The Paper, Volume 1, Number 5 (February 7, 1972)

Item

Identifier
Eng cpj0007
Title
Eng The Paper, Volume 1, Number 5 (February 7, 1972)
Date
7 February 1972
Description
Eng Page 1: Legislature Needs Interest;
Page 1: Thirteen Proposals for S & A Fees: Students Vie For $15,000;
Page 1: Trustees Delay Housing Choice;
Page 1: Two Evergreeners Open Art Show;
Page 1: Recreation Sets Spring Quarter Listing Deadline;
Page 2: Land Use Group Hires Planner: What's for Cooper Point?;
Page 2: Happenings;
Page 2: Indian Carves Abstract Design;
Page 3: Adverse Therapy for Inmates;
Page 3: Net Film Odyssey;
Page 3: Security Measures for Soledad Brothers;
Page 3: Journalists Fly South;
Page 4: Viewpoint: Evergreen 'Community'?;
Page 4: Staff Credits;
Page 4: (cartoon) Nixon & Mao Zedong (people's republic of china);
Page 5: Lunch or Life;
Page 5: Oil Spill Offenders off Easy;
Page 5: Ecologists Attack;
Page 5: Letters: What's Going;
Page 5: Letters: Dorm Blues;
Page 5: Letters: E.W.P.;
Page 5: Letters: Fun City??;
Page 6: Costigan Encourages Student Action in '72;
Page 6: Everyday People;
Page 6: 'Man, Nature and Art';
Page 6: Righteous Baloney;
Page 6: Media Loan Workshop;
Page 7: Evergreen State College Master Plan: nEvergreen on the Run;
Page 7: 'Antiseptic' Walls May get Coloring;
Page 7: (advertisement) Bob's Big Burgers;
Page 7: (advertisement) Sea Mart Shopping Center;
Page 7: (advertisement) Capital Theater & Olympia Theater;
Page 7: (advertisement) Westside Speed Wash;
Page 7: Unclassfied;
Page 8: WashPIRG Seeks Consumer Protection;
Page 8: Wilder Assumes Drama Direction;
Page 8: Chicanos Experience Spirited Mecha Fiesta, 'Teatro' Plays;
Page 8: Library Sets Visit Guidelines: Pets Put on Policy;
Page 8: Record Review: Nero's Quality Lacks Continuity;
Page 8: (advertisement) Hendrick's Rexall Drugs;
Page 8: (advertisement) Peterson's Foodtown;
Page 8: (advertisement) Tacoma Stereo
Creator
Eng Balsey, Ken
Eng Stephens, Charles
Eng Martin, Don
Eng Turnage, Bob
Eng Gay, Henry
Eng Heineck, Dave
Eng Cottongim, Melodi
Eng Leahy, Lester L.
Eng Apperson, Craig
Contributor
Eng Musgrove, Cam
Eng Ness, Chris
Eng Leahy, Lester L.
Eng Campo, Joe
Eng Brockmann, Bruce
Eng Apperson, Craig
Eng Balsey, Ken
Eng Oswald, Joe
Eng Whet, Ruth
Subject
Eng Art
Eng Advertising, Newspaper
Eng Legislature
Eng Northwest Indian Art
Eng Prisons--California
Eng Electroconvulsive therapy.
Eng Aversion therapy
Eng Public Broadcasting Service (U.S.)
Eng Police administration--Washington (State)--Olympia--Evergreen State College
Eng The Evergreen State College
Eng Tuna
Eng Oil Spills
Eng Fear--Psychological aspects
Eng Cynicism
Eng Vietnam War, 1961-1975
Eng Costigan, Giovanni, 1905-1990
Eng Heineck, Dave
Eng Oswald, Joe
Eng Wentz, Philip
Eng Wilder, Ainara
Eng Shoben, Joseph
Eng Mardeisch, August
Eng Evans Dan
Eng Rabel
Eng John
Eng Smythe, Richard
Eng Wilcox, Steve
Eng Anderson, Tom
Eng Pantley, A.J. "Toney"
Eng Olsen, Glen
Eng Tourtellotte, Neal
Eng McLennon, James
Eng Russel, Jim
Eng Roth, Bruce
Eng Robinson, Tyler
Eng Rox, Russ
Eng Reyes, Lawney
Eng Kindschy, Ethel
Eng Kindschy, Robert
Eng Price, Vincent
Eng Chaney, Lon
Eng McBride, Del
Eng Procunier, R.K.
Eng Lawson, Robert
Eng Opton, Edward Jr.
Eng Jackson, George
Eng Bach-y-Rita, George
Eng Pope, L. J.
Eng Champten, Charles
Eng Vavuris, s. Lee
Eng Clutchette, John
Eng Drumgo, Fleeta
Eng Mills, John
Eng Silliman, Floyd
Eng Brockmann, Bruce M.
Eng Campo, Joesph S.
Eng Leahy, Lester L.
Eng Ness, Christine
Eng Brenner, Malcolm
Eng Barker, Martin L.
Eng Minier, David
Eng Brown, Rick
Eng Wentz, Phillip
Eng Brown, Steve
Eng Stefan, Katy
Eng Burk, Gerald
Eng Balsey, Ken
Eng Holly, Jim
Eng Webb, Jackson
Eng Costigan, Geovanni
Eng Buckley, William
Eng Nixion, Richard
Eng Mcgovern, George
Eng Jackson, (Senator)
Eng Duree, Mike
Eng Grant, Ulesses S.
Eng Custer, George
Eng Johnson, Lyndon
Eng Brown, John
Eng Jack
Eng Glenn
Eng Dave
Eng Perry, Don
Eng Graves, Dave
Eng Painter,Christi
Eng Berry, David G.
Eng Kenworthy, Bill
Eng Tello, Francisco
Eng Tello Rita
Eng Valdez, Carmen
Eng Gonzales, Maria
Eng Perez, Elena
Eng Farias, Jesus
Eng Nero, Peter
Eng Lennon, John
Eng Bacharach, Burt
Eng Mancini, Henry
Eng Osmond, Donny
Eng Adult Student Housing, Inc.
Eng Evergreen State College. Board of Trustees.
Eng Thurston County Planning Commission
Eng Cooper Point Association
Eng Legislature
Eng Yacht Club
Eng FM Radio Station
Eng State Capitol Museum
Eng Olympia School District
Eng Jazz Dance Club
Eng Olympia City Hall
Eng Gestalt Encounter Group
Eng Washingtion Junior High
Eng Good Shepaard Lutheran Church
Eng Soledad Folsom
Eng San Quintin
Eng National Education Telivision
Eng Xerox Corperation
Eng Union Oil
Eng Newsweek
Eng Mobil
Eng Texaco
Eng Gulf
Eng Environment Action Coalition
Eng Contempary American Minorities
Eng Melody Lane Tavern
Eng Everyday People
Eng The University Of Washingtion
Eng USSR
Eng Pakistan army
Eng Mason county journal
Eng Evergreen Dorms
Eng Public Interest Research Group
Eng WashPIRG
Eng McLane Fire Station
Eng Privost
Eng Wisconsin State University
Eng The University of Wisconsion
Eng Bob's Big Burgers
Eng Seamart Shopping Center
Eng Capitol Theatre
Eng Westside Speed Wash
Eng MECHA
Eng Theatre of the Lice
Eng The Evergreen State College (Library)
Eng Peterson's Foodtown
Eng Hendricks Rexall Drugs
Eng Tacoma Stero
Format
Eng application/PDF
Language
Eng eng
Place
Eng Seattle
Eng The Evergreen State College
Eng Vacavill, California
Eng University Of California at Davis
Eng Atascadero State Hospital
Eng San Francisco
Eng Santa Barbra California
Eng Kane County
Eng Dade County
Eng Wilmette, Illinoise
Eng White House
Eng Southeast Asia
Publisher
Eng The Paper Cooperative, The Evergreen State College
Extent
Eng 8 pages
Temporal Coverage
Eng 1971
extracted text
Legislature needs interest
By KEN BALSLEY
In this last week of the 1972
Special Legislative Session,
members of the Evergreen
Community are faced with a
variety of bills at the state capitol
that concern them. The 40 day
session ends Feb. 14.
It seems as though there is no
organized opposition to Senate
Bill 130, which lowers the legal
age to purchase liquor to 18, but
it may be running into a bigger
problem, apathy.
At a joint meeting of the
Senate Commerce and House
Business and Professional
committee, which has passed SB
130, no one arose to speak against
the bill. Some witnesses did
appear to speak in favor of it
including a lobbyist for the State
Restraurant Association and
Evergreen's own vice-president
Joseph Shoben.
An amendment has been
attached which would require a

VOLUME 1, NUMBER 5

Referendum vote of the people.
It was a safe political move on

the part of Senator August
Mardeisch, D-Everett, as he will
not not have to answer to his
constituents. It is now in the
Senate Rules Committee, where
passage to the Senate floor looks
good now that the amendment
has been attached.
You can make your opinion
known by calling extension 7755
from Evergreen or by leaving
Senator Mardesich a message. It
doesn't cost anything but your
time.
Many problems seem to exist
for Senate Bill 138, which would
deny liquor licenses to clubs
which discriminate against
membership because of Race,
CoJor, or Creed. There is much
organized opposition to this bill
from the Elk's,of which many
members of the legislature
belong. The liquor board won't
act against these clubs until it has

a low and a court test of that.
The bill is in deep trouble and
all those who feel that state
supported discrimination is
wrong are urged to speak out
now. The chairman of the
committee is the same, Sen.
Mardesich.
Last year a very stringent
anti-rock festival bill was passed
by the legislature. Governor
Evans vetoed the worse portions
out of it, which allowed The
Satsop Riverfair and Tin Cup
Races to be held. This year the
same measure has been
introduced. Because of the fact
that many people have spoken
out in favor of the measure and
because it's an election year the
Governor may not veto it this
ti.me 1There seems to be some
opposition though from Rep.
John Rabel R-Seattle the
chairman of the committee
considering HB 215. He terms it a
clear cut attempt to prohibit rock

