The Paper, Volume 1, Number 9 (March 31, 1972)

Item

Title
Eng The Paper, Volume 1, Number 9 (March 31, 1972)
Description
Eng Page 1: Olympia, Evergreen Work Together;
Page 1: Library Features Head Art;
Page 1: Summer School!;
Page 1: Library Hours Cut;
Page 2: Lobotomies -- Murder of Minds;
Page 2: Play Your Heart Away;
Page 2: Cops Kill Cops;
Page 2: Fingerprints for Six Year-Olds?;
Page 3: Common Drug Emergencies;
Page 3: (Cartoon) Springtime!;
Page 4: To the Board the School: An Apology;
Page 4: April 22;
Page 4: Dare Care a Reality;
Page 4: 'Word of Mouth' Adds Much to Neighborhood;
Page 4: (Cartoon) [Coca-Cola and One Dollar Bill];
Page 4: Staff Credits;
Page 5: Gov. Evans Visits E.D.;
Page 5: Ecotactics;
Page 5: CPA Comprehensive Planning;
Page 5: BSU to Play in Basketball Classic;
Page 5: (Cartoon) [Man Taking a Wife at a Shop];
Page 6: What are You Doing this Summer? Land -Rovers Across Australia;
Page 6: (advertisement) World Shop: Gifts of Distinction;
Page 6: (advertisement) Westside Speed Wash;
Page 6: Unclassified;
Page 7: Happenings;
Page 8: WashPIRG Starts Petition Drive with Wednesday Meet;
Page 8: Distress;
Page 8: Graphics;
Page 8: (advertisement) 107 Tavern;
Page 8: Spring Play;
Page 8: (advertisement) Disc n Deck;
Page 8: (advertisement) Sea Mart Shopping Center;
Page 8: (advertisement) Capital Theater & Olympia theatre;
Page 8: (advertisement) The Music Bar;
Page 8: (advertisement) South Sound National Bank
Identifier
Eng cpj0011.pdf
Creator
Eng Robinson, Chuck
Eng Moffatt, Timothy
Eng Dill, Chere
Contributor
Eng Ness, Chris
Eng Senn, Diane
Eng Leahy, Leaster L.
Eng Brockmann, Bruce
Eng Campo, Joe
Eng Musgrove, Cam
Eng Pagel, Kt
Eng Miller,Michael
Eng Vermeire. Jerry
Eng Balsley, Ken
Eng Stephens, Charles
Eng Turnage. Bob
Extent
Eng 8 pages
Format
Eng application/PDF
Is Part Of
Eng The Cooper Point Journal
Language
Eng eng
Publisher
Eng The Evergreen State College Board of Publications and members of the Evergreen community
Rights
Eng http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Source
Eng US-WaOE.A.1973-01
Spatial Coverage
Eng The Evergreeen State College
Eng Osaka, Japan
Eng New York
Eng Conson, South Vietnam
Eng Detroit, Michigan
Eng Washington
Eng Southeast Asia
Eng Los Angels
Eng Indochina
Eng Versailles, France
Eng Canada
Eng england
Eng France
Eng Ireland
Eng Lebsnon
Eng Lixenburg, New Zealand
Eng Scotland
Eng Sweden
Eng Switzerland
Eng Lacy Park
Eng The Evergreen State College: Organic Farm
Eng California
Eng Mt. Baker
Eng Cascade River
Eng Suiattle
Eng Whitechuck
Eng Boulder River
Eng Alpine Lakes
Eng Cougar Lakes
Eng Okanogan National forest
Eng Wenatchee National forest
Eng Snoqualmie National forest
Eng Simpson Desert, Australia
Eng Perth, Australia
Eng Victoria Desert, Australia
Eng Alice Springs, Australia
Eng Andamooka, Australia
Eng Broken Hill, Australlia
Eng Sydney, Australia
Subject
Eng Art
Eng Drugs
Eng Frontal Lobotomy
Eng Legislation
Eng Marijuana
Eng Mental health
Eng Police
Eng Religion
Eng WashPIRG
Eng Evans, Daniel J., 1925-
Eng Meyers, G.M.
Eng Dolliver, James
Eng McCann, Charles
Eng Nichols, Richard
Eng Teske, Charles
Eng Alexander, Richard
Eng Donohue, Ken
Eng Roley, Dennis
Eng Brown, Ralph
Eng Long, James
Eng Anderson, James
Eng Cole, Glen
Eng Perry, C. Howard
Eng Keller, Robert
Eng Wood, Dennis
Eng Ernst, David
Eng McCann, Paul
Eng Olsen, Gil
Eng Marshall, Robert
Eng Hibberd, Scott
Eng Dorel, Roger
Eng Tracey, William
Eng Bush, William
Eng Shyre, Paul
Eng Dos Passos, John
Eng Wilder, Ainara
Eng Smullin, Dave
Eng Barry, David G.: Burke, Gerald
Eng Moss, John
Eng Stilson, Malcom
Eng Paull, Ken
Eng Heard, Donald G
Eng Breggin, Peter R.
Eng Freenam, Walter
Eng Ervin, Frank
Eng Mark, Vernon
Eng Sweet, William
Eng Procunier, R.K.
Eng Singleton, Stoneleigh
Eng Davis, David E.
Eng Nichols, John F.
Eng Long, Russell
Eng Socrates
Eng Plato
Eng KIinnear, Grant
Eng Kinnear, Calvert
Eng Nisbet, Chuck
Eng Roberts, Paul
Eng Kagan. Jimmie
Eng Moats, Dick
Eng Robinson, Perer
Eng Gierman, Phil, Skrinde, Richard
Eng Kelly, Ned
Eng Livingston, Mike
Eng Irwing, Meg
Eng Swain, Jim
Eng Nader, Ralph
Eng Terry, Clark
Eng Arguelles, Jose
Eng Arguelles, Miriam
Eng Crews, Tim
Eng Hubbard, Connie
Eng Tubbs, Ray
Eng Allen, Thomas E.
Eng Dickenson, Peggy
Eng Groves, Dave
Eng Painter, Cristi
Eng Coca-Cola Company.
Eng Liberation News Services .
Eng The Evergreen State College
Eng St. Michael's
Eng Thruston County Council of Churches
Eng Asphodel Feilds Theatre People
Eng Olympia Police Department
Eng Attorney generals Office
Eng Media Loan
Eng Seattle First National Bank
Eng The Washington Post
Eng Kinsington Ontario Psychatric Hospital
Eng Journal Of American Medical Association
Eng Neuro Research Foundation of Boston
Eng National Institute of Mental Health
Eng Law Enforcements Assistance Administration
Eng California Medical Institute at Vacaville
Eng California Council on Criminal Justice
Eng Brown And Root
Eng Morrison- Knudson
Eng Senate Finace Committee
Eng National Peace Action Association
Eng World Assemblie For Peace And Independance
Eng Service And Activites Fea Board
Eng Colorado College
Eng Word of Mouth Bookstore
Eng Cooper Point Association
Eng University Of Washington
Eng Black Student Union
Eng Edmundson Pavilion
Eng Eastern Washington State College
Eng Metropolitan Seattle Sickle Cell Project
Eng Sierra Club
Eng National Forests of Washington (Forest Service)
Eng ATV, British Television
Eng Fosters
Eng Westside Speed Wash
Eng World Shop
Eng Kung-Fu Club
Eng Anada Marga Yoga Society
Eng YMCA
Eng Jazz Ensemble
Eng WasPIRG
Eng Olympia High School
Eng The Paper
Eng Western Washington Welding Inc.
Eng Radiers and Public Citizen Inc
Eng 107 Tavern
Eng Capitol theatre
Eng Olympic Theatre
Eng Disc n Deck
Eng The Music Bar
Eng Sea Mart
Eng South Sound National Bank
Temporal Coverage
Eng 1965/1971/1972
Type
Eng text
Eng images
extracted text
Olympia,Evergreenworktogether
About 300 members of the
Olympia community including
some religious and business
leaders gathered at St. Michael's
school, Saturday March 25th, to
attend a workshop entitled
"Evergreen College Impact on
Community and Church -- and
Vice Versa".
The introduction was given
by G . M. Meyers, President of
Thurston County Council of
Churches, and the welcome was
extended by James Dolliver,
administrative assistants : to the
Governor. Keynote speaker for
the workshop was Charles
Mccann, president of The
Evergreen State College. Other
faculty and staff from Evergreen
who participated were Richard
Nichols, Charles Teske, Richard
Alexander, and Ken Donohue.

"MINISTRY" FORUM
Participating on the forum,
"Campus Ministry Views
Evergreen College", were Dennis
Roley, chairman of the Campus

Volume 1 Number 9

Ministry Board; Mrs. Ralph
Brown, vice chairman; James
Long, treasurer; and Fr. Martin
Anderson from St. Martins. They
gave their views on what the
Campus Ministry Board should
do and how well it was
succeeding.

