The Cooper Point Journal Volume 4, Number 33 (July 15, 1976)

Item

Identifier
Eng cpj0125.pdf
Title
Eng The Cooper Point Journal Volume 4, Number 33 (July 15, 1976)
Date
15 July 1976
Evergreen Subject
Student Organizing and Activism
Faculty Hiring and Governance
Media Studies/Arts
Description
Eng Will Maraire be Reinstated, Board Decision Announced Tomorrow; Frustrated Program Secretaries Leave; College Pulls Out of Verbal Faculty Offers; Attack of the Corndogs; Buffalo Bob & the Indians;
Creator
Eng Shore, Stan
Eng Stewart, Jill
Eng Pugsley, Davida
Eng Mosier, Judy
Eng Jacobs, Karrie
Contributor
Eng Stewart, Jill
Eng Groening, Matt
Eng Solomon, Sam
Eng Allen, Fran
Eng Shore, Stan
Eng Locke, Ti
Eng Gilbreath, Ford
Eng Shlim, Larry
Eng Judd, David
Eng Sutherland, Brock
Subject
Eng The Evergreen State College Staff Resigning
Eng Cordogs
Eng Buffalo Bill and The Indians Movie
Eng Maraire, Dumi
Eng Altman, Robert
Eng Moss, John
Eng Schillinger, Jerry
Eng Ash Tree Housing
Eng The Evergreen State College
Eng KAOS Radio
Language
Eng eng
Place
Eng Washington State
Eng Olympia WA
Eng Thurston County, WA
Publisher
Eng The Evergreen State College Board of Publications and members of the Evergreen community
Extent
Eng 8 pages
Temporal Coverage
Eng 1976
extracted text
I

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Will Maraire be Reinstated?

Board Decision Announced Tomorrow

Cost saving rent easing the
burden on your pocketbook.

breach of contract, and violation of his
constitutional rights. On June 25 Maraire
was ordered by Federal Judge Donald
Voorhies to exhaust all institutional means
of appeal before taking the case to an outside court. If the hearing board rules
against Maraire, then he has the option to
appea l the case to the Board of Trustees.
Kormondy has the same option if the decision goes against him.
The board members, Anne Hoffman,
Mark Levensky, Ainara Wilder, Pete Sinclair, Pete Steilberg, John Munro, and
Georgette Chun have already approved a
fina l draft of their decision. A copy of it
was sent to Maraire by registered letter on
Wednesday, July 14, and Kormondy the other disputant - should be notified
of the decision today.
In his letter of termination to Maraire,
1<' ormondy stated, "the termination action
arises from allegations by three women
students that they had either involuntary
sexual relations with you or were manipulated into doing so." Kormondy viewed
this as a "violation of the spirit a!"<i letter
of the Evergreen Social Contract."
At the hearing board, testimony revea led thr ee other complaints against
Maraire for allegedly similar actions. but
these were never fully investigated.
A Chronology
(Th~ Journal would like to emphasize
that Maraire has newr been charged with
any criminal activity involving the alleged
incidents, and that he denies a ny wrongdoing whatsoever.
The chronology that follows is based
on the testimony of persons at the hearing board ,)

A Bag
Of·Extras
Like•••
Dumi Maraire

by Stan Shore
After the longest and most controversial
hearings in Evergreen's history, the All
Campus Hearing Board will announce tomorrow whether fin:d faculty member
Dumi Maraire will be reinstated. The
Hearing Board was called to meet in June,
as Maraire sought to reverse Provost Ed
Kormondy's decision to terminate his contract due to alleged sexual misconduct
with Evergreen students Mia Jacobsen and
Fran Allen.
The hearing board finished gathering
swo rn testimony on July 2, after hearing
from Maraire. the two women making the
allegations, and a handfu l of other witnesses.
Previous to the hearing board mt!eting,
Mara ire had filed sui t against the college
for $2 million in damages for slander,

Fall and Winter 1974
It was during this time that Maraire
met both Fran Allen and Mia Jacobsen .
Jacobsen was a student of Maraire's but
Allen was not. Jacobsen claimed in her
written state ment that Maraire coerced
her into having sex with him on two dif-

ferent occasions during winter quarter.
Maraire denied that one of the incidents
took place and said that the other was riot
a matter of force or coercion.
According to testimony. during September and October Maraire also met Allen
and began a romance that included sexual
relations. In October Allen broke off seeing Maraire because she learned that he
had a relationship with another woman
who was to become his wife within the
year.
Fall 1975
Allen joined the Africa and the United
States coordinated studies program in
which Maraire was a faculty member. She
also became friends with Maraire's wife
Linda, and visited their house often.
February 1976
Allen moved into the Maraire's house.
There was some dispute at the hearing as
to why she moved in. Maraire said that
he looked on it as a favor to Allen, letting
her stay there rent-free so she could save
money to go to Africa with her coordina·
ted studies program the following year.
Allen testified that she saw the move as
more that of being a live-in housekeeper.
Friday, March 12, 1976
Allen wan ted to go to Portland to pick
up her four-year-old son, Otis. Allen
asked Maraire if she could use his car and
he indicated she could, if she first checked

it out with a mechanic. The car had IlI)t
been running well. Around this time they
also discussed whether Allen co uld continue living at Maraire's house with Otis.
Maraire did not want her to.
Allen took the car to Portland without
checking with a mechanic and returned to
a room in the college dorms at 11 p.m.
that evening. There was no dispute about
these incidents at the hearing board. A llen
returned the car to Maraire .
Monday, March 15,1976
She had continued to stay at the dorm s
over the weekend with her chi ld. Maraire
ca lled Allen and asked her to come to hi s
office at around 4 p.:n. Allen went to
Maraire's office at that time with O ti s.
Maraire told Allen he was "very. very
angry" with A llen about the car.
After half an hour or so of discussion .
Maraire said that he had to go ~omewhere
and offered to give Allen a ride in his car
back to the dorms.
In her written statement, Allen claimed
that o n the way to the dorms Maraire
said twice , " 1 either have to beat you up
or make love to you ." She understood
this . she explained. as a punishment for
having taken the car without hi s permission . Maraire denied ever saying any thing
of the kind. and there were not any corroborating witnesses.
contillued pag .. 2

The Evergreen State College . OIympia,Washington 98505

THE COOPER POINT

RNAL
July 15, 1976

Volume IV Number 33

Moss, Schillinger Leave Also

Frustrated Program Secretaries Leave

Zappy 110 volts of Columbia River
ele.c tricity to light up your
rooms and give power to your
mega-stereo .

A kitchen complete with all
the modern conveniences to cook
up your latest culinary magic.

N ice, cool, fresh water from
the tap to wet your whistle or
water your phi lodendron.

Close enough to campus
so you don't have to start up
the old VW and burn up
gas.
And people who share a common
interest with you in making
campus living fun and worthwhile.

Joyce KubasI' arId Ed Evans

by Jill Stewart
Two program secretaries have quit aI'ld
a nother is leav ing Evergreen next month,
part ly brcause of what they call "inhumane treatment" by the college.
Secretaries Ed Evans, Joyce Kubose and
Carole Christian have joined a procession
of staff and adm ini strators who are leavin g or have recently left Evergreen.
Others who have left include Director of
Facilities Jerry Schillinger, Director of Personnel -Auxiliary Serv ices John Moss, Di rector of Coop~rat i ve Education Ken Donohue. Director of Admissions Ken Mayer,
and Financial Aid Counselor Don Von
Volkenburg.
Two years ago the program secretaries
began a program to identify the duties
they performed in their jobs. "We wanted
a job description and salary and everything to reflect the job we were really doing .. _ We did a lot of typing but there is
a lot of responsibility and administration
too. " said Ed Evans.
Evans cited their work on student con tracts as one of their most important administrative duties . He said the program

Since we include all the utilities you
only have to pay one low monthly
bi II ... an arrangement
commercial rentals can't touch.
Prices start as low as
$37 p I month and up. If we can
help you out, stop by the
Housing Office or call us at 6132.

Come Live At Our Place.

\

I

.I

secretar ies are the first screeners on individual contracts because they "know what
th e deans will or will not sign."

r

He a lso listed other responsibiliti es, includin g matchin g equivalency awards
with what the student actually signed up
hr. maintaining the contract copy and
co llecting student evaluat ions.
" We are not just secretaries ," Evans
said.
But , according to Evans. wh en the
sta ti s tics were presented to Director of
Personnel John Moss. Moss was uncon vineI'd . and felt that the secretaries were
do in g too much typing to be ca ll ed admin is trators.
So last year the group of program secretaries, working with Dean Rudy Martin ,
agreed to step up their administrative
work and do less typing, "to prove that
we sho uld be reclassified. "
T he tria l period was to last one year, at
the end of which the secretaries would
present statist ics on their work and a decision on reclassification would be made.
Said Evans, " We tried to lower the typ ing through increasing the number of faculty we serve and reducing the number of
program secretaries - which allowed us
to hire typists who worked for us. This
was a ll done to convince someone else
that the job we've done has always been

admi ni st rative."
The statist ics and results kept by the
sec retaries were turned in to Martin
March 16 . However. when the group met
with Martin June 16. his final recomme ndation was that the experiment be con tinued for at least another year. and Mar tin said he was unwilling to reconsid er
c0/1tirlll l?n page 3

College Pulls Out of
Verbal Faculty Offers
by Jill Stewart
Evergreen has refused to hire three facult y who were formally recommended to
be hired, and to whom Dean Rudy Mar·
tin had made a "verbal offer" to hire.
The three , Matthew Halfant, . Maggie
Hunt and josie Mumaw, were informed
June 16 that they would not be hired as
faculty at Evergreen.
Howe ye r, by June 16 Matthew Halfant
and his wife Deborah, who now live in
ASH. had already given up the lease on
their home in Croton-on-Hudson, New
York and had planned to move to Wash ington june 18.
Matthew Halfant said, "We had no

place to go. All bridges behind us had
been burned. The other job offers I had
considered were no longer availab le. so
we came with the thought' of working
something out."
According to Vice President and Provost Ed Kormondy. the decision to not
hire ihe faculty was made because the
projected enrollment for Evergreen fall
quarter has fallen , and less money than
expected will be available to the college
for faculty sa laries. Three faculty were
hired by the college to meet their new
projected enrollment of "roughly 2,300."
but the original number of faculty the col lege had planned to hire was 16.

Kormondy descr ibed the verbai ,'lfer a s
saying to them , " If I offered yoU;) cun tract would yo u accept it ?" He , ilid th at
Rudy Martin made th e otlt'r "in go od
faith that th ey wo'_tld be recom mended"
to the then ava il abk fa cult y posit ion<;.
The Half ants have been JIl ,t ructed b y
th eir lawye r Herb Fuller. who also repre se nt s josie Mumaw . no t to discuss the sit uati('n in detail. And they a re st ill hopi ng
for some change in the plans of the col lege.
"We ca me here beca use we belie vl' In
th e schlh)1. and we want to conti nu ~ to
be lieve in the schooL" saId Matthew Hal ·
Ian!.

J
.1

LETTERS

Attack of the Corndogs
Maraire Case
continued from page 1

ASH SMALLMINDED AND
SHORT-SIGHTED
Tn the Editor:
I see Ash apartments is con :inuing in its tradition at small
minded and short sighted manJgement .
I do my laundry at Ash regularly and, because there is a
snack bar nearby, I often purchase a refreshment. Recently
atter doing five loads of wash,
purchasing soap and a refreshment, I filled my own five gallon
co nt ainer with water. The manager came running after me, demanding to know what I was doing with his water. He then went
into a five minute tirade about
the cost of wa ter in spite of my
remil'.der to him that I had just
spent 54.00 doing laundr y, 25
(ents of which I lost to a washer
~ hat didn't work, which he did
not reimburse me for.
Severai years ago I lived at
Ash and six months after I
moved out I still had not received my deposit which was to
be returned to me within one
month . So with receipt and cancelled check in hand I went to
Ash and asked for my money.
The management told me there
was nothing they could do because they had already returned
the money to my roommates and
it they had made a mistake I
would have to collect what
should have been my refund myself. After three months of calling and making special trips I
finally received my refund minus
a charge for cleaning a rug that
was filthy when I moved in.
This continued disregard for
students as paying consumers,
who support Ash and should
merit respect by the management, must be made known to
all those prospective tenants as
well as tenants residing in Ash,
who have not yet been victimized. I will not continue to patronize any part of The Ash Tree
Apartments, which is owned by
a corporation , subsidized by the
government to proVide low cost
housing to students. Are students
getting what the government is
supposedly paying for? Are we
getting good, lost cost housing
and fair treatment? Or is the
ho usin g shortage in Olympia be ing taken advantage of by a select few who are profiting from

the si tuation, while at the same
time disregarding o ur consumer
rights? These are questions that
need tn be exam ined .
Davida Pugsley

FRIDAY NIGHT

Cheryl Pegues. Friday Nite
Films Coordinator, replies:

FILMS
T (\ the Editor:
What is it with the clowns
who run the Friday Nite Film
Series 7 I thought it was supposed
to be a service for the students,
but it seems to have turned into
a my-favorite-f1ick rental club
for a small group of inconsiderate rubes.
The admission has been raised
to 75 cents and half the movies
for Fall Quarter have already
been selected. Why weren't students surveyed for film suggestions, and why weren't we con sulted before the decision to raise
the admission? A vote could
have been announced and taken
at any 6f the film showings, or
cheaper films could have been
rented. There are thousands of
excellent films availab le that
don't cost much.
And why wasn't there a public
vote on when films would be
shown? One showing only at 7
p.m. on Friday nights during the
summer is ridiculous. If the
Series is losing money renting expensive films, it doesn't make
much sense to have only one
showing. Look at the difference
in size of crowds at 7 and 9 p.m.
shows at any commercial theater.
So come on, kids, wise up.
The Friday Nite Film Series
shouldn't be run for a few people's convenience. It's supposed
to be a student service, remember?
M.A.G.

THE STUDENTS
CAN'T AFFORD IT
To the Editor:
It has come to our attention
that the price for Friday nite
hlms has increased to seventyfive cents; that is, almost a dollar . This massive increase is being foisted .onto those who are
least able to afford it: the stu. dents.

CONTRIBUTORS
Fran (Red) Allen
Stan Shore
PHOTOGRAPHY
Ti Locke
Ford Gilbreath
Larry Shlim

BUSINESS MGR.
David ludd
ADVERTISING
Brock Sutherland

PRINTER
Shelton-Mason

County lournal

The Journal tl located In !tie College Actlvlt_ Bultc:llllQ ~CA81 308. News ptIonM
1811.f.l14. -e:l13. AdwniSing 8IIc:I bueI _ _-eIBI. ~ Poky: All tett.,. to
1'- editor end phot~. IOf lett... s-oe must be 1WC8iv.d by noon Tueaday lor
lhal ....'. pUt)l1c:M1on. Lett.,. mUit be lignec:t, typec:t, double-.".aed 8IIc:I Q

'worc:II or .....

