The Paper, Volume 1, Number 1 (April 19, 1973)

Item

Title
Eng The Paper, Volume 1, Number 1 (April 19, 1973)
Description
Eng Page 1: Solons approve T.E.S.C.. budget;
Page 1: Academians in turmoil over administrative shuffle;
Page 1: Mod raided; student nabbed;
Page 1: $50,000 grant announced;
Page 2: An Editorial: a matter of timing...;
Page 2: Security picking up;
Page 2: Grad schools view T.E.S.C..;
Page 2: Trustees meet today: reorg. on agenda;
Page 2: Faculty day now on wed., still dull say profs;
Page 2: Ward exhibits drawings, paintings;
Page 2: S&A allocates $10,000;
Page 3: 'Different drummer' : Holly raps McCann;
Page 3: Budget action: what's next?;
Page 3: Sounding Board changes time;
Page 3: Pay raises approved;
Page 4: Posters ripped;
Page 4: Staff credits;
Page 4: Editorial policy;
Page 4: Reorganization;
Page 4: (cartoon) [Evergreen established in legislature];
Page 4: Letters;
Page 4: Letters: fraternities;
Page 5: Key seventy-three;
Page 5: Horoscope;
Page 5: Sampson - McCann;
Page 5: Martin Bormann;
Page 6: T.E.S.C.. -- Summer 1973;
Page 6: programs available;
Page 6: records;
Page 7: Fine Arts budget cut;
Page 7: Arts and Entertainment: Seattle Lightfoot performance found lacking;
Page 7: Peter Elbow talks about new book;
Page 7: what's new at the Bijou;
Page 7: '6' premieres;
Page 8: Happenings
Identifier
Eng cpj0018.pdf
Creator
Eng Shore, Stan
Eng Lundin, Shela
Eng Madsen, Barbara
Eng Ellis, Douglas
Eng Nichols, Dick
Eng Moore, A.J
Eng Martin, Don
Eng Berger, H.G.S
Eng Olsen Knute
Eng Blomgren, Jennifer
Eng Carpender, Jim
Eng Fleming, Jill
Eng Elbow, Peter
Contributor
Eng Ryan, Andy
Eng Ellis, Doug
Eng Burman, Julie
Eng Shore, Stan
Eng Hoffman, Anne
Eng Williams, Charles H.
Eng Berger. Knute Olsen H.G.S.
Eng Fleming, Jill
Eng LeGrow, Peter A.
Eng Herger, Michael B.
Eng Hogan, Kevin
Eng Herger
Extent
Eng 8 pages
Format
Eng application/PDF
Is Part Of
Eng The Cooper Point Journal
Language
Eng eng
Publisher
Eng The Publications Board and the Evergreen community
Rights
Eng http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Source
Eng US-WaOE.A.1973-01
Spatial Coverage
Eng Olympia
Eng The Evergreen State College
Eng Thurston County
Eng Kaiser Road
Eng College Parkway
Eng Portland, Oregon
Eng Albia, Iowa
Eng Washington State
Eng Poet Angeles
Eng Seattle
Eng Tumwater
Eng Shelton
Eng Aberdeen
Eng Castel Rock
Eng Renton
Eng Columbia, Georgetown
Eng Olympis Peninsulia
Eng Puget Sound
Eng Vietnam
Eng Pacific Northwest
Eng Westside Center
Eng Italy
Eng Athens
Eng Seattle Opera House
Eng Canada
Eng Skykomish River
Subject
Eng Operations Budget
Eng Grad School
Eng State Legeslature
Eng Budget
Eng Fraternities
Eng The Church
Eng Nazi Hunter
Eng Records
Eng Theatre Arts
Eng Film
Eng Goltz. Barney
Eng Kuehnle, James
Eng McCane, Charles
Eng Schoben, Joe
Eng Steilberg, Pete
Eng Yak, John
Eng Boreman, Bernard
Eng Carpender, James
Eng Daley, Andrew
Eng Flint, James
Eng Medved, Jake
Eng Humphery, Don
Eng Barnard, Robert
Eng Tabbutt, Fred
Eng Rose, Al
Eng Moss, John
Eng Baxter, Janna