CHURCH-SCHOOL
INTERACTION
Presenting the portion of the
program called "Church Views
Evergreen" was Rev. Glen Cole,
Fr. C. Howard Perry, Rev. Robert
Keller, Fr. Dennis Wood, Rev.
David Ernst and Rev. Paul
McCann. It was generally agreed
that both the church and the
school could benefit from more
interaction.
Five students from Evergreen
presented their views of the
college, told of their programs,
and stated how The Evergreen
State College is helping them
obtain their goals.

OLYMPIA'S VIEW
Members of the Olympia
community taking part in the
discu!'Sion included Gil Olsen,
Commissioner of Public Works·
Dr. Robert Marshall•
Superintendent of Schools; Seo~
Hibberd, president of Olympia
Retail Board; and Roger Dorel,
City Parks and Recreation. They
told of Evergreen's impact on
local facilities and businesses.
Scott Hibberd stated that the
0 I y mp i a merchants are well
aware that some students feel the
businesses only court students for
their money, but said the same
feeling is prevalent in all college
towns and is not just common to
Evergreen. He did feel though,
that local merchants will have to
work harder to overcome that
feeling. Dr. Marshall told of the
number of Evergreen students
who are working in the local
schools as projects and
internships. He feels they have
been a great help to the school

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

district and hopes to use their
potential more in the future.

"NEED TO

LEARN"

The luncheon speaker was
Father WilliamTracev', pastor St.
Michael's church. He spoke on
the netld to learn to know one
another better and to overlook
the differences that separate
people.
After the luncheon, under the
leadership of William Bush, past
president , Thurston County
Council of Churches, speakers,
panelists, and spectators broke
down into nine discussion groups
for the purpose of answering such
questions as: What effective
mechanisms or structures can be
devised to break down the
We-They polarization? What
about tensions created by the
academic vs. the community? Are
they good or bad and why? How
to you perceive the role of the
church as it relates to the
reconciliation of college to town?
What about the dogs, drugs and

OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON

long hair controversary? If it is
real, can the establishment
realistically be expected to
overlook it to address the real
issues? If it is not, how can
college changes be made and still
pressure the challenging creative
environment the administration is
seeking? These and others were
tough questions but the
discussion attempted to supply
some answers.

DISCUSSION GROUPS
They felt the dog problem
had been resolved, that drugs
were a national problem and not
just Evergreen's and that no
controversy existed over long
hair, as it is now commonly
accepted. It was felt that
churches s-hou Id accept the
students the way they are and
make their facilities more readily
available. It was agreed that the
location of the college out in the
country created some problems
(See EVERGREEN, page eight)

March 31, 1972

Summer school!
A limited summer school
program at Evergreen, based on
individual and group contracted
studies, kicks into high gear this
week with the publishing of
potential contract areas.
According to David G. Barry,
Vice President and Provost,
faculty interested in the summer
program will also identify
themselves as part of the
beginning effort.
Acting "in response to
expressions of student interest,"
Barry noted, his summer program
task force recently announced
guidelines for a June 19 to
September 1 session. Only those
now admitted and enrolled for
Spring quarter can contract for
one, two or three Evergreen units
of credit over the summer.

GREETING participants at the Sunday opening of the Library Art Show is Mrs. Donald
G. Heard, center.

Library features Heard art
The Donald G. Heard
Memorial Art Show began last
Sunday in the fourth floor library
art gallery and will run for three
weeks. The show contains
paintings covering the last ten
years of Heard's life, as well as a
good sampling of his well-known
i nta Ii go prints. The paintings
range from the very quiet, subtle
small works of thJ early 1960's
to the six by six foot golden orb
more characteristic of his later
work.
Don Heard joined the
Evergreen faculty in September,

1971, bringing with him a rich,
broad background with skills in
m a n y f i e I d s. H e h a d
undergraduate degrees in
theology and philosophy, and
masters degrees in English, drama
and fine arts. He began painting
seriously at the age of 14, though
he did not take the title of
"artist" until he was 32, by
which time he had begun to
co 11 ect awards and honorable
mentions in a number of states
for what was until then an
avocation. He has since shown his
works in 11 states as well as the

World's Fair in Osaka, Japan. He
has had eight one-man shows, and
his work is in several prominent
collections, including the Seattle
First National Bank.
Heard was killed in a traffic
accident last October on his way
to a seminar at Evergreen. He
held great hopes for the new
college, feeling that it promised
the most exciting and viable
alternative form of higher
education in this country. He did
not live long enough to get more
than a glimpse of the promise.

Full-time tuition and fees, he
added, will jump to the 1972-73
scale: $165 for residents;
non-residents, $453; and $120
for Vietnam veterans.
Once developed contract
guidelines reach the academic
deans , prospective students and
faculty will be expected to
de~elop terms of their contracts
between April 1 and 15. Summer
academic agreements "must
provide arrangements
demonstrating continuing
availability and contact between
the faculty supervisor and the
student during the contract
period," Barry added.
Up t" the close of registration
May 12, the academic cl:.-'lns will
review Co-operative b.iucation
internships and contracts to begin
the registration process. Full
tuition payment, required by this

date, is not refundable "because
of the special service nature of
the summer program," he stated.
Although food service will not
operate over summer, residence
units will be available through
Housing Director Gerald Burke.
Students interested in
exploring summer study for·
credit at Evergreen shou Id seek a
faculty sponsor, one of the
academic deans, a Co-operative
Education staff member, the
Registrar, or John Moss in
Student Accounts •· depending
on the nature of their questions.

library hours cut
TESC library hours will be cut
by nine hours a week during
spring quarter, according to
Malcolm Stilson, chief of user
services. Library use statistics
taken during winter quarter have
indicated little or no use of the
library space by the E ,e11reen
community after 10 p.m.
The library group, which is
already understaffed, intends
therefore to cut back library
hours. The new library hours are:
8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday
through Friday; 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.,
Saturday; and I p.m. to 10 p.m.,
I
Sunday.
These are temporary and will
be adjusted to fill user needs,
Stilson added. Media Loan and
production areas will maintain
their regular hours, 8 a.m. to 5
p.m. Any questions or requests to
extend hours should be addressed
to Ken Paull, Operations Manager
for the library, or to Malcolm
, Stilson.

Lobotomies
Murder of minds
NEW YORK (LNS) 'While capital punishment
is progressively being banished in civilized lands,
many of these same nations are witnessing a
resurgence of what can properly .be described as
partial murder of the mind," wrote Dr. Peter R.
Breggin, a Washington psychiatrist at the beginning
of March in the Washington Post. Breggin has
recently done much to try to expose the
increasingly frequent use of lobotomies or brain
surgery to control such varied people as
"overactive" children, addicts, depressed
housewives, prisoners, homosexuals, alcoholics and
old people.
Breggin defines a lobotomy as "a deadening
operation that involves deliberate, irreversible
damaging of an individual's brain for the purpose
of altering behavior th~t others have deemed
','undersirable" - to make "violent" people docile
A lobotomy is a cutting of part of the front
~ection of the brain which controls such human
· unctions as insight, foresight, creativity,
sensitivity, imagination, sense of self, emotional
responsiveness and abstract reasoning." A
:>ro-lobotomy study said, "The patients (after
'obotomy) tend intellectually to be more empty,
,vith restricted interests and simpler satisfactions."
l\nother researcher found "the disappearance of
freams as well as day dreams."
Walter Freenam, a doctor who Breggin calls the
'dean of the lobotomists," said in 1965 that he
elt that his early methods of big cuts in the brain
'were too damaging to be employed in any but
he most chronically and severely disturbed
,atients." But he listed new methods of destroying
irain tissue including the injection of liquid
,utane or "the patient's own blood," ultra sonic
,earns, electricity to produce tissue-searing heat,
mplanted electrodes through which current is sent
inti I the surgeon hears "bubbles of steam
scaping," · 'gdld needles; l~ft iri place· '"for' se\leral
1onths while weak currents were passed at
,tervals," radioactive seed · implantations; beams
'Om a 185-million volt cyclotron and traditional
utting, with finer, more precise tools.
Currently over 600 lobotomies are performed a
ear in the U.S. They are mostly performed on
1digent patients -- those in mental hospitals or
ther institutions who often can't or don't resist
consenting" to the operation.
At the Kinsington Ontario Psychiatric Hospital,
,e hospital wouldn't allow doctors to operate on
1en but allowed them to operate on the brains of
7 women instead. After all, as Breggin points out,
Men couldn't s1.1pport a family after a lobotomy,
ut a woman can do housework." In fact, Dr.
·reeman reports that lobotomized women make
xcellent housekeepers.
The political implications of lobotomies are the
cariest of all. In 1967, after the Detroit riots,
hree Bostom doctors, Frank Ervin, Vernon Mark
nd William Sweet, wrote in the Journal of the
l.merican Medical Association that if social,
conomic and racial deprivation were responsible
'or the riots, then everyone in the ghetto would
,ave been involved. They said that only a small
1ortion committed "violent acts." They went on
o suggest a preventive screening program to defect
>rain disease and to institute preventive treatment
'or potential rioters.
Mark and Ervin co-authoried a book called
'Violence and the Brain" in which they propose
the development of an "early warning" system
...vhich would detect persons who could be
expected to exceed "acceptable violence."
Acceptable violence is defined as "the controlled
minimum · nec~sary action_ to prevent personal
physical injury or wanton destruction of property.
''The definition," the authors reassure us, "would
apply equally to police or public authorities as
well as to politically activist groups (students,
racial, etc.) and all violent acts that did not fit into
this category would be 'unacceptable'."Those who
broke the rules would be treated by some
violence-inhibiting method like brain surgery.
Ervin, Mark and Sweet are all associated with a
newly founded organlzation called the Neoro