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

festivals in this state and that it
can not be allowed because there
are constitutional guarantees for
public gatherings.
Rabel said "What we must be
concerned with are laws
regulating health and safety
standards - but not outlawing
rock festivals." Call Rep. Rabel
and let him know your opinion.
One bill that environmentalists
should be concerned with, is the
one licensing and regulating the
use of All Terrain Vehicles. There
is much opposition to this bill
from so called "Sports Clubs"
who seem to enjoy tearing up the
terrains, polluting the air with
noise and gas fumes, and running
small animals and deer into
exhaustion. There is already
trouble in our quiet forests and
meadows from mini bikes in the
summer and snowmobiles in the
winter; but ATV's are much
worse. They can go anywhere in
any kind of weather, even snow,

and they must be regulated now.
But unless someone speaks up,
this bill will also be defeated. For
the bill's number and current
status call campus extension
7755 or the toll free number
1-800-562-6000. It's time to
speak up.
HB 223 which would
authorize hitchhiking in certain
designated areas has passed the
house and is now in the Senate
Judiciary committee.
In a letter to the House Local
Government Committee,
Governor Evans stated that
"Hitchhiking is socially
acceptable" and that he ~ould
like to see a bill passed allowing it
in certain areas.
The Highways Department and
the State Patrol, who in the past
have been strongly opposed to
such a law, have remained silent
this year, but the bill hasn't
(See LEGISLATIVE, Page 2)

OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON 98505

FEBRUARY 7, 1972

Thirteen proposals for S & A-Tees:

Students vie for $15,000
Tlte Service and Activities
Board has doled out somewhere
in the amount of $22,469 since
their first hearing Jan. 17.
Half of 31 current proposals
have presently been allocated a

working budget by the board.
A combination of limited
money, a multitude of requests,
and the large sums requested have
placed a heavy responsibility on
the board. They have met the

Trustees delay
housing choice
EWSC ART STUDENT Cliff Castle receives the Heard award.

TYio Evergreeners
open art shoYI
Tom Anderson and A.J.
"Tony" Pantley have been
chosen as Evergreen's student
participants in the annual
Governor's Art Show, an
invitational exhibition of
Washington artists. The show
begins today, Feb. 6, and runs
through Mar. 10 at the State
Capitol Museum and at
Evergreen.
Anderson and Pantley were
selected from more than 200
entrants in the recent TESC
student art show. Anderson's
entry is a drawing called "My
Aunt's Chickens"and Pantley's a

kinetic sculpture entitled,
"Manmonster and Child".
These exhibits will be included
with those of 30 students from
other public and private colleges
and universities in Washington,
plus the works of professional
artists from throughout the state.
Showings will be 2-5 p.m.
daily at the museum and in the
Evergreen art gallery, located on
the fourth floor of the library.
The Don aid G. Heard
Memorial Award will be awarded
to a student by Governor Dan
Evans during the showing.

Solutions to housing problems
come as hard as everything else at
an infant s t ate co 11 e ge,
Evergreen's Board of Trustees
learned Thursday at the February
board meeting.
Minus board chairman Mrs.
Neal Tourtellotte, the Trustees
heard from Adult Student
Housing, Inc., that results of their
project application for Federal
funding would not be know for
two more weeks.
Since the board's next
scheduled meeting falls in the
third week of March, the
question of on-campus housing
for the 750 new students during
the 1972-73 academic year will
not be resolved for another
month without another meeting.
The housing management
venture, a non-profit corporation
from Portland, Ore., was
represented by James McLennan
and Jim Russel.
In other business, the four
board members received
information packets from "The
Paper" co-operative, with a

request that the question of
college versus "independent"
newspaper be discussed at the
March board meeting. A fifth
packet will be mailed to Mrs.
Tourtellotte.

Recreation sets
Spring quarter

burden often by cutting budgets
and placing special stipulations
on funds alloted.
T he v a r i e t y o f p 1an S•
demonstrates the multi-interests
of the students of Evergreen.
Among them already passed are:
The Utility Gym--A
temporary, recreational set up to
compensate for the lack of
present facilities. The gym will be
open to serve the community in a
multitude of sports.
Yacht Club--The budget
allocated will be put toward small
trainer crafts and purchase of
longer ranging vessels for the use
of the community.
FM Radio Station--When
established the station will service
the college and surrounding areas
in providing programs and
information concerning a wide

listing deadline ran~:~tf~~~~:·
Deadlines for Evergreen's
three-month Spring activities
calendar has been set for
Thursday, February 17, according
to Bruce Roth of Recreation and
Campus Activities. In order to
obtain maximum publicity for
events planned during Spring
quarter 1972, he advised, all
material should be submitted by
this date.
Word of campus activites may
be left with Roth, Library 3232,
extension 3185. Carol Costello of
the Information (second floor
Library, extension 3625) will also
accept material prior to the
deadline, a mere 10 days away.

Documentary--A
student, Glen Olsen, plans to film
a report on California in an
upcoming trip that he will be
making. The finished work will
be for the use of the college and
students of Evergreen.
This list covers only a sample
of what will be available to
students and other. Evergreeners
in the future. The other 18
proposals still stand in the docket
for future discussion and
allocation by the Student Fees
Board. Interested people can find
out the times for these meetings
and also read a copy of the
proposals at the Information
Center.

Land use group hires planner:

What's for Cooper Point?
By CHARLES STEPHENS

What kinds of considerations
should be taken into account
when planning for the future of
Cooper Point? Existing land uses,
topography, transportation
accessability, and a myriad of
other factors are involved in the
planning process.
One of these factors ,
limitations posed by soil
conditions, was given special
attention during the Cooper
Point Association's Tuesday
evening meeting in the
Environmental Design area of the
library. Tyler Robinson, an
Environmental Design Student,

presented the research done by
the Soil Limitations Study
Committee over the past few
months. Perhaps the most
striking feature presented was the
generally severely limiting soil
conditions for septic systems,
although soil limitations for road
and building foundation
construction are somewhat less
severe. The greatest proportion of
these severely limiting soils lie
along the shorelines of Cooper
Point, and also among the hills
and creeks of the southeastern
area of the point.
Russ Rox, the professional
planner hired by the Association,

emphasized that these types of
studies are usually compiled early
in the planning process for an
area, but are given little more
than . lip-service in the ensuing
planning stages.
"These studies are not given
significant importance because
we have developed the
technology to overcome, or
conquer, nature if we wish," Fox
noted, "We need a new
perspective which listens to the
land and its features and makes
them a determining factor in
focusing development where it is
least disruptive to the existing
character of an area."

(Weekly HAPPENINGS Calendar courtesy TESC College Relations Office, Library 3114; Richard Q.
Nichols, director; Marilyn Larson , facilitator)
FEBRUARY 7 -13
SPECIAL SPECIAL: The Governor's lnvititational
Show of Washington Artists, partly in the 4th
floor Art Gallery of the Daniel J. Evans Library,
and partly in the State Capitol Museum. Hours at
Evergreen-Monday through Friday 2-5 p.m. and
7-9 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, 2-5 p.m. through
March 10.
SPECIAL: Mother Nature's On the Run in the
1970's. Student exhibit, campus tours, daily slide
shows, master plan of the campus and proposed
approaches for the future. February 7 thrQ!J.!lh
lith, 2nd floor Library (Reference area and
Lobby). DAILY: Film Purchasing Co-op (all
invited) - Library 2129, Noon -I p.m.

MONDAY,

FEBRUARY 7

Dance: Noon- 1:30 p.m., 3rd Floor Library
Lobby.
Beginning Ballet: 7:30 p.m., outside cafeteria,
$1.00 per lesson.
Evergreen Political Action Group: 6 p.m.,
Library 3215.
The Evergreen Film Society Presents: Vincent
Price, "Masque of the Red Death," showings at 7
p.m. and 9:15 p.m ., Lecture Hall One. 75 cents
admission.
Everyday People, "just dial HELP", open
meeting, 7 p.m., 3rd floor Orange Lounge.
Karate class: Takwon-Do, Main Library Lobby,
7 p.m.
DTF on Teacher Certification: 2-5 p.m.,
Library 3121

TUESDAY,

FEBRUARY 8

Jazz Dance Club: Noon-1:30 p.m., second floor
Library Lobby, $1 per lesson, open to all.
Dance : Noon-1:30., 3rd floor Library Lobby
Cooper Point Association meeting: 7:30 p.m.,
Environmental Design Lounge, 2nd floor Library.
Legislative Forum (sponsored by Evergreen
College Community Organization): 9 a.m.-noon,
Olympia City Hall Commission Chambers.
Babysitting available.
Policy and planning session for "The Paper"- 7
p.m. at "The Office," Library 3216.
Human Development presents "1000 Clowns"
Lecture Hall One (Yellow) 7:30 p.m. Free.

