burlington
Northern Railroad representatives
will lead a walking tour of the
lands adjoin in g the Nisqually
Delta at 2 p.m . Hikers should
meet at the VIPs parking lot at
the top of Marvin Road .

i

,;:1

·1

Reverend Chumley sharpens
knives for trick.
• The ann ual Seniors Art Show
in the Library Gallery is scheduled for May 10 - 28. Contact
Lynda Weinman, Exhibi ts Coordinator, at 866-8229 or 8666129 if you have work to enter.
The number of pieces allowable
per person will vary according to
size and media(s) , Selection is on
a lirst come basis, so call soon
for an appointment to review
your work. The deadline is
May 5 ,

Summer Internships Available
News from the Office of Cooperative Education
Here are a few points to remember when looking for a summer
Internship:
When using the Co-op Catalog, remember that it is not a
"shopping list, " it's a reference 'guide. The catalog refers to both
past a nd currently available Internships. We also have many new
Internships that have not been listed since publication of the catalog last fall.The first ten pages of the catalog are not listings of possible Internships, but they are there to help you, Take ten minutes a nd ·
read them, they may save you from a number 47 Evergreen headache.
Internships, as you know, are on-the -job learning experiences.
So when you come to tal k to a Coordinator, let us know what
type of job you had in mind, and specifically what academic gains
yo u would like from the Int ern experience. What will ,he Internship teach you ?
Have a faculty spon sor lined up before you start looking for an
Internship . It will save a lot of unnecessary hassles .
W o ndering what kinds of Internsh ips Evergreeners have done?
Ask Palll Nie lson what his Research Internship with the Port land
Zoological Socie ty wa s li ke, or ask Charles Graef about being a
Director fo r Thurston County's Work-Release Program. And if
you wa nt to hea r a self-developed Internship in action, tune to
KRAB radio (l07 .7FM) on Saturdays from 4 - 5 p.m . and listen
to Tamara Swift's program , " With These Hands: The Working
Class View on Current Issues."

• Wednesday, May 5 Pearl Vincent and Larry Stenberg will discuss the Working Climate DTF
at the Sounding Board meeting
in CAB 108 at 8:30 a.m. Also
Ed Kormondy will discuss the
status of academic dean selection.
• Kalua pig, teriyaki chicken,
rice, chop suey, and fruit salad
punch will be served at a Samoan
feast in the first floor library
Lobby Saturday May 8 at 6 p.m .
The Seattle Samoan Club will
dance to live music. "Pua," a
Samoan / Polynesian performer
and dance instructor, will entertain and "just good dancing
music" will be presented for everyone.
Diana Ameperosa , Kiku Kobata, and Tina Kruse are the planners.
Tickets are $6 for the general
public, $5 for students and .$3
for chi ldren 5 to 12 years old.
Reservations must be made by 5
p.m. May 5 at 866-5082 or 8667593.
• An Academic Interest Questionnaire is now being circulated
for all students to fill out immediately. The questionnaire, ava ilable from yo ur faculty or the information center, is partly a statistical survey, but also an effort
to help individual students match
up with pro gram s they want
nex t year .

• THE KARL MARX RECREATIONAL RUN. May 5, Wednesday. The Course: A scenic 2.1
miler starting from the Driftwood Road cleari ng; course
route is posted on the SPORTS
KIOSK. This run is for competitors and laid-backs, that is to
say: everyone! Show up at 2:30
for the 3 : 00 start.
. FREE.

TUNER & TECHNICIAN
Tuning - Cleaning
Refelting -

ALL

9
~i.r~t~MEW
&POLD
e.,.

'R.,..,

P'nr..I, Cally 11..,, "

ISO PlAItS - SAUS. IlITW

CAll JOHN GRACE
i'S " CAP ITOIWY

-

"Th. only ftatural cofttour
.aft",I."

L
5

Normol _ position
good IMllanc.

PRICES
SLASHED

on all receivers
See full Sansui line of
receivers and speakers .at

DESCO ELECTRONICS
'sale and service
2419 Harrison; Olympia
943-1393
"If you think you can beat a
Desco deal - forget it"

WESTSIDE SHOPPING CENTER

9 - 9 Daily
Sunday 7 - 7

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$14.95. $26.95
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CHECKING AND SAVI.N GS ACCOUNTS



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CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSITS



SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES



CASHIER CHECKS AND MONEY ORDERS



Notary Service

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IChild ren'J S lle, In Brown Suede S20 . 951

ON SALE PRICES
STARTING TODAY AT
TESC
BOOKSTORE

Red Apple Natural Foods
Monday - Saturday 9: 30 - 6: 00

Westside Center, Oly 357-877

SOUTH SOUND NATIONAL BANK
Eversreen Branch
·College Activities Building

866-2440

Main Office
South Sound ewer
491-41~

Black Lake Office
Black Lake Boulevard

J

943-371~

'mJens the last time JOu
hear8, ~E Willr?

o

A

BOOKS
All Kinds
over400 titles

• There will be a planning meeting for Communications and
Community, a coordinated study
to be offered next fall , on Mon-.
day , May 3 at 1 p.m. in LAB
2020. If you cannot make the
meeting, leave your name and
address at LAB 2020.

• Dave Milne , currently teaching
Marine Biology, will be talking
with Jananne Gaver about Initia tive 325 to Safeguard Nuclear
Power oil KAOS radio (89.3) at
6:30 p.m ., Wednesday, May 5 .

S
A

VINTAGE

. • Thursday, May 6 at 7 :30 p.m .
·in LH two, Friends of the Dolphin, the Sierra Club, and the
Evergreen Environmental Resource Center are co -sponsoring
a whale and wolf wildlifJ film
experience. LAST DAYS OF
THE DOLPHIN depicts the fate
of the species in the seine nets of
the yellow-fin tuna harvesters.
In 1960 it was estimated that 1.2
dolphins were killed for every
ton of tuna canned. DEATH OF
A LEGEND is a Canadian Film
Board commentary on wolves
and their present status due to
poisoning and destruction of
habitat.

• All st udents interested in the
" He lpin g Relati o n s hip Sk ills "
g roup contract for nex t year
must complete an entry questionnaire by Friday, May 7. The
forms are avai lable at Earle McNeil's office, lib . 2606.

PRESENTED BY IlCOCHlE BOX PRODUCTIONS

also' perfonning JOHN CARLETON

library Main Lobby
Saturday, May First
Eight p.m., One Dollar Fifty Cents

IN BRIEF
OLYMPIA SPORT SHOP
STOCK REDUCTION SALE
20% off on .
flY TYING SUPPLIES
ASSORTED RAINWEAR
BACKP ACKlNG ITEMS
MANY OTHER ITEMS
ON SALE
"come in and browse" HOURS
Wed . thru Sat.
10 to 5:30
719 East 4th
357-7580

Now

20%
Discount on all

Regular
Film Developing
506 N Capito l Way
943-3820

REMAINING
WHALES
RELEASED
T he two remaining Budd Inlet
wha les in ca ptivity were released
by their human custodians Monday.
The w ha les, captured in Budd
In let March 7 by Sea World , Inc.
were turned over to the University of Washington 's Dr. AI
Erickson by court order March
23. Eri ckson moved them to a
netted-off cove o n, the west side
of Sa n Juan Island where tracking radios were surgicall y atta ched to their dorsal fins.
Acco rdin g to Erickson. he and
two other researchers plan to fo llow the wha les' radio bea m day
and night fo r a month. They will
then mak e periodi c checks on the
wha les for a bout a year, afte r
which time th e radios are expected to stop working a nd fall
off.
The wha les were the subject of
loud public outcry and furor ,
much of it com ing from the Evergreen co mmunity, aft er they
were ca ptured on Budd Inlet
March 7 by Don Go ldsberry a nd
his Sea World crew. Many of the
whale lovers, especia lly those attending the First International
Orca (Kille r whale) Symposium
held at Evergreen March 12 and
13, claimed the wha les had been
harassed and possibly harmed
during th e capture operation.
Go ldsberry claimed otherwise.
The fight to free the whales
was taken to court when suits
were fil ed by both the state Atto rn ey General and Evergreen
stud ent Mark Overland. T.he
cuurt ordered the whales turned

ALL WAYS TRAVEL SERVICE. lilt:.