Research Founcation of Boston which receives
grants from the National Institute of Mental
Health and the Justice Department's Law
Enforcement Assistance Administration (LEAA:
(the same agency that funds local police
departments and helps equip them with riot
control equipment) totalling at least $600,000.
Included is a $108,931 grant from the LEAA to
study "the incidence of violent disorders in a state
penitentiary for men; estimate their prevalence in
a non-incarcerated population; and improve,
develop and test the usefulness of
electro-physiological and neurophysiological
techniques: for the detections of such disorders in
routine examinations."
Perhaps the best known place where some of
these techniques are actually being used is the
California Medical Facility at Vacaville. In
December, some of the facts about Vacaville
started coming' out'.' At ' that time; state ·officials
called a meeting •to• gain support from doctors for
the expansion of Vacaville to house the 700
prisoners in the state's adjustment centers. The
prisoners at the Adjustment Centers are practically
without exception radicals, the "incorrigibles" of
the state prison system. Under this plan, they
would undergo a four-month treatment period
during which they would be subjected to
treatments ranging from long-term tranquilization
to shock treatment to lobotomies and other things
very vaguely described as "aversion therapy."
Furthermore, about this time, someone ripped
off and released a letter written by Director of
Corrections R.K. Procunier requesting a $48,000
safe streets grant from the California Council on
Criminal Justice for a program of "Neurosurgical
Treatment of Violent Inmates." After a public
outcry, the Director of Research at Vacaville
claimed the plan for brain surgery and electric
shock has been shelved, and anyway the plan was
only in the discussion stages.
On Feb. 16, the newly expanded Vacaville
center opened (as reported in the Feb. 7 issue of
"The Paper"). They added a new wing of 84
single-occupancy cells all designed by Brown and
Root of Texas and Morrison-Knudson of Idaho -the same companies that designed the infamous
Tiger Cages in Con Son, South Vietnam.
Prison officials claim that the newly expanded
facilities are there to treat "volunteers" only. The
question is what does "volunteer" mean in prison
·· especially in the California prison system where
so many people have indeterminate sentences for
which there is no end date. The parole board
decides every year if they are qoing to get out.
One prisoner, Stoneleigh Singleton, was told if
he signed the consent form he'd · get more
privileges, that by signing the consent form he
wouldn't be considered a militant anymore. He has
been in segregation for three years because he was
labeled a militant and accused of assaulting a guard.
So, he thought if he wasn't labled a militant
anymore he would be all right. His family realized
what he was getting into and, with some support
from the community, they got his transfer

_squashed.

PAGE 2-THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE March 31, 1972

e

1bM

Play your
heart away
Recreation opportunities for
members of the Evergreen
community abound this week
with the opening of temporary
gymnasium space in the Utilities
Plant, and the imminent start of a
coffee house and small games
area in the first floor Library
Building lobby.
The college's Utilities Plant is
located near Plant Operations,
Building 201, in the campus "old
area" off Overhulse Road. Gym
hours are 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Monday-Friday and noon to 10
p.m. Saturday and Sunday.
Started at the beginning of
Spring quarter, the temporary
Utilities gym area will provide
community members with
limited recreation until
completion of the Recreation
Center, under construction next
to the College Activities Building.

Plans call for completion of first
phase building by Fall quarter
1972.
Featured in the temporary
facility are basketball, volleyball,
badminton, weight lifting,
wrestling, judo, tumbling and
boxing. Other activities housed in
the area include floor exercises,
karate, ballet, yoga, modern
dance, rope climbing, indoor
tennis and gymnastics, complete
with a balance beam.
As soon as wall partitions
enclose two separate areas of the
first floor Library lobby, a coffee
house with piano and stage will
open for business on the east
side, next to the college business
offices.
A small game area is planned
on the opposite side, near Library
Media area, with billiard and ping
pong tables and checkout of
small games, such as cards and
chess. Hours for the Library
recreation area, still to be
announced, are expected to be
the same as the gym.

Cops ki 11 cops
DETROIT, Mich (LNS) It was
a "tragic mix-up" according to
police, when 3 policemen -- all
members of STRESS, a special
decoy unit -- burst into an
off-duty sheriff's deputy's
apartment, killing one deputy,
and injuring 3 others as they
played cards.
Deputy David E. Davis (not
among those injured in the
shooting, which took place March
9), said that the Detroit STRESS
pol ice started shooting and
continued for about 10 minutes
although the deputies threw their
guns and bad es out and shouted,
''Pol ice! Police! Police!" to
identify themselves. Afterwards,
Davis said, the police beat them
with shotgun butts.
Mr . Davis stated that the
STRESS agents "just kept firing
double-barrel buckshot magnums.
They must have fired 100 rounds.
It lasted about 10 minutes."
A not her eyewitness to the
shooting, Richard Sain, a civilian
who was playing cards with the
off-duty deputies, gave a similar
account.
The police version was less
precise. The police said that the
policemen had seen a man who
they believe was carrying a gun
across an alley. Two of the
policemen left their unmarked
car and went to the rear of the

building while the third
policeman followed the man to
the apartment involved and
entered, leaving the door slightly
ajar. At this point, the Detroit
Police Department said they did
not have enough information to
tell what happened next.
The attacking policemen
involved were members of a
special unit, STRESS (Stop the
Robberies -· Enjoy Safe Streets),
formed January, 1971 to reduce
street crime. The elite unit,
composed of about 30 volunteer
officers, most of them white, act
as . decoys to . lure P-Otential
criminals to rob or assault them.
Since its inception twelve
persons have been shot to death
by STRESS Teams. Eleven of the
victims have been black. All of
the deputies in the latest shooting
were black.
Following this shooting, the
Guardians, an association of
black policemen in Detroit, sent a
telegram to Police Commissioner
John F. Nichols demanding that
the STRESS units be disbanded.
But Commissioner Nichols, at
a news conference, said the unit
would not be disbanded and
urged people to be calm.
There have been no
indictments in the latest
shooting.

Fingerprints for
six year-olds?
WASHINGTON (LNS) The
Senate Finance Committee
approved a plan in the beginning
of March that would require
every child in the country to be
assigned a Social Security number
when he or she enters the first
grade, beginning in 1974.
The Finance Committee is
studying a plan that would make
fingerprinting mandatory for
"older" persons who apply for
cards but "voluntary" for 6 year
old children receiving cards for
the first time.
An objective of the plan,
according to Committee
Chairman Russell Long, is to
block poor people from obtaining

mu It i p le cards with different
names in order to use them to
collect several different welfare
checks.
"I personally think that
everyone ought to have
fingerprints on file but I don't
think we should require it at age
six," Long said.
"It would be useful for other
reasons with children -- to trace
lost children and runaways," he
continued.
The Social Security and
Welfare bill, to which the
fingerprinting plan would be
attached if approved, will be
ready for Senate action in about
a 1119nth. _


Common drug e111ergenc1es
(Co-operative Note: As the weather warms,
drug use at Evergreen seems to be increasing. So
far there's been one flip-out and anO.D. that the
staff knows of, and it's going to get hotter. We
hope that this LNS article and graphic will be of
some value in dealing with this problem.
By CHUCK ROBINSON
Radical Therapist
LIBERATION News Service
There are three common drug emergencies
where your concerned intervention can help
someone, and even save their life. These
emergencies are freak-outs, overdoses and chronic
drug emergencies.