Stan Shore
Judy Mosier

CLOWNS RUN

JOURNAL STAFF
EDITOR
I ill Stewart
NEWS EDITOR
Matt Groenrng
PRODUCTION MGR .
~.Im Solomon

Why should students have to
pay for the capita li s t rental
agency's sins? Answer me that.

~

In response to all this Friday
Nite Film fan mail: Friday Nite
Films is here to provide a service.
We don't have to have films here
on campus, after all, if you'd
rather see first run garbage at
$2 - $3 a shot, that's your bag.
There are. however, people who
have a slightly higher mentality
who enjoy the convenience and
the unique quality of Friday Nite
Films - these are the people we
are interested in serving. There
were 133 people in attendance at
our first 75 cent film this summer and only two of those people made any negative comment
as to the rise in price. These people appreciate the pains we take
to provide a diversity of quality
films at the lowest rental rate we
can find. We make no profit the series is self-generating . It
costs 75 cents per person to run
the series. This is a simple matter
of arithmetic.
As to the selection of Friday
Nite Films; there was a suggestion box posted here in the activities office for more than a
month last spring which, incidentally, had over a 1000 suggestion response, and from which
we selected this summer's films.
There has been no selection, to
my knowledge (and as the person ordering those films, I would
know) of any films for next falL
I suggest that next time you
check out your gossIp more
thoroughly.

At the dorms Maraire says
that Allen invited him up to her
room to finish their con versation, despite his protests that he
had little time. Allen maintained
she did not invite him.'
Maraire testified under oath
that when up at Allen's room he
did not even touch her, much
less force her to have sexua l intercourse.
LEVENSKY: Did you touch
her?
MARAlRE: Why would I
touch someone when I'm angry?
I did not.
LEVENSKY: In the dormitory,
in the room you didn't even
touch her? You don't remember
touching her - even her shoulders - even grabbing hold of
her?
MARAIRE: I don't even want
to say remember. I can sti ll see
the picture. I did not.
LEVENSKY: You did not
physically touch her during the
whole time?
MARAIRE: No. I did not.
Allen alleged that Maraire told
her to go into the bathroom,
where he undressed her. She said
her child Otis was in the next
room.
ALLEN: I was crying, but trying to be quiet because I didn't
want Otis to know what was
happening. I was also thinking
about the consequences of my
not letting him (Marairel have
his way. He was the head of my
program, he could flunk me out,
or stop teaching me, or say I
wouldn't be able to be a housekeeper, that I stop seeing Linda,
that I wouldn't be able to go to
Africa the next year. . . so I
was trying to figure how to keep
from losing all of this which was
directly dependent on Dumi. I
felt I just couldn't give up all
that just because of Dumi's being
unable to control himself. I was
terribly confused at this point.
Allen said at the hearing board
she did not physically resist the
alleged abuse, because she feared
Otis would become involved.
Later that evening, she said, she
was not sure if Maraire had actually raped her, since she did
not fight him off.
That evening Allen called the
Crisis Clinic to reach Counselor
Lou Ellen Peffer to discuss the
alleged incident, according to a
written statement by Peffer.
March18,1976

On Thursday afternoon AlIen went to Maraire's office and
"beat him with a stick" until Bill
Brown, another faculty member
in the Africa program, came in
and separated the two, according
to a Security report. At 4 p.m.
I would li ke to thank all our
Marairc
called Security and compatrons for their understanding
plained of the incident. "He
of our raising our price and for
could give no reason for the astheir continual support of Friday
sault, had not had any difficulNite Films. Please feel free to
ties with Fran and was generally
·bring any and all suggestions
at a total loss as to why it had
and constructive criticisms to our
occurred. He stated when quesoffice in CAB room 305, and
tioned that Fran did not make
direct them to me .
any statements during the alleged
assault that would give him any
F-~!!~~~~~~==~=~~~ insight into why it occurred, " the
report said.
Everybody at the hearing
agreed that the beating took
place, although Allen stated that
Maraire knew that the beating
was retaliation for the alleged
sexual violation two days earlier.
That evening Allen went to work
at Security where she explained
to Sue Shaw, a Security staff
member, about the alleged incident Monday with Maraire .
Shaw filed a report two days
100

later explaining what had transpired .
The End of March
It was at this time, according
to testimony at the hearing, that
Allen disccvered that student
Mia Jacobsen also had a compla int against Maraire. The two
had met in passing a year earlier.
Also, around this time, Allen
investigated the possibility of filing criminal charges against
J'v!ara ire but was told that there
war, not enough evidence for the
police to press charges, according
to staff member Judy Annis.
I n the last week of March,
Jac<-bsen and Allen went to Provost Ed Kormondy, and compl<lined abou~ Maraire to him.
Kormondy ~sked them to prep'lre written 3tatements explaining their charges, and he warned
the women that "the whole issue
might not be a private one, a
discreetly handled personnel matter , but one that might be a campus-wide iS5u e."
April
At the same time, according to
Kurmondy's testimony , he asJ<ed
Security to investigate the matter. By the second week at April,
Kormondy had received the SeCUI ity report, and statement~
from the two wom<.>n. He also
received written reports from
Peffer and Gerald Weiner, a student in the Africa program.
W~iner's written statement declared that Marain' had told him
around March 20 that he had
told Allen on March 15 that he
had to either "beat her up or
make love to her." Maraire, as
mentioned above, denied this,
and at the hearing his attorney,
Jackie Ashurst, pointed out that
Weiner was a friend of Allen's .
Kormondy also received two
other reports, which he never
fuljy investigated, that three
other women had been involved
in similar incidents with Maraire.
On April 16, Kormondy and
Mmaire met for two hours to
discuss the alleged incidents.
B(lth agreed at the hearing that
M.uaire expressed shock and surprise at the accusations. Maraire
stated at the hearing that he
denied both incidents, but Kormondy remembers simply that
he "did not acknowledge them."
Toward the end of their conversation Kormondy offered Maraire
the choice of resigning effective
immediately or being terminated.
Maraire argued that the Africa
program should be allowed to
continue, and Kormondy told
Maraire that he would consider
delaying the termination.
On Apri: 19, the first business
day after their last meeting, Kormondy told Maraire that he
cou ld resign effective June 15 or
face termination on the same
date.
On April 26, Maraire told Kormondy that he was not going to
resign, and that he was not
guilty of the offenses charged to
him .
On April 30, Kormondy sent a
letter to Maraire informing him
that hi; contract would be terminated un June 15, saying, "This
action arises from violation of
the spirit and letter of the Evergreen Social Contract . .. as
that document relates to your
roles and responsibilities as a
faculty member with respect to
your students. In particular, the
termination action arises from
allegations by three women students that they had either involuntary sexual relations with you
or were manipulated into doing
so .

by Karrie Jacobs
Tacos, corn dogs, tater tots, Eagle pups
(Eagle Pups?) but no zeppoli. "Well, this
isn't an Italian sai nt festival," I thought to
myself, "This is Lakefair." No, I couldn't
have resisted go ing if I tried, even if I had
considered avoiding Olympia's event of
th e year. After all it's better than the
fourth of July , bigger than the Thurston
Cou nty Fair. One can not help but to
acknowledge Lakefair's presence. From
th e drone of the hydroplanes on Capitol
Lake (which sounded like the attack of
th e killer bees from my Westside retreat) ,
to the sight of little men and parachutes
dropping from th e sk ies, Lakefair makes
its presence known.
So there I was, wandering between ply wood palaces, all covered with Pepsi signs
(What, no Coca-Cola?), doing my best to
ignore th e efforts of the persistent and
often talented hawkers, "Hey, lady, yeah
you , you look like a winner, only a quarter a try , you can't miss!"
"Oh yeah, you wanna bet?" But, I'm a
sucker at heart , and haven't I always
wanted a purple furry hippopotam us? So,
I threw a little blue ring and watched it
miss the neck of every 7- Up bottle in
sight.
"You wanna try aga in r
The se lect ion and coronat ion of the
Lakefair queen was a ritual w hich I will
not eas ily forget. It was a ll app le pie and
ballpark franks, and I'll be damned if I
didn't see Ozzie and Harriet o ut there in
the audience. The show started with a
group called " We Believe in Music" doing
a few George M. Coha n songs, a bit of
flagwaving a nd the C harles ton, complete
\\l it h girls in white fringes . Then came my
fir st sight of Oly mpi a's mayor de liver ing
a n unmemorable speech . The co loni a l
Minute Men fired off a few rounds on
th eir muskets and out came the princesses,
each escorted not by a prince, but by a
Capita larian.
After being ushered to the microphone
b y her very own blue and white clad

knight, each of the princesses gave ~ short
speech which invariably contained th e
phrases, "rea lly learned a lot ," "a good
experien ce," and "In this bicentennial year
... " The words were punctuated by
sweet smiles and slightly too long silences.
The contestants did a very tame version
of the Hustle with the "We Believe in
Music" folks, to fill up the suspenseful
moments before the announcement of the
judges' decision. A town cri er, enveloped
in red velvet, comp lete with bell and hear
ye , hear ye's ran o nto the stage to
a nn ou nce th a t Lisa of North Thurston
wa s IT. Lisa's ascension to qu eendom was
accompa ni ed by hugs and musket fire.
Congratu lat ions Lisa.
The event which I co
ered the highligh t of Lakefair wee end was the street
dance , Friday night n Legion Way. The
music was provide by a very tight Canadian rock and rol: b'lnd called Chinook .

The crowd was hesitant to dance at first ,
and just milled around wiggling their hips
until a few Evergreeners (undoubtedly
starv ing for a little good rock dancing)
started hopping, and then many others
joined in. It was a good friendly mix of
people out there, boogying and sweating
on Legion Way.
Saturday there was a count ry band
playing in th e gazebo in Sylvester Park
which was followed by a performance not
planned by the Lakefair committee. The
Theater of the Unemployed's play on the
"American Institution."
With the eveni ng Saturday , there came
a sligh t drizzle and a mammoth parade.
Crowds had been gathering at the curb
along Capito l Way since early afternoon.
People came and set up lawn chairs to
hold th eir square of concrete wh il e they
went off to watch the quick draw contest
and munch on fries. By five there was

barely enough sitting room on the curb
for a small child's bottom. At five the
voice of Big Brother emanated from the
roof of the Governor House Hotel coffee
shop, " Now, we don' t want anyone to get
hurt, so stay out of the street and obey
the police, and remember IT'S NOT
GO ING TO RAIN"
The parade began with the Seatt le
Chinese Community drill team and ended
w ith Natio nal Guard tanks. From start to
finish, Big Brother's voice came through
the P.A. system, saying, "How about
that I" and "Let's give them a big Olympia
welcome. " He told us to buy Lakefair but ·
to ns and we did. He ordered the Tum ·
water mayor's car to speed up and the
fl ag bearers for the Job Corps band to
slow down a nd they obeyed. The man is
omnipotent , at least fo r one day a year.
The Lakefair parade is very long. It far
exceeds the length of normal adult curb
squatting tolerance , but even though my
back was aching and my knees were so re,
I was fascinated.
Olympia en masse is a rare sight. The
th ing that I found most interesting wa s
watching the high school kid s. I have
never seen more pairs of stylized, faced
blue bell-bottom jeans anywhere in my
life. Everyone wears them. Maybe even
the Lakefair princesses when the y' re no t
dressed in their powder blue perso nalized
gowns.
Ah , yes, there was one new addition te'
this year's Lakefair. Our own KAOS-F M
was there , broadcasting 24 hours a da y
from a trailer donated by a friendl y
neighborhood mobile home dea le r .
KAOSites were out on the midw ay ,
mingling with th e crowd , intervie',ving
fo lks and ' genera ll y provoking friendl y
curios it y. KAOS' presence at Laketair
was it s first venture into the public eye or
the Oly communi ty . I o nly regret th a t it
WdS KGY , with its bla ring to p fort y isms,
rather than KAOS wh ich reigned over th e
fair's main P . A . system as O lympi a·s
"llffici a l radio stati o n. " Maybe nex t yea r

Frustrated Staff Resign
COlitililled frolll iJagc 1
Mary A nn Hesse agreed, saying, "The
staff morale is lower, I think, than it has
ever been ... They wear you down and
then they'll think of some way to boost
your morale, but it a lways ends up the
same . So I plan on putting no more energy into anything."

Jerry Schillinger
that posit ion. He explained that results of
an upcoming clerical survey and money
for raising their salaries were two of the
problems.
"Rudy Martin a lways comes across as
honest ," said Carole Christian, "but I
think he's a manipulator. He left us at the
end of a quarter when there was no time
left to do anything different or to fight it."
In a resignation letter to John Mos~
dated June 17, Ed Evans said "This was
the straw for me and I resigned. Rudy
shrugged but didn't commen!."
Evans said he felt the group was used .
"When we first started this whole thing
we had lost six program secretaries in six
months. Rudy came to us and said, 'Why
is this turnover rate so high and what can
we do about it?' Maybe it was just to
placate us enough so the turnover wasn't
more drastic, " he said .
Program secretaries Robin Erhart and
Mary Ann Hesse are staying at Evergreen ,
but they echo the feelings of their coworkers.
"I think you 'll find this feeling is true
almost to a person,'r Erhart said, "The
class system is very prevalent at Evergreen. We are the peons of the system
and we're to be kept down."

The group places much of the blame on
the top administration here. Caro le
Christian said, "I don't know if these people on the third floor (Library) purposely
isolate themselves, but they rea lly don't
know what 's going on.
" I was talking to Charles I McCann I
about how I feel about the lack of support
for clerical staff, and afterwards I.
realized he hadn't heard a word. I think
Charles is in the woods philosophizing
whi le the rest of us are trying to work."
Christian summed up the frustrated
feelings of the program secretaries, saying,
"I would have loved to see a walkout or a
strike, I would have loved to see this
place try to operate without program secretaries for two weeks. The place would
have fallen apart."

misused. This (DTF 's and committees) is
where community input stops ."
Sch illinger voiced frustration at being in
a midd le management position here, saying, "We seem to have a lot of administrators here who can't make decisions ...
decisions are hard to come by at this
place."