WEDNESDAY,

FEBRUARY 9

Gestalt Encounter Group, 4 p.m., Library 3319.
Mother Nature on the Run in the 1970's,
Speakers 7:30p.m., (details 3625).
Open Forum with Counseling Services, all
invited for an input-output session; 7:30 p.m.,
Orange Lounge, 3rd floor Library.

Dance: Noon-1:30 p.m., 3rd floor Library
Lobby.
Volleyball: 7 p.m., Washington Junior High
School Gymnasium, Olympia.
Photography Interest Group: 7:30p.m., C & I
Lounge, 2nd floor of Library.
Transcendental Meditation-Group Meditation
and tape lecture: 8 p.m., Library 3234
Karate class: Takwon-Do, Main Library Lobby,
7 p.m.

THURSDAY,

FEBRUARY

10

Evergreen Exhibitions Group: Brown bag
lunch, Library 4004, noon. All invited.
Dance: Noon-1 p.m., outside cafeteria.Dance:
Noon-1 p.m., 3rd floor Library Lobby.
Beginning Ballet: 7:30 p.m., outside cafeteria.
Brown Bag Forum, with Secretary of State: a
chance to talk with administrators from noon to I
p.m. call 2526 for further information.
Vietnam Veterans Against the War present a
forum of three speakers and the film "Winter
Soldier", plus a Question and Answer session - all
open (and free) to the public. Sponsored by
Human Development. 7:30 p.m., Lecture Hall
One.
Media Workshop: This week - 16mm projects,
reel to reel and audio tape recorders. 2-4 p.m.,
Library 1309.

FRIDAY,

FEBRUARY

11

The Evergreen Film Society presents: "The
Hunchback of Notre Dame," the original with Lon
Chaney, 7 and 9:15 p.m. showings, Lecture Hall
One, Admission 75 cents.
College Forum: Agenda, PIRG - 2:30- 4 p.m.,
Library 3112.
Dance: Noon-1 :30 p.m., 3rd floor Library
Lobby.
State Capitol Museum Creative Center: "People
of the Salmon and Cedar: Art and Life Styles of
the Northwest Coast Indians", slides and
commentary by Del McBride (Museum curator)
and carving demonstration by Duane Pasco.

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY

12

Soccer: Woodruff Playfield, 12:30 p.m.

SUNDAY,

FEBRUARY

13

Invitational show of Washington Artists
continues in the 4th floor Library Art Gallery.
The show is staged both at Evergreen and at the
State Capitol Museum, and will run through March
10.2-5 p.m.
Folk Worship sponsored by Good Shepherd
Lutheran Church, 5:30 p.m., 2nd floor Library
Lobby.

PAGE 2 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE February 7, 1972

The Cooper Point Association,
with 170 members, is composed
of students, faculty, and local
residents who are looking into
these problems, and are also
developing the organization and
mechanisms to effectively deal
with them .
Besides the full-time planner,
hired to co-ordinate the efforts of
the members , a Board of
Directors has been established. A
regular newsletter is printed and
sent to members to keep them
up-to-date with the association's
activities.
Recognizing the importance of
not only developing a
comprehensive plan for Cooper
Point, but also assuring that it is
incorporated into a legal
ordinance, efforts have been

made to include local county
officials in the Association's
activities. Members of the
Thurston County Planning
Commission have been invited to
meet Feb. 10 with the CPA to
hear a progress report on the
studies being undertaken.
Most of the work of the
Association is presently being
focused through the various
committees establish e d to
consider specific problems or
tasks , such as housing,
transportation, community
relations, and media publicity.
For more information on the
activities and goals of the Cooper
Point Association, contact
Environmental Design or come to
the general meeting Tuesday in
the ED lounge at 7:30p.m.

Indian carves
abstract design
"My work is a contemporary
expression of what I think and
feel would have been the natural
progression of Northwest Indian
art from traditional to modern
times had the culture evolved and
expanded in an uninterrupted
way."
Those are the words of
Colville Indian Lawney Reyes of
Seattle , who recently completed
a special commission to design
and-s"Cutptme the-exterior of the
large doors which open into the
TESC art gallery on the fourth
floor of the Library.
The doors were installed to
coincide with the first major
exhibit in the gallery, the 1972
Governor's Invitational
Exhibition of Washington Artists,
which opens Feb. 6 at Evergreen
and at the State Capitol Museum.
Reyes was chosen for the
commission last summer after the
college received a $1,000 gift

from Mrs. Ethel Kindschy of
Olympia (3876 Hoadly Street) in
memory of her late husband
Robert. Mr. Kindschy, a longtime
teacher in the Olympia School
District, was an instructor at
Washington Junior High School
prior to his retirement in 1964.
Mrs. Kindschy had selected
owls as the surface motif for the
gallery's white oak doors, which
are seven feet high and six feet
wide. The doors were fabricated
as part of the library construction
project, fitted in place, delivered
to Reyes for attachment of the
sculptured pieces, then returned
to the contractor for installation.
The knobs of the doors form
the eyes of the large S!'Ul ptured
owl, with the design rad!1.th g as
feathers from th (::rn The
sculpture , which Reyes <.:alls an
"abstract Indian design" is
stained to match the color of the
doors to which it is attached .

Legislative report
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
moved out of committee and
doesn't seem likely to unless
pressure is brought to bear. The
chairman of the committee is
Rep. Richard Smythe,
R-Vancouver.
While there is no bill up before
the I egislature this year that
would legalize Marijuana, an
initiative has been filed with the
Secretary of State's Office which
would remove all criminal
penalties for possession.
An intitative requires that 10%
of the registered voters in the
state sign the petition. It will
then go on the ballot in the
General Election in November for
a vote of the people.
The initiative is being
sponsored by BLOSSOM, or
Basic Liberation of Smokers and
Sympathizers of Marijuana. The
initiative would make advertising
of the product a gross
misdemeanor, but would also call
for mandatory parole of all
con vic ted mariguana offenders
now serving sentences.
~teve Wilcox of Olympia is

co-chairman. His phone number
is 943-7548. You may wish to
sign the initiative, if you are a
registered voter.
Senate Bill 157 would require
all students at state supported
institutions of higher learning to
sign a promisory note, agreeing to
pay the state back $600 for every
year of education, within six
years of graduation. This bill
while it has no organized
opposition also has no organized
support. Although it does tend to
appeal to those legislators who
are under pressure from the folks
back home to help the state make
money in order to lower their
taxes . It is currently in the Senate
Committee for Higher Education.
Lets hope it stafs there!
Apathy will kill many of these
important measures. · Organized
opposition has a strong voice and
lobbyist wield much power. It is
only by making our combined
voices louder than theirs, that can
our will be felt.
Write , call , or visit your
le gi sla tors. Then register and
vote .

Adverse therapy for inmates
VACAVILLE, Calif.
(LNS)--California State prison
authorities are just now putting
the finishing touches on an
intensive psychiatric prison
center at the Vacaville state
mental facility to control "the
aggressive, destructive, political
inmate".
The new facility will house up
to 80 prisoners and will open in
late January or early February.
The prisoners will be taken from
the maximum security
Adjustment Centers at Soledad,
Folsom, and San Quentin.
Psychiatrists will administer
"adversion therapy" to inmates
considered "the most violent."
The therapy may include
electric and insulin shock, fever
treatments, sodium pentothal
(truth serum) interviews,
Anectine (a death-simulating
drug), anti-testosterone injections
(to neutralize sex hormones),
electrode brain implants and
lobotomies.
According to a letter that was
ripped off recently, R.K.
Procunier, California Chief of the
Dept. of Corrections, wrote on
September 8 to Robert Lawson,
Executive Officer of the
California Council on Criminal
Justice:
This letter of intent is to alert
you to the development of a
proposal to seek funding for a
program involving a complex
neurosurgical evaluation and
treatment program for the violent

inmate. Initially, following
screening at the Calif. Medical
Facility at Vacaville, a period of
acute hospitalization would be
involved for a period of 5-7 days.
After this during a period of 2
or 3 weeks the patient would
undergo diagnostic
stu dies--surgical and diagnostic
procedures would be performed
to locate centers of the brain
which may have been previously
damaged and which could serve
as the focus for episodes of
violent behavior. If those areas
were located and verified that
they were indeed the source of
aggressive behavior, neurosurgery
would be performed.
The outlines of the new
Vacaville facility have been
leaking out to the press for the
past few months, but detailed
information was not available
until November 19, when the
Department of Corrections held a
"think session" at the University
of California at Davis. The
meeting was to get support
among the psychiatric profession.
Fortunately Dr. Edward
Optont Jr., a Berkeley research
psychologist with a strong liberal
orientation, was invited. Opton
contacted the Medical Committee
for Human Rights to get the
shocking information presented
at the conference out to the
public.
According to Dr. Opton's
notes from the meeting, the
Vacaville center has become

necessary in the eyes of prison
administrators because of the
catastrophic failure of the
relatively new Adjustment
Centers demonstrated by George
Jackson's "escape"/murder from
the San Quentin AC. Adjustment
Centers are maximum security
sections of maximum security
prisons.
Prison administrators, far from
understanding the real causes of
prisoner violence--a reaction to
the highly repressive life they are
forced to live, inside the
Adjustment Centers--seem to
blame it on "some sort of organic
inner agitator," according to Dr.
Opton's notes.
The meeting was led by Dr.
George Bach-y-Rita, the head
research psychiatrist at the new
unit. He mentioned a few of the
treatments his personnel would
experiment with. One would be
the anti-testosterone injections to
counteract sex drive and
supposedly reduce the tensions a
prisoner feels "without the
negative side-effects in terms of
poor self-image that direct
castration creates."
Dr. Bach-y-Rita also feels that
about 10% of the Adjustment
Center inmates would benefit
from partial frontal lobotomies in
which sections of the brain
controlling motivation and drive
would be cut out.
This method usually leaves the
patient a passive vegetable
capable of only simple tasks.