Freak-outs
Not all psychedelic experiences are positive.
There is no way to predict whether or not you, or
someone else will have a partially bad trip
( "bummer") or an extremely negative trip
("freak-out"). When a person is in a mildly
frightening place, or is afraid that they may
"bum," they may frown, appear tense, or mention
the fact that they are getting scared. A brief "It'll
pass soon, just ride with it. If it gets bad, let me
know," said with relaxed concern will usually aid
the tripper in their search for a more positive space
and experience. Extensive questioning, or
unreasonable anxiety on your part can make the
situation worse. Stay calm, and reassure the person
that you will be there if you are needed.
A person can also find themselves in a bad
place without warning. The dominant emotions
experienced (but not necessarily articulated)
during a freak-out are fear and helplessness. The
intense fear or disorientation on the part of the
tripper allows you to differentiate between the
person who needs help and the person who only
needs reassurance.
On a freak-out, the person may scream loud
and long, become agitated, become unable to
"contact" another personJ sob uncontrollably, _or

retreat to a corner and tremble. You can intervene
in these crises in such a way as to relieve the
tripper's anxiety and aid them in relocating
themselves within a more positive space.
Try to make contact with a calm question such
as "Are you in a place you don't want to be?" The
person may respond, or continue to freak. Don't
be hurt or frightened if they don't respond
immediately.
Unaggressively continue with surface questions
or statements. 'When did you drop? Do you want
the music on? I'm here to help you. You are here
at your place with friends." Try to let them know
where they are, that it is a safe place, that they can
trust the people are there, and that the bad
experience will pass.
Listen and offer reassurance. It is often helpful
to tell the tripper to "flow with it, let go. It will all
be clear later. Relax, let go."
Avoid ridicule, censure, and playing guru -don't attempt to make sense out of the verbal

content for the tripper. Encourage them to talk.
Respond simply and honestly. The person will
usually get confortable within an hour.
It is well to have a second person with you, or
close by, if you are helping a I person bring
themself down. If you get tired, the second person
can take over. It is best for the three of you to
spend time together before the first helper leaves.
If the tripper becomes violent, be cautious.
Restrain only when they actively strike out.
Frightened people are strong and aggressive when
they imagine an attack on their person. Call more
friends, or stronger and more experienced friends.
In this situation, and other drug emergencies,
don't get in over your head. Don't be afraid to
request help or back off from a potentially
dangerous person. You may have to call an
ambulance. If this is necessary, try to accompany
the person to the hospital. If a person becomes
unconscious, or begins to convulse, get them to a
hospital immediately.
You can use the same approac~es with a person
who has an acute panic reaction or\ grass (this does
happen -- usually with an inexperienced smoker or
people who turn on when they ar~ already in the
midst of a stressful emotional state) or people on
speed runs.
A word on speed. There are reports of fatal
overdoses on speed. People can also become
violent and paranoid on speed, and extremely
depressed after a run. People who use a lot of
speed are in the midst of a chronic drug
emergency. Urge them to seek help.
It is a poor idea to give downs or tranquilizers
to a person who is freaking out. The drug may
initiate a dangerous situation in the person's body.
You never know what is in a tab that is said to be
acid, mescaline, etc. And aborting a trip with the
aid of drugs may prevent a person from working
through the difficulty which brought on the bad
trip. This may be the cause of flashbacks. It has
been determined that depriving a person of dream
time can cause flip outs, Ttie situation, wher.e y.oµ
.- , abort a trip wl h another drug is,quit~~simi!ar.

Drug overdoses
Most fatal overdoses result from an excess of
opiates, barbiturates, or combinations of barbs and
alcohol. When people inject drugs, they sometimes
"go under" right after they shoot up. They come
around or someone slaps them awake for a brief
period of time. Then they nod out again. Lots of
times they never wake up. The drugs have
depressed breathing beyond the capacity to
support life. People take fatal O.D.'s hours after
they get off. It takes a while.
You can play doctor and shoot them full of
salt, coke or speed, waste time, feel important,
complicate an already dangerous bodily condition,
or you can get them to an emergency ward as fast
as you can. The tools and skills to save an O.D.
victim are to be found only in a hospital. Being in
the middle of an O.D. situation can be confusing.

,, .. -h,, •

1ll1,

,.

h,.h~

•-.

The people with someone who O.D.'s are often
high themselves. It takes energy to respond.
The situation is frightening because someone
may be dying, and to save them you might have to
face the possibility of doctor and cop hassles. But
then it is equally confusing when someone dies in
your presence. There is always realistic guilt.
Disposal of a dead person's body is heavier than a
run to the emergency ward.
If the person stops breathing, start mouth to
mouth resuscitation. Tilt the head back, remove
foreign objects from the mouth. Pinch the nose
closed and breathe a lung full of air into the
victim's mouth. The chest should raise and then
deflate again. Repeat until the person can breathe
on his own. Don't wait for the person to stop
breathing before you respond.
If you can't slap a person awake, head for the
hospital. If the person comes around, don't let
them go under again and don't leave them alone.
If a person has O.D.'ed on methadone they Ccjn
be fine for two hours and sudd~nly die.
Methadone is very long ~cting. Th·e same is tru·e of
a barbiturate overdose. A person often takes barbs
at intervals. The ones they took an hour ago may
knock them out, but the pills they dropped
twenty minutes ago will kill.
How do you respond when so,:-i.,·J ne O.D.'s?
Stash any drugs you have on you. Try to slap the
person around and get them walking. Head for the
nearest hospital, or call an ambulance. Meet the
ambulance outside and say that you found the
person there. If you can get them to the hospital,
do so fast. Once again, say you found them
outside your house. The police or hospital officials
have no right to detain you. You are simply a good
citizen helping a fellow, though unknown, citizen.
Never try to induce vomiting unless the person
is quite alert. Usually, inducing vomiting is
effective only in the first fifteen minutes after a
person drops pills. Any later the person will
strangle on their vomit because their gag reflex is
k110,.~l<~ ouJ. J,!1 t~e hospjtal tl')e $t<;>mach qtn be
su<;,_ce.~ ully pumpe~.
, The O.D.-victim has put you in a funny place.
They're the one who has taken an overdose, but
you must decide whether or not to attempt to save
their life. You have to deal with those changes.
They have to deal with the hospital changes. You
don't have to take any 'Why did you take me to
the hospital? I would have been OK," bull from
anyone who gives themselves a drug overdose and
starts to die in front of you. It is not unhip to save
someone's life. Their response is only one of guilt.

Most common emergency
The most common drug emergency happens to
millions of people every day. They are slowly
killing themselves and destroying those around
them with downs, speed, heroin and alcohol. If
this is you, or someone you care about, there is a
drug emergency.
These people don't do it alone. They have
more than enough help from our society. America·
has the best of everything. If you want the best
drugs for ruining your mind, America has these
drugs.
With Thorazine hospital oranges, wi!h Mexican
reds the CIA-Federales ignore in their mucho shoot
outs with peasant grass-growers, with the princess
amphetamine that wires a person into a "groovy
chick," with nicotine and alcohol, .v1 'h killer
street acid for children, with political man a snack,
scag, duka, junk, horse, dope, tagic mag c, boy,
heroin.
If you, or someone you relate to punches a
hole into their arm, there is a drug emergency. If
you are on a speed run, ask the wall people if you
have a drug emergency. If you can't sleep without
barbs, or you wonder how many goofers are
behind your bottle of wine, someone is telling you
something. But maybe you can't hear anyone
because you found out there isn't anyone there. If
this is your reality, seek out a change with others
who are changing. You cannot change yourself
alone, or with others who are not changing.
If you really care about someone who is in a
constant drug emergency, you know what to do.
Try to discover a way of communicating this to
them. If you always scream the message, whisper
it. If you always whisper, scream.
March 31, 1972THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE PAGE 3

VIEWPOINT
To the Board
the School: An-Apology
By TIMOTHY MOFFATT
am not using the term apology to
signify contrition, but rather in the sense
the Greeks used it; as an explanation.
Socrates, by way of Plato used the apology
I haven't yet been asked to drink hemlock,
but I wonder if my position isn't similar
nonetheless. I do not retract anything I
said in my earlier article, nor do I wish to
delete any of the language I used, which
has apparently found disfavor among some
segments of the college.
This college is very tender after two
quarters of operation; it is very vulnerable

to attackby legislators, by the public, by
anyone who is · concerned to look very
closely at what it is accomplishing in its
first crucial year. This vulnerability is a
function of our own progress in putting it
together; if the faculty ignores student
input in program design or
decision-making, the students have a
legitimate gripe. If the deans remain in the
shadows of the academic programs,
allowing them to drift apart and deteriorate
internally, they are subject to scrutiny. If
the board is composed of a non
-representative sgement of the state's
population, it is open to question by
minority groups, lower middle-class voters,
etc. Finally, if the students are unwilling to
assume the task of guiding their own
education, producing, leaning, actively
participating in their programs, contracts,
and in the evolution of the college as a
whole, they are bringing into question the
whole non -authoritarian, interdisciplinary
arrangement of the school.
The frightening reality of this place is
that we have no one to blame if it fails; not
the leqislature, not the bui Idings, not the
students if you are a member of the
faculty, not the administration if you are a
student, and so on. It's our problem. If I
don't produce in my program, and the
faculty gives me credit just the same, the
credibility of our grading system comes
into question . If the faculty lets things
slide, or worse, take over in a way that
violates the freedom of the programs, they