Schillinger said that standing alone
"Evergreen's problems" were not enough
to make him leave, but that "collectively
they are a concern to me."
One of his concerns was that Evergreen
has "not articulated what it is doing - its
goals ."
When I tell people I work for Evergreen I have to defend what I'm doing
here - because no one has articulated it, "
he said.
A second concern Schillinger expressed
was with the top administration, "The top
administration has misled students as to
what their role is in the decision- making
here .. . " he said. "I think they are being

Don Von Volkenburg, who left hi s
financial a id counseling position May 31 ,
said "Evergreen is a difficult place to
work. I can' t begin to tell you how 'man y
people I have talked to at the middle
management level who dislike Evergreen.
"Specific reasons I people are leaving I.
and these are only suspicions , are that
some people have suspicions that Ever green is having an enro ll ment prob lem. If
the word gets around. . it's conceivable
that their employability will be harmed ."
Von Vo lkenburg also linked his criti ·
cisms of the college with the administra ·
tion. He explained that many of them
have been here from the beginning, and
have developed "blind spots."

Several staff and administrators have
resigned or left recently, all for different
reasons, but many of them feel the same
frustration the program secretaries voiced .
Director of Facilities Jerry Schillinger
left July 8 for the University of Denver.
Schillinger said he was leaving because he
had completed a job and because he was
offered an excellent position at his new
one.

ulty was aimed at the current needs of a
very transient market. As the need and
the market changed the curriculum
changed . But we overlooked that we must
change the resources - the people here .
Stude nt s aren't buying what we developed
in the 1960's."

fohn Moss
Director of Personnel-Auxiliary Services John Moss, whose appointment to the
position in 1974 'caused a campus uproar
over possible affirmative action violations,
resigned recently to assume a new position as business and finance director for
the Edmonds-Everett Community College
District.
Moss also expressed frustration with his
job . " It's very frustrating here. It's diffi cult to get a decision made. We make
much of reinventing the wheel every year.
We do lots of shuffling but don' t change
anything. "
He pointed out that one of Evergreen's
"dangers" was "an aura of flexibility . An
aura because it is only perceived, not real.
"As an example, " he said, "our first
c\lrriculum developed by the planning fac -

"Something has got to be done to plug
the blind spots," he said . "We need a tal ented research and planning person to
open up campus communications. An other option is a shakeup in the top ad ministration .
"O"e problem is the distance and isola ·
tion from the rest of Evergreen that th e
third floor has acquired," said Von Vol·
kenburg . " I personally think McCann is a
good president , but those people up there
are distant. "
When asked to comment on the "rats
leaving a sinking ship" rumors here , both
Schillinger and Moss made predictio ns
about Evergreen .
"This is no ma ss exodus, it's
natural thin g," said Schillinger.
green is going to survive. but for
or two it will go through a pretty
time. "

just a
" Ever a yea r
austere

John Moss agreed with Schillinger's observalion, but added , "I have no doubt
there will be an Evergreen 20 years from
now. But what kind is really up for grabs
right now ."

J
.1

LETTERS

Attack of the Corndogs
Maraire Case
continued from page 1

ASH SMALLMINDED AND
SHORT-SIGHTED
Tn the Editor:
I see Ash apartments is con :inuing in its tradition at small
minded and short sighted manJgement .
I do my laundry at Ash regularly and, because there is a
snack bar nearby, I often purchase a refreshment. Recently
atter doing five loads of wash,
purchasing soap and a refreshment, I filled my own five gallon
co nt ainer with water. The manager came running after me, demanding to know what I was doing with his water. He then went
into a five minute tirade about
the cost of wa ter in spite of my
remil'.der to him that I had just
spent 54.00 doing laundr y, 25
(ents of which I lost to a washer
~ hat didn't work, which he did
not reimburse me for.
Severai years ago I lived at
Ash and six months after I
moved out I still had not received my deposit which was to
be returned to me within one
month . So with receipt and cancelled check in hand I went to
Ash and asked for my money.
The management told me there
was nothing they could do because they had already returned
the money to my roommates and
it they had made a mistake I
would have to collect what
should have been my refund myself. After three months of calling and making special trips I
finally received my refund minus
a charge for cleaning a rug that
was filthy when I moved in.
This continued disregard for
students as paying consumers,
who support Ash and should
merit respect by the management, must be made known to
all those prospective tenants as
well as tenants residing in Ash,
who have not yet been victimized. I will not continue to patronize any part of The Ash Tree
Apartments, which is owned by
a corporation , subsidized by the
government to proVide low cost
housing to students. Are students
getting what the government is
supposedly paying for? Are we
getting good, lost cost housing
and fair treatment? Or is the
ho usin g shortage in Olympia be ing taken advantage of by a select few who are profiting from

the si tuation, while at the same
time disregarding o ur consumer
rights? These are questions that
need tn be exam ined .
Davida Pugsley

FRIDAY NIGHT

Cheryl Pegues. Friday Nite
Films Coordinator, replies:

FILMS
T (\ the Editor:
What is it with the clowns
who run the Friday Nite Film
Series 7 I thought it was supposed
to be a service for the students,
but it seems to have turned into
a my-favorite-f1ick rental club
for a small group of inconsiderate rubes.
The admission has been raised
to 75 cents and half the movies
for Fall Quarter have already
been selected. Why weren't students surveyed for film suggestions, and why weren't we con sulted before the decision to raise
the admission? A vote could
have been announced and taken
at any 6f the film showings, or
cheaper films could have been
rented. There are thousands of
excellent films availab le that
don't cost much.
And why wasn't there a public
vote on when films would be
shown? One showing only at 7
p.m. on Friday nights during the
summer is ridiculous. If the
Series is losing money renting expensive films, it doesn't make
much sense to have only one
showing. Look at the difference
in size of crowds at 7 and 9 p.m.
shows at any commercial theater.
So come on, kids, wise up.
The Friday Nite Film Series
shouldn't be run for a few people's convenience. It's supposed
to be a student service, remember?
M.A.G.

THE STUDENTS
CAN'T AFFORD IT
To the Editor:
It has come to our attention
that the price for Friday nite
hlms has increased to seventyfive cents; that is, almost a dollar . This massive increase is being foisted .onto those who are
least able to afford it: the stu. dents.

CONTRIBUTORS
Fran (Red) Allen
Stan Shore
PHOTOGRAPHY
Ti Locke
Ford Gilbreath
Larry Shlim

BUSINESS MGR.
David ludd
ADVERTISING
Brock Sutherland

PRINTER
Shelton-Mason

County lournal

The Journal tl located In !tie College Actlvlt_ Bultc:llllQ ~CA81 308. News ptIonM
1811.f.l14. -e:l13. AdwniSing 8IIc:I bueI _ _-eIBI. ~ Poky: All tett.,. to
1'- editor end phot~. IOf lett... s-oe must be 1WC8iv.d by noon Tueaday lor
lhal ....'. pUt)l1c:M1on. Lett.,. mUit be lignec:t, typec:t, double-.".aed 8IIc:I Q

'worc:II or .....

Stan Shore
Judy Mosier

CLOWNS RUN

JOURNAL STAFF
EDITOR
I ill Stewart
NEWS EDITOR
Matt Groenrng
PRODUCTION MGR .
~.Im Solomon

Why should students have to
pay for the capita li s t rental
agency's sins? Answer me that.

~

In response to all this Friday
Nite Film fan mail: Friday Nite
Films is here to provide a service.
We don't have to have films here
on campus, after all, if you'd
rather see first run garbage at
$2 - $3 a shot, that's your bag.
There are. however, people who
have a slightly higher mentality
who enjoy the convenience and
the unique quality of Friday Nite
Films - these are the people we
are interested in serving. There
were 133 people in attendance at
our first 75 cent film this summer and only two of those people made any negative comment
as to the rise in price. These people appreciate the pains we take
to provide a diversity of quality
films at the lowest rental rate we
can find. We make no profit the series is self-generating . It
costs 75 cents per person to run
the series. This is a simple matter
of arithmetic.
As to the selection of Friday
Nite Films; there was a suggestion box posted here in the activities office for more than a
month last spring which, incidentally, had over a 1000 suggestion response, and from which
we selected this summer's films.
There has been no selection, to
my knowledge (and as the person ordering those films, I would
know) of any films for next falL
I suggest that next time you
check out your gossIp more
thoroughly.

At the dorms Maraire says
that Allen invited him up to her
room to finish their con versation, despite his protests that he
had little time. Allen maintained
she did not invite him.'
Maraire testified under oath
that when up at Allen's room he
did not even touch her, much
less force her to have sexua l intercourse.
LEVENSKY: Did you touch
her?
MARAlRE: Why would I
touch someone when I'm angry?
I did not.
LEVENSKY: In the dormitory,
in the room you didn't even
touch her? You don't remember
touching her - even her shoulders - even grabbing hold of
her?
MARAIRE: I don't even want
to say remember. I can sti ll see
the picture. I did not.
LEVENSKY: You did not
physically touch her during the
whole time?
MARAIRE: No. I did not.
Allen alleged that Maraire told
her to go into the bathroom,
where he undressed her. She said
her child Otis was in the next
room.
ALLEN: I was crying, but trying to be quiet because I didn't
want Otis to know what was
happening. I was also thinking
about the consequences of my
not letting him (Marairel have
his way. He was the head of my
program, he could flunk me out,
or stop teaching me, or say I
wouldn't be able to be a housekeeper, that I stop seeing Linda,
that I wouldn't be able to go to
Africa the next year. . . so I
was trying to figure how to keep
from losing all of this which was
directly dependent on Dumi. I
felt I just couldn't give up all
that just because of Dumi's being
unable to control himself. I was
terribly confused at this point.
Allen said at the hearing board
she did not physically resist the
alleged abuse, because she feared
Otis would become involved.
Later that evening, she said, she
was not sure if Maraire had actually raped her, since she did
not fight him off.
That evening Allen called the
Crisis Clinic to reach Counselor
Lou Ellen Peffer to discuss the
alleged incident, according to a
written statement by Peffer.
March18,1976

On Thursday afternoon AlIen went to Maraire's office and
"beat him with a stick" until Bill
Brown, another faculty member
in the Africa program, came in
and separated the two, according
to a Security report. At 4 p.m.
I would li ke to thank all our
Marairc
called Security and compatrons for their understanding
plained of the incident. "He
of our raising our price and for
could give no reason for the astheir continual support of Friday
sault, had not had any difficulNite Films. Please feel free to
ties with Fran and was generally
·bring any and all suggestions
at a total loss as to why it had
and constructive criticisms to our
occurred. He stated when quesoffice in CAB room 305, and
tioned that Fran did not make
direct them to me .
any statements during the alleged
assault that would give him any
F-~!!~~~~~~==~=~~~ insight into why it occurred, " the
report said.
Everybody at the hearing
agreed that the beating took
place, although Allen stated that
Maraire knew that the beating
was retaliation for the alleged
sexual violation two days earlier.
That evening Allen went to work
at Security where she explained
to Sue Shaw, a Security staff
member, about the alleged incident Monday with Maraire .
Shaw filed a report two days
100

later explaining what had transpired .
The End of March
It was at this time, according
to testimony at the hearing, that
Allen disccvered that student
Mia Jacobsen also had a compla int against Maraire. The two
had met in passing a year earlier.
Also, around this time, Allen
investigated the possibility of filing criminal charges against
J'v!ara ire but was told that there
war, not enough evidence for the
police to press charges, according
to staff member Judy Annis.
I n the last week of March,
Jac<-bsen and Allen went to Provost Ed Kormondy, and compl<lined abou~ Maraire to him.
Kormondy ~sked them to prep'lre written 3tatements explaining their charges, and he warned
the women that "the whole issue
might not be a private one, a
discreetly handled personnel matter , but one that might be a campus-wide iS5u e."
April
At the same time, according to
Kurmondy's testimony , he asJ<ed
Security to investigate the matter. By the second week at April,
Kormondy had received the SeCUI ity report, and statement~
from the two wom<.>n. He also
received written reports from
Peffer and Gerald Weiner, a student in the Africa program.
W~iner's written statement declared that Marain' had told him
around March 20 that he had
told Allen on March 15 that he
had to either "beat her up or
make love to her." Maraire, as
mentioned above, denied this,
and at the hearing his attorney,
Jackie Ashurst, pointed out that
Weiner was a friend of Allen's .
Kormondy also received two
other reports, which he never
fuljy investigated, that three
other women had been involved
in similar incidents with Maraire.
On April 16, Kormondy and
Mmaire met for two hours to
discuss the alleged incidents.
B(lth agreed at the hearing that
M.uaire expressed shock and surprise at the accusations. Maraire
stated at the hearing that he
denied both incidents, but Kormondy remembers simply that
he "did not acknowledge them."
Toward the end of their conversation Kormondy offered Maraire
the choice of resigning effective
immediately or being terminated.
Maraire argued that the Africa
program should be allowed to
continue, and Kormondy told
Maraire that he would consider
delaying the termination.
On Apri: 19, the first business
day after their last meeting, Kormondy told Maraire that he
cou ld resign effective June 15 or
face termination on the same
date.
On April 26, Maraire told Kormondy that he was not going to
resign, and that he was not
guilty of the offenses charged to
him .
On April 30, Kormondy sent a
letter to Maraire informing him
that hi; contract would be terminated un June 15, saying, "This
action arises from violation of
the spirit and letter of the Evergreen Social Contract . .. as
that document relates to your
roles and responsibilities as a
faculty member with respect to
your students. In particular, the
termination action arises from
allegations by three women students that they had either involuntary sexual relations with you
or were manipulated into doing
so .

by Karrie Jacobs
Tacos, corn dogs, tater tots, Eagle pups
(Eagle Pups?) but no zeppoli. "Well, this
isn't an Italian sai nt festival," I thought to
myself, "This is Lakefair." No, I couldn't
have resisted go ing if I tried, even if I had
considered avoiding Olympia's event of
th e year. After all it's better than the
fourth of July , bigger than the Thurston
Cou nty Fair. One can not help but to
acknowledge Lakefair's presence. From
th e drone of the hydroplanes on Capitol
Lake (which sounded like the attack of
th e killer bees from my Westside retreat) ,
to the sight of little men and parachutes
dropping from th e sk ies, Lakefair makes
its presence known.
So there I was, wandering between ply wood palaces, all covered with Pepsi signs
(What, no Coca-Cola?), doing my best to
ignore th e efforts of the persistent and
often talented hawkers, "Hey, lady, yeah
you , you look like a winner, only a quarter a try , you can't miss!"
"Oh yeah, you wanna bet?" But, I'm a
sucker at heart , and haven't I always
wanted a purple furry hippopotam us? So,
I threw a little blue ring and watched it
miss the neck of every 7- Up bottle in
sight.
"You wanna try aga in r
The se lect ion and coronat ion of the
Lakefair queen was a ritual w hich I will
not eas ily forget. It was a ll app le pie and
ballpark franks, and I'll be damned if I
didn't see Ozzie and Harriet o ut there in
the audience. The show started with a
group called " We Believe in Music" doing
a few George M. Coha n songs, a bit of
flagwaving a nd the C harles ton, complete
\\l it h girls in white fringes . Then came my
fir st sight of Oly mpi a's mayor de liver ing
a n unmemorable speech . The co loni a l
Minute Men fired off a few rounds on
th eir muskets and out came the princesses,
each escorted not by a prince, but by a
Capita larian.
After being ushered to the microphone
b y her very own blue and white clad

knight, each of the princesses gave ~ short
speech which invariably contained th e
phrases, "rea lly learned a lot ," "a good
experien ce," and "In this bicentennial year
... " The words were punctuated by
sweet smiles and slightly too long silences.
The contestants did a very tame version
of the Hustle with the "We Believe in
Music" folks, to fill up the suspenseful
moments before the announcement of the
judges' decision. A town cri er, enveloped
in red velvet, comp lete with bell and hear
ye , hear ye's ran o nto the stage to
a nn ou nce th a t Lisa of North Thurston
wa s IT. Lisa's ascension to qu eendom was
accompa ni ed by hugs and musket fire.
Congratu lat ions Lisa.
The event which I co
ered the highligh t of Lakefair wee end was the street
dance , Friday night n Legion Way. The
music was provide by a very tight Canadian rock and rol: b'lnd called Chinook .