WESTSIDE SMDPPING CENTER

OLYMPIA. WASHINGTON

943.8700

ANNOUNCEMENTS
over to the custody of Dr. Erickso n fo r release within 60 da ys .
Erickson claims the whales and
the rad io packs get alo ng to ge th er "beautifully. " He isn't sure
just wha t they'lI do after relea se
but expects them to cruise San
Juan waters for a few days to
"get their beari ngs ."
T he possibility that the whales
might rejoin their old pod (family) has been raised by recent
sightings of killer whales near the
Sa n Juan cove . It is thought by
some that these might be the old
pod awaiting their co mrades' re lease.

resent a tives, consumer representati ves, and alternative organizers.
Organizers of the conference
are John Adams, Carla Becker,
Tom Clingman, Bill Knowles,
Tessa Martinez, Cathy Paulson,
Tom Robinson , and Thorn
Thacker.
For chi ld care information call
866 -0303 . For other quest ions
call 943-6772 .

. THIRD WORLD
CONFERENCE rIN MAY

WOMEN'S SOCCER
VICTORIOUS
The Evergreen Women's Soccer Team won their game against
th e Renton Mudders at the
Renton Stadium last weekend.
The game was a close 2 to 1 victo ry . Bot h goals were scored by
player / coach Barbara Wooton,
The first goal was scored off a
rebound from a shot by Pat
Moodie. The ball went straight
to Wooton and she pounded it
in, The second score was made
when a slide tackle passed an opposing fullback to push the ball
into the goal.
The tea m is looking forward
to their next game Saturday
against the University of Washington Huskies on the Evergreen
playfield at noon.

FOOD CONFERENCE
SET MAY 8 - 9
The Food Conference, May 8
and 9 at Olympia Community
Center isn't going to be a "gathering of the tribes," says Thorn
Thacker spokesman for the Community Resource Conference.
Thacker says this conference is
for Olympia , to bring resources
studen ts have out to the community. The Food Conference is
the first in a continuing series of
conferences to build community
by giving people the opportun it y
to meet each other and organize.
Future plans a re for child ca re
and health care conferences .

On May 22 a conference entitled " Third World People and
the American Legal System: Immigration , Citizenship, and
Treaty Rights and Laws" will be
held at the Olympia YMCA
Friendship Hall.
The purposes of the conference are: 1) to educate the surrounding community (Olympia,
Lacey, Tumwater, etc.) about
racist and discriminatory laws
that America has had in the
past, 2) to find out about current laws and legal hassles, 3) to
educate Third World people to
the commonalities of our history , to build stronger Third
World community ties, 4) to put
together a follow-up paper
wh ich includes highlights from
the conference, methods for
making positive legal changes,
and community organizations
and social services that can help
in making those changes.
At this time, a core group of
people have been organizing the
conference, contacting speakers,
ordering films, etc. We'd like to
see more people get involved
with this project since it has relevancy for all community members,
All persons who are interested
in the conference are enco uraged
to come to a n organizational
meeting on Tuesday , April 27 at
noon in Lib. 3205 , or drop by
the Third World Coa lition office
(lib. 3236) or the Asian Coaliti on office (lib . 3209) for more
informa tion .

Evergreener enjoys one of Olym pia 's first sunny spring days.
A written statement to participants says, "We have all seen
major changes in the food industry in the last few years,
what with the rising food prices
and virtual disappearance of the
corner grocery store. Most cons umers don't understand why
food shortages exist and why
they are paying more and more
for less and less food. And it's
hard to see who is involved in
the increase in food prices,
w hether it be the farmer, the
wholesaler or the retailer. It's
hard to know what effect we as
consumers can have on the food
industry."
Panel discussions are titled:
"Why are our food prices so
high 7", "Cooperative food distribution ", and "Cooperative approaches to food production a nd
supply, " The Theater of the Unemployed will perform "That's
Agri - Biz. " Groups will be organ ized for commun it y gardens, recycling , farmer's market , and
food co -o ps.
Pa rti cipant s include retail rep-

S

I'4f3S
0
_'"FOot Tfft S

P

•••••



N

ALBUMS
JAZZ
FOLK

ROCK
over
800 Titles

• Planning and informational
meetings for next fall's Community Advocacy Program will be
held with Russ Fox and Hap
Freund every Wednesday 1 - 3 in
Lab 3065,
• Sunday, May 2, Burlington
Northern Railroad represen tatives will present their plans for
deveopment 01 the Nisqually
Delta to an open meeting. The
presentation will be at 5 :30 at
the United Church .of Christ,
11th and Capitol Way.
Saturday, May 1, Burlington
Northern Railroad representatives
will lead a walking tour of the
lands adjoin in g the Nisqually
Delta at 2 p.m . Hikers should
meet at the VIPs parking lot at
the top of Marvin Road .

i

,;:1

·1

Reverend Chumley sharpens
knives for trick.
• The ann ual Seniors Art Show
in the Library Gallery is scheduled for May 10 - 28. Contact
Lynda Weinman, Exhibi ts Coordinator, at 866-8229 or 8666129 if you have work to enter.
The number of pieces allowable
per person will vary according to
size and media(s) , Selection is on
a lirst come basis, so call soon
for an appointment to review
your work. The deadline is
May 5 ,

Summer Internships Available
News from the Office of Cooperative Education
Here are a few points to remember when looking for a summer
Internship:
When using the Co-op Catalog, remember that it is not a
"shopping list, " it's a reference 'guide. The catalog refers to both
past a nd currently available Internships. We also have many new
Internships that have not been listed since publication of the catalog last fall.The first ten pages of the catalog are not listings of possible Internships, but they are there to help you, Take ten minutes a nd ·
read them, they may save you from a number 47 Evergreen headache.
Internships, as you know, are on-the -job learning experiences.
So when you come to tal k to a Coordinator, let us know what
type of job you had in mind, and specifically what academic gains
yo u would like from the Int ern experience. What will ,he Internship teach you ?
Have a faculty spon sor lined up before you start looking for an
Internship . It will save a lot of unnecessary hassles .
W o ndering what kinds of Internsh ips Evergreeners have done?
Ask Palll Nie lson what his Research Internship with the Port land
Zoological Socie ty wa s li ke, or ask Charles Graef about being a
Director fo r Thurston County's Work-Release Program. And if
you wa nt to hea r a self-developed Internship in action, tune to
KRAB radio (l07 .7FM) on Saturdays from 4 - 5 p.m . and listen
to Tamara Swift's program , " With These Hands: The Working
Class View on Current Issues."

• Wednesday, May 5 Pearl Vincent and Larry Stenberg will discuss the Working Climate DTF
at the Sounding Board meeting
in CAB 108 at 8:30 a.m. Also
Ed Kormondy will discuss the
status of academic dean selection.
• Kalua pig, teriyaki chicken,
rice, chop suey, and fruit salad
punch will be served at a Samoan
feast in the first floor library
Lobby Saturday May 8 at 6 p.m .
The Seattle Samoan Club will
dance to live music. "Pua," a
Samoan / Polynesian performer
and dance instructor, will entertain and "just good dancing
music" will be presented for everyone.
Diana Ameperosa , Kiku Kobata, and Tina Kruse are the planners.
Tickets are $6 for the general
public, $5 for students and .$3
for chi ldren 5 to 12 years old.
Reservations must be made by 5
p.m. May 5 at 866-5082 or 8667593.
• An Academic Interest Questionnaire is now being circulated
for all students to fill out immediately. The questionnaire, ava ilable from yo ur faculty or the information center, is partly a statistical survey, but also an effort
to help individual students match
up with pro gram s they want
nex t year .

• THE KARL MARX RECREATIONAL RUN. May 5, Wednesday. The Course: A scenic 2.1
miler starting from the Driftwood Road cleari ng; course
route is posted on the SPORTS
KIOSK. This run is for competitors and laid-backs, that is to
say: everyone! Show up at 2:30
for the 3 : 00 start.
. FREE.

TUNER & TECHNICIAN
Tuning - Cleaning
Refelting -

ALL

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ISO PlAItS - SAUS. IlITW

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i'S " CAP ITOIWY

-

"Th. only ftatural cofttour
.aft",I."

L
5

Normol _ position
good IMllanc.

PRICES
SLASHED

on all receivers
See full Sansui line of
receivers and speakers .at

DESCO ELECTRONICS
'sale and service
2419 Harrison; Olympia
943-1393
"If you think you can beat a
Desco deal - forget it"

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STARTING TODAY AT
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Monday - Saturday 9: 30 - 6: 00

Westside Center, Oly 357-877

SOUTH SOUND NATIONAL BANK
Eversreen Branch
·College Activities Building

866-2440

Main Office
South Sound ewer
491-41~

Black Lake Office
Black Lake Boulevard

J

943-371~

'mJens the last time JOu
hear8, ~E Willr?

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All Kinds
over400 titles

• There will be a planning meeting for Communications and
Community, a coordinated study
to be offered next fall , on Mon-.
day , May 3 at 1 p.m. in LAB
2020. If you cannot make the
meeting, leave your name and
address at LAB 2020.