Eng Barry, Dave
Eng Marron, Rod
Eng Shoben, Joe
Eng Cortous, Clifford
Eng Sparkman, Donal
Eng Ward, Jill
Eng Kormondy, Edward
Eng Evans, Daniel J.iel J.
Eng Teske, Charles
Eng Sinclarir, Pete
Eng Romero, Jacob
Eng Aldridge, Bill
Eng Knapp, Rob
Eng Skov, Niels
Eng Foote, Tom
Eng Smith, Robyn
Eng Steinberg, Larry
Eng Holly, Jim
Eng Clabaugh, Dean
Eng Nichols, Dick
Eng Magel, Fred E.
Eng Martin, S. R. (Sennie Rudolph), 1935-2016
Eng Mussolini Benito
Eng Lewis, Harry
Eng Sandison, Gordon
Eng Murry, John
Eng Bausch, Del
Eng Savage, Charles
Eng Charette, Robert
Eng Thompson, Alan
Eng Shinpoch, A. N.
Eng Bagnariol, John
Eng Graham, Billy
Eng Walton, William
Eng Boone, Pat
Eng Nixion, Richard
Eng Meyer, Eugene
Eng Sampson_____
Eng Bormann, Martin
Eng Palance, Jack
Eng Parish, Patsy
Eng Eldridge, Lester
Eng Rainey, Tom
Eng Beck, Gordon
Eng Fox, Russell
Eng Hahn, Jeanne
Eng Harding, Phil
Eng Herman, Steve
Eng Hillaire, Mary
Eng Johansen, Bernard
Eng Mimms, Maxine
Eng Machlis, Mark
Eng Olexa, Carol
Eng Portnoff, Greg
Eng Pailthorop, Charles
Eng Papworth, Mark
Eng Royse, Chester
Eng Parson, Willie
Eng White, Sid
Eng Delgado, Medardo
Eng Esquivel, Cruz
Eng Gerstl, Theodore
Eng Greenhut, Naomi
Eng Gulden, James
Eng Hitchens, David
Eng Humphreys, Willard
Eng Klyn, Stan
Eng McNeil, Earle
Eng Kutter, Elizabeth
Eng Pailthorp, Charles
Eng Patterson, Lynn
Eng Powll, David
Eng Rainy, Thomas
Eng Sinclare, Leon
Eng Smith, LeRoi
Eng Wilder, Ainara
Eng Winden, William
Eng Eickstaedt, Larry
Eng Kottke, Leo
Eng Fahey, John
Eng Siebel, Paul
Eng Johnson, Dave
Eng Dickenson, Peggy
Eng Lightfoot, Gordon
Eng Haynes, Rick
Eng Clements, Terry
Eng Visconti Luchino
Eng Downey, Robert
Eng Dinsmore, Walter
Eng Streisand, Barbra
Eng Newman, Paul
Eng Kagen, Jim
Eng Rauschenberg, Chris
Eng Habbick, Frida
Eng McLaren, Norman
Eng Hitchcock, Alfred
Eng Garner, Lynn
Eng Jung, Carl
Eng Sherman, Stanley
Eng Burrows, Elizabeth
Eng Mystic, Christian
Eng Koons, James
Eng LeVasser, Anne
Eng The Evergreen State College
Eng The Senate
Eng The House of Representatives
Eng State Highways Department
Eng Olympia Poliece Department
Eng Thurston County Sherrifs Department
Eng National Science Foundation
Eng S & A Fee Review board
Eng Wester Washington university
Eng University of Washington
Eng Evergreen Campus Security
Eng Chamber Singers
Eng Jazz Ensemble
Eng Recreational Folkdancers
Eng Recretion Center
Eng KAOS Radio
Eng The Paper
Eng Gay Center
Eng Department of Social and Health Services
Eng Ways and Means and Higher Education Committees
Eng The Wahington Post
Eng Kleenex
Eng Navy
Eng Army
Eng Counciling and Health Services
Eng Black Mountin College
Eng Takoma Rocords
Eng Rainy Day Records company
Eng Sweet'n Sour
Eng Capitol theatre
Eng Womens Consciousness Raising Group
Eng Olympia Y.M.C.A
Eng Group health Medical Center
Eng Society for Krisna consciousness
Eng chamber Singers
Eng Rugby
Eng Jazz ensemble
Eng Aikido Extending Ki
Eng Gay Rap group
Temporal Coverage
Eng 1970/1984
Type
Eng text
Eng images
extracted text
Non-profit Organization