Security measures
for Soledad Brothers

SAN FRANCISCO (LNS)--It's
"acceptable, modern
transportation" said Judge S. Lee
Vavuris referring to the
helicopter that now carries John
Clutchette and Fleeta Drumgo,
the two remaining Soledad
Brothers from their cells at San
Quentin to trial in San
Francisco's Hall of Justice. The
two men are kept behind a steel
screen with guards all around
them. Their wrists, waists, and
legs are in irons and although
they are provided with
parachutes and life preservers,
their chains prevent them from
ever being able to use them if
they had to.
These latest bits of
information were gleefully leaked
by officials Jan. 19 despite a
feeble ruling by Judge Vavuris
forbidding the release of any
information on security systems
since it instilled fear of the
Soledad Brothers in the minds of
the jurrors. So far the
prosecution has been unable to
present any evidence to link
Clutchette and Drumgo with the
death of Soledad guard John
Mills in Jan. 1970. Recently their
tactic has been an all out effort to
create a media image of the
Brothers as "dangerous
murderers" in order to prejudice
the jury. The chains and steel
screen fit right in with that
campaign.
In front of the press Jan. 19,

Another experimental technique
would be to emplant electrodes
in the brain to control behavior
directly.
But the basic method to be
used on most of the prisoners will
be "aversion therapy". Aversion
therapy is aimed at making the
prisoner sick or terrified
everytime he gets involved in
violence. It works like this:
The patient is strapped into a
chair in front of a movie screen.
While he is shown movies of
violence and sex, he is tortured.
He may be given shocks, or drugs
to make him feel nauseous or like
he is dying. His eyes are clamped
open so that he can't turn away
from the screen.
The process is repeated daily

until the man is deeply
conditions in his reactions.
Supposedly then when the ·
reformed prisoner tries to
commit violence, his new drive
takes over and makes him
helpless. Aversion therapy using
the death-simulating drug
Anectine has recently been
reported in the treatment of
homosexuals at California's
Atascadero State Hospital.
According to the
administrators the Vacaville
treatments will be voluntary. "If
they don't want to take the drug
they don't have to," says Dr. L.
J. Pope, Warden of the facility.
"If they want to stay coo-coo
and locked up all their lives that's
all right with us."

NET Film Odyssey
Anyone who has lived in the
Seattle-Tacoma area for any
length of time is well aware of
the quality of movies shown on
the local stations. These movies
range from a chopped version of
"Citizen Kane" to the high
"horror" of ''Attack of the Giant
Leeches". Whenever a decent
movie is shown the car dealers
and deodorant ads merge with
the movie until all dramatic
feeling is lost. The network
movies are no better.
Well, all this has changed at
least for the next few month_s___
National Educational Television
(Channel 9) in conjunction with
Xerox Corporation is presenting
each Friday at 8:30 p.m. movie
classics that most people would
probably never have the
opportunity to see.
The movies are presented in
their original uncut natural
language version, with subtitles
supplied when necessary. Most
blessed of all-there are no
interruptions, no commercials, no
messages. At the end of each film
Charles Champten, the film critic
who is the host ofFilmOdyssey,
discusses
the film with the

director or someone
knowledgeable with the director's
work. For those without the
benefit of a television, one is
available each Friday in room
2129.
The presentations will be:
2/11 The Seven Samarai
(Japan)
2/18 Beauty and the Beast
(France)
2/25 Ivan the Terrible, part 1
(USSR)
3/3 The 39 Steps (Great
B
_r_i-ta-'-i--n)
--- -- 3/10 The Rules of the Game
3 f 1 7 Intimate Lighting
(Czeck)
3/24 Potemkin (USSR)
3/31 Barrier (Poland)
4/7ClassicShortsi(FR.,GT.
BRIT., USA)
4/14 The Cabinet of Dr.
Caligari (Germany)
4/21 Orpheus (France)
4/28 Knife in the Water
(Poland)
5/6 The Overcoat (USSR)
5/12 Our Daily Bread (USA)
5/19 Yojimbo (Japan)
5/26 The Last Laugh
(Germany)

r~~1~ I mo~~~~~~~::.ts·~~! ~p~'~nu~~mb"•
Fivo

.........,

Vavuris commented that the
Brothers' conduct in prison
warranted the special security
procedures. When asked for
specifics by the defense, he
replied provocatively "Remember
December 14" but would not
explain what he meant by the
remark.
During a heated objection
argument from the defense,
Vavuris justified the news leak by

saying that "you can't keep
things like this quiet in an
enlightened democracy", and
talking about an "open trial".
Floyd Silliman, Clutchette's
attorney, accused Vavuris of
wanting an "open trial" only
when it was favorable to the
prosecution and was immediately
cited in contempt of court--the
first since the trial began three
weeks ago.

Co-operative will be travelling to
New Orleans, La., for that city's
annual Mardi Gras celebration.
According to newspaper business
manager Harley Cameron
Musgrove, their four-day visit will
provide detailed coverage of the
pre-Lenten festivity for
Evergreen's "The Paper."
The decision to supplement
the educational experience of
''The Paper" Co-operative
members came after members
determined that their community
communications medium would
best be served by providing a
unifying source of attention for
TESC's various factions.
Arranged in last week's
co-operative meeting, the
procedure was thought to be a
solution to the problem of
apathy prevalent since creation of

•nd
through partial funding last
month by Service and Activities
Fee money, to the tune of
$2,500.
According to latest business
office computation, the $500 per
person will cover air
transportation for the round trip
trek, plus accomodations at the
New Orleans "First Avenue
Salvation Mission."
Co-operative members
vol un tee ring for the in-depth
news coverage excursion are
Bruce M. Brockmann, Contracted
studies - Journalism; Joseph S.
Campo, Causality, Freedom and
Chance; Lester L. Leahy,
Communications and
Intelligence; Christine Ness,
Human Development; and
Musgrove, Individual in America.

February 7, 1972 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE PAGE 3

VIEWPOINT
Evergreen
~community'?

By DON MARTIN

If Evergreen State College worked as
well in practice as it does on paper, it
would be a model for reform of education
in t his cou ntry.
Unfortunately, after ta lking to seve ral
other students over the past weeks , it is
becoming in creasing ly clear to me that
Evergreen as an alternat ive system is not
working.
Some students cla im that their program
is factionali zing aro und in d ivi dual faculty,
or that sem in ars are boring and
unproductive. Some say that their
programs have no direction, are too
specia li zed, dd not stimu late socia l
awareness , or provide littl e opportu nity for
implementing changes. A major comp laint
is that there is not much chance to meet
and interact with peop le outs ide one's
program.
To simp lify ana lysis of the problem, I have
divided it into three broad catagories--need
for commun ity, lack of soc ietal pr iorit ies,
and organizing.

Community
Despite all the mention of it, Evergreen
has no commun ity. It must be recognized
that problems of the programs cannot be
separated f rom t hi s fact.
Isola t ion --if there is a word to describe
Evergreen it i s this. The co ll ege is
geograph ica lly iso lated five miles from any
city. Th is limits students and f acu lty from
cu ltural, informatio nal and socia l outlets . It
seems for a schoo l that . is supposed ly
concerned with reforming American
society, of which t he city is a prime

component, t o be iso lated from the
problems of the city would be a handicap.
Some argue , however, that Evergreen's
locat ion has its advantages--pa rt icu larly its
proxemity to O l ympia and potential
governme nt access. This potential for
studying and working in the legislature is
all but being ignored, though. Think of all
the valuab le educationa l and pract ical
exper i ence being wasted by not
part icipating as an organized student lobby
in the leg islature.
Evergreen peop le are furthe r isolated
from each other in their programs, because
no one had the foresight to estab li sh a
medium for getting the school together as a
whole - --informa ll y . Living groups are
isolated from each other and peop le in the
dorms say they don't even know those in
t heir own building.
Certainly an aspect t hat needs constant
mention is architecture and how it contro ls
fo rmati on of a commun ity. It is no wonder
Evergreen h as an impersonal
"non-community" when its people are
forced to li ve and work in such crude, co ld,
belittling, concrete monstrositie Action
is being taken to stop further destruction
of col lege land and murder of plants and
trees for such things as parking lots and
football stad iums by some students in
Evergreen Environment. It deserves
everyone's attention and part icipation.
As important as any of these is the
repression of student attGmpts to estab lish
alternative businesses and such community
necessities as hea lth ca re and counse ling
facilities. I k now of at least one case where
a student was stopped from establishing an
alternative food serv ice because, I believe,
of a guarantee to the present non-student
serv ice of exc lu sive food sa les on campus.
I do not know the present status of day
care facilit ies, but discussions of a few
weeks ago led me to be lieve that day care is
very limited. There are no adequate denta l
or health faci li tes on campus . This
newspaper i s a sp lendid examp le of
harrassment of students trying to start
services for the commun ity . The Paper was
conceived in November and just got
financial security last week, bu t on ly after
submitting to imposed control of the board
of trustees through an editorial board . ·
Co mmuni tcations, both internal and
external, is vita l to a functioning
community to be informed of loca l,
nationa l, and wor ld eve nts and strugg les. A
comm unity cannot be an effective political
or socia l force unless it estab li shes reliabl e
comm uni cations . To the Commu ni cations
and Intelligence program : What are you
doing to help this situation? I am presently
enro ll ed in this program and am appa ll ed
by the thousands of dollars of equipment