• Dave Milne , currently teaching
Marine Biology, will be talking
with Jananne Gaver about Initia tive 325 to Safeguard Nuclear
Power oil KAOS radio (89.3) at
6:30 p.m ., Wednesday, May 5 .

S
A

VINTAGE

. • Thursday, May 6 at 7 :30 p.m .
·in LH two, Friends of the Dolphin, the Sierra Club, and the
Evergreen Environmental Resource Center are co -sponsoring
a whale and wolf wildlifJ film
experience. LAST DAYS OF
THE DOLPHIN depicts the fate
of the species in the seine nets of
the yellow-fin tuna harvesters.
In 1960 it was estimated that 1.2
dolphins were killed for every
ton of tuna canned. DEATH OF
A LEGEND is a Canadian Film
Board commentary on wolves
and their present status due to
poisoning and destruction of
habitat.

• All st udents interested in the
" He lpin g Relati o n s hip Sk ills "
g roup contract for nex t year
must complete an entry questionnaire by Friday, May 7. The
forms are avai lable at Earle McNeil's office, lib . 2606.

PRESENTED BY IlCOCHlE BOX PRODUCTIONS

also' perfonning JOHN CARLETON

library Main Lobby
Saturday, May First
Eight p.m., One Dollar Fifty Cents

ENTERTAINMENT

KENDO

'"PJ!fPHIJUSE

The Art of Sword Fighting

Arts and Entertainment

-

50 centsf

ON CAMPUS
Friday, Apri I 30
200 MOTELS ( 1971 , 99 min ,)
Frank Zap pa's su rre'! li slic musical
co medy about a touring rock group
(The Mothers) sluck in Centervi ll e .
See rev i ew lhi s pag e . Starring
Ringo Starr as Larry the Dwarf.
With Theodore Bikel , Th e Roya l
Philharmon ic Orchestra, Mark Vol man , Howa rd Kaylan, George Duke,
Ayns ley Dunbar , Marti n Licke rt , Ian
Underwood, Don Preston , Jimmy
Carl Black , Ji m Pons , Motorhead
Sherwood, and Keith Moon . A l so :
rarel y seen animation by Cal Schenkel, and "Popeye the Sailor Meets
Sinbad the Sai lor ," by Dave Fleischer , LH one, 3 , 7, and 9 : 30 p.m .,
50 cent s

"

Raudenbush

Motor Supply

Ride

highonff,,,,~

otes

Performing Kendo in the back -yard.

As with other japanese arts,
such as archery , Aikido , calligraphy , painting and the tea ceremony : Kendo embodies th e
uni on of the sp irit, the mind a nd
the body .

by Michael T, Smithson
Kendo is the art of japanese
sword -f ighting derived from the
Sam ura i of old japan. This art
or iginated around the fourth or
fifth centu ry , but was not fully
developed u l1 til the 1300's.

Monro- Mal(" air-adjustable
monster shocks. Good for
extra inches Good for
performance. Beauty
for your beast
from Monroe.

The
Samurai
(Japanese
Knights) extended the discipline
an d patience they learned in
training to their everyday lives,
and fr om this evo lved a code of
ethics called Bushido, This code
is so metimes likened to the chiva lry of European knights.

412 S, Cherry

The true spirit of Kendo is a
training process towa rd human
perfection, never of murderous
in t e nt , but peaceful-minded .
Kendo d oes no t necessarily teac h
o ne to cut a n enemy, but rather
to cut the enemy w ithin o neself.

943.3650 Open 8 · 8 daily & Sunday

,

The practice of Kendo now is
composed of three separate
parts; keiko, kata and iai , Keiko
is the most w idely pract iced
form in Japan and the United
States, Armor and a spli t-bamboo sword are used and actual
co nt ac t is made between the two
o pponents. This can become extremely fast , and a good eye is
needed to follow the co urse of
events.

Today Kendo is practiced lo ca ll y in dojos (practice halls) in
Seattle , Tacoma, Vancouver,
B.C., the University of Washington and here at Evergreen ,
Two excellent teachers usually
travel from Tacoma to run th e
pra ctices here
Mr. Rod
Omoto, seventh degree blackbelt and Mr. Mas Tanabe, fifth
degree bl ack -be lt
Practices a re held every Thursday from 7 - 9 p,m , in CAB 108.
Anyone interested is welcome to
co me and join or watch .
A Kendo demonstration will
be held at 2 p.m . today on Red
Square (or th e main library
Lobby is weather is bad ).

FM STEREO/FM-AM RECEIVER
Sug. List. 560

Novv only
and

OVER COST

Thru May 2nd.

$406

Electronics

Reg. 700

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Special
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quantity limited
Tape Machin es
and Acces s orie ~
Cassette Machine s
10% Over Cos t
all
Mi xe rs Microphones
,
and Blank tapes
10% over cost

All 4 Channel Decks
10% OVER COST

$400 $335
250 193
300 231
TC - 3530
400 338
TC - 377
500 369
TC - 645
900 752
TC - 756
TC _ 756 - 2
752
900
836
1 ,000
TC - 758

TC - 270
TC - 280

STR - 7015
STR - 7025
STR - 703 5
STR - 7045
STR - 7055
STR - 7055A

reg.

10%

$220
260
300
370
450
460

$160
189
225
278
338
345

All Integrated Amplifiers & Tuners
10 % over cost

Tu rn lables
PS
PS
PS
PS

- 1100
- 5520
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- 4750

Can Make You Crazy
by Matt G roening
Fran k Z appa 's 200 MOTELS IS
beil1g presellted Friday , April 30,
in Leetllre Hall Olle . SIIO WS are
sch eduled at 3, 7. and 9:30 p.m.
Admission is 50 cents.

Th e essence of 200 MOTEL S is
very difficult to ca pture . Frank
Z app a 's '1971 feature-Ienglh
mov ie ope rates on so many lev els that iso lating any element
wi ll not do it justice. It is a
musica l / visua l / comic
extrav aganza th at compresses time and
space into a 99-minute pulsa ting
lump , combining real incidents
a nd Zappa 's fantasies into a surrealistic documentary un like any
o ther movie ever seen.
Frank Zappa has been educat ing and entertaining the world
with his rock group the Mothers
of Invention since 1964. Hi s
compositions, which link class ical music with some of the more
popular varieties, are at their
best un surpassed by any serious
composer alive today , Absurdity
and humor engulf almost everything Zappa does , but the per cep ti ve listener will discover that
behind th e controlled madness
Za ppa is deadly se rious.

SONY
STR-7065

SONY®
10'%

Iai is usually practiced with a
sword a nd is performed alone.
This form of Kendo requires and
deve lops a grea t dea l of st illness
a nd concentration.

Kata is a lso practiced with two
people, but without armor. A
wooden sword replaces the split
bamboo sword used in keiko.
The m ove ments of th e participants are predeter mined , but
they must act as one to perform
the actions properly and safely.

.

?OETRY

FilMS

$)00

$ 77

190
160

J2O.

300
and more

mb audio
4422 6th AVE. S.l. IN lACEY
~~CAU. 491-0991

142

218

200 MOTELS is Zappa's most
amb iti o us art event to da te. Video taped in seven days in an
English studio , it is the first feature -lengt h film to utilize recent
adva nces in tape-to -film technol ogy. The result is a film with a
uniqu e look, full of spectacu lar
effec ts un o btainable in any other
way, T he lenses give the film a
fl a tness of im age that is perfect
fo r th e disto rted vi sion Zappa
wa nts us to ex perie nce .

Za ppa him se lf appears in th e
fi lm only during certain musical
se quence s. Larry the Dwarf ,
p layed by Ringo Starr, serves as
a bogus Zappa the rest of the
time_ Theodore Bikel plays Rance
Muhammitz, a uniformed Devil
who tempts various Mothers
with strange food fro m a steaming briefcase . The Who's Keith
Moon plays th e Hot Nun, Jimmy
Carl Black is Lonesome Cowboy
Burt , a nd asso rted underling s
romp a bout as newls , Ku Klux
Klanners, and vacuum cleaners.
The monolith from Stanley Kubrick's 2001 makes a cameo appearance .
Za ppa 's cynical humor leaves
no one unscathed, including himself. Some will be offended by
his misogynistic tendencies, but
he makes fun ot men and their
sex uality as well. The song
"Pe nis Dimension" satirizes the
anxious concern of men about
the size of their genitals, and
throughout the movie the musicians' quest for instant sexua l
gratif ication is mercilessly exposed,
The orchestral music, p layed
by the Royal Philharmonic,
swirls throughout the mov ie in
jagged , rapidly changing time
sig natures, and recalls the works
of Edgard Varese and Igor Stra vinsky, as well as the dozens of
ot her composers they hav e influ enced, The rock music is well pla yed and gives Zappa the opportunity to get off a few bri ef
but brilli a nt g uitar so los, Mark
Volman a nd Howard Kaylan ,
formerly with the Turtles, lead
the singi ng throughout and are
at the ce nt er of most of the
comed y sequ ences.