wmlitness~o~ur1misbom&jfollp

VOLUME 1 NUMBER 1

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

Off Campus: 10 Cents

Olympia, Washington 98505 April 19, 1973

Solons approve
T.E.S.C. budget
Last weekend the State
Legislature adopted the final
version of the 1973-75 operating
budget for higher education,
including $10,830 ,065
recommended for TESC by the
House. The legislators also
approved the House's
recommendation for $8,751,396
in capital improvements at
Evergreen. The Senate concurred
with the House in boosting the
amounts originally appropriated
by the Senate.
Evergreen's new operating
budget increases its annual
enrollment during the next
biennium by 150 students over
the 1900 level freeze made by the
Senate. The final budget is the
same as recommended on April 4
by the House Ways and Means
Committee, amounting to a
$298,815 increase over the total
approved by the Senate on March

3.

At that time the Senate
decided to reduce the Evergreen
student body by 100 from the
current enrollment of 2000 and
provide only $10,531,250 for
operations - a cut of $2 .3
million from the Governor's
recommendation, and $1.6
million less than the current level.
In proportion to the other
schools included in the Senate's
operating budget for higher
education, Evergreen lost by far
the most funding. The Senate
effectively reduced Evergreen's
staffing and services in every area
and at all levels of operations for
the next biennium.
Capital Budget
The new capital improvements
budget for the 1973-75 biennium .
provides Evergreen with
$7,512,962 for construction of a
laboratory-office building,
$447,733 for site improvements,
$415,474 for completion of the

"There once was a solon named Kuehnle (pronounced Keenly)
1\Vho was very much opposed to Evergreenly.
In spite of his song,
Mr. Kuehnle is wrong.
I think his motion is obscenely."
The above poem was read on the House floor April 11 by Rep.
Barney Goltz (D-Bellingham) in response to a motion by Rep.
James Kuehnle (R-Spokane) to amend the Higher Education bud
get by completely omitting all funds for Evergreen. Rep.
Kuehnle's motion failed 82 to 3.

on-campus portion of the
parkway, $355 ;1.27 for equipping
a previously funded seminar
building, and $20,000 for minor
remodeling and improvements.
The tinal capital appropriation is
about $8d3,000 higher than the
amount approved on March 29
· by the Senate. It restores the
funds marked for site and
on-campus parkway
improvements, but does not
include $6.5 million requested by
the Governor for a
drama-music-arts (forensic
science) building.

Academicians in turmoil
over administrative shuffle
by STAN SHORE
Six weeks of hectic h ass1ing,
wi ld rumors, and disquieting
administrative secrecy wi11 fimall y
end today when President Charles
McCarm presents his plan for
reorganization to the Board of
Trustees. Also to be presented is
an alternate plan drawn up by
two dozen faculty and students
h eaded by Vice PreSI'dent J oe
Schaben.
McCann's reorganization plan
has been the subject of much
controversy-both for the
content and the process from
which it was arrived. It has as
main points: a cut-back from
three vice-presidents to two
(eliminating the executive V.P.),
the placement of some or all of
the student services under the
administrative vice president, the

shifting of Media Services from non-discriminatory) report
the Library to academic directly to the President and
supervision, and the withdrawal having the Developmental Officer
)
of some less than necessary staff (fund raiser do the same. Also
P ositions, such as the keeping all of the present Student
stenographers pool.
Service together and keeping
"Priorities," explained Media Services under the
McCann, "do not admit keeping jurisdiction of the Library .
people simply for the sake of
~t a College Forum last
keeping people. Our first goal has -Fnday, where many heated
always been to make and keep feelings _came to a head, c?nc~rn
this a strong place of learning. To was vo_Iced that,, reorgan_ I,z,atwn
do that you don't sit around and along lines of acaderruc and
decide how many people you can "business" could hurt the
keep ,"
school's professed principles of
The alternate proposal, inter-disciplinary activity. For
althotJgh agreeing with McCann exampl~, the. Recreatio~ ~enter
on many issues such as the need found Itself m the position of
to cut back the number of having to decide whether it was a
vice-presidents, disagrees on some "business" (extracurricular)
crucial points. They include activity or an "academic" one.
having the Affirmative Action Pete Steilberg, head of Student
Officer (who is in charge of Services said, "this is entirely
seeing that hiring practices are against the spirit of this place ..."
(continued on page 3)