the co-operative
Working Members of The Paper Co-operative
Cam Musgrove
Chris Ness
Lester L. Leahy
Joe Campo
Bruce Brockmann
Staff: Craig Apperson, Ken Balsley, Joe Oswald, Ruth Whet
The Paper is published weekly as a co-operative effort for the
students, faculty and staff of The Evergreen State College, Olympia,
Washington 98505. Editorial comment contained herein does not
uecessarily represent the views of the TESC community but rather
those of the individual author. Advertising material presented herein
does not necessarily imply endorsement by this newspaper.
Newspaper offices are located in Library Room 3216, temporary
campus extension (753) 3185.

PAGE 4 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE February 7, 19 72

that is not being used and is not avai lab le
to people who want to use it for
co mmuni ty purposes. I ca n th ink of no
other program in this schoo l that has done
less for communicat ions than this program .

Priorities
The cata log states that it is the goal of
t he coll ege to produce peop le who wi ll be
reformers of the prob lems in American
soc iety. I think most students came here
with that sense of purpose.
But livin g at Evergreen is like being in
the cap itol of apathy. Problems of rac ism,
sexism, poverty, injustice, the war,
corporate power, the env ir onme nt,
imperia li sm, etc., etc. are somehow lost in
the shuff le of daily activi ty .
Aren't th ese prob lems what daily
activity should concentrate on? Certainly,
many programs are designed to do this, but
working on these problems shou ld be a
coordinated commun ity priority.

Organize!
Finally, it must be recognized that for
Evergreen to be a viab le force in reform, we
must organize. There is a rapidly dyi ng
group who want to get "into t he system"
to organize and affect change. This
philosophy ul t imately ends in comp romi se
and perversion of character and ideals.
· The on ly other so lu t ion is to organize an
informed, active comm unity. If we are
ser ious about alternative to a corrupt
government and eco nomy we must
in st it ute these alternatives.
We must start our own busi nesses and
services, regardless of "guaranteed exclus ive
rights ." We must become an organized
political force. We must get to know each
other and break this paralyzing iso lation.
We must I i b erate ourse lves, sexua ll y,
emotiona ll y and socia ll y . We must co ntrol
the planning and bui lding of this ca mpus.
We must have a stro nger voice in the
financial dec isions of this co ll ege--we have a
double interest since we pay for it by taxes
and by tuition. We must add ress ourselves
to the prob lems of soc iety, in stead of
isolating ourse lves from them . A lso, we
must expand cu ltur a l activities on
campus--more music, more speakers, more
art.
Evergreen w ill fa il if it tr ies to ex ist
w it hout a commun ity, separates itself from
human and eco l og i ca l prob l ems,
concentrates on bourgeo is activities, and
produces peop le who wi ll perpetuate a
corrupt soc iety.
It can succeed only if innovation in
education is app lied to im plementing
alternative society. To accomp lish this we
need a community.

Lunch
or

Life
The porpoise, a member of the
mammalian family, is one of the
most beautiful, friendly, and
playful animals around. They are
part of the beauty and ecological
balance of the oceans that we all
are trying so hard to preserve.
You, however, are helping to kill
these lovely creatures every time
you eat a tunafish sandwich or
anything containing tuna. This
view has been presented by
Malcolm Brenner in an
announcement posted around the
Evergreen campus.
Tuna is cheap, tastes good,
and contains a lot of protein, but
you should find something else to
eat. The reason for this statement
is based on an article appearing in
the Sept. 6, 1971 issue of

Newsweek. It states that three
species of porpoises--spinners,
spotters, and white-bellied--are
being killed in enormous numbers
and may be in danger of
extinction.
The porpoises are being killed
by the commercial fishermen.
Porpoises travel together
predominatly with the Yellowfin
Tuna feeding on the same kinds
of smaller fish. The porpoises are
used for spotting the tuna, and in
netting the tuna many of the
porpoises are caught in the nets,
panic, and drown. Efforts are
often made to free these
porpoises but also often it is a
futile attempt. As many as
250,000 porpoises may be killed
in one year in only the American
nets. This is not including the
Peruvial, Japanese, French,
Mexican and Spanish tuna fishers.
Malcolm Brenner of the
Communications and Intelligence
program is willing to discuss this
topic with interested persons, and
share the entire "Newsweek"
article. He can be located at the
Film Co-op in room 2129 (C&I
area) daily from noon to l
p m.

LETTERS
What's going
To:

"The Paper"

Hi, My name is Rick Brown. I'm a
black student at Evergreen State in
the Contemporary American
Minorities program.
My main interest at this school is
to learn more about my people and
myself in this present system. Also to
help educate the white students of a
different world, the black one.
Most whites are unaware of the
oppressor AmerKKKia. Whites must
be aware of the problem, for we all
must deal with the monster before it
kills us.
Please feel free(?) to write or ask
questions dealing with the oppressor.
I can only answer from my own
personal feelings and experiences as a
member of the black race. I can't and
won't speak for the whole race.
So, I hope to get both positive and
negative reactions to this letter, Right
on! Get involved and get .a pen and
paper. Send questions to the CAM
office, on the first floor.
Rick Brown
Contemporary American Minorities

Dorm blues
To:

"The Paper"

Out of desperation and disgust I
am writing to you and the entire
Evergreen Community. I'm tired of
waiting for action on the following
matters and I'm very tired of living in
a drafty room.
Several weeks ago my window was
broken by a strong wind. I don't
understand why the windows have no
safety device to keep them from
swinging around into the building.
This happened over the weekend and
when Monday came Evergreen
maintenance people came by to repair
the window. However, when they put
the window back they didn't tighten
the bolts that hold the frame to the
casement more than finger tight. The
window was then free to swing very
easily. They also did such a poor job
of glueing the rubber molding that
holds the glass in place that it is now

Oil spill offenders off easy
-It was just about three
years ago that crude oil came
gushing up from a ruptured well
under the Santa Barbara Channel
causing one of California's first
and biggest oil spills. No one still
knows the exact cost of the
disaster in terms of the damage
done to the area's environment
and wildlife but recently Santa
Barbara court Judge Morton L.
Barker wrote out his own price
tag--a mere $500 in criminal
penalties for the oil companies
involved, Union Oil, Mobil,
Texaco and Gulf.
Under a section of the Fish
and Game code which makes
pollution of coastal waters a
criminal misdemeanor, the four
oil companies have been charged
with 343 violations apiece
making a total possible fine of
$812,000 apiece.
But, for some reason, Judge
Barker thought the companies
had "suffered sufficiently." He
said that to date, some $6 million
worth of civil suits have been
settled and that Union Oil has

falling out. The frame itself fits so
poorly that there is a constant draft
(air also comes in at the corners where
there are gaps of up to a full inch
where the rubber molding doesn't
meet).
To top this off Gerald . Burke
informed me that I would have to pay
for the damages. His reason was that,
as a resident, I am responsible for all
damages done to my room w!lile I live
there. Please tell me what happens if
this dorm burns down!
The other problem, which was also
reported, is our shower curtain. Since
it doesn't even reach the floor of the
shower it is nearly impossible to
shower without getting the rest of the
floor all wet.
I reported my window to the dorm
manager last week, and these last few
days have really been cold. How can a
student get anything done around
here?
Thank you, I hope I hear from
someone soon.
Philip Wentz
Individual in America

E.W.P.
To:

"The Paper"

I guess it's no secret by now, but I
still feel that this problem should be
brought into the open so that
everyone knows about it. This
problem concerns the architectural
design of the buildings on the campus.
The structures are constructed in such
a way that when a strong wind blows,
objects in the rooms are sucked out
without anyone noticing until it is too
late.
There seems to be no limit on the
size of the objects that are blown out
of the rooms. Anything from watches
to stereos and stoves have met this
fate.
Activity of this kind is particularly
frequent when doors and windows are
left open or even unlocked according
to several victims questioned. Some
people try to attribute this occurrence
to the dishonesty of their fellow
students at Evergreen.
The absurdity of this statement is
easily recognized. I don't think any
student would jeopardize the relative
freedom that exists on our campus by
stealing.
No one would want the
administration to be forced to
squander large amounts of their
educational budget on sampus
security. And who wants to have to
show their ID card to some gorrilla in
a uniform every time they are outside
the dorms after dark?
Actually the more one thinks
about the Evergreen Wind
Phenomenon (official name of the
occurrence), the more logical it
becomes. Other people contend that
they have actually seen people carry

spent $10.5 million to clean up
tarred beaches. And more suits
are still to be settled, namely
$500 million demanded by the
state of California and the county
and city of Santa Barbara in civil
damages. However, there has
been no indication that the suit
will ever be settled.