Day care a reality

April 22
NEW YORK (LNS) -- The
>Jational Peace Action Coalition
NPAC) is calling for
nternational demonstrations on
\pril 22 to demand the
mmediate and unconditional
vithdrawal of all U.S. troops,
varplanes, and materials from
;outheast Asia. The mass
nobilizations are planned for
>Jew York City a,;d Los Angeles.
As a part of the six weeks of
,ustained international struggle
1gainst the war, decided up at the
IVorld Assembly for the Peace
ind Independence of the
ndochinese People in Versailles,
=ranee, ten other countries are
ilso calling peace actions on April
22. They are Canada, England,
France, Ireland, Lebanon,
Luxemburg, New Zealand,
Scotland, Sweden and
Switzer,:..nd. For more
information write or call NPAC,
150 5th Ave., Rm 911; NY, 212
741-20!8.

The Driftwood House moved
a step closer to reality thanks to
an extensive lobbying effort on
the part of its proponents. At a
meeting of the Service and
Activities Fee Board, on March
13th, $4,290 was approved to set
up the Evergreen Day Care
Center. Some twenty students
and faculty, along with half a
dozen children, were in
attendance to voice their
sometimes emotional pleas for
support of the project.
The Driftwood House is an
old building on campus, owned
by the college. It is currently
without electricity, water, or
sewage. A good portion of the
money, over $3000, will go to
provide for these services. $1000
of it will go towards recreational
and educational tools for the
children. If a day care center was
to be established, it became
necessary to utilize this house,
when no other location on
campus was available.
Initially there was some
hesitance by some members of
the board to approve such a large
sum, for an activity that would
be utilized by a relatively small
portion of the students. With
only a little over $11,000 to work
with, and with request for
considerably more than that on

hand, it was thought by some
members of the board that they
money could be better utilized
elsewhere.
No one on the board was
opposed to the idea of a day care
center, but some thought that
renovating the Driftwood House
was hot the answer. It was
pointed out by proponents that it
was the only location available.
The board was assured that once
the building was remodeled it
would remain in the hands of the
students, and if it became
necessary for the day care center
to move to a larger facility in the
future, the building would then
be available for other student
related activities.
The Driftwood House can
care for a maximum of 15
children on a rotating basis with
around 60 children a week being
cared for. The bu i Id ing is
scheduled to be opened from 8
a.m. to 5:30 p.m., and to be
manned by student volunteers,
who in some cases will work for
credit.
The large turnout of
interested people, and the
sincerely emotional pleas of the
parents carried the day, and the
funds were overwhelmingly
approved. No date has been set
for the scheduled opening of
Evergreen's day care center.

are drawing pay for helping to destroy the
ideals we established. And so on ... the
point is this, and I will make one retraction
from my earlier article; there was no
mandate as such from anyone to bu i Id a
special kind of college. The decision was
made, and how may be ur:iclear, but here
we are. WE are fragmented, out of touch
with each other, deans from faculty,
faculty from faculty, students from . . .
how do we build when we're all marching
to our own drum? How do we ask the
people of this state for more money when
we can't make a humane judgment as to
how to spend the money we do have? How
do we come to call this a college, when it is
a series of independent, unrelated parts
that increasingly operate by their own
rules, to their own ends?
I have spoken out before. I have spoken
since I came here almost two years ago.
Maybe I have talked too much, or in a way
that insults people and turns them away
from the problems I see. That is okay. I
haven't said anything I haven't also heard
from others. When we begin to say it
together, "The Emperor has no clothes on
at all," when we face reality and begin to
do something about it, and not sit back and
protect our positions and our good looks,
• we'll start to get somewhere. If you don't
speak, no one will hear you.
The chance for this college and for
ourselves is right here in our open hands.
Squeeze it and it dies. Ignore it and it flies
away.

'Word of Mouth' adds
much to neighborhood
are designers, builders and owners
of this place, "The Word of
Once upon a day, a student
Mouth Bookstore." This secretive
from Evergreen decided to take a
place is located on the corner of
solitary and rainy walk to the
Adams and Overhulse roads, and
school's oeacn area. On lier vi/if
it s a very nice pface t6 vistt.
she came to a mysterious old
Some of the things very
building. She had heard things
noticeable in this place, are
about this place so she went
books. There are many colorful
closer. Soon she saw two signs,
hardback books on animals,
one said "Kinnear" and the other
photography, cooking and even
one said, "open", and she went
children's books. Also available is
inside.
a large paperback selection of
The very first thing she
books concerning such topics as
noticed was not a thing at all, but
race, poetry, ecology and politics
a smiling man with a beard sitting to name a few. Upstairs there is
behind a counter. She asked him,
artwork for sale or just to look
"what is your name?", and he at, and anyone wanting to sell
replied, "My name is Grant some of their artistic wares
Kinnear''. After talking to this
should look into this store as a
man the young student found out
possible place to take their work.
many interesting facts. For one
As the young student
thing, this person was a former discovered, even if you don't
student at the Colorado College, have money for extra books or
he is also the brother of Calvert artwork to sell, "The Word of
Kinnear. Calvert Kinnear is a
Mouth Bookstore" is still a nice
poet, (some of his works are place to visit. If you would like
available at this mysterious place) to go there, they are open
and also was a teacher at a girl's Monday thru Saturday, starting
college in upstate New York . . out at 10 a.m. and closing up at 6
Together these two people make p.m. Say Hello to Grant and Cal
up, The Kinnear Brothers, who from "Little Red Rain ~oncho".

By CHERE DI LL

Working Members of The Paper Co-operative
Chris Ness
Lester L. Leahy
Joe Campo
Kit Pagel

Diane Senn
Bruce Brockmann
Cam Musgrove
Michael Miller

Staff:
Jerry Vermeire, Ken Balsley, Charles Steven~, Bob Turnage
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
necessarily 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 3217A TESC Library, camP.us
extension 3189, unrestricted telephone 753-3186.

TricontinentalIL NS
PAGE 4 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE March 31, 1972

Gov. Evans visits E.D.
Environmental Design
students were surprised at a
recent Monday group meeting by
a one hour visit with Governor
Daniel J. Evans.
Arranged by faculty member
Chuck Nisbet, Evans' visit helped
widen communications between
students and the governor. He
questioned students about their
coordinates studies program. Paul
Roberts, an ED student active in
the Cooper Point Association,
explained the purposes and goals
of the association. Paul briefly
explai.ied the other large group
projects, including Lacey Park,
Marine Development,
Experimental Housing, the
Organic Farm, and various
individual projects.
Governor Evans asked
students for suggestions on how
people could be working to solve
environmental problems.
Students suggested more student
participation, deeper concern by

the community residents, and
mass transportation instead of
individual transportation.
When asked how he felt about
the present tax system, the
governor explained that citizens
are frustrated because they pay
small taxes on "almost
everything." He feels the system
should be simplified and only a
few items taxed.
Evans noted that the "18 year
old vote" would have a valuable
influence on political decisions -if the 18 to 21 year old people
register and vote.
Jimmie Kagan, an ED student
and an organizer of the Organic
Farm, asked Governor Evans, "If
you cou Id do anything you
wanted to do, right now, with no
opposition, what would you do?"
The governor said he would
like to reorganize local
government. He explained that
citizens think local government
has control, but that it does not;

most of the control is at the state
level.
Evans said he would ' like to
see county government
responsive to the needs of its
citizens, so local districts could
be more organized and would
work together efficiently. He
feels that individual counties have
difficulties being concerned with
the total environmental impact.
They are caught in the mass of
governmental units and tax
structures, which restricts good
communication between
governmental agencies.
Dick Moats, another ED
student, asked the governor for
his opinion on the responsibility
of an elected official to his
electors. Governor Evans said he
feels that a person in politics
needs to keep in touch with the
people he represents, which may
be accomplished through a series
of opinion polls. The elected
official should then follow the
direction the people want.