$50,000 grant announced
Evergreen has received
unofficial notice that the
National Science Foundation will
award the college $50,000 to
begin developing self-paced
learning units as an approach to
individualized learning in the
natural and social sciences.
Academic Dean Don Humphrey
said 11 faculty members will be

mvolved in the project this
summer. Humphrey added,
"possibilities for additional
funding up to a total of $800,000
exist."
The funds will enable a
faculty/student team to
accelerate production of learning
resources designed to take the
place of standard academic

courses.
Development of the self-paced
- coupled with the opening of
the new $5,000,000 laboratory
building complex - will enable
Evergreen to offer a full range of
learning opportunities in the
sciences. Faculty members Fred
Tabbutt and Robert Barnard will
coordinate the NSF project.

The legislature also
appropriated $1.8 million to the
State Highways Department for
completion of the parkway from
the campus to the
Olympia-Aberdeen Freeway.
Evergreen's original budget
request to the Governor called
for · rapid expansion during the
next- biennium. But a trend of
diminished growth in student
enrollments across the state
induced the Governor to cut
Evergreen's capital improvements
from $39.1 million to $15.4
million, and operations from
$17.1 million to $12.8 million.
The Governor recommended
only enough capital improvement
funds to meet current needs and
provide for modest growth to
realize economies of scale. The
proposed operating budget,
however, cut deeply into
Evergreen's request, hurting plant
maintenance, student instruction,
and the library.
(continued on page 3)

INSIDE
Opinion ................. 4
Astrology............... s
Entertainment ........ 7
Happenings ........... a
Next Week:
The John Yak Story

Mod raided;
student nabbed
by SHEILA LUNDIN
Bernard Boreman, 19, was
arrested at his apartment in
Modular Housing Saturday night,
April 7, and charged with
violation of the Controlled
Substance Act and Desecration of
the American flag, both
misdeameanors.
The arrest came after Campus
Security men James Carpenter
and Andrew Daley received a 10
p.m. phone call from Detective
James Flint, Narcotics Division of
the Olympia Police Department,
who asked that they meet him
and five Thurston County
deputies at the intersection of
Kaiser Road and College
Parkway.
Carpenter and Daley followed
the officers to the Modules,
where the deputies surrounded
the apartment.
Carpenter said he was asked to

enter the apartment at this time,
where he observed an officer
taking photographs of a cluster of
2-3 foot plants, which were next
to the living room window.
Boreman was then arrested by
Flint and taken into custody by
Sergeant Jake Medved of the
Thurston County Sheriff
Department.
According to Security sources,
Flint then asked three deputies to
remain at the apartment while he
went to get the search warrant
changed. The original warrant, it
was reported, read 317B instead
of318B.
A search of the apartment on
Flint's return one hour later
uncovered various paraphenalia
including: four pipes, one roach
clip, baggies containing residue,
two bags of seeds, five plants
approximately 2-3 feet high,
numerous seedlings and letters of
(continued on page 3)

PAGE 2

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

AD editorial

A matter of timing ....

Security picking up

•.