Ecologists attack
-"Kidnap the presidents of
the big car companies and put
them in a room and for 30
seconds then turn their car
pollution on them." Protest the
use of approved commercial
poisons by mailing "a coyote
poisoned by 1080 (a commercial
poison) or the like to the Wildlife
Service." These are two of the
entries in the recent
ecotage--sabotage to help the
ecology--contest sponsored by
the Environment Action coalition
of Washington DC.
The first known ecotage which

objects out of other students. rooms
and never bring them back.
Apparently the accusers have
misunderstood the intentions of their
comrades.
Actually these people, having felt
another occurrence of the EWP about
to happen, rushed over to their
friends. apartments and moved all
their friends' valuable belongings to a
safe place where they wouldn't be
blown away.
So if you are missing something
speak to your friends and ask them if
they have saved any of your
belongings from the EWP and possibly
have forgotten to bring them back.
Meanwhile the construction
workers are laboring against time
trying to close up the crevasses in the
Library so that no books will be
blown out of the new resource center
when it opens doors.
Steve Brown
Human Development

Fun City??
To:

District Attorney David
Minier, who is appealing Barker's
decision to a higher court, termed
the $500 criminal penalty
"outrageous," and compared the
judge's ruling to letting a
drunken driver off with only a
nominal fine after he has paid the
hospital--or funeral-- costs. (LNS)

"The Paper"

As a long-time resident of the
0 ly m pia area, I enjoyed the
January 24 article"Fun City"by
Ken Balsley, and found it fairly
accurate. However, I must take
issue with one point. The article
seemed to imply that ID-checks
are optional at some taverns
Maybe they are in some other
communities, but here we are,
"in the shadow of the Capitol
Dome", as they say, and that
means that "Big Brother" is very
close at hand.
Evergreen students who are
residents of Washington are
probably already aware that
Washington State law limits ,
purchase and/or comsumption of
alcoholic beverages to persons of
21 years or more, and requires
that positive identification and
proof of age be shown. If a tavern
is caught violating this law, it is
closed for 7 days for the first
offense. (There is also a stiff fine
for the minor who is served, and
the possibility of a jail sentence.)
I am the wife of an Evergreen
student, and I work at the
Melody Lane Tav on Saturday
nights. Believe me, we don't
check ID to harrass people. The
so-called "freaks" and
"long-hairs" are our favorite
people; to some of us, they are
more than that--they are "our
kind of people", our friends.
The Lane's manager, who's as
straight as can be, says the
long-hairs are his favorite
customers, as they seldom hassle
or hustle the waitresses, are
usually polite, and almost never
cause trouble.
But--the Melody Lane (and

February 7, 1972 THE

has so far remained anonymous,
went on a midnight
chimney-capping and
sewer-plugging campaign in Kane
County, Ill. Ecotage made
national news when Miami's
Eco-Commando Force 70 put
packets of yellow dye into six
Dade County sewage treatment
plants. The next day the "treated
sewage" appeared--bright
yellow--in half of Dade's canals.
Entries to the ecotage contest
came from all over--in fact fourth
graders from Wilmette, Illinois
suggested the kidnap plot. (LNS)

most other "popular" places
around town) is "visited" at least
once a week by the Liquor Board
inspector. In the case of the
Lane, the visit is usually on
Friday or Saturday night, and
sometimes both nights. If we get
busted, we get closed, and
nobody gets paid. · (The wages
aren't much, but we have to eat.) '
Besides, it's not unusual for an
employee to be canned if caught
serving a minor. We check ID (a
bit more strictly than stated in
THE PAPER--at least when I'm
working) for our protection and
for yours, too. H -you have I D,
you can't be busted for illegal
consumption.
Admittedly, until fairly
recently ID in this state was a big
hassle, because the only legally
acceptable ID was a Washington
State Liquor ID card. Recent
regulation changes have made a
variety of identification legally
acceptable. You won't have any
problems getting served if you
have any of the following:
I. Any valid driver's license
that has a picture of the bearer;
2. armed services I D (draft
cards don't count);
3. any liquor ID card, with
picture, from any state that issues
such cards;
4.
Any
state
or
government-issued official ID
card with picture and age; or
5. a passport.
In addition, most places (the
Lane included) will, at the
bartender's discretion, allow 3
pieces of non-photo ID' showing
birthdate, such as birth
certificate, armed services
discharge, baptismal certificate,
temporary or non-photo driver's
license, etc.
If you don't have ID' it's easy
to get, and saves a lot of hassles.
The Wash . State Dept. of Motor
Vehicles issues an official
Washington ID card which is
accepted anywhere in the state as
all-purpose identification. It is
available for a small fee from the
Driver Licensing Examining
offices; the Olympia office is
located at 503 West 4th Ave.
Please remember--we don't ask
for ID to hassle you, at least not
the places like the 107, the Lane,
and Ali Saba's. We think you're
great and enjoy having you
around. You'll probably find that
though the places with live music
jack up the prices when the music
starts, nobody will pressure you
to buy something. The more
there are of you taking up space,
the less room there is left for
''redneck s' '. B u t---' bring
ID---please!
P.S.---Let's all get busy and
sign those petitions to legalize 18
year-old drinking!
Katy Stefan

EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE PAGE 5

Costigan encourages
student action in '72
By BOB TURNAGE
Professor Giovanni Costigan of
the Univ. of Washington spoke at
Evergreen Wednesday afternoon.
A distinguished historian and
speaker, Dr. Costigan's recent
claim to fame was the debate last
November with William Buckley,
whom Costigan defeated before
8,000 people in Seattle. Professor
Costigan came to Evergreen to
encourage young people to be
involved in the political process.
The historical aspect of the
speech was divided into four
themes. (I) America's
pathological fear of change and
its result, (2) waste of money on
armaments, (3) misappropriation
of priorities and resources within
America, and (4) the mood of
public cynicism toward American
government.
The last quarter century, he
began, has seen a technological
revolution which has no parallel
in hlstory. In the vanguard of it
has been the USA. Change must
come, but paradoxically, the
U.S., which led the technological
revolution, finds itself resisting
that change in the socio-political
sphere. This resistance developed
into a pathological fear of change
which found its first catalyst in
Communism.
What this pathological fear has
produced is waste of money in
the arms race. $200 billion is
spent by the world annually on
annaments, l/3 of that figure by
the United States, which is twice
what the Soviets spend.
While on this quest for
security our own people have
been suffering at home. The
richest land on earth has 40
million people who are poor. The
discord this has fermented is the
worst since the Civil War.
Costigan said that since Dallas
1963 a national mood of cynicism
has set in. The people can no
longer trust their government and
with good reason. Democracy is
predicated on trust and this
cynicism can only be corrosive
and paralyzing.
With this historical
background Costigan ably
proceeded to pick apart Nixon.
He thought the Peking trip is a
good thing and overdue, but
Nixon's dramatic turnovers of
policy smack of opportunism
rather than principle.
Also in the process of getting
close to China, through the
diplomatic intermediary of
Pakistan, we have lost the

decided that the load of the ten
million refugees was too great
and that she must take action to
release the Bengali, which I think
was the proper thing to do if no
one else was coming to their
rescue, then we condemned India
and even moved to give military
aid to Pakistan."
Vietnam withdrawal has been
too slow and has also been
accompanied by an escalation in
the bombing. "He's reduced the
(American) casualty list, which is
good, and greatly increased the
casualty list among the helpless
peasants. And while that is being
done he has made a new war in
Cambodia , tried to start a new
war in Laos ... today Cambodia is
more than 2/3 in the hands of the
communists." 1/3 of all
American deaths in Indo-china
have occurred since Nixon said he
had a peace plan. "Every single
American who dies in this war,
there were 2 yesterday, only 2,
they died in vain. Why should we
go on sending our young men to
die for Thieu, who must privately
have the most infinite contempt
for this country and its
stupidity."
Costigan summed up saying
that Sen. George McGovern could
bring about fundamental change
and trust to the country. He
especially pointed out
McGovern's political courage, as
being the first to speak out on
issues. "I think •. .l hope the word
has not lost all meaning or value
in our language, that he feels for
people, that he's not just
concerned with his own career, ·
that he has what I don't detect in
Mr. Nixon or his predecessor, a
deep sense of compassion."
Costigan stressed that the
principle key to McGovern
success is student involvement.
"Senator McCarthy stood for all
these things four years ago but he
failed and the youth in the nation
who trusted in him were cheated.
I hope they will not be so
discouraged as not to be willing
to make another try." He
reminded us that 21 million new
young voters definitely have the
opportunity and the power to
institute change.
C o s t i g a n 's speech was
fallowed by an organizational
meeting for McGovern

supporters. Foremost in their
minds is getting precint delegates
to the county convention, which
selects delegates for the state and
most importantly, the National
Democratic convention . The
strong, state-wide effort is to
deny Senator Jackson a sizeable
portion of his home state
delegates. The effort isn't being
made by McGovern supporters
alone, but by those of all liberal
candidates.
All that's needed is people.
Like you. People do have the
power, if they desire to exercise
that power. Anyone who wishes
to volunteer (and everybody is
welcome) should contact: Mike
Duree, Building A Room 422 C,

753-7401.