This di sto rted visio n revolves
aro un d w ha t it is li ke to be in
the Mothers of Inventio n , "To ur ing can make you crazy," explai ns the na rrator at the begin nin g of th e movie , "Th at is what
200 M O TEL S is a ll abo ut. " After
crossing time zo nes from one
co ntinent to another, sleeping in
the sterile d ungeons known as
motel rooms for months on end,
and ea ting the sa me greasy mystery burgers night after night, all
towns blend into o ne gigantic,
malignant Centerv ille, U, S, A.

Recreat ional Facility (a concentra tion camp) to help croon the
cl os in g in s pirational prayer.
"Lord, have mercy on the fate of
this movie," Bikel sings, and
gathering momentum , the chorus
joins in:

The Centerville in 200 MOTELS is an extensio n of Zappa's
real -li fe nightmare. "A Real Nice
Place to Raise Your Kids Up" is
th e town motto, and its cafes
have names like Redneck Eats,
"This to wn ," sing the Mothers,
"is a sealed tuna sandwich _"

Lord, have mercy
On the hipp ies and faggo ts
And th e dykes and the weird
Little child"en they grow
Help the black man
Help the poor man
Help the milk man
Help the door man

All too soon Theodo re Bikel
turn s to the camera and says,
" Thi s, as you might ha ve
guessed, is Ihe end of the mov ie,"
The entire cast is gat hered with
the orchestra in the Centerville

Help the lonely , Yleglected
Old farts that I know.

But, yo u may ask, will I, a
normal person , enjoy 200 MOTELS? Frank Zappa answers:
"Fo r the audience that a lready
knows and appreciates the Mothers, 200 MOTELS will provide a
logica l extension to our co ncerts
and recordings . For the aud ience
that doesn't know, doesn' t care,
but still takes a chance every
o nce in a while on a new idea,
200 MOTELS will provide a surprising introduction to the group
and ils work ,
" For those who can' t stand the
Mothers and have a lways felt we
were nothing more than a bunch
of tone-deaf pe rverts , 200 MO TELS will probably confirm their
worst suspicions. "
Rarely seen animation by Ca l
Schenkel is on the sa me bill with
200 MOTELS . Schenkel, whose
brilliant drawings and paintings
were featured in a special exhibition in the Library Art Gallery
until last week , designed the
"Dental Hygiene Dilemma" cartoon sequence in 200 MOTELS ,
the best part of the movie _ Cartoons scheduled include a Frank
Zappa TV commercial and an
excerpt from the film Th e Hu mall Ape,

CLASSIFIED ADS
Woman needs room in co oper ative house with responsible
people with social and spiritual
consciousness, Clean s pac es
and good vibes necessary , Call
Marita co llect (Tacoma) 5374765 . Need by May 1st.

Monday . May 3
UNION MAIDS (1975, 48 m in .)
Using 1930's archival loo tag e and
labor musi c of th e period, three
wome n tell of f ighting tenant evicli on s and th e orga n iza t ion o f th e
CIO (Co ngress of Indust rial Organizat io ns). Student Charlotte Mill s
and co mmunity member Carol yn
Hall wil l speak abo ut their work in
an O ly mpia nu rsi ng h ome fol lowi ng
th e fi lm . Presented by EPIC . LH
one, 7 :30 p .m . FRE E .
Tu esday, May 4
THE LAST AMERICAN HERO
(19 73 , 97 min .) Jef f Bri dges stars in
thi s movie about the real -l ife stock
car race r Jun ior Johns(, n , based on
an arti cle by To m Wolfe in hi s fi rst
boo k , "Kand y-Ko l orec Tanger ineFlake St ream line Bab y." Direc ted
by Lamont John son . Presented by
The Academ ic Fi lm Series . LH one,
2 and 7: 30 p .m . FREE.
IN OLYMPIA
ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCK·
OO'S NEST to May 12 . Olympi c
Theatre , 35 7-3422 .
ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN .
Capito t Theatre, 357-7161.
ECHOES OF A SUMMER, about
a dyi ng g irl , and THE DOVE . State
Theatre, 357-4010.
BtTE THE BULLET w ith Gene
Hackman, and THE STEPFORD
WIVES with Paula Pren t iss and
Katherine Ro ss. La cey Driv e- in ,
491-3161 .
HEARTS OF THE WEST an d THE
MOONRUNNERS . Sunset Drive -in ,
357-8302.
RADIO AND TELEVISION
Thursday, April 29
HOWARD BURROWS and TOM
FOOTE p resent music and stories
by st udents in the Country Music
Conlract. KAOS-FM , 7 - 9 p.m .
Friday, April 30
CRUSTY'S COOP with host Evergreen studen t Carl Cook. Ton ight:
"The Go lem," a silent horror c las sic; "Santa Fe Trail; " Chapter VII
of · 'The Phantom Creeps ; " a videotape of an original rock opera by
Olympia High School st udents ;
an d a f il m parodying Star Trek,
also made by Olympia High School
students. Also, the winner of the
Name- the-Chicken Contest. Channel 6 (telecable), 11 p.m . to 3 a.m .
Saturday , May 1
THE ALL NITE ' JAMM with host
Carl Cook . Loca l I ive music .
KAOS-FM , 10 p. m . to 4 a.m.
Sunday, May 2
NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC
BROADCAST,
Mi chae l Tilso n
Th omas con ducting . Resp ighi : Th e
Fountains o f Rom e; Nielso n: Flute
Co ncerto, Jul i us Baker, f luti s t ;
Brahms: Symphony NO .4 . KAOSFM , 7: 30 p.m.

ON ~AM PU S
Th ursday, April 29
ROBYN LlPNER and HUGH
NICOLL read th eir poetry . Spon so red by The Center fo r Poetry In
Perf o rm an ce. B o ard Roo m . L i b
3112 , 7 p.m . FREE .
Thursday , May 6
JODY ALIESAN and MARCIA
LEVENSON read t heir poetry . Spon sored by The Center 'Ior Poe try in
Perf o rman ce . B oard Roo m , Lib .
3112,7 p .m. FREE .
MUSIC
ON CAMPU S
Thu rsday, April 29
JORGEN KRUSE , a jazz-rock tliO
featu ring Jo rgen Kruse on electnc
k eyboa r d and sy nt hes i zer, Dean
Tsapralis on perc uss ion , and Ch uck
Deardorf on elec tr ic bass . ASH
Coffeehaus. 8 p. m , 75 ce nts .
Friday, Aplil 30
DUMI AND THE MINANZI MARIMBA ENSEMBLE bene fit dan ce
Wine and beer wil l be SOld Fourt h
Fl oor Library. 8 : 30 p.m .. $1 50
Sat urday . May 1
LtNDA WATERFALL In concert
Also: Joh n Carl el on , sin ger I gU I'
ta ri st. L ibrary Ma in Lobby . 8 p .m ,
$1.50.
Sunday, May 2
ISRAEL MOL TR IE , c laSS ic al gU Itari st. Firs l of fo ur weekly c las sical
m USIC concert s sponsored by the
Gig Commi ssio n as pa rt 01 the Colleg ium Series. Library Mai n Lobby .
2 p .m . Admiss io , $1 for sl udents
and se ni or c ili zens . $1.50 general .
Under 5 free.
CHARLES CHIEN , a n eig hth
grader at Ni squall y Midd le Sch oo l ,
presents pian o works by Bee thoven ,
Gersh win, and Ch op in In hi s o ne
hou r rec ital. Lib rary Main Lobby, 8
p .m . FREE .
DAY LATE AND A DOLLAR
SHORT(formerly Th e New Bl ue Jazz
Devils) with Bob Jas tad o n te nor
sax, Mike Canfield on bass, and
Jim Don ey on drums . Oth er music ians are welcome to sit in . ASH
Coffeehaus , 8 p. m . F REE .
Wed ne sday, May 5
KtTTY PRESTON, a recent Evergreen graduate , p tays p iano works
by Bach, Bartok, Beetho ven , and
Chopin in a one hour recital LIbrary Main Lobby, 8 p .m . F REE .
IN OLYMPIA
Friday , April 30
SOUTHFORK , a Bellingham b luegrass group , in c onc ert . App le,am
Folk Center, 220 E. Uni o n. Doors
open 8 p .m ., main act 8:25 , $1 .
Saturday, May 1
SARAH JONES , folk singer / guitarist , and INISFAIL , a tno tha t
p lays tradit iona l and fo l k music of
Ireland . Applejam F olk Center .
Do ors open 8 p .m . , first act starts
8 : 25,$1 .
ART
ON CAMPUS
AFRICAN TRIBAL SCULPTURE
25 wood-carved wo rks from Iribes
in the area between Sierra Leone
an d the Congo in Central Africa
Through May 7. Library Art Ga ll ery .
ART FROM CHINA Se l ected
posters , c h ildren 's art. and stamps
lrom th e collect ion o f Lac ey res i dent Jean Tow ne. Thro ug h Apri l 30.
Libra ry Upper Gallery .