The crowd was hesitant to dance at first ,
and just milled around wiggling their hips
until a few Evergreeners (undoubtedly
starv ing for a little good rock dancing)
started hopping, and then many others
joined in. It was a good friendly mix of
people out there, boogying and sweating
on Legion Way.
Saturday there was a count ry band
playing in th e gazebo in Sylvester Park
which was followed by a performance not
planned by the Lakefair committee. The
Theater of the Unemployed's play on the
"American Institution."
With the eveni ng Saturday , there came
a sligh t drizzle and a mammoth parade.
Crowds had been gathering at the curb
along Capito l Way since early afternoon.
People came and set up lawn chairs to
hold th eir square of concrete wh il e they
went off to watch the quick draw contest
and munch on fries. By five there was

barely enough sitting room on the curb
for a small child's bottom. At five the
voice of Big Brother emanated from the
roof of the Governor House Hotel coffee
shop, " Now, we don' t want anyone to get
hurt, so stay out of the street and obey
the police, and remember IT'S NOT
GO ING TO RAIN"
The parade began with the Seatt le
Chinese Community drill team and ended
w ith Natio nal Guard tanks. From start to
finish, Big Brother's voice came through
the P.A. system, saying, "How about
that I" and "Let's give them a big Olympia
welcome. " He told us to buy Lakefair but ·
to ns and we did. He ordered the Tum ·
water mayor's car to speed up and the
fl ag bearers for the Job Corps band to
slow down a nd they obeyed. The man is
omnipotent , at least fo r one day a year.
The Lakefair parade is very long. It far
exceeds the length of normal adult curb
squatting tolerance , but even though my
back was aching and my knees were so re,
I was fascinated.
Olympia en masse is a rare sight. The
th ing that I found most interesting wa s
watching the high school kid s. I have
never seen more pairs of stylized, faced
blue bell-bottom jeans anywhere in my
life. Everyone wears them. Maybe even
the Lakefair princesses when the y' re no t
dressed in their powder blue perso nalized
gowns.
Ah , yes, there was one new addition te'
this year's Lakefair. Our own KAOS-F M
was there , broadcasting 24 hours a da y
from a trailer donated by a friendl y
neighborhood mobile home dea le r .
KAOSites were out on the midw ay ,
mingling with th e crowd , intervie',ving
fo lks and ' genera ll y provoking friendl y
curios it y. KAOS' presence at Laketair
was it s first venture into the public eye or
the Oly communi ty . I o nly regret th a t it
WdS KGY , with its bla ring to p fort y isms,
rather than KAOS wh ich reigned over th e
fair's main P . A . system as O lympi a·s
"llffici a l radio stati o n. " Maybe nex t yea r

Frustrated Staff Resign
COlitililled frolll iJagc 1
Mary A nn Hesse agreed, saying, "The
staff morale is lower, I think, than it has
ever been ... They wear you down and
then they'll think of some way to boost
your morale, but it a lways ends up the
same . So I plan on putting no more energy into anything."

Jerry Schillinger
that posit ion. He explained that results of
an upcoming clerical survey and money
for raising their salaries were two of the
problems.
"Rudy Martin a lways comes across as
honest ," said Carole Christian, "but I
think he's a manipulator. He left us at the
end of a quarter when there was no time
left to do anything different or to fight it."
In a resignation letter to John Mos~
dated June 17, Ed Evans said "This was
the straw for me and I resigned. Rudy
shrugged but didn't commen!."
Evans said he felt the group was used .
"When we first started this whole thing
we had lost six program secretaries in six
months. Rudy came to us and said, 'Why
is this turnover rate so high and what can
we do about it?' Maybe it was just to
placate us enough so the turnover wasn't
more drastic, " he said .
Program secretaries Robin Erhart and
Mary Ann Hesse are staying at Evergreen ,
but they echo the feelings of their coworkers.
"I think you 'll find this feeling is true
almost to a person,'r Erhart said, "The
class system is very prevalent at Evergreen. We are the peons of the system
and we're to be kept down."

The group places much of the blame on
the top administration here. Caro le
Christian said, "I don't know if these people on the third floor (Library) purposely
isolate themselves, but they rea lly don't
know what 's going on.
" I was talking to Charles I McCann I
about how I feel about the lack of support
for clerical staff, and afterwards I.
realized he hadn't heard a word. I think
Charles is in the woods philosophizing
whi le the rest of us are trying to work."
Christian summed up the frustrated
feelings of the program secretaries, saying,
"I would have loved to see a walkout or a
strike, I would have loved to see this
place try to operate without program secretaries for two weeks. The place would
have fallen apart."

misused. This (DTF 's and committees) is
where community input stops ."
Sch illinger voiced frustration at being in
a midd le management position here, saying, "We seem to have a lot of administrators here who can't make decisions ...
decisions are hard to come by at this
place."

Schillinger said that standing alone
"Evergreen's problems" were not enough
to make him leave, but that "collectively
they are a concern to me."
One of his concerns was that Evergreen
has "not articulated what it is doing - its
goals ."
When I tell people I work for Evergreen I have to defend what I'm doing
here - because no one has articulated it, "
he said.
A second concern Schillinger expressed
was with the top administration, "The top
administration has misled students as to
what their role is in the decision- making
here .. . " he said. "I think they are being

Don Von Volkenburg, who left hi s
financial a id counseling position May 31 ,
said "Evergreen is a difficult place to
work. I can' t begin to tell you how 'man y
people I have talked to at the middle
management level who dislike Evergreen.
"Specific reasons I people are leaving I.
and these are only suspicions , are that
some people have suspicions that Ever green is having an enro ll ment prob lem. If
the word gets around. . it's conceivable
that their employability will be harmed ."
Von Vo lkenburg also linked his criti ·
cisms of the college with the administra ·
tion. He explained that many of them
have been here from the beginning, and
have developed "blind spots."

Several staff and administrators have
resigned or left recently, all for different
reasons, but many of them feel the same
frustration the program secretaries voiced .
Director of Facilities Jerry Schillinger
left July 8 for the University of Denver.
Schillinger said he was leaving because he
had completed a job and because he was
offered an excellent position at his new
one.

ulty was aimed at the current needs of a
very transient market. As the need and
the market changed the curriculum
changed . But we overlooked that we must
change the resources - the people here .
Stude nt s aren't buying what we developed
in the 1960's."

fohn Moss
Director of Personnel-Auxiliary Services John Moss, whose appointment to the
position in 1974 'caused a campus uproar
over possible affirmative action violations,
resigned recently to assume a new position as business and finance director for
the Edmonds-Everett Community College
District.
Moss also expressed frustration with his
job . " It's very frustrating here. It's diffi cult to get a decision made. We make
much of reinventing the wheel every year.
We do lots of shuffling but don' t change
anything. "
He pointed out that one of Evergreen's
"dangers" was "an aura of flexibility . An
aura because it is only perceived, not real.
"As an example, " he said, "our first
c\lrriculum developed by the planning fac -

"Something has got to be done to plug
the blind spots," he said . "We need a tal ented research and planning person to
open up campus communications. An other option is a shakeup in the top ad ministration .
"O"e problem is the distance and isola ·
tion from the rest of Evergreen that th e
third floor has acquired," said Von Vol·
kenburg . " I personally think McCann is a
good president , but those people up there
are distant. "
When asked to comment on the "rats
leaving a sinking ship" rumors here , both
Schillinger and Moss made predictio ns
about Evergreen .
"This is no ma ss exodus, it's
natural thin g," said Schillinger.
green is going to survive. but for
or two it will go through a pretty
time. "

just a
" Ever a yea r
austere

John Moss agreed with Schillinger's observalion, but added , "I have no doubt
there will be an Evergreen 20 years from
now. But what kind is really up for grabs
right now ."

.

IN BRIEF
STUDENT FILMMAKERS GUESTS
OF KOMO
"The Evergreen Film-makers"
- students of cinematic arts at
Evergreen - were featured on
KOMO -TV 's "Viewpoint" program last Sunday a nd Monday
evenings .
Guest s on the show were faculty member Bob Barnard and
students Pat Barber a nd Gary
Peterson , both graduating seniors
from Tacoma . Art McDonald ,
manager o f Specia l Projects at
KOMO , produced and moder ated the program ,
The Evergreen guests described
the opportunities to make films
here . and exp lained Evergreen's
til m t rd if1in g program , which
Ba rnard s.3i d emphasized film
techniqu e. including special eft('c ts, li ~ ht i ng . and animation.
All thn"_' brag!,?-cd about Ever,:recn's s"l' hi st icat ed film equip"lent .

KAOS Progra.11 Guide

Excerpts from dozens of films
made at Evergreen over the past
four years were interspersed
throughout the show.

Sunday

WOMEN'S
SLOWPITCH
WINS 3 OF 5

7-l0a.m.
IOa.m.-12:30

The Evergreen Women's Slow
Pitch team returned from the Invitational tournament in Tacoma
this weekend (July 11 - 12) without any hardware, lots of aches
and pains, but some good experiences , Winning three out of the
five games they p layed, Evergreen showed a strong consistent
defense but had trouble with
hitting the ball. On Monday
night back at Lacey Field, TESC
won over Musgrove Milling
12 - 6, The next game will be
Wednesday aga inst Captain Coyote's at 6:30 p.m. at Lacey Field.
Also, the weekend of July
24 - 25 they plan to attend the
Seafair Tournament in Seattle
a nd hope to bring back some
trophies .

$20.95 to $28.95
R N Brown suede
R
Gold suede
R
Dark brown leather
R
White leather
(Children's sizes in
brown suede $20,95)

Westside Center 357-8779

A look behind prison walls with Robin

~ODA'S

9:30p.m.-12a.m .

IN AMERICA THEY CALL US AMERICANS
theme ... host John S. Fost er

KAOS, which broadcast live at Lakefair from a trailer. wIll once agai~ set up their remote equipment in August - this time for the Thurston County FaIr, Here Stallon- Manager Carl L Cook
takes some time out from Lakefair to go on the air.

We rent money in for details."

On Ju ly 19 participants will
show examples of their own exhibits for an open exchange of
ideas and critiques. The conference will conclude the following
day when an exhibit entitled
"Found Objects" will be designed
for Evergreen's gallery, Each participant will contribute at least
two "found objects" to the display. which will remain on exh ibit through July 30.
People wishing to register late
for the conference can come to
the opening workshop at 8 : 30
a .m . Ju ly 18 in Lib, 4003 . The
registration fee is $30 ,

FARMER'S MARKET
OPENS JULY 16
A farmer's market featuring
fresh produce from local growers
and some crafts, will open in
Olympia July 16 at the foot of
7th and Water.
The market, which is sponsored by the Thurston County
Farmer's Market, will celebrate
its grand opening Saturday,
July 17.
Approximately 25 growers are
now involved in the project. and
anyone interested in 'selling fresh
produce is welcome to join the
market for a fee of $1.
Claudia Sepp, an organizer of
the market. said they are a nonprofit organization interested in
providing people a place to sell
small sca le produce and to provide wholesome and fresh products,
La5t year the market was set
up in Lacey, but the group feels
they will attract more sellers and
customers in their new location.

GRADUATE SCHOOL
EXPLORATION
WORKSHOP
Date: Wednesday, July
21, 1976
Time: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m.
Place: Career Resource
Center, Li brary 1221
For more information
call Career Planning
& ' Placement: 8666193.

Sepp said that no provIsions
were made in the organization's
bylaws for craft sellers, "We'd
like to be able to say, 'Can you
come another day? We have too
many crafts today,' so we didn't
include them in our bylaws ,
They are welcome to a point,
but we don't want crafts to overrun the market," she said.
In addition to the $1 fee to
join, growers who use a large
space or booth will be charged
$1 a day. Those who sell off
their tailgate will be charged 50
cents a day. Sepp emphasized
that the market will have a
"bring your own booth" arrangement.
The market will run from July
16 through September 25. For
more information call Claudia
Sepp at 866-2974 .

6-l0a.m.

THE SELDOM HEARD SHOW

2-4p.m.

Big Band Era music with Harlan Zinck

CA VA BIEN French poetry, interviews, and mus ical specials
with Jananne Gaver

4-7p.m.

AUDIO OINTMENT

12a.m.-whenever

Jazz with Lee Meister

RADAR RANGE

12a . m. - whenever

Folk-ro ck and varie ty with

~ar i ta

Hahe r la nd

CLOWNS OF THE UNr.ARVE n ]\T,Or.K Poe tr y a nd mu s i c with f: llua2 e .
al t e rnating weekl v with Sh irl ey Ko llman
LATE NITE JAZZ featuring obRcure i azz t i ll the wee hour s

7-10a.m,
lOa.m.- lp , m.
1-4p, m.

10:3 0p .m. - 2a. m.

LIP SERVICE with Walter Da v i s
STEVE FROM CHICAGO
<:harak

Rea d ings, ia zz , and roc k. with Steve

HI STORY OF THE BLl IES with Peggv r.a ll a her
THE ALTEI(NATTVF. HOUR S
Bi cklehaup t
r.LASSICAL H\lSI<:

Cl ass i ca l, fo lk. and j azz , with John

includin~

JA ZZ PEOPLE Jazz
with Rob ~1a c ht

thr o u ~h

Ba r OQ ue, wit h Brad Furlon2

the aRe s, f eat urin g

b i oRrap hi es~

ALL Nl r.HT >!IIS I C with J ohn White

Tuesday
7- l0a.m.

r.LASSICAL CONSORT

lOa . m. -lp,m.