CPA Comprehensive planning
By developing a master plan
for the growth of the campus, the
college has demonstrated that it
has chosen to follow the path of
an orderly, or at least planned,
development of structures, rather
than producing a helter-skelter
mish-mash pattern so common at
other schools. But unless the
growth of the surrounding area is
also of logical and systematic
-manner, the cotfege campus can
only be a bright spot in one more
typical American suburb.
One major, immediate goal of
the Cooper Point Association is
to assure a systematic growth of
Cooper Point, through the
development and implementation
of its comprehensive plan.
Implementation is a key word
here, for many an area which
does have a comprehensive plan
for development still ends up
looking like Surburbia, U.S.A. It
is because such plans have

traditionally been created by the
trained professional planners, but
with no public input.
Consequently, when the pressure,
of developers are exerted, there is
no community support to
implement the plan.
The traditional premeise upon
which comprehensive plans are
built is that all of the 'projected'
market needs of an area should
be accommodated in an orderl
fashion. But this method
artifically inflates the values of
the land, encourages speculation,
and generates its own market
demands in an area.
The Cooper Point Association
has chosen to develop its plan on
the premise that the 'real' market
demands be met, rather than
those twenty years from now.
This prevents land characteristics
and amenities to be the primary
determinates of land use.
Another of the precepts

BSU to play in
basketball classic
University of Washington's
Sickle Cell Anemia Basketball
Classic this weekend features the
premiere tip-off of The Evergreen
State College's squad.
Hosted by the UW Black
Student Union, the tournament
began yesterday. It ends
tomorrow night, Saturday, with
final consolation and
championship games. Tickets are
$1.00 per person each of the
three days.
Evergreen's all-black team is
competing for classic honors at
Edmunson Pavilion on UW
campus with 15 other black
teams from California, Canada
and Washington. The team's first
game was against Eastern
Washington State College
yesterday.
All proceeds from the games
will go to support the task force
for the Metropolitan Seattle
Sickle Cell Project, which will

initiate screening and educational
counselling in this area. Sickle
cell anemia is a chronic disabling
condition, sometimes fatal, which
occurs in approximately one in
every 400 black Americans.
Ninety-eight per cent of the
people who have this disease are
black. The disease causes an
elongation of red blood cells,
leading to blood clots and oxygen
starvation. Rarely do victims live
past the age of 30.
Ten per cent of the blacks in
this country are now victims of
this disease; 30 per cent carry the
trait of susceptibility. And yet in
view of these facts, the U.S.
government has given very little
money to the research and
development of a cure for this
disease.
Donations may be made to
the Sickle Cell Anemia Fund, c/o
Liberty Bank, 2320 E. Union,
Seattle, WA 98122.

formulated by the association is
that there should exist some type
of incentive to a developer for
including open space areas within
his development, as well as
developing his land on a large
parcel basis rather than small
parcel "strip" development. This
incentive should be in the form
of density bonuses that allow a
developer more people (or
w llin
nits _per acre if he
develops his land a certain way.
Although the basis precepts
are now established, the
association still has much work to
do to establish them into an
effective comprehensive plan.
The aim is to have this completed
by June. If you are interested in
having an input and learning
more of the work of the
association talk to the folks in
Environmental Design, or come
to the meetings on Tuesday
evenings (7:30) in the ED lounge
in the library building.

Cou.ntless controversial
enviromental issues demand your
attention and support. A current
example centers around the
American wilderness, threatened

by logging, mining, and
motorizational development. The
following account is an
extraction from a Sierra Club
memo appropriately titled "Speak
Now Or Forever Hold Your
Peace" including; an explanation
of the wilderness situation, a
suggested list of priorities for
National Forests of Washington,
and a way for the individual to
exert influence in favor of a
greater and lasting wilderness.
Background: In response to
increasing conservationists'
pressure last year, the Chief of the
Forest Service ordered all the
National Forests to prepare an
inventory of what de facto

wilderness remained within their
boundries, in block of 5,000
continuous acres or more. Once
the inventory is complete the
Forest Service is then to get
"public input," and to make
recommendations to the Chief
for which areas, out of all those
inventoried, would be further
studied, and possibly placed
within the National Wilderness
Preservation System. This process
is to be completed by June 30,
1972--so there is not much time.
Without strong public
pressure, it is extremely unlikely
that the Forest Service will even
stude or recommend any areas
that we want for protection;
'therefore, we must speak out'.
(note: The opportunity to "speak
out" existed during Feburary
26-March 7 when a series of
public meetings were held by the
Forest Service to hear what the
public wanted done with the
remaining unprotected wilderness
in our National Forests. However,
the opportunity to voice your

opinion in the form of a letter
still exists.)
Now is the time to come out
for the places we love and have
fought for for so long: Places like
. Mt. Baker, the Cascade River, the
Suiattle, the Whitechuck, Boulder
River, the Alpine Lakes and the
Cougar Lakes--and many others.
You do not need to know about
every area; the most important
thing is that you let the Forest
Service know exactly what you
think before April 5, 1972. Then
the Forest Service will stop
receiving public input regarding
the wilderness inventory.
Here is a brief summary of
what the Forest Service
proposed, and what we have
identified as critically important.
(Note: In writing to the Forest
Service the individual could
suggest the fr,l,owing '
recommendations)
MT. BAKER NATIONAL
FOREST. Belllngham, March 7,
evening. Write: Forest Supervisor,
Federal Bulldlng, Belllngham,
Washington.
Includes wilderness places long a
part of conservationists' program for
full protection, such as Boulder
River-Whitehorse+, Mt. Dickerman+,
Monte Cristo+, Lost Creek*, Clrcle
Peak*, Buck Creek-Downey Creek*,
Falls Creek-Jug Lake*, Cascade
River*,· Mt. Baker+, Tomyhol-Sllesla
Creek+.
Our position. All these areas
deserve the full protection of the
WIiderness Act. Those with an *
should be added to the Glacier Peak
Wilderness, to which they are adjacent.
Those with a + Should be managed as
separate wilderness areas. The other
areas In this locatlon Should be studied
further without logglng untll more
meetings have been held.
OKANOGAN NATIONAL
FOREST • Okanogan, evening, March
2. Write, Forest Supervisor, Box 950,
Okanogan, Washington 98840.
611,000 acreas of de facto
wllderness lndentlfled In 26 different
areas, many of which could be
combined to form larger single units.
This Forest proposes for addltlonal
WIiderness study the Long Draw and
Long Swamp areas which could be
added to the existing Pasayten
WIiderness. We support this, but there
are many other areas too, which
should be either added to the Pasayten
WIiderness or given full protection on
their own.
WENATCHEE NATIONAL
FOREST. Write Forest Supervisor,
P.O. Box 811, Wenatchee, Washington
98801.
Identified 730,000 acres In 9
separate units (there are some
shocking omissions here, more later).
These areas Include the Entiat*, Lake
Wenatchee*, Kltan+, and Lake
Chelan+.
The areas with an * should be
added to the Glacler Peak WIiderness,
and are baslcally an Integral part of It,
the Kltan area must be protected as a
part of an Integral Alplne Lakes
WIiderness and the Forest SErvlce
should be severely criticized for
shocking omissions and for falllng even
to Inventory all the potentlal
WIiderness that Is there.
SNOQUALMIE NATIONAL
FOREST.
This forest has Identified 17
different areas totaling about 632,000
acres as Inventoried de facto
wllderness. It proposes to recommend
182,000 acres In three different areas
for further study: 50,000 acres of the
Alplne Lakes country, 127,000 acres
In the Cougar Lakes area, and 500
acres next to the existing Goat Rocks
WIiderness.
The Mt. Index-MIiier P v'e ·-Lake
Dorothy-Mt Thompson Ram._ ' . t area
should be lmmedlately Included as a
part of the proposed Alplne Lakes
WIiderness; the Monte Crlsto-Grlzzly
Peak area should be added to the
Glacler Peak WIiderness; and the Norse
Peak area should be l'n cluded as an
Integral part of the plan for a Cougar
Lakos Wllderrtoss •.

It is really important for you
to respond to the Forest Services'
ca II for public input because
public opinion carries a good deal
of weight in deciding the future
of public land. Please give ten
minutes of your time to support
the ,American wilderness,
Any questions may be
addressed to a memberof The Mt.
St. Helens Protection Association
through the Individual in
Am .erica program.
March 31, 1972 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE PAGE 5

What are you doing
this su111111er?
FIRST IN A SERIES OF

STORY AND PHOTOS

ARTICLES ABOUT WHAT
EVERGREEN COMMUNITY
By BRUCE BROCKMANN

MEMBERS WILL BE DOING
THIS SUMMER.