ANTIQUE SQUEAK TOYS , rubber
plaything s for infant s and young
dogs from th e coll ect ion of the late
Joe Bem is . Joe Bem is Memor ial
Gallery, open 24 hou rs.

Need so m eone to "hold" your
house for s umm er until you
co m e back in fall ? We need a
LARG ElS H house for SUMMER
- call 866-5188 and we can
talk . Tha'lks. Ask for Kathy or
Judy.

til"
OW
'DEl-I
too west

4H! 357·6616

10 to 6
Mon. thru Fri.

12 to 6
Sat.

ENTERTAINMENT

KENDO

'"PJ!fPHIJUSE

The Art of Sword Fighting

Arts and Entertainment

-

50 centsf

ON CAMPUS
Friday, Apri I 30
200 MOTELS ( 1971 , 99 min ,)
Frank Zap pa's su rre'! li slic musical
co medy about a touring rock group
(The Mothers) sluck in Centervi ll e .
See rev i ew lhi s pag e . Starring
Ringo Starr as Larry the Dwarf.
With Theodore Bikel , Th e Roya l
Philharmon ic Orchestra, Mark Vol man , Howa rd Kaylan, George Duke,
Ayns ley Dunbar , Marti n Licke rt , Ian
Underwood, Don Preston , Jimmy
Carl Black , Ji m Pons , Motorhead
Sherwood, and Keith Moon . A l so :
rarel y seen animation by Cal Schenkel, and "Popeye the Sailor Meets
Sinbad the Sai lor ," by Dave Fleischer , LH one, 3 , 7, and 9 : 30 p.m .,
50 cent s

"

Raudenbush

Motor Supply

Ride

highonff,,,,~

otes

Performing Kendo in the back -yard.

As with other japanese arts,
such as archery , Aikido , calligraphy , painting and the tea ceremony : Kendo embodies th e
uni on of the sp irit, the mind a nd
the body .

by Michael T, Smithson
Kendo is the art of japanese
sword -f ighting derived from the
Sam ura i of old japan. This art
or iginated around the fourth or
fifth centu ry , but was not fully
developed u l1 til the 1300's.

Monro- Mal(" air-adjustable
monster shocks. Good for
extra inches Good for
performance. Beauty
for your beast
from Monroe.

The
Samurai
(Japanese
Knights) extended the discipline
an d patience they learned in
training to their everyday lives,
and fr om this evo lved a code of
ethics called Bushido, This code
is so metimes likened to the chiva lry of European knights.

412 S, Cherry

The true spirit of Kendo is a
training process towa rd human
perfection, never of murderous
in t e nt , but peaceful-minded .
Kendo d oes no t necessarily teac h
o ne to cut a n enemy, but rather
to cut the enemy w ithin o neself.

943.3650 Open 8 · 8 daily & Sunday

,

The practice of Kendo now is
composed of three separate
parts; keiko, kata and iai , Keiko
is the most w idely pract iced
form in Japan and the United
States, Armor and a spli t-bamboo sword are used and actual
co nt ac t is made between the two
o pponents. This can become extremely fast , and a good eye is
needed to follow the co urse of
events.

Today Kendo is practiced lo ca ll y in dojos (practice halls) in
Seattle , Tacoma, Vancouver,
B.C., the University of Washington and here at Evergreen ,
Two excellent teachers usually
travel from Tacoma to run th e
pra ctices here
Mr. Rod
Omoto, seventh degree blackbelt and Mr. Mas Tanabe, fifth
degree bl ack -be lt
Practices a re held every Thursday from 7 - 9 p,m , in CAB 108.
Anyone interested is welcome to
co me and join or watch .
A Kendo demonstration will
be held at 2 p.m . today on Red
Square (or th e main library
Lobby is weather is bad ).

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Can Make You Crazy
by Matt G roening
Fran k Z appa 's 200 MOTELS IS
beil1g presellted Friday , April 30,
in Leetllre Hall Olle . SIIO WS are
sch eduled at 3, 7. and 9:30 p.m.
Admission is 50 cents.

Th e essence of 200 MOTEL S is
very difficult to ca pture . Frank
Z app a 's '1971 feature-Ienglh
mov ie ope rates on so many lev els that iso lating any element
wi ll not do it justice. It is a
musica l / visua l / comic
extrav aganza th at compresses time and
space into a 99-minute pulsa ting
lump , combining real incidents
a nd Zappa 's fantasies into a surrealistic documentary un like any
o ther movie ever seen.
Frank Zappa has been educat ing and entertaining the world
with his rock group the Mothers
of Invention since 1964. Hi s
compositions, which link class ical music with some of the more
popular varieties, are at their
best un surpassed by any serious
composer alive today , Absurdity
and humor engulf almost everything Zappa does , but the per cep ti ve listener will discover that
behind th e controlled madness
Za ppa is deadly se rious.

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Iai is usually practiced with a
sword a nd is performed alone.
This form of Kendo requires and
deve lops a grea t dea l of st illness
a nd concentration.

Kata is a lso practiced with two
people, but without armor. A
wooden sword replaces the split
bamboo sword used in keiko.
The m ove ments of th e participants are predeter mined , but
they must act as one to perform
the actions properly and safely.

.

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218

200 MOTELS is Zappa's most
amb iti o us art event to da te. Video taped in seven days in an
English studio , it is the first feature -lengt h film to utilize recent
adva nces in tape-to -film technol ogy. The result is a film with a
uniqu e look, full of spectacu lar
effec ts un o btainable in any other
way, T he lenses give the film a
fl a tness of im age that is perfect
fo r th e disto rted vi sion Zappa
wa nts us to ex perie nce .

Za ppa him se lf appears in th e
fi lm only during certain musical
se quence s. Larry the Dwarf ,
p layed by Ringo Starr, serves as
a bogus Zappa the rest of the
time_ Theodore Bikel plays Rance
Muhammitz, a uniformed Devil
who tempts various Mothers
with strange food fro m a steaming briefcase . The Who's Keith
Moon plays th e Hot Nun, Jimmy
Carl Black is Lonesome Cowboy
Burt , a nd asso rted underling s
romp a bout as newls , Ku Klux
Klanners, and vacuum cleaners.
The monolith from Stanley Kubrick's 2001 makes a cameo appearance .
Za ppa 's cynical humor leaves
no one unscathed, including himself. Some will be offended by
his misogynistic tendencies, but
he makes fun ot men and their
sex uality as well. The song
"Pe nis Dimension" satirizes the
anxious concern of men about
the size of their genitals, and
throughout the movie the musicians' quest for instant sexua l
gratif ication is mercilessly exposed,
The orchestral music, p layed
by the Royal Philharmonic,
swirls throughout the mov ie in
jagged , rapidly changing time
sig natures, and recalls the works
of Edgard Varese and Igor Stra vinsky, as well as the dozens of
ot her composers they hav e influ enced, The rock music is well pla yed and gives Zappa the opportunity to get off a few bri ef
but brilli a nt g uitar so los, Mark
Volman a nd Howard Kaylan ,
formerly with the Turtles, lead
the singi ng throughout and are
at the ce nt er of most of the
comed y sequ ences.

This di sto rted visio n revolves
aro un d w ha t it is li ke to be in
the Mothers of Inventio n , "To ur ing can make you crazy," explai ns the na rrator at the begin nin g of th e movie , "Th at is what
200 M O TEL S is a ll abo ut. " After
crossing time zo nes from one
co ntinent to another, sleeping in
the sterile d ungeons known as
motel rooms for months on end,
and ea ting the sa me greasy mystery burgers night after night, all
towns blend into o ne gigantic,
malignant Centerv ille, U, S, A.