A~THI~G

Friday

Classical music with Kirk Russell

SHOW with Ke van

Ra~en

1-40. m.

to be announced

4-7 p . m.

THE W(\I(LD OF JAZ7. with special emphasiS on female vocalists,
and a s c hedule of NW musical h appen in gs. With Kim McC art nev

7-10a . m.

lOp.m.-2a.",.

BLANCO Y NEGRO HOURS
mu s i c to t he People.

The Blanco Y Negro flesign Club present s
With Steve winl Rer

WELL FOR OPENERS

"'orning news a n d 1azz with

~Iargo

Westfall
lOa.m .- lp,m.

7-10p.m.

THEATER GHOST EATS LUNCH Broadwav so undt racks, and later,
rock tn' r oll, wit h Steve Sma ll ey

1-4p,m .

STORIES FOR OTHER WORLDS with Aaron Cl ea r

4-7p . m.

THE ALTERNATIVE HOURS RETUI(N with John Bick e lh aupt

7-IOp . m.
lO p.m . -12a.m .

CRAZY CROSS THE COUNTRY " A voca l s s how of
loose Iv about traveling," with Tom Gill

~o

r e put e

BLUES l~ THE NIGHT f rom Cab Ca ll owav to Rig Bands and
Dori s nay

Saturday
7- 10a, m.
lOa .m, -l p.m.

SAMF.D I MATI N REALITE with Laura f1av Ab raham
FRIDAY N[(;HT DREAMS

" Contemporary and 'S o' s jazz r e quests
Al so: news and

gladly humore d," s avs Jo e Murphv, host.
local in fo rmation

l-4p. m,

RERUNS FOil LAT E RI SERS ~1os tlv new mus i c hv unknown o r
unrecognized artists , with Jo hn S. Foster

4-7p. m.

PR[MF. TrME SIIIW

7- l0p.m.

THE EAR LY SHOW

lOp.m,-4a.m.

• KAOS STAFF MEETING The
KAOS-FM core staff meets every Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the station's studios on the third floor
of the College Activities Building.
People not working with KAOS
are welcome to attend,

Sou l and jazz, with '1ike Gri ggs
Jazz,

s wjn~,

and blues, with :-largo l.,lestfa l 1

mu sica l talent r r ecorded "remo t e "
or perf ormed l ive in th e KAns stud i os . Al so: .ja zz , r are
c omedv a n d ex p eri men t a 1 radio . 'h th Ca r 1 L . Cook

THE ALL NI TE .J AMM

Loea ]

I

• The Self Help Bicycle Repair
Facilities are open five hours a
week for the duration of the
summer quarter on Fridays 12
through 5 p.m, It is loca ted in
the basement of the College Activi ties Building (CAB). The fee
is 25 cents per day.

PAI NT

co.

• Beginning Monday, July 12,
the library (User Services area)
will be open on Monday and
Wednesday nights until 9 :00 p.m ,

W£aTaID£ S"O~~INO C£NTa ..

.43.8700

wi t~

Janann e Caver

2-7a .m .

Students:
10% discount on ALL art suppliea
WCQ) IFiJD)

OLYMPIA. WASHINGTON

7-10p,m .

7:10- IO :30p ,m,

• Summer senior employment
seminars will be held Tuesdays
and Thursdays from 3: 30 to
4:30 p.m, in Lib. 1221, beginning
August 3 .
The seminars are as follows :
August 3 - Introduction to
Placement Services and how to
write a resume and letter of
application.
August 5 - How to complete a
job application and how to
compile a credential fil e.
August 10 - How to plan and
conduct a job search,
August 12 - How to conduct an
information and employment
interview ,

SOUTH SOUND NATIONAL BANK
Black Lake Office
Black Lake Boulevard

CLASSIr.AL SNOOTERY A wide variet v of c lassical mu s i c .
includin g a n or~a n re cital wee kly b v J ohn Obetz at u n . m.
With Ca rla Kno?er

Audio frenzy with Tom Hood

ALL WArs TIIA"£L UIltllC£.IIII::

Main Office
South Sound Center
491-4144

ARlEN ODY SSEY

4-7:30p . m.

PERSON TO PERSON Interviews, local sports notes, music,
and news from the OIVIDpia Maritime Association with
Laura May Abraham and Walter Davis

7-10p. m.

So n e~o

Thursday

GET UP WITH IT Jazz, vocals, and assorted tunes to get the
week moving . With Rob Macht

10a,m.-lp.m.

Jazz and spor t s commentar y with Aaron

BRl~CH

4-7p.m.

Obscure music with a weekly

Monday

COFFE E , TOAST, AND JN1M Li ~ ht ;azz , ra r e c omedy . c h a rmln p.
c hit- chat, l ocal mu s i c , an d experimental radio. Also:
bre akfast on the air whenever t he hens lay. With
r.arl L. Cook

1-4p, m.

SHOW with Rhoda Fleisc hman ••• children's stories and

ROOTS AND BEYOND Soft countrv-rock and R&B 9:30, new releases
lOp.m. ~ news commentarv and f~ee music l1p.m . With Chris
Holden

12a.m.-whenever

"Hey folks!

Evergreen Branch
Co llege Activities Building
806 -2440 : Open 12 - 3

10a,m.-Ip,m:

European rock ,

The workshops will begin a t
8: 30 a,m, July 18, Topics to be
covered include basic organiza tion of design, lead time requirements, budgets, innovations in
case and frame hangings , and
modular unit construction,

b:DO

7-10a.m.

ETHER CLASSICS Historv, critique, and resdings of 20th
century classical music and jazz, with Joe Murphy

6:30-9:30p.m.

A special workshop in photo
mural techniques will be conducted by Skip Pahl, who is
from Chaffey College in Palo
Alto , Using an original negative
by the great early 20th Century
photographer Edward S. Curtis,
Pah I will construct a photo
mural that will measure ·52
inches by eight feet. The resulting work will become property
of Evergreen.

Red Apple
Natural Foods

Wednesday

with Aaron Cle ar

Musi c in and' out of the 1950's with Kidd Rhythm

TWO O' CLOCK COUNT
Crook

3:30-6:30p.m.

Guiding the workshop will be
guest faculty members Dextra
Frankel and Thomas Hartman,
both teachers at California State
University at Fullerton, Frankel,
an associate professor of art, has
been CSUF's gallery director for
the past nine ytars, in addition
to serving as cu"tor at four art
museums and as a trustee for the
American Crafts Council. Hartman has directed exhibits for a
number of museums and is a
freelance designer.

FRANCISCAN:

WHAT IT IS

2-3: 3Op.m.

A three-day workshop on art
exhibition design, sponsored by
the Western Association of Art
Museums, will be held on campus July 18 - 20.

_.._."
M_.

MO~~INr.

STONELIGHT HO~S Music by and for Women, with stories and
newB • . . Oivine Decadence with Annie Stone

12:30-2p . m.

ART EXHIBITION WORKSHOP HELD

Monday - Saturday 9:30 -

HARD TO GET UP IN THE

10 to 6
Mon. thru Sat.

@if

M(Q)10J lr Jill

183 (Q) (Q) I[~
352-0720

Westside Center

501 E 4th
943-1170

Special Order Service

Av~il~ble

.

IN BRIEF
STUDENT FILMMAKERS GUESTS
OF KOMO
"The Evergreen Film-makers"
- students of cinematic arts at
Evergreen - were featured on
KOMO -TV 's "Viewpoint" program last Sunday a nd Monday
evenings .
Guest s on the show were faculty member Bob Barnard and
students Pat Barber a nd Gary
Peterson , both graduating seniors
from Tacoma . Art McDonald ,
manager o f Specia l Projects at
KOMO , produced and moder ated the program ,
The Evergreen guests described
the opportunities to make films
here . and exp lained Evergreen's
til m t rd if1in g program , which
Ba rnard s.3i d emphasized film
techniqu e. including special eft('c ts, li ~ ht i ng . and animation.
All thn"_' brag!,?-cd about Ever,:recn's s"l' hi st icat ed film equip"lent .

KAOS Progra.11 Guide

Excerpts from dozens of films
made at Evergreen over the past
four years were interspersed
throughout the show.

Sunday

WOMEN'S
SLOWPITCH
WINS 3 OF 5

7-l0a.m.
IOa.m.-12:30

The Evergreen Women's Slow
Pitch team returned from the Invitational tournament in Tacoma
this weekend (July 11 - 12) without any hardware, lots of aches
and pains, but some good experiences , Winning three out of the
five games they p layed, Evergreen showed a strong consistent
defense but had trouble with
hitting the ball. On Monday
night back at Lacey Field, TESC
won over Musgrove Milling
12 - 6, The next game will be
Wednesday aga inst Captain Coyote's at 6:30 p.m. at Lacey Field.
Also, the weekend of July
24 - 25 they plan to attend the
Seafair Tournament in Seattle
a nd hope to bring back some
trophies .

$20.95 to $28.95
R N Brown suede
R
Gold suede
R
Dark brown leather
R
White leather
(Children's sizes in
brown suede $20,95)

Westside Center 357-8779

A look behind prison walls with Robin

~ODA'S

9:30p.m.-12a.m .

IN AMERICA THEY CALL US AMERICANS
theme ... host John S. Fost er

KAOS, which broadcast live at Lakefair from a trailer. wIll once agai~ set up their remote equipment in August - this time for the Thurston County FaIr, Here Stallon- Manager Carl L Cook
takes some time out from Lakefair to go on the air.

We rent money in for details."

On Ju ly 19 participants will
show examples of their own exhibits for an open exchange of
ideas and critiques. The conference will conclude the following
day when an exhibit entitled
"Found Objects" will be designed
for Evergreen's gallery, Each participant will contribute at least
two "found objects" to the display. which will remain on exh ibit through July 30.
People wishing to register late
for the conference can come to
the opening workshop at 8 : 30
a .m . Ju ly 18 in Lib, 4003 . The
registration fee is $30 ,

FARMER'S MARKET
OPENS JULY 16
A farmer's market featuring
fresh produce from local growers
and some crafts, will open in
Olympia July 16 at the foot of
7th and Water.
The market, which is sponsored by the Thurston County
Farmer's Market, will celebrate
its grand opening Saturday,
July 17.
Approximately 25 growers are
now involved in the project. and
anyone interested in 'selling fresh
produce is welcome to join the
market for a fee of $1.
Claudia Sepp, an organizer of
the market. said they are a nonprofit organization interested in
providing people a place to sell
small sca le produce and to provide wholesome and fresh products,
La5t year the market was set
up in Lacey, but the group feels
they will attract more sellers and
customers in their new location.

GRADUATE SCHOOL
EXPLORATION
WORKSHOP
Date: Wednesday, July
21, 1976
Time: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m.
Place: Career Resource
Center, Li brary 1221
For more information
call Career Planning
& ' Placement: 8666193.

Sepp said that no provIsions
were made in the organization's
bylaws for craft sellers, "We'd
like to be able to say, 'Can you
come another day? We have too
many crafts today,' so we didn't
include them in our bylaws ,
They are welcome to a point,
but we don't want crafts to overrun the market," she said.
In addition to the $1 fee to
join, growers who use a large
space or booth will be charged
$1 a day. Those who sell off
their tailgate will be charged 50
cents a day. Sepp emphasized
that the market will have a
"bring your own booth" arrangement.
The market will run from July
16 through September 25. For
more information call Claudia
Sepp at 866-2974 .

6-l0a.m.

THE SELDOM HEARD SHOW

2-4p.m.

Big Band Era music with Harlan Zinck

CA VA BIEN French poetry, interviews, and mus ical specials
with Jananne Gaver

4-7p.m.

AUDIO OINTMENT

12a.m.-whenever

Jazz with Lee Meister

RADAR RANGE

12a . m. - whenever

Folk-ro ck and varie ty with

~ar i ta

Hahe r la nd

CLOWNS OF THE UNr.ARVE n ]\T,Or.K Poe tr y a nd mu s i c with f: llua2 e .
al t e rnating weekl v with Sh irl ey Ko llman
LATE NITE JAZZ featuring obRcure i azz t i ll the wee hour s

7-10a.m,
lOa.m.- lp , m.
1-4p, m.

10:3 0p .m. - 2a. m.

LIP SERVICE with Walter Da v i s
STEVE FROM CHICAGO
<:harak

Rea d ings, ia zz , and roc k. with Steve

HI STORY OF THE BLl IES with Peggv r.a ll a her
THE ALTEI(NATTVF. HOUR S
Bi cklehaup t
r.LASSICAL H\lSI<:

Cl ass i ca l, fo lk. and j azz , with John

includin~

JA ZZ PEOPLE Jazz
with Rob ~1a c ht

thr o u ~h

Ba r OQ ue, wit h Brad Furlon2

the aRe s, f eat urin g

b i oRrap hi es~

ALL Nl r.HT >!IIS I C with J ohn White

Tuesday
7- l0a.m.

r.LASSICAL CONSORT

lOa . m. -lp,m.

A~THI~G

Friday

Classical music with Kirk Russell

SHOW with Ke van

Ra~en

1-40. m.

to be announced

4-7 p . m.

THE W(\I(LD OF JAZ7. with special emphasiS on female vocalists,
and a s c hedule of NW musical h appen in gs. With Kim McC art nev

7-10a . m.

lOp.m.-2a.",.

BLANCO Y NEGRO HOURS
mu s i c to t he People.

The Blanco Y Negro flesign Club present s
With Steve winl Rer

WELL FOR OPENERS

"'orning news a n d 1azz with

~Iargo

Westfall
lOa.m .- lp,m.

7-10p.m.

THEATER GHOST EATS LUNCH Broadwav so undt racks, and later,
rock tn' r oll, wit h Steve Sma ll ey

1-4p,m .

STORIES FOR OTHER WORLDS with Aaron Cl ea r

4-7p . m.

THE ALTERNATIVE HOURS RETUI(N with John Bick e lh aupt

7-IOp . m.
lO p.m . -12a.m .

CRAZY CROSS THE COUNTRY " A voca l s s how of
loose Iv about traveling," with Tom Gill

~o

r e put e

BLUES l~ THE NIGHT f rom Cab Ca ll owav to Rig Bands and
Dori s nay

Saturday
7- 10a, m.
lOa .m, -l p.m.

SAMF.D I MATI N REALITE with Laura f1av Ab raham
FRIDAY N[(;HT DREAMS

" Contemporary and 'S o' s jazz r e quests
Al so: news and

gladly humore d," s avs Jo e Murphv, host.
local in fo rmation

l-4p. m,

RERUNS FOil LAT E RI SERS ~1os tlv new mus i c hv unknown o r
unrecognized artists , with Jo hn S. Foster

4-7p. m.