The need for Evergreeners to develop a feeling for public
by BARBARA MADSEN
accountability every day of the year - not just the three or four
months the legislature is in session - became crucially apparent last
Some find statistics
week.
distasteful, others fmd these
Reacting with great concern for the college and with a deep sense of .numbers fascinating. Here's a
paranoia about the legislators' feelings towards Evergreen, Dean of count that may interest the entire
Developmental Services Larry Stenberg "misinterpreted" minutes of Evergreen community, Last year,
the S and A Fees Review Board's April 7 meeting, with the apparent Evergreen's Campus Security
intent of covering up the board's allocation of $800 for the Gay Center. responded in various ways to 329
According to Stenberg it was his understanding - based on calls. The count of calls for help
conversations with AI Rose, John Moss and Janna Baxter - that the this year, to date, is
center had not actually been funded. So, he ordered the minutes 1,250-nearly four times that
written to reflect that no monies were alloted the center and that its previous amount!
representatives were asked to resubmit their proposal.
"It is necessary to qualify the
Fees Review Board members, irate over the discrepancies in the low statistics," explained Rod
minutes, moved unanimously at last Friday's meeting to revise the Marron, Director of Security. The
minutes to read that the center had indeed been funded. Student increase is not due only to the
Accounts Supervisor John Moss then vetoed the proposal. He was later increased enrollment of students.
reported to have said that "the veto may be retracted next week .. As Rod remembers from last
.after the legislature is adjourned."
year, "It took at least
On Monday - two days after the legislature adjourned - Stenberg two-and-one-half quarters to
and Moss "discovered the compounding of errors and immediately persuade students that Security
withdrew the veto action."
was a protective force that
At issue is not the funding of the Gay Center, which at press time
looks like a sure thing, but administrative efforts to have Evergreen
.look one way while the legislators are in session, and act another way as
soon as they adjourn.
Vice President Dave Barry, who has served as Evergreen's official
legislative liaison since January, has said that the most important thing
the college must learn from the last three traumatic months on the hill
is "that we are accountable for our actions every day of the year." As a
public-funded institution, we must be.
In passing it should also be noted that every other state college and
university has some kind of gay organization and that Western and the
The Board of Trustees of The
University of Washington have earmarked funds for their centers. The
Evergreen State College meets
attorney general of the state has upheld the right of students to use S
today at 10 a.m. in Room 3112
and A funds for the establishment of such centers.
of the Library Building. President
The funding of the Gay Center in itself should not be harmful to
Charles McCann will present a
Evergreen. True, it may upset a few folks on the hill, but by and large it
controversial administrative
is likely to have little effect on the Evergreen budget. What may have
reorganization plan containing
impact are the actions of those who apparently feel that we have to be
details of proposed personnel
accountable only when the legislators are in session and that anything
changes.
goes while they're out of town.
Included in McCann's proposal
We hope that this kind of. mistake. - niade though it mayliave been · are a cutback from four
with the best intentions - will-not be repe.at~. ln the long run,
vice-presidents to two, removing
Evergreen public relations is what Evergreen is, and that is something Joe Shoben and David
we can be proud of - without playing any administrative games to
Barry(both of whom have the
pretend we're something else.
option to rotate into facultv

existed for them."
Presently there are twenty
people working in Security, four
full-time and sixteen part-time.
Security heads look for students
with an honest interest in the
welfare of this semi-isolated
community. As employees of
Security, Evergreen students
receive training in first-aid,
communication, and law
enforcement, which includes
bodily search and questioning
procedures.
At present, with limited funds,
job openings for either sex are
almost non-existent. Due to
recent work-study program cuts,
three students are no longer
employed. When spaces are
available, however, an open door
policy prevails. An interesting
observation: as of Aprill2, there
were no girls' names on the

Trust·e es meet today
Reorg. on agenda

Faculty day now Wed.,
still dull say profs
byOOUGELUS
Ed Kormondy is a very funny
fellow according to the faculty
and staff of The Evergreen State
College. With tape recorder in
hand a diligent reporter battled
his way through the hallowed
halls of the Gov. Daniel Evans
Library Building to find
comments on Kormondy's
memorandum concerning
"Faculty Friday". The
memorandum read as follows:
"The effort to fmd a
non-discriminatory title for the
day set aside for non-students to
dialog has reached success in a
phrase sure to remove titillating
and suspect expectations.
Henceforth it is 'Dull Friday'
instead of 'Faculty Friday,' but
next quarter Friday becomes
Wednesday. You can't win.
"So this Dull Friday
(February 16) the topic is
'Science at Evergreen' led by
Dean Don Humphrey. Dullness
begins at 8:30 a.m. with coffee,
followed by Don's exhortation
and that in tum followed by
small discussion groups following
up on the topic. The afternoons
are available for continuing
discussions, DTF's and this
Friday for Coop Ed's Field
Supervisors Workshop.
"Next time, Dull Wednesday
will be April 18: the topic
'Humanities at Evergreen' with
~an Charles Teske in charge.