Recreat ional Facility (a concentra tion camp) to help croon the
cl os in g in s pirational prayer.
"Lord, have mercy on the fate of
this movie," Bikel sings, and
gathering momentum , the chorus
joins in:

The Centerville in 200 MOTELS is an extensio n of Zappa's
real -li fe nightmare. "A Real Nice
Place to Raise Your Kids Up" is
th e town motto, and its cafes
have names like Redneck Eats,
"This to wn ," sing the Mothers,
"is a sealed tuna sandwich _"

Lord, have mercy
On the hipp ies and faggo ts
And th e dykes and the weird
Little child"en they grow
Help the black man
Help the poor man
Help the milk man
Help the door man

All too soon Theodo re Bikel
turn s to the camera and says,
" Thi s, as you might ha ve
guessed, is Ihe end of the mov ie,"
The entire cast is gat hered with
the orchestra in the Centerville

Help the lonely , Yleglected
Old farts that I know.

But, yo u may ask, will I, a
normal person , enjoy 200 MOTELS? Frank Zappa answers:
"Fo r the audience that a lready
knows and appreciates the Mothers, 200 MOTELS will provide a
logica l extension to our co ncerts
and recordings . For the aud ience
that doesn't know, doesn' t care,
but still takes a chance every
o nce in a while on a new idea,
200 MOTELS will provide a surprising introduction to the group
and ils work ,
" For those who can' t stand the
Mothers and have a lways felt we
were nothing more than a bunch
of tone-deaf pe rverts , 200 MO TELS will probably confirm their
worst suspicions. "
Rarely seen animation by Ca l
Schenkel is on the sa me bill with
200 MOTELS . Schenkel, whose
brilliant drawings and paintings
were featured in a special exhibition in the Library Art Gallery
until last week , designed the
"Dental Hygiene Dilemma" cartoon sequence in 200 MOTELS ,
the best part of the movie _ Cartoons scheduled include a Frank
Zappa TV commercial and an
excerpt from the film Th e Hu mall Ape,

CLASSIFIED ADS
Woman needs room in co oper ative house with responsible
people with social and spiritual
consciousness, Clean s pac es
and good vibes necessary , Call
Marita co llect (Tacoma) 5374765 . Need by May 1st.

Monday . May 3
UNION MAIDS (1975, 48 m in .)
Using 1930's archival loo tag e and
labor musi c of th e period, three
wome n tell of f ighting tenant evicli on s and th e orga n iza t ion o f th e
CIO (Co ngress of Indust rial Organizat io ns). Student Charlotte Mill s
and co mmunity member Carol yn
Hall wil l speak abo ut their work in
an O ly mpia nu rsi ng h ome fol lowi ng
th e fi lm . Presented by EPIC . LH
one, 7 :30 p .m . FRE E .
Tu esday, May 4
THE LAST AMERICAN HERO
(19 73 , 97 min .) Jef f Bri dges stars in
thi s movie about the real -l ife stock
car race r Jun ior Johns(, n , based on
an arti cle by To m Wolfe in hi s fi rst
boo k , "Kand y-Ko l orec Tanger ineFlake St ream line Bab y." Direc ted
by Lamont John son . Presented by
The Academ ic Fi lm Series . LH one,
2 and 7: 30 p .m . FREE.
IN OLYMPIA
ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCK·
OO'S NEST to May 12 . Olympi c
Theatre , 35 7-3422 .
ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN .
Capito t Theatre, 357-7161.
ECHOES OF A SUMMER, about
a dyi ng g irl , and THE DOVE . State
Theatre, 357-4010.
BtTE THE BULLET w ith Gene
Hackman, and THE STEPFORD
WIVES with Paula Pren t iss and
Katherine Ro ss. La cey Driv e- in ,
491-3161 .
HEARTS OF THE WEST an d THE
MOONRUNNERS . Sunset Drive -in ,
357-8302.
RADIO AND TELEVISION
Thursday, April 29
HOWARD BURROWS and TOM
FOOTE p resent music and stories
by st udents in the Country Music
Conlract. KAOS-FM , 7 - 9 p.m .
Friday, April 30
CRUSTY'S COOP with host Evergreen studen t Carl Cook. Ton ight:
"The Go lem," a silent horror c las sic; "Santa Fe Trail; " Chapter VII
of · 'The Phantom Creeps ; " a videotape of an original rock opera by
Olympia High School st udents ;
an d a f il m parodying Star Trek,
also made by Olympia High School
students. Also, the winner of the
Name- the-Chicken Contest. Channel 6 (telecable), 11 p.m . to 3 a.m .
Saturday , May 1
THE ALL NITE ' JAMM with host
Carl Cook . Loca l I ive music .
KAOS-FM , 10 p. m . to 4 a.m.
Sunday, May 2
NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC
BROADCAST,
Mi chae l Tilso n
Th omas con ducting . Resp ighi : Th e
Fountains o f Rom e; Nielso n: Flute
Co ncerto, Jul i us Baker, f luti s t ;
Brahms: Symphony NO .4 . KAOSFM , 7: 30 p.m.

ON ~AM PU S
Th ursday, April 29
ROBYN LlPNER and HUGH
NICOLL read th eir poetry . Spon so red by The Center fo r Poetry In
Perf o rm an ce. B o ard Roo m . L i b
3112 , 7 p.m . FREE .
Thursday , May 6
JODY ALIESAN and MARCIA
LEVENSON read t heir poetry . Spon sored by The Center 'Ior Poe try in
Perf o rman ce . B oard Roo m , Lib .
3112,7 p .m. FREE .
MUSIC
ON CAMPU S
Thu rsday, April 29
JORGEN KRUSE , a jazz-rock tliO
featu ring Jo rgen Kruse on electnc
k eyboa r d and sy nt hes i zer, Dean
Tsapralis on perc uss ion , and Ch uck
Deardorf on elec tr ic bass . ASH
Coffeehaus. 8 p. m , 75 ce nts .
Friday, Aplil 30
DUMI AND THE MINANZI MARIMBA ENSEMBLE bene fit dan ce
Wine and beer wil l be SOld Fourt h
Fl oor Library. 8 : 30 p.m .. $1 50
Sat urday . May 1
LtNDA WATERFALL In concert
Also: Joh n Carl el on , sin ger I gU I'
ta ri st. L ibrary Ma in Lobby . 8 p .m ,
$1.50.
Sunday, May 2
ISRAEL MOL TR IE , c laSS ic al gU Itari st. Firs l of fo ur weekly c las sical
m USIC concert s sponsored by the
Gig Commi ssio n as pa rt 01 the Colleg ium Series. Library Mai n Lobby .
2 p .m . Admiss io , $1 for sl udents
and se ni or c ili zens . $1.50 general .
Under 5 free.
CHARLES CHIEN , a n eig hth
grader at Ni squall y Midd le Sch oo l ,
presents pian o works by Bee thoven ,
Gersh win, and Ch op in In hi s o ne
hou r rec ital. Lib rary Main Lobby, 8
p .m . FREE .
DAY LATE AND A DOLLAR
SHORT(formerly Th e New Bl ue Jazz
Devils) with Bob Jas tad o n te nor
sax, Mike Canfield on bass, and
Jim Don ey on drums . Oth er music ians are welcome to sit in . ASH
Coffeehaus , 8 p. m . F REE .
Wed ne sday, May 5
KtTTY PRESTON, a recent Evergreen graduate , p tays p iano works
by Bach, Bartok, Beetho ven , and
Chopin in a one hour recital LIbrary Main Lobby, 8 p .m . F REE .
IN OLYMPIA
Friday , April 30
SOUTHFORK , a Bellingham b luegrass group , in c onc ert . App le,am
Folk Center, 220 E. Uni o n. Doors
open 8 p .m ., main act 8:25 , $1 .
Saturday, May 1
SARAH JONES , folk singer / guitarist , and INISFAIL , a tno tha t
p lays tradit iona l and fo l k music of
Ireland . Applejam F olk Center .
Do ors open 8 p .m . , first act starts
8 : 25,$1 .
ART
ON CAMPUS
AFRICAN TRIBAL SCULPTURE
25 wood-carved wo rks from Iribes
in the area between Sierra Leone
an d the Congo in Central Africa
Through May 7. Library Art Ga ll ery .
ART FROM CHINA Se l ected
posters , c h ildren 's art. and stamps
lrom th e collect ion o f Lac ey res i dent Jean Tow ne. Thro ug h Apri l 30.
Libra ry Upper Gallery .


ANTIQUE SQUEAK TOYS , rubber
plaything s for infant s and young
dogs from th e coll ect ion of the late
Joe Bem is . Joe Bem is Memor ial
Gallery, open 24 hou rs.

Need so m eone to "hold" your
house for s umm er until you
co m e back in fall ? We need a
LARG ElS H house for SUMMER
- call 866-5188 and we can
talk . Tha'lks. Ask for Kathy or
Judy.

til"
OW
'DEl-I
too west

4H! 357·6616

10 to 6
Mon. thru Fri.