Media loan
.Workshop

sympathy of India. "This is one
Media Producer John Brown
of the excuses for not getting out
reports because of the continuing
(of Vietnam), the fear of a
need for instruction in the use of
surreptitious bloodbath, which
media loan equipment a
has not yet taken place. When a
workshop will be held each
bloodbath did take place in India
Thursday from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.
last year' involving we are told
in Library Room 1309.
several million lives and ten
The operation of different
million refugees, the White House
equipment will be covered each
said nothing. This is the biggest
week for the rest of Winter
bloodbath in 25 years, the
quarter. The Feb. 10 workshop
slaughter of the Bengali by the
will be covering the 16 mm film
Pakistan army. Our government
projector , and both the reel and
said nothing--the government
cassette tape recorders.
For more information con tact
which professed to be interested
in avoiding bloodshed--not one
Brown at campus extension (753)
word. And when in the end India
3380.
PAGE 6 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE February 7, 1972

Everyday people
Lonely? Freaked Out?
Pregnant? Hassled? If so we hope
you are aware that there are
people on campus that are willing
to listen and help. They are
Everyday People located in
Building A Room 205, campus
extension (753) HELP. Everyday
People exists to try and he! p with
hassles, whether they're
emotional, drugs, or things like
who in the library to see to
improve reading speed, etc. If
they can't help they know of
people on campus or in Olympia

who can.
Everyday People is a part of
TESC's counseling services and is
made up of volunteer students.
The hours are from 8 p.m. to 4
a.m. every night. It is hoped that
their services will be expanded to
a 24 hour arrangement.
For more information contact
the counseling center or come to
the Everyday People meeting 7
p.m. every Monday night in the
orange lounge area in the Library
Building on the third floor by the
counseling center.

'Man, Nature and Art'
Evergreen's first student
contract for public presentation
is now on display in the Evans
Library, adjacent to Librarian
Jim Holly's office .
Faculty · sponsor E Jackson
Webb calls the project "a brief,
but eloquent poetic and
photographic essay on Man,

President Nixon has apparently
discovered the secret of how to fool
most of the people most of the time.
His advisers concluded, cynically
but correctly, that Americans' critical
faculties are numbed while they watch
television.
A viewing public that will accept
"All in the Family" as a crusade
against bigotry, or swallow the claim
that cigarettes and cigars are sexual
magnets, will accept failure as success
if it is presented to them as such on
the boob tube.
We have thus been presented with a
series of administration failures
labeled as successes, the latest being
last week's death rattle of
Vietnamization, trumpeted as the
latest victory in a three-year search for
peace.
You will remember the aftermath
of the unsuccessful raid on a North
Vietnamese prisoner of war camp.
President Nixon appeared on
television pinning medals on the
chests of officers whose intelligence
system was so faulty they risked the
lives of their men to invade a
compound that contained not one
prisoner.
If President Grant had availed
himself of this technique, General
George Custer would have been buried
on the White House grounds following
the massacre on the Little Bighorn.
When his original economic game
plan failed disastrously, the president
appeared on the tube and told the
unemployed and the hard-pressed
elderly that they must bite the bullet
as soldiers in the war against inflation,
which was being done.
When this bit of rhetoric failed to
stem mounting inflation and
unemployment, he appeared to tell us
that his efforts to end the war had
been so successful that the switch
from a wartime to a peacetime
economy called for a grand new
program of wage and price controls
which really didn't mean that his
former plan had failed because he
really didn't believe in wage and price
controls and would use them only
long enough to stop inflation and get

Nature and Art".
The black and white display is
prefaced by the student's
description of the learning
process undertaken to achieve
this first contract presentation
for TESC. "I know you will
enjoy seeing thls work," Webb
concluded.

the economy moving again so he
could return to his fanner game plan
which was really best all along and
then the country would once again be
the champion of free enterprise
throughout the world and he would
lead us ever-onward ever-upward.
Phase I of the wage-price freeze
was chaotic. Phase II is an
incomprehensible mess of exemptions ,
exceptions, favoritism , and practically
a total lack of enforcement. The only
positive aspect of the new economic
game plan is the tax cut portion,
which assured that the rich get richer
and the poor get poorer.
When this farce has run its course,
President Nixon will once again
appear in our livingrooms to tell us
the wage-price freeze has worked so
well he is abandoning it now that the
light can be seen at the end of the
inflation tunnel.
Last night's exercise in trickery was
especially sickening, because it
involved deception about a war in
which the United States has lost tens
of thousands of men and killed
hundreds of thousands.
The president's message was that
we have lost the war in Southeast Asia
and that his program of
Vietnamization has failed. But this
message was presented as a super
expose of the secret efforts of a band
of good guys who have been foiled at
every step by a gang of bad guys.
In other words, more righteous
baloney. The kind of righteous
baloney that sent Lyndon Johnson
down the tube and put Richard Nixon
in the White House. (Lyndon, of
course, had not discovered the secret
of television selling.)
The cruel truth of this lengthy
charade is that when Richard Nixon
ends the war he will have to do it in
just the way critics of the war have
been advocating for years - get the
hell out.
He should have done it in 1969. If
he had, 19,000 Americans would not
have died in vain during the three
years he has been in office.
But, then, 1969 wasn't an election
year.

TESC master plan

Nevergreen
on the run
By DAVE HEINECK
Have you taken a good look at
the campus master plan lately? If
you can find it, look quickly, for
the distance from paper to
concrete reality isn't far. Our
campus could be littered with
parking lots, vast treeless malls, a
football stadium, even a small
dam and artificial lake--unless we
students become aware that we
are the reason for Evergreen, and

demand a voice in planning done
supposedly for our benefit.
The major assumption of the
planning is that the student
population will reach 12,000. We
question whether that size would
be good for anybody; we also
question if it will ever happen,
regardless of the plan. College is
not the goal it used to be. The
dropping birth rate has already
left some elementary classrooms

bare. From either standpoint,
why are we planning for 12 ,000?
When we carne to Evergreen,
we expected
.:>find an
innovative, problem-solving
college. Academically, we got it.
But outside the classroom we
find the same old methods used.
Are we really so locked in to the
automobile culture that we can
find no alternatives to parking
lots and parkways? Does anyone
know if off-campus parking and
shuttle buses have even been
considered? It works at Santa
Cruz. Our campus should be a
reflection of what we've learned:
there is nothing progressive about
a school which allows itself to be
run down by cars and chain saws.
In theory at least, we do have
a say about the physical growth
of our campus. Look up section
7.106 of The Evergreen State

Co Jle ge Business Policies and
Procedures Manual (every
secretary has one). It says in part:
" ... All proposed master planning
and sitting decisions must
therefore be measured against the
value of preservation and
enhancement of the ecological
and biological qualities of the
campus. That measurement shall
be undertaken by a committee
composed of representatives of
affected faculty, administration,
and students, subject always to
final decision by the Board of
Trustees ... " That committee has
only rarely been convened on
matters relating to campus
planning. We therefore demand a
mora tori urn on all construction
not actually underway until such

Welcome,
Evergreen

'Antiseptic' walls
may get coloring
By MELODI COTTONGIM
Space, Time and Form
For a quarter and a half, the
hallways and rooms of Evergreen
have remained much as they were
when we arrived. With the
exception of taped up notices,
the antiseptic appearance in n o
way reflects the spirit of
Evergreen.
Much of the hesitancy to
change the appearance has been
due to the lack of clarity with
regard to building policies.
A group of interested students
and faculty, after discussing the
need for livening up this place,
met with Plant Facilities Leader,
Don Perry. He informed them
that it will be possible to pain l

directly on the walls.
As a result, ideas for murals,
supergrapltics of whatever should
come directly from each of the
coordinated studies programs.
Each program, they agreed,
should direct its efforts toward
identifying "their turf," making
it possible for <}ny visitor to
distinguish which program area he
is entering.
Perry also advised them that
assistance was available including
suggestion of types of paint to
use and how best ot apply it.
We are now asking that all of
the programs present their
designs and proposals Thursday
noon in Library Room 4004.

WashPIRG seeks
consumer protection
A proposed petition drive for
a Public Interest Research Group
at Evergreen will be the subject
of this week's Forum meeting.
TESC's chapter of WashPIRG will
present their case for consumer
protection and research at the
Friday session, beginning at 2:30
p m in Library Room 3112.
A state representative of
WashPIRG will attend the
February 11 Forum to discuss the
Wash.PIRG program throughout

the state, according to Evergreen
member Dave Groves. He may be
reached for further information
at the McLane Fire Station,
325-5200.
Another WashPIRG member
at TESC, Christi Painter, may be
reached through the
Communications and Intelligence
program, extension 3975, or at
horne on Overhulse Road,
943-4956.