PR[MF. TrME SIIIW

7- l0p.m.

THE EAR LY SHOW

lOp.m,-4a.m.

• KAOS STAFF MEETING The
KAOS-FM core staff meets every Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the station's studios on the third floor
of the College Activities Building.
People not working with KAOS
are welcome to attend,

Sou l and jazz, with '1ike Gri ggs
Jazz,

s wjn~,

and blues, with :-largo l.,lestfa l 1

mu sica l talent r r ecorded "remo t e "
or perf ormed l ive in th e KAns stud i os . Al so: .ja zz , r are
c omedv a n d ex p eri men t a 1 radio . 'h th Ca r 1 L . Cook

THE ALL NI TE .J AMM

Loea ]

I

• The Self Help Bicycle Repair
Facilities are open five hours a
week for the duration of the
summer quarter on Fridays 12
through 5 p.m, It is loca ted in
the basement of the College Activi ties Building (CAB). The fee
is 25 cents per day.

PAI NT

co.

• Beginning Monday, July 12,
the library (User Services area)
will be open on Monday and
Wednesday nights until 9 :00 p.m ,

W£aTaID£ S"O~~INO C£NTa ..

.43.8700

wi t~

Janann e Caver

2-7a .m .

Students:
10% discount on ALL art suppliea
WCQ) IFiJD)

OLYMPIA. WASHINGTON

7-10p,m .

7:10- IO :30p ,m,

• Summer senior employment
seminars will be held Tuesdays
and Thursdays from 3: 30 to
4:30 p.m, in Lib. 1221, beginning
August 3 .
The seminars are as follows :
August 3 - Introduction to
Placement Services and how to
write a resume and letter of
application.
August 5 - How to complete a
job application and how to
compile a credential fil e.
August 10 - How to plan and
conduct a job search,
August 12 - How to conduct an
information and employment
interview ,

SOUTH SOUND NATIONAL BANK
Black Lake Office
Black Lake Boulevard

CLASSIr.AL SNOOTERY A wide variet v of c lassical mu s i c .
includin g a n or~a n re cital wee kly b v J ohn Obetz at u n . m.
With Ca rla Kno?er

Audio frenzy with Tom Hood

ALL WArs TIIA"£L UIltllC£.IIII::

Main Office
South Sound Center
491-4144

ARlEN ODY SSEY

4-7:30p . m.

PERSON TO PERSON Interviews, local sports notes, music,
and news from the OIVIDpia Maritime Association with
Laura May Abraham and Walter Davis

7-10p. m.

So n e~o

Thursday

GET UP WITH IT Jazz, vocals, and assorted tunes to get the
week moving . With Rob Macht

10a,m.-lp.m.

Jazz and spor t s commentar y with Aaron

BRl~CH

4-7p.m.

Obscure music with a weekly

Monday

COFFE E , TOAST, AND JN1M Li ~ ht ;azz , ra r e c omedy . c h a rmln p.
c hit- chat, l ocal mu s i c , an d experimental radio. Also:
bre akfast on the air whenever t he hens lay. With
r.arl L. Cook

1-4p, m.

SHOW with Rhoda Fleisc hman ••• children's stories and

ROOTS AND BEYOND Soft countrv-rock and R&B 9:30, new releases
lOp.m. ~ news commentarv and f~ee music l1p.m . With Chris
Holden

12a.m.-whenever

"Hey folks!

Evergreen Branch
Co llege Activities Building
806 -2440 : Open 12 - 3

10a,m.-Ip,m:

European rock ,

The workshops will begin a t
8: 30 a,m, July 18, Topics to be
covered include basic organiza tion of design, lead time requirements, budgets, innovations in
case and frame hangings , and
modular unit construction,

b:DO

7-10a.m.

ETHER CLASSICS Historv, critique, and resdings of 20th
century classical music and jazz, with Joe Murphy

6:30-9:30p.m.

A special workshop in photo
mural techniques will be conducted by Skip Pahl, who is
from Chaffey College in Palo
Alto , Using an original negative
by the great early 20th Century
photographer Edward S. Curtis,
Pah I will construct a photo
mural that will measure ·52
inches by eight feet. The resulting work will become property
of Evergreen.

Red Apple
Natural Foods

Wednesday

with Aaron Cle ar

Musi c in and' out of the 1950's with Kidd Rhythm

TWO O' CLOCK COUNT
Crook

3:30-6:30p.m.

Guiding the workshop will be
guest faculty members Dextra
Frankel and Thomas Hartman,
both teachers at California State
University at Fullerton, Frankel,
an associate professor of art, has
been CSUF's gallery director for
the past nine ytars, in addition
to serving as cu"tor at four art
museums and as a trustee for the
American Crafts Council. Hartman has directed exhibits for a
number of museums and is a
freelance designer.

FRANCISCAN:

WHAT IT IS

2-3: 3Op.m.

A three-day workshop on art
exhibition design, sponsored by
the Western Association of Art
Museums, will be held on campus July 18 - 20.

_.._."
M_.

MO~~INr.

STONELIGHT HO~S Music by and for Women, with stories and
newB • . . Oivine Decadence with Annie Stone

12:30-2p . m.

ART EXHIBITION WORKSHOP HELD

Monday - Saturday 9:30 -

HARD TO GET UP IN THE

10 to 6
Mon. thru Sat.

@if

M(Q)10J lr Jill

183 (Q) (Q) I[~
352-0720

Westside Center

501 E 4th
943-1170

Special Order Service

Av~il~ble

2nd Weekend

ENTERTAINMENT



In July

Arts and Entertainment
FILMS
ON CAMPUS
Friday, July 16
THE JUNGLE BOOK (1942, 109
min .) Director Zol tan Korda and his
associates I ilted some names and
ideas from a few of Kip lin g 's
" Jungle" ta les, produci ng a Technico lor Tarzan-type fantasy starring
Sabu as Mowgli , the Jungle Boy .
The New York Times co mmented in
1942, "Indeed, there has sel do m
been a piclure in which one cou ld
see so much snarl ing and fighting.
so much animal turbulence, over a
space of t wo hours." LH one, 7
p.m. , 75 ce nts.

lArry Shlim

Buffalo Bob
& the Indians

Kilt hie,'" .\lfeig lw"

by Stan Shore

Robert Altman 's BUFFALO

BILL

AND

THE

INDIANS

is

currently playing in Seattle and
Portlwld.
The spotlight of fame shines
with blinding brightness and, unfort un ate ly , with an alarming
lack of discretion. Those who
know who John Kennedy was
know equall y well who killed
him.
All those who are famous, for
whatever reason from Sirhan
Sirhan to Gerald Ford to Carl
Sagan - must deal wi th the pecul iarities and idiosyncrasies of
populari ty. They are part of a
very select group; prai sed or
damned, their every move is
publ ic property. It is no wonder
they often become confused.
Norman Mailer thought he could
be mayor of New York, confusing literary fame with po litical
stre ngth.
John
Ehrlichman
thought he cou l d write a novel.
making the same mistake in re verse. Bob Dylan thought a song
could free a man from prison.
And others make the mistake as
well: E instein was offered the
presidency of Israel; Sir Isaac
Newton, a seat in Parliament.
But it is actors, actresses, writ ers and, especially, directors who
must l ive fully in this world of
exaggerat i on and deception.
Show business, by its very
nature, creates r ea lity out of
fantasy. Of the people in show
bus i ness , directors most often
grapple with the whims of fame
and w i th the process of show
business itself. Antonioni made
Blow-Up, about a reality that
changed as it was made public.
Fellini, in 8'/ 2, showed a movie
director who skirted between his
fantasy world of film and the
real wo rld with all too much
f e li city. Robert Altman's last
film, Nashville, dealt with the
plastic over-large world of country performers and the inevitable
inner wt that their surface hypocrisy had caused. It was a
g reat fi lm , w(.'rthy of being mentioned in the same breath as Antonioni 's and Fellini 's ma s ter pIeces .

J,Il Stewa rt

But now let's take another
breath before we go on to talk
about Altman ' s curren t film ,

BUFFALO BILL AND THE
lNDIANS , OR SITTING BULL'S
HISTORY LESSON. It is a hIm
'-4IIr.1I

SI,Ii,,,

The photographs on this page were taken by Evergreen photographers during Olympia 's Lakefair celeb rat ion last weekend .

o n the same theme ;
able, boring film.
often reflect their
"'"rds and make

but a miserGreat films
glory backa director's

early efforts seem all the better,
con t a in in g this or t h at flair that
wou ld later be included in the
masterp iece. But Altman's new
film reflects its shallowness backwards, making Altman's earlier
fi l m s seem less the controlled
limi t a t ion of a great director
than the n ecessary limitation of a
mediocre one.
The sto r y of Buffa lo Bill and
the Indians is simple enour,h:
Buffalo Bill, the famous showma n , is i n need of something to
boost his popularity: he hiu's
Sitting Bull, the famous Indian
chief. to perform in his w'ild west
show. Sitting Bull comes, shows
his superiority, meets Presiden t
Grover Cleveland, and leaves.
Thematically, the fi lm is supposed to compare the flaky
showmanship of Buffalo Bill
w i th t h e equally phony statecraft
of Grover Cleveland and contrast
them both with the art of Sitting
Bull, a speci al inspired, a lmost
magical showmanship which elevates him to a true leader . With
Sitting Bull, the staging is a staging of reality, a subtle manipulation and shaping of events.
Well , as you can see, it is all
fine on paper, but on the screen
not even the Big Name performances of Paul N ewman and Joel
Grey can save this movie. It is
shot ,
la McCabe and Mrs.
Miller, with a speci ally tinted
film. In this case it is a rustic
brown reminiscent of the old
West. But in BUFFALO BILL the
tinting has been overdone: even
Paul Newman's blue eyes look
smoggy.

a

So it i s throughout the film:
each stylistic innovation from an
ea rlier film, each thematic insight
is redone and made worse. The
cheapness of politicians resur rected in the person of Grover
Cleveland; the strength of women resurrected in Annie Oakley;
the sleig ht-o f - hand storyteller
from the o ld card player borrowed from McCabe arld Mrs.

Friday , July 23
THE AFRICAN QUEEN (1951, 105
min.) John Huslon's film claSSiC,
d ist inguished ch iefl y by the excellent performances of Humphrey
Bogart and Kathe rine Hepb urn ,
who as Capta in Charlie Allnut and
missionary Rose Sayer take a dilapidated tugboat down an uncharted
African ri ver and blow up a World
War I German gunboat. Bogart and
Hepburn are on screen alone for
almost the entire film. (The tugboat, by the way, has been somewhat restored and is now being
used to give tourists rides on the
Desc hut es River at a resort in
Soulhern Oregon .) LH one, 7 p.m.,
75 cen l s.
Friday, July 30
aUACKSER FORTUNE HAS A
COUSIN IN THE BRONX (1970, 90
min .) Quack ser (Gene Wild er) is a
cu l e young Dubliner who shovels
horse manure off the streets for a
living. A cu te American student
(Margot Kidder) can't resist taking
his picture and having an affair
wit h him . When the c ity passes an
ordi nance banishing horse-drawn
wagons, Quackser tries to liberale
his friends, now on their way to
glue and dogf"od factories. He is
ca ll ed Quackser because he imitated ducks when he was a boy .
Cu te. LH one, 7 p.m., 75 cents.
IN OLYMPIA
ROBIN AND MAR IAN Richard
Lester's story of an aging Robin
Hood , starring Sean Connery and
Audrey Hepburn. Also: THE FORTUNE Whatever happened to M ike
Nichol s? He does for Jack Nichol ·
son in this movie what he did for
dolphins in "Day of the Dolphin."
Through Tuesday , July 20 . State
Thealre.357-4010 .
MOTHER, JUGS, AND SPEED
An ug ly ambulance comedy starring
Raquel Welch. Start s Jul y 21 . State
Thealre.
MURDER BY DEATH Neil SImon 's lowbrow script wastes good
talent. Starts July 28. Stete Theatre.
IN SEARCH OF NOAH'S ARK
Low budget Bible babble by Big
Bucks business boys. Through July
27 . Olympic Thealre. 357 - 3422.
BAD NEWS BEARS Michae l
Ritc hi e ("Smi le," "Downhill Racer,"
"The Candidal e") di rected Tatum
O'Neal and Walter Matthau in thi s
Litt l e League co medy. Matthau
didn't get hi s 'A cademy Award,
even though he groveled before
millions on the Johnny Carson
Show . No shame. Starts July 28 .
OlympiC Theatre .
PETER PAN If al l the kids who
jumped out of windows after
seeing this story were laid end - toend, boy, wou ld there be a mess . A
Walt Disney Cartoon. Through July
20. Capitol Theatre, 357·7161 .
GUS The best donkey movie
since "Francis Joins the Army ."
Ju ly 21 through August 3. Capitol
Theatre.
HAWMPS The original title of
this camel movie for children was
" Humps. " but the producers dec ided it might be mi sconstrued .
Starts August 4, Capitol Theatre.

AT THE EARTH'S CORE and
THE MYSTERIOUS ISLAND OF
CAPTAIN NEMO Need we say
more? Through July 17 . Lacey
Drive- In , 491 -3161.
ROOSTER COGBURN, a study in
senility , an d THE GIRL FROM PE TROVKA, wi th Goldie Hawn as the
gi rl. July 18 - 20. Lacey Drive- In.
GATOR A pet al li gator, flu shed'
down the toilet by its ow ner, grow s
to an awesome size in the city
sewers by eati ng the ce real waste
produc t from a local factory. Burt
Reyn olds must stop thi s menace .
An added treat : THE KILLER
ELITE . J uly 21 - 27 . Lacey DriveIn .
JAWS and THE McCULLOCHS
July 16 - 22. Sun set Drive-in , 3578302.
ODE TO BILLIE JOE, based on
th at irri tati ng song , and HENNESSEY. Jul y 23 - 25. Sunset Drive- in .
RADIO
See the KAOS Program Guide
elsewhere in th is issue for regul ar
listings.
DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL CONVENTION Summaries and on-thefloor coverage twice dai l y from
New York City . 10 - 11 a.m . and
5 - 6 p.m. through July 19. Pro duced by the Pac ifi ca Foundation
for exclusive Northwest broadcast
by KAOS-FM.
LECTURES AND CONFERENCES
ON CAMPUS
Thursday, July 15
KENNETH O'CONNELL speaks
on graphics design. LH four, 11 :30
a.m.
Sunda y , Ju l y 18 - Tuesday ,
Ju ly 20 '
EXHIBITION DESIGN CONFER ENCE, sponsored by the Western
Association of Art Museums.
Tuesday, July 20
ALAN NASSER speaks on phi losophy . LH four, 11 :30 a.m .
Thursday, July 22
PEGGY DICKINSON speaks on
art. LH four, 11 : 30 a.m .
Tuesday, July 27
MARK LEVENSKY speaks on philosophy. LH four , 11 :30 a.m.
Thursday, July 29
ED KORMONDY speaks on zoology . LH four, 11:30 a.m.
,Tuesday, August 3
LOWELL KUEHN speaks on soci o logy . LH four . 11:30 a.m.
Friday. August 13 - Sunday , August 15.
STATE N.O.W. CONVENTION
N. O.W. (National Organization of
Women) convention is open to all
women: "A time and place to renew friendships, make new ones ,
learn, play, think, relax , and enjoy!"
For f urthe r inf ormation, contact
Conference Coo rdinator Cathy
Cochran at 943-4592 .