"I hope the change of title
removes any stigma about staff
participation!"
Striving to fmd a grain of
truth in the accusation the "any"
Friday at T.E.S.C. could be
"dull," this reporter received
comments from various faculty
members.
The question most frequently
asked was: "Do you think 'Dull
Friday/Wednesday' (whatever the
case may be) is an appropriate
name for the defunct 'Faculty
Day?"'
Pete Sinclair: "Yes." Do you
believe the meetings are Dull?
"Yes." Are the meetings
worthwhile or just a waste of
time? "They are worthwhile."
Jacob Romero: "I really don't
care what the name is; I think we
should address ourselves with
what the function of the day
means rather than the title." Are
the meetings worthwhile? "I
think, so far, they have been a
waste of time. What I'm trying to
say is I think the time could be
used more efficiently."
Bill Aldridge: "In terms of
what's gone on in the past for
those days the answer is yes."
Are the meetings worthwhile or
just a waste of time? "For what's
gone on in the past they were a
waste oftime."
Rob Knapp: "As good as any.
It's a thing we need to do, but
we're still fumbling."
Niels Skov: "In the context it

April19, 1973

was suggested I thought it was
both witty and appropriate." Are
the meetings worthwhile? "I
think they have been less
productive than they could have
been or might have been."
Tom Foote: "I think they
should call it defunct faculty
day." Are the meetings
worthwhile? ''They're frustrating
because they're long."
Not only did the name change
from "Faculty Friday" to "Dull
Wednesday", but along with it,
the format. Now a person with a
"specific topic" can pose his
question to small discussion
groups. The results are then
discussed by all concerned
parties. "Dull" or not, every
other Wednesday at Evergreen
the "frustrated" faculty feel and
hear the growing pains of our
community.

positions), the separation of
responsibility for Student
Services, and elimination of the
stenographers' pool. The Board
may adjourn to executive session
before making any final decisions
since personnel matters are
usually discussed in private.
Clifford Cortous, a neighbor of
President McCann, is also coming
before the Bo.ard f01. .1he. tb.Wl
time to discuss an exchange of
property. He wants to exchange a
parcel of his land for a parcel of
the President's Residence, giving
the President more room for a
parking lot and himself room for
a swimming pool.
Other agenda items to be
discussed are a request for
permission to cross college
property from Donal Sparkman,
Evergreen's Emergency Loan
proposal, re-payment of
interfund and commercial loans,
and if time permits, a
presentation about the
experimental structures project.

Ward exhibits
drawings,
paintings
Jill Ward, a graduating
fourth-year student at Evergreen,
opened a one-woman show in the
reference alcove of the Evans
Library last Monday.
The two-week exhibit shows
the Portland, Oregon student's
growth as an artist over the past
seven years and includes
paintings, black and white
photography, sculpture and
pottery thrown on a hand wheel.

waiting list for future
employment.
Security must be aware of
potential problems in the area so
they can function most
efficiently to protect this college,
its students, and its faculty. The
problems phoned into the
Security office deal with
anything and everything. The
sheriff is called only if the case
falls under a serious heading such
as felony, larceny, homicide, or
serious assault.

Grad schools
view T.E.S.C.
You're going to be looked at a
little differently, a little closer, if
you apply for graduate school
with an Evergreen B.A.
Representatives from eight west
coast graduate schools were
visiting Evergreen last Tuesday
and Wednesday. Their job was to
examine the school in this short
time and tell Evergreeners exactly
what would happen when they
tried to apply to their school.
Their reactions went from "a
student from Evergreen would be
looked at most favorably by the
Sonoma State School of
Psychology," to "because of the
lack of art facilities, it would be
very difficult to get accepted by
the Humbolt State Art School."•
The general consensus was that
Evergreen's lack of a
conventional gradjng system was
an obstacle - but not an
insurmountable one. Entrance
hinges on the ability Of e
student to show the graduate
school that he has done the
things that the graduate school
requires.
One thing in a student's favor
when applying for a graduate
school is his teachers. A letter of
recommendation from an
Evergreen professor, describing
your strengths and weaknesses, is
of far more interest and
importance than any application
form could be. Another item of
importance to grad school
admissions is the GRE score, or,
Graduate Records Examination.
This is a test taken before
applying to a school, and these
scores are numbers that are near
and dear to the heart of every
computer in school offices
everywhere (almost). A good
score here is imperative.
An Evergreen educahon is
more personal, and does not fit
well to the heavily structured
style of most grad schools. As it
was simply put by the
representative of the University
of Washington Law School,
"Computers don't read
evaluations."