Wilder assumes
drama direction

Ainara Wilder has been
appointed as a part-time member
of Evergreen's faculty for the
balance of the current academic
year, according to Vice President
and Provost David G Barry. The
appointment runs through June
15.
Mrs. Wilder, designated as a
Member of the Faculty (Theater
and Drama). will be responsible
for sponsorship of six or seven
three-unit study contracts during
Winter and Spring Quarters. She
also will assist with Coordinated
Studies workship activities

concerning drama, and will serve
as faculty advisor and coach to
the Asphodel Fields Theater
People. Mrs. Wilder provided
volunteer help to the Asphodel
group when it produced a series
of one-act plays during Fall
Quarter.
A native of Latvia, Mrs. Wilder
received a bachelor's degree in
Dramatic Arts from Wisconsin
State University in 1968, and a
master's of Theater Arts from the
University of Wisconsin in 1969.
She currently is a doctoral
student of Theater at the
University of Wisconsin.

a committee has formed and
opinions made of the present
plans. We have no time to lose.
Clearing begins on the parkway
from Highway 101 to our front
door within a very short time.
There are alternatives. At the
College Forum last Friday some
planning proposals were made.
Beginning today, there will be an
extensive exhibit in the library,
offering some possible solutions.
Speakers are planned for the
middle of next week. This time
we have to be tight. If you can
help, call Jack at 5460, Glen at
4764, Dave at 4705, or stop by
the Evergreen Environment
Office in 3317. And help
Evergreen from becoming
Nevergreen.

Participants should bring a lunch
to the February 10 session, or
they may purchase a meal at the
cafeteria next door.
The chance we've been waiting
for has arrived. Let's get going on
making this place as exciting as
the people. For further
information contact the author
through the STF program or at
D-306, extension 5058.

Man & Tues: "Lady and The
Tramp" and "20,000 Leagues
under the Sea" STARTS WED:
"Night of the Living Dead" and
"Horror of Dracu Ia"

Man-Wed: "Harold and Maude"
and "Jennifer on My Mind"
STARTS SUN: "Sometimes a
Great Notion" with Paul Newman
and "Shootout" with Gregory
Peck

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•• , •• ed

UnCI ass
Two separate
co-operatives:

but

needed

One would be an alternative
bookstore which would benefit
the students of Evergreen more
than the present bookstore is
doing,
The other would be a
co-o per at ive garage. This
co-operative would work not
only on automobiles but also
bicycles, unicycles, and what ever
else you have. Anyone interested
in seeing something 9 o t o
Li410 or phone 3965.

Space below donated for personal ads for the Evergreen
Student Community by Westside Speed Wash.

MUSIC. Anyone who would
like to get an improvisional and
music reading. Pref. recorders,
wo eden flutes, wooden string
instruments, pottery drums,
thur.1b harps; Contact Janet, A
9128, (753) 4797.
GUITAR. Would anyone care
to share some guitar techniques
with me. Janet, A 9128, (753)
4797.
PERSONAL: Hey Chris, Arn
is really a great guy. -The
Staff.

VOICE & THEORY. I'd like
to learn something about music
something about keys, something
about theory, and maybe voice.
Janet, A 9128, (753) 4797.
PERSONAL: 8ron, meet me
in the clock tower on Tuesday,
the 14th at 9 p.m .• Love
always-Dick.
FOR SALE: Wood burning
iron cook stove, sell cheap or
trade for small wood heater. Call
Charlie 943-4427 (evenings).

February 7, 1972 THE EVERGREEN $TATE COLLEGE PAGE 7

Chicanos experience spirited
MECHA fiesta, 'teatro' plays
An interesting scheme began
to
unfold
last week for
Evergreen Community members,
one that may never end . A small
but energetic group of people
arranged a MECHA day in whlch
TESC lost its virginity ~o the
Chicano culture ... what a way to
go!
MECHA arranged with Bill
Kenworthy of Food Services for
a Chlcano fiesta for the February
2 dinner. In addition, the popular
Teatro del Piojo (Theater of the
Lice) presented satirical acts
about the Chlcano movement and
the problems of the migrant.
"The entire food service crew
really went all out to make the
fiesta a success ," MECHA
members observed . "Too often
they are the victims of everyone's
anxieties--bitches--and seldom do
they receive due credit. "
Preparation of the Chicano
fiesta food was assistend by
Francisco Tello's mother and
sister Rita from Seattle. Carmen
Valdez , Maria Gonzales and Elena

Perez provided the necessary
spice to the entire meal by giving
their support in the kitchen.
Wednesday's menu consisted
of enchiladas , causelas, mole ,
frijoles fritos , burritos, tacos,
capirotada ( a bread pudding )
and much hot chile.
During the meal live music was
provided by the musical portion
of the Teatro del Piojo. They
sang corridos (ballads) of the
movimiento and revolucion.
The theater group then
explained how they actually
prepare the acts, usually centered
around a Chlcano problem. Next
they presented the debut
performance of an act prepared
enroute to Evergreen in their car.
The Teatro group is a vigorous
one and "very exciting to
watch ," MECHA noted. "They
have a message to deliver ; if you
ever get the opportunity , you
should go to one of their
performances."
After their presentation, the
group entertained again in the

cafeteria, then went to Jesus
Farias' home for more music and
drink.
MECHA 's feeling after their

Pets put on policy
By ·LESTER L. LEAHY
Evergreen' s Library Group has
broken tradition once again in
recognizing the existence of
animals on campus. They were
forced in to the unpop.ular move;
too many of their grey concrete
columns were turning a golden
hue.
The Disappearing Task Force
for pets on campus "has
apparently bogged down ,"
Library Dean Jim Holly noted
this week. The result is that the

Library Group has set ground
rules for visits by animals ,
effective immediately, "until a
college-wide policy on pets i!\
established," he added.
"Unsponsored" pets , those
seemingly let loose to their own
designs , are now unwelcome in
the Library Group area and will
be humanely removed from the
premises. "Sponsored" animals,
those under the control of a
human being, will be allowed
with the understanding that the
sponsor is responsible for the
pet's behavior.
Since control is best
demonstrated by use of a leash,

Nero's quality lacks continuity
ago, called "A Wam1 Shade of
Ivory" , in which Mancini with hls
piano and orchestra flowed from
song to song like a beautiful
stream flows down the side of a
mountain. The difference in
smoothness might be explained
by the fact that Mancini is
primarily
a
com poser-arranger-conductor,
and secondarily a piano player ,
whereas with Nero it is quite the
antithesis. Perhaps a little help on
arran gements and conducting
would improve this important
quality .
But let's not be too
harsh--anyone who can make a
song such as "Go Away Little
Girl" enjoyable to listen to after
the massive teeny-bopper
butchering it received from

like, forever here," they said. To
quote one member of the Teatro
del Piojo, "I am so Chlcano that
when I walk, beans come out!"

Library sets visit guidelines

Record review:

By CRAIG APPERSON
Back tickling the ivories of a
Stein way is the indefatigable
Peter Nero , who has put out
another biggie entitled , "Summer
of '42" (Columbia-C31105).
Certainly thls whole album is a
joy for contemporary .piano fans .
With cuts ranging from that of
the title to John Lennon's
"Love", Burt Bacharach's "Close
to You" , and many others , Nero
has put out one of his better
forty minutes of music.
Although the piano playing
itself is of high quality , it is
apparent that there is a definite
lack of continuity of flow from
cut to cut.
The idea of flow brings to
mind a similar album produced
by Henry Mancini a few years

successful production was "muy
mal" of the head, but the
memories and the spirit of all the
brown faces at Evergreen are ,

Donny Osmond deserves a great
de a! of credit , and certainly
Maestro Peter Nero will receive
hls just applause from this writer.

members of the Library Group
have set this requirement as
policy. They see the handler's
responsibility for behavior as a
direction to clean up the results
of a pet becoming sick or
relieving itself "througl1 lack of
self-control or your
though fuln ess," the Library
stated in its new guidelines.
Evergreen's Library Group has
borne the animal problem too
long, Holly explained. "These
'unsponsored' pets have
micturated on Co-ordinated
Studies columns , and now they
are documenting Library
columns ," he observed.

PETERSONS

HENDRICKS REXALL DRUGS
Westside Shopping Center
Olympia, Wash ..
Open Seven Days A Week

Prescriptions
Postal Sub-station
Hallmark Greeting Cards
Russell Stover Chocolates
Complete Drug Store Service
Bank Cards Honored
Large Selection Of Posters

WESTSIDE CENTER "Q"

OLYMPIA. WASHINGTON
Telephone 352-4868

PETERSON~s

FOODTOWN

In the Westside Shopping
Center has been welcoming
Phone- 352-8071

the Evergreen State College

February Stereo Sales
JBL Lanzer 71's
Headphones
Koss L-6 Headphones 1 yr. warr.
HITACHI Cassette Decks
8 Track Playback Decks
Kenwood 7001 Tuner 2 Demos
Kenwood 7002 Amplifer 2 Demos
ADC 303AX (Best Buy Consumer
Report 1970)
ADC450A
Sansui 4000A Receiver (used 1 yr. old)
Sony PR-150 1" Reel Tape
Sony Cassettes
Speakers, 2 Way 5 yr. warr.

RETAIL

SALE

198.00
19.95
26.50
119.95
49.95
279.95
299.95

149.00
4.95
17.99
89.95
19.95
199.95
239.95

100.00
149.95
369.95
4.19
1.49
39.95

79.95
129.95
274.95
2.99
.99
19.95

TACOMA STEREO
2321 Tacoma Ave. So.

Phone BR2-3157

11 to 7 Mon. - Fri. 10 to 6 Sat.
PAGE

8 THE

EVERGREEN

STATE

COLLEGE

students, faculty and staff

February 7, 1972

from the beginning and will
continue to welcome you to
our complete Food Center.

We think you're GREAT!

Open Daily 9 to 9
Sundays to 7
Source
Eng US-WaOE.A.1973-01
Is Part Of
Eng The Cooper Point Journal
Media
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