12 to 6
Sat.

8

CAMPUS REACTS TO FIRINGS

Evergreeners Irk Local Taverns
Under his cash till Dean has some con fisca ted I.D" Evergreen l.D . and Washington drive r' s licenses, He explained a n
architec t's typewr ite r ca n bl oc k o ut and
rl"-type the numbers, but held to the light
the o ri ginal shows th rough. Dean says
Coyote' s prosecutes two o r three peop le a
week for fa lse l. D. This invo lves "goi ng
ou t to the park ing lot and get ting the ir
dri ver's license number , if necessa ry , and
test ifyin g in court. "
Dea n exp lai ned wh y it is necessary for
l. D. to be checked eve ry time . The o ne
tim e Coyo te's was fined , it was because a
19 year o ld Eve rgreen student had co me
in ori g in a ll y w ith fa lse id e n tificatio n
wh ich was accepted. The student co ntin ued com ing in , a nd as he became known
was no lo nger "ca rded ," until a n off icer of
the liquor board ca rd ed him .
The stud ent was fine d $100 a nd the tavern had the cho ice of clos in g o ne week or
pay ing a fine app rox imate ly equa l to the
profit of one week's sa le of liquor.

by Ca therine Ridde ll
The Li quo r Cont ro l Board a nd undera ge
r"t ro ns Me two of the biggest proble ms
tac ing a tave rn owner try in g to make a
I,vm g.
Rece ntl y. Dave W ilso n became so
ang ry about underage Eve rgreeners drin k ing .:It Dir ty Dave's Gay 90's Pizza Par lour
thilt he wit hdrew his advertisi ng from the
CUll per P"int Journa l.
in cases w here the unde rage pa tron is
di sco ve red by th e Liquor Boa rd exa miner ,
the patron a nd the person se rving a re subjec t tt' fine , a nd th e tavern owne r faces

remova l of a ll alco ho lic beverages tor up
to 30 da ys o r is fined the equiva lent of 30
days' profit from liq uor sa les .
T here is a lso a possibi lit y of canceli ng
the liquor license . Accordi ng to a source
a t the Liquo r Co ntrol Board , pena lties a re
decided "o n a n individual basis," a nd it
"depends on the circumstances of the offense, ..
Henry Dean at Capta in COy0 te's has
prob lems with fa lse ident ificat ion, A driv er's li ce nse w ithout a photo, present ed
w it h an Eve rg reen I.D . ca rd , is not accepta bl e. "You co uld sli p a not her p hoto in
there, co uldn't yo u? " said Dean .

T o avoid thi s kind of prob lem, proprie to rs a re required to maintain a file of "licensee's Cert ificat ion Cards" for a nyone
there is a ny qu est ion on . The certifica te,
w hich mu st be signed by the patron, is a
two part oa th ; one tha t the person serving saw the I. D ., and the o ther tha t th e
customer is of lega l age and the identificatio n is v alid . In the case of Coyo te's wit h
the fa lse I. D. , the fi le of these cards ha d
bee n sto len . The box is now na iled dow n .
Elma Brown , of Spud a nd Elma 's Two
M il e House sa id, "They cha rge us $2.00
fo r so of those ca rd s. We just sta rted asking pe ople to fill th em out because the
co mmiss io n sa id we had to. "
Brow n sa id , he could accept the license
of a ny state rega rdl ess of whether t here
was a picture on it. She said however, "if
there' s an y qu estio n , I turn them out ."

Spud and Elm a's has had onl y one bust
in 23 years of opera tion - also an Ever gree n student - just bef ore Th anksgiv ing
last yea r. Agai n it was a case of fa lse I. D,
The b arma id was fined $100, the wo man
with the false J. D . was fin ed $1 00 and the
business wa s closed fo r 10 days, Peop le
are turned out every ni ght at Spud a nd
Elma's fo r in sufficient J. D.
LJave Wil son a t Dirt y Dave's Pizza
Parlour thi nks the problem isn ' t so much
phony I.D ., bu t that people "don ' t give a
shit ." Wilson says, "They like my place,
but they d o n' t giv e a shit. They m ight be
fined, the person who serves might be
fined, but W ilso n gets nai led,"
He says the ma jority of his emp loyees
a re Evergreen stud ent s work ing their way
throu gh sc hooL He feels that it comes
down to emp loyees los ing a month 's wage
beca use they 've been don e an inju stice by
their peers. He points ou t th a t people rese nt being carded by peop le they know ,
ye t the pena lti es of the law a re the same.
Dave's has been ca ught by liquor otti ce rs four times. Thi s last time he only re ce ived a warn in g. Wilso n exp la in s th at
beer a nd w ine are ·'a convenience for ou r
custo mers , We don't make our mo ney o n
it , People co me in he re a nd dri nk a ll night
and - maybe - have a pizza. " T he
ty p ica l situ a tion is tha t a minor comes in
with a group where everyone else is of
age, and ha ngs back whi le I. D. is checked,
Wilson sa id ano ther comm on practice is
tha t the person who is 21 o rders the beer
and "then yo u come back a nd the min or
is d rinking beer o ut of hi s co ke cup, "
The ma nager
the beer w ill be
d er age d rinks
don 't be li eve it ,
protect io n.

now warns cus tomers th at
tah n away if anyone un it. People ge t upse t a nd
but it' s necessa ry fo r legal

Wilso n summed up hi s a ngry fee lings
abou t the w ho le situ a tion . "[f yo u' re 21
ac t it . If yo u' re 20 , do n't drink at my
place.' ·

by C urt Mi lton
Evergreen Vice President a nd Provost
Ed Kormo ndy ignored the recommendations . of two deans w hen he decided not
to re new contracts for facu lty members
Jim Martinez and Medardo Delgado, the
Cooper Point Journal has learned ,
The decision by Kormondy not to rehire the two fac ulty when thei r present
contracts expire was disclosed in last
week's Jo urnal. The non-renewal s are the
first of their kind in the history of the
sc hooL
Dean Rudy Martin confirmed that rec ommendations hy both he and fellow
dean W illie Parson were overru led by
Kormondy, Martin was concerned tha t Kormondy's decision was opposite that o f
the tw o deans, but emphasized that the
deans only make recommendat ions. Th e
fin al decision belongs to the provost. "Of
course," he added, "it's nice when your
reco mm endati ons are followed, "
Tom Rainey , pres ident of the Evergreen
chapter of the American Federation of
Teachers, is a ttempt in g to determine if the
process for reach ing a non - renewal deci_ -;:-s""
io""n , as ou tlined in the faculty handbook,
has been followed, The union wa nts to
"protect due process," Rainey says ,
That process, the one tha t determines
w het her or not a faculty member will be
retained at Evergreen, is a long, compli cated series of meetings, eva luati ons, reviewing, letter writing and personal anguish , It culminates in a decision not to
be reached lightly .
The fact that there is even a renewa l
process at a ll is pecu liar to Evergreen,
Faculty members here do not have tenure
as they wou ld a t most o ther colleges,
Contracts are renewed every three years
so no one's jo b is ever totally safe, T hat's
one reason many people are nervous
about the Mart inez / Delgado non-renewa ls.
Facu lty a t Everg reen have three eva lua-

A Singles Community
1 Room
2 Rooms
4 Rooms

$ 74.50
$144.00
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Social Rooms

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Free TV Cable

Laundry Facility

Recreation Room

Wall-to-Wall Carpeting
Easy access to freevvay & City Center
Just dovvn the Road from the Greenvvood Inn

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"

-

_Ij.