5 & A allocates $10,000
The Services and Activities
Fees Reviews allocated more than
$10,000 to Evergreen community
organizations in two meetings
held April 7, and 13.
Groups funded included the
Chamber Singers and Jazz
Ensemble, $150; recreational
folkdancers, $316; Recreation
Center (for outdoor equipment),
$384; GIG Commission (for
Spring entertainment), $500;
KAOS radio (for equipment and

enlarging the station), $3,000;
organic farm (for furnishing the
house and purchasing a
rototiller), $650; THE PAPER,
$4,820; and Robyn Smith
(KAOS staffer who is designing a
"Call for Action"-type program),
$120.
Also included in board action
was the appropriation of $800
for Gay center "office,
educational and resource
purposes." Due to
"misunderstandings" between

Dean of Developmental Services
Larry Stenberg and Director of
Student Accounts John Moss, the
Gay Center proposal received an
administrative veto at the April
13, board meeting. The veto was
withdrawn, however, when
Stenberg and Moss met Monday
morning and "discovered the
compounding of errors" in
interpreting the original intent of
the board. The Gay Center is now
authorized to disburse funds in
accordance with their budget.

PAGE 3

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

April 19, 1973

Budget action:
what's
next?
Holly raps McCann

·'Different Drummer'

by STAN SHORE

by DOUGLAS ELUS

The first to be hired will be
the first to be fired. Jim Holly,
Dean of Library Services, was one
of the first persons to be
recruited and hired by President
McCann in 1969. As of today,
Holly is also one of the first
people to be fired according to
McCann's reorganization
proposal. Holly's services will no
longer be available after June
30th. Asked to comment, Holly
had these remarks:
JIM HOLLY
Ellis: "What are your duties as of today; did the administration cut
you back in any way?"
HOLLY: (At this point Holly referred to a Jetter he received from
Joe Shoben) "This means that I'm relieved of administration duties."
Ellis: "Were you given ample notice of your predicament and your
present state within the administration?"
HOLLY: "It was spelled out pretty carefully. As to what McCann's
plans were, Charles tends basically to work through others; he doesn't
like to deal directly with things that are basically unpleasant. In that
review of the situation he said that there would be reductions in force
and that the first people to go would be those who aren't delivering I 00
per cent."
Ellis: "And so he (McCann) considered you as not delivering?"
HOLLY: "I would say that I would fall in that category in his
estimation. This is understandable from his point of view. Our ideas of
what an academic library should be are in much more variance than I
thought when I came here.
"When things get nitty-gritty Charles tends to revert to pretty
standard ways of dealing with problems, traditional ways. One of the
traditional ways that he falls back on is the carrot and the stick.
"This is typical, I think, of the way he (McCann) operated when he
was at Central.
"I also think the reorganization that's blocked out is the healthiest
thing that's happened to Evergreen in a long time."
Ellis: "Do you think it (reorganization) was fair?"
HOLLY: "They haven't eliminated my position; they've eliminated
Jim Holly. I doubt that there would be any capacity in which it would
be tolerable for Charles to have me continue at Evergreen. Pretty much
I've lost respect for him as an educator."
Ellis: "So President McCann is using the budget cut as an excuse?"
HOLLY: "Yes."
Jim Holly is now waiting until June 30, to see what will develop
within McCann's reorganization proposal. Jim Holly and President
McCann have had their differences, but it should be remembered Holly
has said earlier that he "marched to a different drummer in his four
years at Evergreen."

Editor's note: President McCann had no response when asked early
this week to comment on Holly's above statements.
USt (from page I )
sorts that identified the
(from page I)
occupants to the apartment. In
Close Evergreen
one bedroom officers found a
While the Senate Ways and
large American flag with a hole cut
in it and a small knapsack that Means Committee was
appeared to have been made from considering the budget for higher
education, a well-publicized
it.
At the conclusion of the controversy developed around
search Security was asked to lock the possibility of closing TESC. A
general shortage of funds,
up the premises.
According to Det. Flint, an shrinking enrollments at other
off-duty Washington State schools, plus doubts about
patrolman driving through the Evergreen's goals and methods
campus earlier in the week saw Jed some legislators to believe
the plants in the living room that the college should be closed.
window and notified Thurston The costs of closure - estimated
from $3 to $5 million - would
County officials.
be nothing compared to the
funding need to keep the school
open. The campus could be used
Evergreen custodians are
to centralize the Department of
uptight about student, faculty
Social and Health Services, which
and staff hang-ups. As a result,
would also remove pressure for
there is a new ruling on the
another $20 million to provide
placement of informational signs
office space on capital grounds,
on campus. No posters or signs
they said. The motion for closure
should be hung up on windows or
ofT E S.C. failed in a House vote
walls without approval from
82 to 3.
Library Services.
It is felt that if everyone
* * *
The world champion for
complies with this ruling it will
make the job much easier for the eating out is Fred E. Magel of
custodians who have to wash the Chicago, who, between 1928 and
windows and walls ...not to 1971 dined in more than 34,000
mention saving the posters from a restaurants in 60 nations as a
restaurant-grader.
premature cremation.