SPORTS AND FESTIVALS
Friday, July 16 - Sunday, July 18
BEAR FESTIVAL , McCleary ,
Washington
Saturday, July 17
KIWANIS AIR SHOW , Bremerton
FairQrounds
SOCCER San Antonio - Sounders, Kingdome, Seattle
Saturday, Ju ly 23 - Sunday, August 1.
WATER FOLLIES, Tri -Clties
Sunday, Augu st 24
SOCCER
Phi ladelphia - Sound ers, Kingdome, Seattle
Thursday, July 29 - Sunday. August 8 .
SEAFAIR, Seattle

Con tributions to th e Arts and Entertainmen t column are welcome .
Con tact Features Editor. Cooper
Point Journal , CAB 306 , or call 8666213 .
MUSIC
IN OLYMPIA
Friday, July 16
DULCIMER WORKSHOP Teddy
McN ight , a local inst rument bui lder
and pain ter, and Virginia Painter. a
music ian and perform er. will teac h
cons truction , care. an d how to play
the dulCimer . B. Y. O. D. (Bring Your
Own Du lC i mer.) Applejam Fo lk
Center . 220 E. Un ion, 8 :15 p.m ., 50
cents .
Saturday, Jul y 17
HOUSEBOAT MUSIC a group
feat uri ng Hank Brad ley (1974 State
Fidd le Champ), Jack the Greek .
and Nancy Schenk. ptaY lng South·
ern , Slavic, and Scottish songs .
Applejam Fo lk Center , 8 : 15 p.m.
Minors we lcome, $1 .
Su nday, July 18
ORCA , a newly-formed Lat i n
Jazz band. and STEVE KELSO, a
si nger, in a benefit performance for
the Open Community Schoo l. Blake
Grange Hall, 1 :30 p.m. , $1.50.
IN SEATILE
Friday , July 30
LILY TOMLIN . comed ien ne. in
concert. I know she's not a musician, but she doesn't fit into any
other category . Paramount Northwest Theatre , 8:30 p.m .

ART
tN OLYMPIA
DAVID THORNOCK WATERCOLORS t hrough July 31 . Also: DAVID
HERO POTTERY , Childhood's End
Gallery, 507 S. Capitel Way. Tuesday - Saturday, 11 - 5 : 30 p.m .
OUR HERITAGE, AMERICA , an
exhi bition featurin g arts and sk ill s
of the pioneer past. State Capito l
Museum , 211 West 21st Avenue .
Tuesday - Friday . 10 - 5 p.m. ; Sat·
urday - Sunday, 12 - 6 p.m.

IN TACOMA
DEREK BENNETT SWISS PHOTOGRAPHS to July 18. Jul y 19August 4, closed. The Silver Image
Gallery, 727 Commerce Street.
IN SEATILE
LUCAS SAMARAS PHOTOTRANSFORMATIONS and DAVID
HOCKNEY DRAWINGS AND LITH OGRAPHS. Seattle Art Museum
Modern Art Pavilion , Seattle Cen ter. To July 18.
BIRD IN SPACE, a psychic sculpture performance by Tom Marion i
from the San FranCisco Museum of
Conceptual Art. July 17, 8 :30 p.m .
Paid admission. Also : VIDEO EXHIBIT by Shigeko K ubota and
Karen Hel merson , from July 24 .
Kubota and Helmerson will discuss
their work on July 23 at 8:30 p.m .
And/Or Ga ll ery, 1525 E. Pine
Street.
ON CAMPUS
FOUND OBJECTS. an exh ibit
with pieces contributed by partici pants in the Evergreen Exhibit ion
Design Conference. Ju ly 20 - 30,
Library Gallery .
STUFFED ALBINO SQUIRREL
FETUSES Over a dozen cunningly
bottled would-be squirre l s, ar ranged artistically on t he gallery
shelves, serve as mute evidence tor
the " Right to Scamper" organizati on . Lectures will be given every
ten minutes and tapes of baby
squirrels squeaking will be presented in an effort to play on your
emotions . Joe Be mis Me mor iat
Gall ery , open 24 hours.

, Miller.
Coming as this film does on
th e heels of other grea t American
directing' failures
(Hitchcock's
Family Plot, Arthur Penn's Misso uri Breaks), it seems all the
more depressing. All o ur best actors and best directors seem to
have been struck by a Sisyphusian curse: to do the same thing
over and over again, except
worse each time .
Altman's new film is barely
worth writing about and not at
all worth seein g,

PIlaSON'S

~

arch 1- d~]
bald ;~\:.Y
sisters

WESTSIDE SHCFPING CENTER
Hours 9 - 9 Daily
Sunday 7 - 7

Corner of Kaiser & Mud Bay
Phone : -866 -2030

2nd Weekend

ENTERTAINMENT



In July

Arts and Entertainment
FILMS
ON CAMPUS
Friday, July 16
THE JUNGLE BOOK (1942, 109
min .) Director Zol tan Korda and his
associates I ilted some names and
ideas from a few of Kip lin g 's
" Jungle" ta les, produci ng a Technico lor Tarzan-type fantasy starring
Sabu as Mowgli , the Jungle Boy .
The New York Times co mmented in
1942, "Indeed, there has sel do m
been a piclure in which one cou ld
see so much snarl ing and fighting.
so much animal turbulence, over a
space of t wo hours." LH one, 7
p.m. , 75 ce nts.

lArry Shlim

Buffalo Bob
& the Indians

Kilt hie,'" .\lfeig lw"

by Stan Shore

Robert Altman 's BUFFALO

BILL

AND

THE

INDIANS

is

currently playing in Seattle and
Portlwld.
The spotlight of fame shines
with blinding brightness and, unfort un ate ly , with an alarming
lack of discretion. Those who
know who John Kennedy was
know equall y well who killed
him.
All those who are famous, for
whatever reason from Sirhan
Sirhan to Gerald Ford to Carl
Sagan - must deal wi th the pecul iarities and idiosyncrasies of
populari ty. They are part of a
very select group; prai sed or
damned, their every move is
publ ic property. It is no wonder
they often become confused.
Norman Mailer thought he could
be mayor of New York, confusing literary fame with po litical
stre ngth.
John
Ehrlichman
thought he cou l d write a novel.
making the same mistake in re verse. Bob Dylan thought a song
could free a man from prison.
And others make the mistake as
well: E instein was offered the
presidency of Israel; Sir Isaac
Newton, a seat in Parliament.
But it is actors, actresses, writ ers and, especially, directors who
must l ive fully in this world of
exaggerat i on and deception.
Show business, by its very
nature, creates r ea lity out of
fantasy. Of the people in show
bus i ness , directors most often
grapple with the whims of fame
and w i th the process of show
business itself. Antonioni made
Blow-Up, about a reality that
changed as it was made public.
Fellini, in 8'/ 2, showed a movie
director who skirted between his
fantasy world of film and the
real wo rld with all too much
f e li city. Robert Altman's last
film, Nashville, dealt with the
plastic over-large world of country performers and the inevitable
inner wt that their surface hypocrisy had caused. It was a
g reat fi lm , w(.'rthy of being mentioned in the same breath as Antonioni 's and Fellini 's ma s ter pIeces .

J,Il Stewa rt

But now let's take another
breath before we go on to talk
about Altman ' s curren t film ,

BUFFALO BILL AND THE
lNDIANS , OR SITTING BULL'S
HISTORY LESSON. It is a hIm
'-4IIr.1I

SI,Ii,,,

The photographs on this page were taken by Evergreen photographers during Olympia 's Lakefair celeb rat ion last weekend .

o n the same theme ;
able, boring film.
often reflect their
"'"rds and make

but a miserGreat films
glory backa director's

early efforts seem all the better,
con t a in in g this or t h at flair that
wou ld later be included in the
masterp iece. But Altman's new
film reflects its shallowness backwards, making Altman's earlier
fi l m s seem less the controlled
limi t a t ion of a great director
than the n ecessary limitation of a
mediocre one.
The sto r y of Buffa lo Bill and
the Indians is simple enour,h:
Buffalo Bill, the famous showma n , is i n need of something to
boost his popularity: he hiu's
Sitting Bull, the famous Indian
chief. to perform in his w'ild west
show. Sitting Bull comes, shows
his superiority, meets Presiden t
Grover Cleveland, and leaves.
Thematically, the fi lm is supposed to compare the flaky
showmanship of Buffalo Bill
w i th t h e equally phony statecraft
of Grover Cleveland and contrast
them both with the art of Sitting
Bull, a speci al inspired, a lmost
magical showmanship which elevates him to a true leader . With
Sitting Bull, the staging is a staging of reality, a subtle manipulation and shaping of events.
Well , as you can see, it is all
fine on paper, but on the screen
not even the Big Name performances of Paul N ewman and Joel
Grey can save this movie. It is
shot ,
la McCabe and Mrs.
Miller, with a speci ally tinted
film. In this case it is a rustic
brown reminiscent of the old
West. But in BUFFALO BILL the
tinting has been overdone: even
Paul Newman's blue eyes look
smoggy.

a

So it i s throughout the film:
each stylistic innovation from an
ea rlier film, each thematic insight
is redone and made worse. The
cheapness of politicians resur rected in the person of Grover
Cleveland; the strength of women resurrected in Annie Oakley;
the sleig ht-o f - hand storyteller
from the o ld card player borrowed from McCabe arld Mrs.

Friday , July 23
THE AFRICAN QUEEN (1951, 105
min.) John Huslon's film claSSiC,
d ist inguished ch iefl y by the excellent performances of Humphrey
Bogart and Kathe rine Hepb urn ,
who as Capta in Charlie Allnut and
missionary Rose Sayer take a dilapidated tugboat down an uncharted
African ri ver and blow up a World
War I German gunboat. Bogart and
Hepburn are on screen alone for
almost the entire film. (The tugboat, by the way, has been somewhat restored and is now being
used to give tourists rides on the
Desc hut es River at a resort in
Soulhern Oregon .) LH one, 7 p.m.,
75 cen l s.
Friday, July 30
aUACKSER FORTUNE HAS A
COUSIN IN THE BRONX (1970, 90
min .) Quack ser (Gene Wild er) is a
cu l e young Dubliner who shovels
horse manure off the streets for a
living. A cu te American student
(Margot Kidder) can't resist taking
his picture and having an affair
wit h him . When the c ity passes an
ordi nance banishing horse-drawn
wagons, Quackser tries to liberale
his friends, now on their way to
glue and dogf"od factories. He is
ca ll ed Quackser because he imitated ducks when he was a boy .
Cu te. LH one, 7 p.m., 75 cents.
IN OLYMPIA
ROBIN AND MAR IAN Richard
Lester's story of an aging Robin
Hood , starring Sean Connery and
Audrey Hepburn. Also: THE FORTUNE Whatever happened to M ike
Nichol s? He does for Jack Nichol ·
son in this movie what he did for
dolphins in "Day of the Dolphin."
Through Tuesday , July 20 . State
Thealre.357-4010 .
MOTHER, JUGS, AND SPEED
An ug ly ambulance comedy starring
Raquel Welch. Start s Jul y 21 . State
Thealre.
MURDER BY DEATH Neil SImon 's lowbrow script wastes good
talent. Starts July 28. Stete Theatre.
IN SEARCH OF NOAH'S ARK
Low budget Bible babble by Big
Bucks business boys. Through July
27 . Olympic Thealre. 357 - 3422.
BAD NEWS BEARS Michae l
Ritc hi e ("Smi le," "Downhill Racer,"
"The Candidal e") di rected Tatum
O'Neal and Walter Matthau in thi s
Litt l e League co medy. Matthau
didn't get hi s 'A cademy Award,
even though he groveled before
millions on the Johnny Carson
Show . No shame. Starts July 28 .
OlympiC Theatre .
PETER PAN If al l the kids who
jumped out of windows after
seeing this story were laid end - toend, boy, wou ld there be a mess . A
Walt Disney Cartoon. Through July
20. Capitol Theatre, 357·7161 .
GUS The best donkey movie
since "Francis Joins the Army ."
Ju ly 21 through August 3. Capitol
Theatre.
HAWMPS The original title of
this camel movie for children was
" Humps. " but the producers dec ided it might be mi sconstrued .
Starts August 4, Capitol Theatre.

AT THE EARTH'S CORE and
THE MYSTERIOUS ISLAND OF
CAPTAIN NEMO Need we say
more? Through July 17 . Lacey
Drive- In , 491 -3161.
ROOSTER COGBURN, a study in
senility , an d THE GIRL FROM PE TROVKA, wi th Goldie Hawn as the
gi rl. July 18 - 20. Lacey Drive- In.
GATOR A pet al li gator, flu shed'
down the toilet by its ow ner, grow s
to an awesome size in the city
sewers by eati ng the ce real waste
produc t from a local factory. Burt
Reyn olds must stop thi s menace .
An added treat : THE KILLER
ELITE . J uly 21 - 27 . Lacey DriveIn .
JAWS and THE McCULLOCHS
July 16 - 22. Sun set Drive-in , 3578302.
ODE TO BILLIE JOE, based on
th at irri tati ng song , and HENNESSEY. Jul y 23 - 25. Sunset Drive- in .
RADIO
See the KAOS Program Guide
elsewhere in th is issue for regul ar
listings.
DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL CONVENTION Summaries and on-thefloor coverage twice dai l y from
New York City . 10 - 11 a.m . and
5 - 6 p.m. through July 19. Pro duced by the Pac ifi ca Foundation
for exclusive Northwest broadcast
by KAOS-FM.
LECTURES AND CONFERENCES
ON CAMPUS
Thursday, July 15
KENNETH O'CONNELL speaks
on graphics design. LH four, 11 :30
a.m.
Sunda y , Ju l y 18 - Tuesday ,
Ju ly 20 '
EXHIBITION DESIGN CONFER ENCE, sponsored by the Western
Association of Art Museums.
Tuesday, July 20
ALAN NASSER speaks on phi losophy . LH four, 11 :30 a.m .
Thursday, July 22
PEGGY DICKINSON speaks on
art. LH four, 11 : 30 a.m .
Tuesday, July 27
MARK LEVENSKY speaks on philosophy. LH four , 11 :30 a.m.
Thursday, July 29
ED KORMONDY speaks on zoology . LH four, 11:30 a.m.
,Tuesday, August 3
LOWELL KUEHN speaks on soci o logy . LH four . 11:30 a.m.
Friday. August 13 - Sunday , August 15.
STATE N.O.W. CONVENTION
N. O.W. (National Organization of
Women) convention is open to all
women: "A time and place to renew friendships, make new ones ,
learn, play, think, relax , and enjoy!"
For f urthe r inf ormation, contact
Conference Coo rdinator Cathy
Cochran at 943-4592 .