8GRElN PARK ' DRIVt= • OLYMPIA, WA 98502 • l2 06 ) 94 3 -73 3 0

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

, ii \ '

+ ~ lA~
Tom Rainey: " This can be a judicial
question very quickly ."
tion conferences with a dean d uring thei r
three year contract term , one each year.
The first and third yea r conferences are
known as "grow th" conferences , the purpose being to aid the academic growt h of
the fa culty member, identify hi s strengths
and work on his weaknesses.
Dur ing the first half of winter quarter,
facult y / dean conferences are scheduled
fo r those people in the second year of
th eir contract. T hese are k nown as a "renewa l conference" during which a comprehensive review is made of the fac ulty a nd
wha t that person has done at Eve rgreen.

reach ing a non -renewal decision so faculty could determine if their right s had
been vio lated .
"The uni on isn' t in th e bu si ness of pro tecti ng incompetence," says Rainey, "but
the burden of proof is o n the administra tion ." Neither Martinez nor Delgad o have
asked for un io n support , acco rdin g to
Rainey.
Rainey descr ibes the mood of the faculty as one of "paranoia. T he administ ration has not made any sta temenl. " He
fee ls th at the w hole affai r should have
bee n ha nd led more openly .
" We are suspending judgment on me rit s
of the case" until more info rmation is
ava ilable, Rainey says. He sa id "Thi s can
be a judicial question very quick ly," ex plaining that "No matter how info rmal
the discussions, a ny thing sa id by adm in ·
istrators or fa cult y can eventua lly be a
judicia l questi o n - fi rst ins ide the co ll ege
a nd then in a civil suit. "
Of the several faculty members con tacted by the Jou rnal. most sa id they had
many opini ons but declin ed to comment
o n the recent non -renewa ls. However ,
facult y member Maxine M imms ha d a
great deal to say.
" I k no w bo th men very well. " reco ntmued page j

The Evergreen State College . Olympia,Washington 98505

THE COOPER POINT

RNAL
Volume IV Number 27

April 29, 1976

COG III MEMBERS SPEAK OUT
by Jim Wright

·1

~:;. t

According to the handbook, one condi tion of reappointment is that the faculty
member must keep a portfo lio of work
"done at and for the co llege" during 'the
co nt ract period, The cumula tive portfolio
"will bec ome the pri ncipal documenta ry
ev idence for a thoro ugh evaluatio ns by
the Deans . .. " and a source for dete rmining reappo int ment. To be included in
the portfolio are a ll evaluations the faculty member has written about himself as
well as evaluations o ther facu lty and stu dents have written about him .
After the renewa l conference, evalua ~
ti ons a nd recommenda tio ns are written
and these are turned over to the Vice President and Provost who makes the final
dec ision , If they are no t to be rehired , fac ult y mu st be informed, in writ ing w it h
reaso ns for the non-renewal , by April IS.
According to the handbook, if the fac ult y
member is not informed, he or she is
automa tically rehi red . A facu lty member
cannot be fired for. reasons he or she was
not info rmed of during a prev ious evaluation conference,
Tom Rainey , acting on beha lf of the
union, issued a memo to a ll facu lty offering uni on help to those who had been
fired or whose jobs are in danger . The
memo outlined the steps to be taken in

f ro m the com muni ty . The co mmittee
!\rew o ut o f student di ssa tishcti on l. , t fall
and l> charged wi th rev isi ng ihe ,chool
govern ance code ,
There seems to be genera l acco rd with in
the com mittee tha t COG III needs to pro vide a mecha nism through which comM

The Co mmitt ee on Gove rn a nce III Disappear ing Task ·Force (COG III DTF ) is
cu rrentl y attempt ing to foc us its efforts
into co ncrete proposa ls fo r · governance
change dnd, according to C hairman Nie ls
Skov, " wi ll shortly be so li citin g feedback

/ENROLLMENT ESTI MATES~
LOOK PROMISING
by jill Stewart
If the fall enro llment here fo ll ows the
same pat tern it has in past years , Evergreen ca n ex pect a n esti mated 2,784 students when, th e doors open next fa ll.
A , po t of approximately $300,000 il"l
state mon ey earma rked for faculty salaries
awaits us if we hit th e numb er right on
th e nose,
At a campus press mee ting Monday,
Vice President and Provost Ed Kormo ndy,
Dean of Enrollment Services Larry Sten berg and Les Eldridge exp la in ed the enrollment situatio n .
The a nnua l ave rage for student enro ll ment next year has been set at 2,632 students, compared to la st year's average of
2,383 students . To meet th at average , Evergree n will need the high fa ll enrollment
of 2,784 students to offset the lower
enrollm ent expected for spring.
Les Eldridge explained that if Evergreen
goes over the estim a ted enro llment number , it st ill ge ts the est imat ed $300,000 in
state money , "but we also get addit iona l
students, so the student! faculty rati o may
go up. "
In the even t th at Evergreen does not
meet its projected enro llment , it will not
receive the entire $300,000, so faculty hi ring w ill be lessened accordingly . However,
there are 17 - 18 teaching posi tion s now
open for next year and, according to Ed
Kormondy, "That estimate may go up as
the enroilment picture becomes clearer ,"
Of the almost 2,800 students expected
next fall, co ntinuing students will probably number about 1,300, leaving 1,500
expected new st udents,
The problem now facing the co ll ege is
how to a ttrac t 1,500 new students by this
fall. Larry Stenberg and Ed Kormondy
have devised some extensive plans for ac\,complishing the feat.

They inclu de:
1 ) In creasin g the " take ra te" the
numbe r of stude nts who app ly to Evergreen who act ua ll y fo llow th ro ugh and
reg ister.
2) Increasing part-time students from
120 to 400 - 600 by offeri ng more modules and programs.
3) Send ca talog to st udents on leave
(a n es timated 700),
4) Make specia l community college visits over summer. Talk to students, coun selo rs and facu lt y abo ut Evergreen.
5) Wri te fo ll ow - up lett ers. Letters have
been composed which represent SO - 60
academic field s here , to be se nt to students w ho inquire about specific fields at
Evergreen .
6) Reta in more st udents by providing
impr oved reg istratio n , academic advising ,
o rientat ion se rvi ces, even after the Aca demic Fa ir (May 19, 10 a,m, - 2 p, m,),
7) Identify a lterna tive cli entele. Make
o fferin gs releva nt to homemakers, state
workers, pr iso ners,
Larry Stenberg emph as ized that aside
from a ny effort s the co llege will make,
st udent s should become involved in the
enroll ment process , He said, "Students
who feel a commitmen t to Evergree n and
have had pos iti ve experiences here should
go hom e to thei r com munities and let
peop le know. "
Stenberg also urged students to read the
Ca talog Supplement with care, a nd make
thei r academic decisions soon , "Students
should do some planning just like the institution does, and enro ll during spring
enrollment. Then we can correct enroll ment prob lems ahead of time,"
The big question now is, will Evergreen
hit th e 2,800 mark? Ed Kormondy thinks
so. ''I' m q uite opt imistic about it," but
Larry Stenberg adds, "If we work damn
hard, "

munity news can be mo re clearly stated
than

;tt

pre"cr 1

P p ','f'!" 0

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!ioJ Ifl

hdS been decideJ 50 far. (The co ~nl it tee
met again yesterday to discuss th is and
ot her issues.) What fo llows then , is a
sy mposium of viewpoints from various
members of COG Ill .
O ne of many co ntrove rsies concern s
two different proposals to replace the
present Sou nding Boa rd, The first ide;l,
offered by student Tom Morrill , would
replace the Sounding Board wi th a body
empowered to or igin ate and term ina te
DTF ' s, to m edi a te d is putes betwee n
DTF's and th eir chargers, a nd to vote acce pta nce or rej ection of DTF findings,
Such a board, Morrill cla im ed, would offer th e comm unity "leverage power" with
which to co nfront administrators . Student
governance would gain respectability and
comm unicati ons flow would be improved,
he felt ,
T h e ot h e r proposa l would rep lace
Sounding Board with a College Cou nci l
"strongly advisory" to the college adm inist ra ti on, according to its originator, facult y member Will Humphreys. Composed
of ten students, ten staff, a nd five faculty,
the council would be advice rather than
forum-oriented as is the current Sounding
Board . " I do n' t b la me anyone for no t being interested in a weekly discussion,"
sa id Humphreys,

If students still consider
their role to be passive
and impotent, then that's
what it's going to be ."
II

He characterized his proposal as strictly
advisory in nature as opposed to Morrill's, which he sa id resemb led a college
administra tive board , Hump h reys also
expressed concern over the lack of student
int e re st in gove rn a n ce procedures . " It
d oesn't matt er h ow you change the
mechan ism - If stu d e nt s still cons id er
their role to be passive and impoten t, then
that's what it's going to be ,"
Neils Skov predicted the detnise o f
Sounding Boa rd and its replacement by

some other bod y . Conc!,rning t he abov e
two proposal s he sa id , " If we had
Morrill 's proposal , it wouldn 't make se nse
to have presidents o r prov osts. Reversa l
power is ultim ate power ,"
Facu lty member Susie Strasser argued
that the key issue was whether COG III
was a ll owed eno u g h time to m ake
"fundamental " governa nce changes she saw
as necessary . She defined fundamental
as a c h a nge " from a system whi c h
attempts to mainta in that th ere is no
co nfli ct to o n e i n which th e re is a
confli ct." St rasser charged that "The old
document (COG II ) pro vides a system in
w hi ch 'co nsen sus ' is maintain ed by
ad min istrative force ."
' Strasser expressed frustration with th e
a mount of tim e COG III ""as given to
revise the governance code, "It seems that
in charging us the way he did , Mc Cann
(Evergreen president) was asking for a
co nfinllcd page J
Source
Eng US-WaOE.A.1973-01
Media
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