Land-

acres
Australia

Rovers
If summertime means getting away from it all, then the Simpson
Desert is surely just as far as you could go if you wanted to escape from
America. This summer Peter Robinson and two Evergreen students, Phil
Gierman and Richard Skrinde, together with an outside crew are
shooting a thirty-minute documentary about a Land-Rover trip across
the outback of Australia. "'Boomerang' (the film's title)," said Peter
Robinson, "will be the story of a fast-moving expedition that tries to
catch all the mystery of the scrub, some 15,000 square miles of fantasy
land on a trip that starts from Perth, moves northwards across the
Victoria Desert to Alice Springs, south through the Simpson Desert to
Andamooka and homewards via Broken Hill to Sydney."
The film will reveal more than a slice of life down under, and it
explores the contrasting life styles between the raeidly growing
industrial cities such as Perth and Sydney which lie to the east and west
of the desert and the alternative types of existence,particularly among
those groups which resist progress and this is the plight of the aborigine.

Richard Skrinde who is currently enrolled in the Contracted Studies
Program shooting a film "Brand New Day" will be assisting in filming
of this project. "Just think of all those shades of yellow, sand, stones
and sunsets", said Dick, "and all the rhythm of hopping kangaroos,
wheels across dusty roads and fading horizons. It should be a
photographer's paradise." Phil Gierman has just completed a study of
the "Jackson for President campaign" also in Contracted Studies, so I
asked him how he felt about a change to something as different as this.
''Well, I've never thrown a boomerang," said Phil, "and the summer
seemed a good time to see if it came back."
Part of the sponsorship is coming from ATV, an independent British
television station, and negotiations are currently underway with two
local channels The 30 minute film should be on the air before
Christmas providing everybody gets back safely. Apart from carrying
gasoline and water the only other stable diet will be a huge supply of
Foster's Lager. Maybe you can drive 5,000 miles on Foster's Lager; if
not, there will be three thirsty people who may never see Sydney.

Where the _
k angaroo hops
"I want to convey something about the mystery of the desert, a day
in the life of the flying doctor, trek the trail once ridden by Ned Kelly
and record some of the chatter by swagmen who can't 'spike the
Quine's English'," Peter Robinson reflected, "but at the same time
reveal how both to the east and west of the desert stand all the signs of
progress, mdustrial growth and the hustle and bustle that is Perth and
Sydney."
I asked about the type of transportation and the problems of
breakdowns and carrying gasoline. "You need tough vehicles for this
type of trip so we will be using the standard '88's' Land-Rover which
perform well in the varied type of terrain we'll be crossing. Probably
we'll strap gerry cans to the side as well as carrying extra water."



<Wo.J'd .dfwp

Westside Speed Wash
1214 WEST HARRISON

Unclassified
NEED sewing, mending or darning
done? I can do designing, and make
clothes too, as well as alter, or
decorating, call Marya at 753-3321 or
753-3332, on campus.

91/fa of r:bldlnailon
FOR SALE '56 Pontiac Sedan, engine
has cracked block or head but
remaining mechanicals are all superb,
good tires, brakes, heater, etc., straight
body, $30. 943-8930, Jay.

WEST SIDE CENTER H
OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON 98501

Bridal Registry

Telephone
357-4353

PAGE 6 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE March 31, 1972

LOST a brown Basset Hound, named
Sam, has white feet, very good looking.
Call 753-5779.

OPEN 8 AM to

10 PM

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

WORK WANTED, Can do
electronics repairs at reasonable
cost, contact Mike Livingston,
ED, Rt. 5, Box 491, Oly.,
491-5948.
WANTED BOOKS, inmates at
McNeil Is, would really
appreciate books of all sorts,
drop them by the MECHA office,
(Man & Art).
WANTED BOOKS, Have any
books to rid yourself of, give
them to the Third Eye, kids there
want to read, contact Joan
753-7082.

TECHNICIAN NEEDED we are
looking for someone who really has a
lot of experience with recording
studies to help us make a high quality
tape for the Library and hopefully
bigger and better things. If you are that
person, contact Cruz lr,i the Man & Art
program or Carrllu Thompson at
753-2625 as soon as possible,
PERSONAL want to meet another
radical gay male, Object: Exploration
of homosexuality. Call Don at
943-2980 after 5 p,m.
HELP WANTED Newspaper work,
call 753-3186 or 3189 on campus.

.. .

.

..... . ... . .. ........ . ... .. . . .. . .. . . . ••. . . . . . . . •. . ... . . ...... ...

·· ·········· ... .

----------IIIL-al-•------FRIDAY, March 31:
The second game in the "Black Student Union Sickle Cell
Anemia Basketball Classic" will be held at 1 :40 p.m. (See
story)
College Forum, 2:30, Library 3111.
NET's Film Odyssey "Barrier" (Polish), 8 :30 p.m.
Meg Irwin and Jim Swain, harpsichord concert, 9 p.m.,
second floor lobby.
APRIL FOOL'S DAY!, April 1:
The Championship and consolation games which conclude
the "Black Student Union Sickle Cell Anemia Basketball
Classic" will be held at 9:40 p.m. and 7 p.m. respectively.
MONDAY, April 3:
Sixth day of class and also the last day for payment of
tuition and fees, without incurring a $15 late payment
charge. Payments postmarked by the TH IR D wi 11 be accepted
without penality.
Today is the last day in the withdrawal period with full
refund of tuition and fees.
Draft Counseling office open, room 3206, 10 - noon and
1-5.
Student Public Relations Group will meet in room 3234
at 11 :45.
Kung-Fu club meets in the third floor lobby, Monday
noon to 1 :30 p.m.($10 month fee)
Evergreen Political Action Group meets in room 3215 at
6 p.m.
Beginning Ballet class is meeting in the third floor lobby
at 7:30 p.m.
A DTF on Alternative Transportation will meet in the
Communication and Intelligence Lounge, second floor library
at 7:30 p.m.
DTF on Campus Employers, Library 3121, 3-5 p.m.
Studies abroad meeting, 3-5 p.m., Lecture hal I 2.
White Racism Workshop Films, noon-1 p.m., library
3112.
Ananda Marga Yoga Society Group Meditation at 7 a.m.,
library 2506, exercise and breakfast to follow.
TUESDAY, April 4 :
Cooper Point Association meeting will take place in the
Enviromental Design lounge at 7:30 p.m.
Karate class is held in the third floor lobby at 6:30 p.m.

Judo class is held at the Downtown YMCA (5th
Franklin) at 7:30 p.m.
Computer Services will have another workshop
Faculty and Staff on how to opperate the computer, if
are interested contact Jill Feeney at ext. 3345.
workshop will take place at 10 a.m.

Correction of Cultural Studies Abroad. The
meeting that according to the last edition of 'The
Paper' was scheduled for April 3 at 2 p.m. has been
changed to an hour later--3 p.m., April 3, in
Lecture Hall 2.

***

***

The Si~kle Cell Anemia Basketball Classic. The
Black Student Union of the U of W is sponsoring a
"Sickle Cell Anemia Basketball Classic" continuing
today, March 31, at 1:40 p.m., with a consolation
game on April 1, at 7 p.m. The championship
game will also be held on April I, at 9:40 p.m.
Garfield High School in Seattle will be the location
of the tournament. This event is open to the
public and there will be no admission charge. For
more information contact Thomas E. Allen,
Intramural Coordinator, home phone-7534713,
business--753-3199 .

Ying and Yang paintings. Jose and Miriam
Arguelles will be putting on a visable manifesto
presenting Ying and Yang paintings, through April
23 in the library circulation area. This event will
be open to the public with no admission- charge
and will be shown during library hours. For more
information on this event contact Tim Crews,
Media Productions, circulation area of the library.

***

Connie Hubbard art exhibit. The drawings and
pottery of Connie Hubbard (head of Graphics,
library group) will be on display during library
hours until April 10. The location of this showing
will be at the exhibition cases on the first floor
and the wall of the second floor lobby. This
exhibition is open to the public and no admission
will be charged.

'

for
you
The

WEDNESDAY, April 5:
Executive Vice-Presidents' Staff Meeting is in room 3121
at 3 p.m.
Group Meditation and Advanced lectures for all
meditators will happen in room 3121 at 7:30 p.m.
SCUBA film and meeting, 7-10 p.m., third floor library
lobby.
.
Gas Welding Workshop, introductory sessions, 3 J;l.m.,
building 211, early sign-up r-ecommended in 211.
Jazz Ensemble will meet in room 1407 at 7:30 p.m.
Ralph Nader's WashPI RG organization will be sending a
representative from the U of W to TESC. This meeting will be
held at noon in the Co-operative Education lounge on the
third floor. All Evergreen students, faculty, and staff
interested in starting a petition drive for a TESC WashPI RG
chapter are cordially invited .
THURSDAY, April 6:
Film Series "Z", 7 and 9 p.m., lecture hall 1.
Health Sciences again is asking Evergreen Students,
Faculty, and staff to donate blood for reserve in the TESC
fund, therefore another blood drawing affair will take place
in the second floor lobby from 1-4 p.m.
Beginning Ballet will have another class in the third floor
lobby from 7:30 p.m. on.
Karate classes will be held in the third floor lobby at 6:30
p.m.
The Women's Commission will hold a meeting in the
womens' room (3225) at 7 p.m.
FRIDAY, April 7:
Clark Terry Workshop, 4 p.m ., lecture hall 1.
Clark Terry Concert with The Evergreen Jazz Ensemble
and the Olympia High Jazz Ensemble, 7:30 p.m., Olympia
High School. Students with ID $1.25, Adults $2.00.
Late Payment period ENDS.
NET's Film Odyssey "Class·ic Shorts I" (France, Great
Britian, USA), 8:30 p.m.
College Forum will be held in room 3112 at 2:30 p.m.