SPORTS AND FESTIVALS
Friday, July 16 - Sunday, July 18
BEAR FESTIVAL , McCleary ,
Washington
Saturday, July 17
KIWANIS AIR SHOW , Bremerton
FairQrounds
SOCCER San Antonio - Sounders, Kingdome, Seattle
Saturday, Ju ly 23 - Sunday, August 1.
WATER FOLLIES, Tri -Clties
Sunday, Augu st 24
SOCCER
Phi ladelphia - Sound ers, Kingdome, Seattle
Thursday, July 29 - Sunday. August 8 .
SEAFAIR, Seattle

Con tributions to th e Arts and Entertainmen t column are welcome .
Con tact Features Editor. Cooper
Point Journal , CAB 306 , or call 8666213 .
MUSIC
IN OLYMPIA
Friday, July 16
DULCIMER WORKSHOP Teddy
McN ight , a local inst rument bui lder
and pain ter, and Virginia Painter. a
music ian and perform er. will teac h
cons truction , care. an d how to play
the dulCimer . B. Y. O. D. (Bring Your
Own Du lC i mer.) Applejam Fo lk
Center . 220 E. Un ion, 8 :15 p.m ., 50
cents .
Saturday, Jul y 17
HOUSEBOAT MUSIC a group
feat uri ng Hank Brad ley (1974 State
Fidd le Champ), Jack the Greek .
and Nancy Schenk. ptaY lng South·
ern , Slavic, and Scottish songs .
Applejam Fo lk Center , 8 : 15 p.m.
Minors we lcome, $1 .
Su nday, July 18
ORCA , a newly-formed Lat i n
Jazz band. and STEVE KELSO, a
si nger, in a benefit performance for
the Open Community Schoo l. Blake
Grange Hall, 1 :30 p.m. , $1.50.
IN SEATILE
Friday , July 30
LILY TOMLIN . comed ien ne. in
concert. I know she's not a musician, but she doesn't fit into any
other category . Paramount Northwest Theatre , 8:30 p.m .

ART
tN OLYMPIA
DAVID THORNOCK WATERCOLORS t hrough July 31 . Also: DAVID
HERO POTTERY , Childhood's End
Gallery, 507 S. Capitel Way. Tuesday - Saturday, 11 - 5 : 30 p.m .
OUR HERITAGE, AMERICA , an
exhi bition featurin g arts and sk ill s
of the pioneer past. State Capito l
Museum , 211 West 21st Avenue .
Tuesday - Friday . 10 - 5 p.m. ; Sat·
urday - Sunday, 12 - 6 p.m.

IN TACOMA
DEREK BENNETT SWISS PHOTOGRAPHS to July 18. Jul y 19August 4, closed. The Silver Image
Gallery, 727 Commerce Street.
IN SEATILE
LUCAS SAMARAS PHOTOTRANSFORMATIONS and DAVID
HOCKNEY DRAWINGS AND LITH OGRAPHS. Seattle Art Museum
Modern Art Pavilion , Seattle Cen ter. To July 18.
BIRD IN SPACE, a psychic sculpture performance by Tom Marion i
from the San FranCisco Museum of
Conceptual Art. July 17, 8 :30 p.m .
Paid admission. Also : VIDEO EXHIBIT by Shigeko K ubota and
Karen Hel merson , from July 24 .
Kubota and Helmerson will discuss
their work on July 23 at 8:30 p.m .
And/Or Ga ll ery, 1525 E. Pine
Street.
ON CAMPUS
FOUND OBJECTS. an exh ibit
with pieces contributed by partici pants in the Evergreen Exhibit ion
Design Conference. Ju ly 20 - 30,
Library Gallery .
STUFFED ALBINO SQUIRREL
FETUSES Over a dozen cunningly
bottled would-be squirre l s, ar ranged artistically on t he gallery
shelves, serve as mute evidence tor
the " Right to Scamper" organizati on . Lectures will be given every
ten minutes and tapes of baby
squirrels squeaking will be presented in an effort to play on your
emotions . Joe Be mis Me mor iat
Gall ery , open 24 hours.

, Miller.
Coming as this film does on
th e heels of other grea t American
directing' failures
(Hitchcock's
Family Plot, Arthur Penn's Misso uri Breaks), it seems all the
more depressing. All o ur best actors and best directors seem to
have been struck by a Sisyphusian curse: to do the same thing
over and over again, except
worse each time .
Altman's new film is barely
worth writing about and not at
all worth seein g,

PIlaSON'S

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arch 1- d~]
bald ;~\:.Y
sisters

WESTSIDE SHCFPING CENTER
Hours 9 - 9 Daily
Sunday 7 - 7

Corner of Kaiser & Mud Bay
Phone : -866 -2030

I

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Will Maraire be Reinstated?

Board Decision Announced Tomorrow

Cost saving rent easing the
burden on your pocketbook.

breach of contract, and violation of his
constitutional rights. On June 25 Maraire
was ordered by Federal Judge Donald
Voorhies to exhaust all institutional means
of appeal before taking the case to an outside court. If the hearing board rules
against Maraire, then he has the option to
appea l the case to the Board of Trustees.
Kormondy has the same option if the decision goes against him.
The board members, Anne Hoffman,
Mark Levensky, Ainara Wilder, Pete Sinclair, Pete Steilberg, John Munro, and
Georgette Chun have already approved a
fina l draft of their decision. A copy of it
was sent to Maraire by registered letter on
Wednesday, July 14, and Kormondy the other disputant - should be notified
of the decision today.
In his letter of termination to Maraire,
1<' ormondy stated, "the termination action
arises from allegations by three women
students that they had either involuntary
sexual relations with you or were manipulated into doing so." Kormondy viewed
this as a "violation of the spirit a!"<i letter
of the Evergreen Social Contract."
At the hearing board, testimony revea led thr ee other complaints against
Maraire for allegedly similar actions. but
these were never fully investigated.
A Chronology
(Th~ Journal would like to emphasize
that Maraire has newr been charged with
any criminal activity involving the alleged
incidents, and that he denies a ny wrongdoing whatsoever.
The chronology that follows is based
on the testimony of persons at the hearing board ,)

A Bag
Of·Extras
Like•••
Dumi Maraire

by Stan Shore
After the longest and most controversial
hearings in Evergreen's history, the All
Campus Hearing Board will announce tomorrow whether fin:d faculty member
Dumi Maraire will be reinstated. The
Hearing Board was called to meet in June,
as Maraire sought to reverse Provost Ed
Kormondy's decision to terminate his contract due to alleged sexual misconduct
with Evergreen students Mia Jacobsen and
Fran Allen.
The hearing board finished gathering
swo rn testimony on July 2, after hearing
from Maraire. the two women making the
allegations, and a handfu l of other witnesses.
Previous to the hearing board mt!eting,
Mara ire had filed sui t against the college
for $2 million in damages for slander,

Fall and Winter 1974
It was during this time that Maraire
met both Fran Allen and Mia Jacobsen .
Jacobsen was a student of Maraire's but
Allen was not. Jacobsen claimed in her
written state ment that Maraire coerced
her into having sex with him on two dif-

ferent occasions during winter quarter.
Maraire denied that one of the incidents
took place and said that the other was riot
a matter of force or coercion.
According to testimony. during September and October Maraire also met Allen
and began a romance that included sexual
relations. In October Allen broke off seeing Maraire because she learned that he
had a relationship with another woman
who was to become his wife within the
year.
Fall 1975
Allen joined the Africa and the United
States coordinated studies program in
which Maraire was a faculty member. She
also became friends with Maraire's wife
Linda, and visited their house often.
February 1976
Allen moved into the Maraire's house.
There was some dispute at the hearing as
to why she moved in. Maraire said that
he looked on it as a favor to Allen, letting
her stay there rent-free so she could save
money to go to Africa with her coordina·
ted studies program the following year.
Allen testified that she saw the move as
more that of being a live-in housekeeper.
Friday, March 12, 1976
Allen wan ted to go to Portland to pick
up her four-year-old son, Otis. Allen
asked Maraire if she could use his car and
he indicated she could, if she first checked

it out with a mechanic. The car had IlI)t
been running well. Around this time they
also discussed whether Allen co uld continue living at Maraire's house with Otis.
Maraire did not want her to.
Allen took the car to Portland without
checking with a mechanic and returned to
a room in the college dorms at 11 p.m.
that evening. There was no dispute about
these incidents at the hearing board. A llen
returned the car to Maraire .
Monday, March 15,1976
She had continued to stay at the dorm s
over the weekend with her chi ld. Maraire
ca lled Allen and asked her to come to hi s
office at around 4 p.:n. Allen went to
Maraire's office at that time with O ti s.
Maraire told Allen he was "very. very
angry" with A llen about the car.
After half an hour or so of discussion .
Maraire said that he had to go ~omewhere
and offered to give Allen a ride in his car
back to the dorms.
In her written statement, Allen claimed
that o n the way to the dorms Maraire
said twice , " 1 either have to beat you up
or make love to you ." She understood
this . she explained. as a punishment for
having taken the car without hi s permission . Maraire denied ever saying any thing
of the kind. and there were not any corroborating witnesses.
contillued pag .. 2

The Evergreen State College . OIympia,Washington 98505

THE COOPER POINT

RNAL
July 15, 1976

Volume IV Number 33

Moss, Schillinger Leave Also

Frustrated Program Secretaries Leave

Zappy 110 volts of Columbia River
ele.c tricity to light up your
rooms and give power to your
mega-stereo .

A kitchen complete with all
the modern conveniences to cook
up your latest culinary magic.

N ice, cool, fresh water from
the tap to wet your whistle or
water your phi lodendron.

Close enough to campus
so you don't have to start up
the old VW and burn up
gas.
And people who share a common
interest with you in making
campus living fun and worthwhile.

Joyce KubasI' arId Ed Evans

by Jill Stewart
Two program secretaries have quit aI'ld
a nother is leav ing Evergreen next month,
part ly brcause of what they call "inhumane treatment" by the college.
Secretaries Ed Evans, Joyce Kubose and
Carole Christian have joined a procession
of staff and adm ini strators who are leavin g or have recently left Evergreen.
Others who have left include Director of
Facilities Jerry Schillinger, Director of Personnel -Auxiliary Serv ices John Moss, Di rector of Coop~rat i ve Education Ken Donohue. Director of Admissions Ken Mayer,
and Financial Aid Counselor Don Von
Volkenburg.
Two years ago the program secretaries
began a program to identify the duties
they performed in their jobs. "We wanted
a job description and salary and everything to reflect the job we were really doing .. _ We did a lot of typing but there is
a lot of responsibility and administration
too. " said Ed Evans.
Evans cited their work on student con tracts as one of their most important administrative duties . He said the program

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commercial rentals can't touch.
Prices start as low as
$37 p I month and up. If we can
help you out, stop by the
Housing Office or call us at 6132.

Come Live At Our Place.

\

I

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secretar ies are the first screeners on individual contracts because they "know what
th e deans will or will not sign."

r

He a lso listed other responsibiliti es, includin g matchin g equivalency awards
with what the student actually signed up
hr. maintaining the contract copy and
co llecting student evaluat ions.
" We are not just secretaries ," Evans
said.
But , according to Evans. wh en the
sta ti s tics were presented to Director of
Personnel John Moss. Moss was uncon vineI'd . and felt that the secretaries were
do in g too much typing to be ca ll ed admin is trators.
So last year the group of program secretaries, working with Dean Rudy Martin ,
agreed to step up their administrative
work and do less typing, "to prove that
we sho uld be reclassified. "
T he tria l period was to last one year, at
the end of which the secretaries would
present statist ics on their work and a decision on reclassification would be made.
Said Evans, " We tried to lower the typ ing through increasing the number of faculty we serve and reducing the number of
program secretaries - which allowed us
to hire typists who worked for us. This
was a ll done to convince someone else
that the job we've done has always been

admi ni st rative."
The statist ics and results kept by the
sec retaries were turned in to Martin
March 16 . However. when the group met
with Martin June 16. his final recomme ndation was that the experiment be con tinued for at least another year. and Mar tin said he was unwilling to reconsid er
c0/1tirlll l?n page 3

College Pulls Out of
Verbal Faculty Offers
by Jill Stewart
Evergreen has refused to hire three facult y who were formally recommended to
be hired, and to whom Dean Rudy Mar·
tin had made a "verbal offer" to hire.
The three , Matthew Halfant, . Maggie
Hunt and josie Mumaw, were informed
June 16 that they would not be hired as
faculty at Evergreen.
Howe ye r, by June 16 Matthew Halfant
and his wife Deborah, who now live in
ASH. had already given up the lease on
their home in Croton-on-Hudson, New
York and had planned to move to Wash ington june 18.
Matthew Halfant said, "We had no

place to go. All bridges behind us had
been burned. The other job offers I had
considered were no longer availab le. so
we came with the thought' of working
something out."
According to Vice President and Provost Ed Kormondy. the decision to not
hire ihe faculty was made because the
projected enrollment for Evergreen fall
quarter has fallen , and less money than
expected will be available to the college
for faculty sa laries. Three faculty were
hired by the college to meet their new
projected enrollment of "roughly 2,300."
but the original number of faculty the col lege had planned to hire was 16.

Kormondy descr ibed the verbai ,'lfer a s
saying to them , " If I offered yoU;) cun tract would yo u accept it ?" He , ilid th at
Rudy Martin made th e otlt'r "in go od
faith that th ey wo'_tld be recom mended"
to the then ava il abk fa cult y posit ion<;.
The Half ants have been JIl ,t ructed b y
th eir lawye r Herb Fuller. who also repre se nt s josie Mumaw . no t to discuss the sit uati('n in detail. And they a re st ill hopi ng
for some change in the plans of the col lege.
"We ca me here beca use we belie vl' In
th e schlh)1. and we want to conti nu ~ to
be lieve in the schooL" saId Matthew Hal ·
Ian!.
Source
Eng US-WaOE.A.1973-01
Media
cpj0125.pdf