New hours for the draft counseling service.
Since the last issue of the Paper the hours for the
Draft Counseling office have been changed. They
are now open on Mondays only and are open from
10 a.m. to noon and 1-5 p.m. Appointments may
be set up by calling 943-0758.

Gas Welding Workshop. Ray Tubbs of Western
Washington Welding Inc. will present a series of gas
welding workshops. There will be 3 sessions, April
5, 10, and 12, which will run from 3 p.m. to 5
p.m . Each session is limited to 15 students so it is
required for interested persons to sign-up. You can
sign-up in building 211, which is also the loctaion
of the sessions. If interest merits, additional
sessions may be set up to serve-those interests.

and

An Etching Show by Peggy Dickenson. An
etching show by Peggy Dickenson will be
presented at the slide and print area of the library
building, second floor. Showing until April 18, the
event can be seen during library hours. The theme
of this event will center around the transmutations
of impressions of the enviroment through mind
and spirit into symbols. The event, open to the
public, will have no admission charge. For more
information contact Tim Crews, 753-3360.

Harpsichord Concert Tonight. Meg Irwin and
her accompanist, Jim Swain, will present a
harpsichord concert tonight, March 31, at 9 p.m.
in the second floor lobby of the library. Meg, an
extremely versitile m uscian, has studied
throughout Europe and the U.S.

***.

Jazz Improvisation Workshop. Clark Terry will
present a features talk on jazz improvisation. He is
a trumpet player for the "Tonight" show and will
tell everybody how to make it in the "big time".
, March 31, 1972 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE PAGE 7

I
WashPIRG starts petition
I Evergreen drive with Wednesday meet
(Continued from page one)

of isolationism. It was suggested
that the churches run a bus pool
on Sunday from college to the
various churches. Most agreed
that they had to make an attempt
to learn more about the college
and its new ideas, and felt that
more discussion groups such as
this one would be helpful. Most
members of the churches and the
community would like to become
more involved with the Evergreen
community. It was felt that only
by coming to know each other
better wou Id fears, frustrations,
and tensions be relieved.
It was
pointed that the college '1as been
on the defensive too long. A
positive philosophy that explains
the purpose of the college is
vitally needed. Seven points
stressed by one group were; (1)
college policy is designed to
constantly change according to
needs; (2) there is strong evidence
of a definite ethical concern on
part of students to reexamine
society's bureaucratic and
technological problems; (3) the
program which is designing
models for a new society wants
to involve community
participation; (4) Evergreen
people showed a tremendous
sense of community in light of
adverse physical surroundings at
the beginning of the school year;
(5) at Evergreen, minority groups
are organizing themselves in order
to become more involved in the
whole college community; (6)
DTF's are an innovative and
workable alternative to
unproductive, stagnant
committees; and (7) Many
interdisciplinary studies are
aimed toward one direction or
, goal. This group alsothoughtthat
since 300 students were doing

Spring play
Asphodel Fields Theatre
People will audition Tuesday anrl
Wednesday of next week for their
spring quarter play. The April 4
and 5 tryouts b~in at 7:30 p.m.
in lecture hall three (orange).
Their next production,
"USA" by Paul Shyre and John
Dos Passos, will be presented May
24 through 27 in what is hoped
wi 11 be the new theatre,
converted from lecture hall one.
The play is a multi-media look
at life in the USA in the first
third of the 20th century. Those
wishing further information
shou Id see Ainara Wilder in
Library :;'603 or Marty
'.)ppenheimer, Library 3214A.

THROUGH TUESDAY:
"Bedknobs and Broomsticks"
STARTS WEDNESDAY:
"Dr. Zhivago,"

THROUGH TOMMOROW:
"Such Good Friends" & "The
Deserter" STARTS
SUNDAY: "Love Story" &
"Paint Your Wagon"

internships, the community
should be more aware of its
effect.
Another discussion group said
that Evergreen merits better
reporting in the local press.
Asked if they received the college
newsletter, about fifteen people
raised hands. They commended
the college newspaper and
suggest it should be circulated
throughout the community.
Many questions were raised;
many answers given. It was felt in
general that some progress
towards integration of The
Evergreen community with the
Olympia community had been
made.

Distress
Dave Smullin,, a student in
the Causality program, had an
unexpected visitor at his house
on East 8th, Tuesday afternoon;
a member of the Olympia Police
Department.
It seems as though Dave and
his roommates had an American
flag hung on the inside of their
front door, portions of which
could be seen through a window
in the door.
The gentleman informed Dave
that they didn't like that kind of
thing around here, and that it was
illegal. He informed Dave that he
could go to jail, or be fined $500.
He suggested that it be taken
down. His request was complied
with.
The state Attorney General's
office was contacted regarding
the law, and Dave was informed
that it was a Federal Law and
that the attorney General's office
didn't know a thing about it.
Dave and his roommates are
currently trying to contact
someone in the Federal building
that can rule on the legality,_
In the meantime the flag has
been removed from where it can
be seen from the street.

A meeting Wednesday, April
5, with University of Washington
WashPIRG officials will initiate a
petition drive by the local
chapter to establish a like
operation at The Evergreen State
College. Set in the third floor
library lounge in the Co-operative
Education area, next week's
session of community members
interested in starting a Public
Interest Research Group here will
begin at noon.
Members of the Evergeeen
Wash Pl RG will seek student
signatures throughout April as a
necessary set up in the formation
of a college research group. Set
for coverage of Evergreen as wel I
as the Olympia community, the
local group wi II be styled after
Ra.lph Nader's grassroots
organizations such as Nader's
Raiders and Public Citizen, Inc.
These groups have directed
student and citizen concern with
environmental, social, and
political problems, channeling
their combined energy into
conducting research,
disseminating information from
and to the community, engaging
in litigation and testifying.
Supported by a
do I la r-per-quarter contribution
per student, the student-run
WashPIRG would enable all as
members to decide on project
ideas and undertake research on
social and political problems in
Olympia and surrounding
communities.
With the dollar from each
member, the Evergreen
WashPIRG could raise sufficient
funds to hire a full-time staff of
researchers or public interest
representatives. These people
would join with other
campus-based WashPIRG
chapters, such as the UW group
visiting next week, and create a
statewide staff with direct

student input for identifying and
solving questions~

few weeks to encourage
one-to-one explanations.,

Evergreen's chapter must
garner the support of more than
half of the student body prior to
presentation of the interest group
concept to the college Trustees,
who in turn would allow
Evergreen to act as collecting
agent for the per-quarter
donations.
Local WashPI RG volunteers
hope to make their dream a
reality as a means of insuring
public interest priorities. They
plan a booth in the second floor
Library lobby during the next

Those wishing further
information should attend the
Wednesday noon session and
contact Dave Groves at the
Mclane Fire Station, 352-5200,
or Cristi Painter in the
Communications and Intelligence
area, second floor Library "A''
wing, or at 943-4956.

Graphics
Straight Edge, Inc., an open
graphics area for all members of
the Evergreen community, is
currently seeking areas of
interest--layout, calligraphy and
the like--from its users. The
facility is located in L 13418,
through the Media Loan area to
the rear corridor.
Open 15 hours each week, the
graphics workshop provides
general use facilities, but no
materials, through the office of
Connie Hubbard, Library Media
graphics artist. Tom Anderson,
Straight Edge manager, plans to
provide workshop sessions in
areas in which the greatest
community interest is shown.
Anderson is available for
graphics informatio.n and
assistance within the facility
during its three hours five days a
week. Hours for Straight Edge,
Inc., are I to 4 p.m. Monday and

107

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Latest LP
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Pinball
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Sandwiches
Refreshments

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Olympia, Wa.
Wednesday; Tuesday noon to 3
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Regular Price - 10c

Bag of Popcorn

Hot Popcorn
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Records, Tapes, TVs, Stereos
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Amplifer, Speaker Components

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I

':>AGE 8 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE March 31, 1972

...
Media
cpj0011.pdf