B

Budget

Posters ripped

"What happens next?" Joe
Evergreener may be tempted to
ask after a sigh of relief now that
the legislature has passed
Evergreen's budget. The answer,
according to Vice President for
Business Dean Clabaugh , is that it
goes through a long
administrative maze to determine
the a mount each individual
program should be alloted from
the total funds the legislature has
given us.
This process begins in the
Office of the Controller where a

base budget is drawn up
according to estimated costs.
Then a student, staff and faculty
meeting will be held to decide
what the priorities are for
allocation of funds. (For example
the library is a higher priority
than a coffeeshop) .
In the third step, the president
and vice president meet to
establish preliminary allocations
based on the above priorities.
This is followed by budgetary
heads making requests, the vice
presidents reviewing them , the
controller summarizing them and
the board of students, staff and

Sounding Board
changes time
Meeting time changes and
replacement of non-attending
members were the main issues
discussed at last Thursday's
Sounding Board meeting in
Room 108 of the Activities
Building.
Spring Quarter meetings of the
Sounding Board will be held
every other week rather than
weekly, according to chairperson
Dick Nichols. Meetings will
continue to be held in Room 108
of the CAB, and will start
promptly at 8:30a.m.
Persons with agenda items for
the Sounding Board may submit
them at the Information Center

through 5 p.m. on Wednesdays
preceding the meetings. It was
decided that agenda items should
be signed, and will only be
discussed if the person submitting
them is present at the meeting.
No decision was reached on
replacing non-attending board
members, but it was pointed out
that members unable to attend
the meetings should arrange for
their own substitutes.
The next board meeting will
be held on April 26. The
remaining Spring Quarter
meetings are slated for May 10,
May 24, and June 7.

they match the agreed upon
priorities.
After the community board
approves the tentative
allocations, the president and vice
presidents prepare a final budget,
which is drawn up by the
con troller.
Budgetary unit heads,
following the final budget,
re-program and re-submit. They
are then checked, rewritten,
rechecked and sent to the Board
of Trustees. The Board of
Trustees will review, modify and
approve an operating budget for
1973-74.

* * *

All the tools ordered last fall
have arrived at the Set and Model
Shop. Go down to the basement
and use your shop.

*

*

*

Albia, Iowa had a population
of 4,151 in I970.

*

*

*

Adipocere is the scientific
term for the type of soap which
on occasion forms as a result of
the decomposition of a corpse
which has been hastily buried in a
moist place.

*

*

*

Pay

ra1ses
approved
Included in the
Evergreen operating budget
for the 1973-74 biennium
is a $245,372 line item for
pay increases for faculty
and exempt staff. The
increases are effective July
1 and subject to allocation
at the discretion of the
college.
Also provided are funds
for carrying the $40
across-the-board pay raises
of last February through
the next biennium, raising
the pay for faculty and
exempt staff an additional
3.5 per cent (again, subject
to discretionary allocation
by the college) on July 1,
raising the pay for classified
staff 4.5 per cent on
January I and increasing
the state's monthly
contribution to employee
benefits from $15 to $20.
Another piece of
legislation provides for
improvements in the
TIAA-CLEF retirement
program. Effective on July
I, 1974, it sets for the first
time a minimum goal
retirement package. At age
65 for 25 years of service,
the retiree will receive 50
per cent of the highest
consecutive two years of
salary. The benefits for
surviving spouses are also
improved.

FIELDING QUESTIONS - Pres. Charles McCann fills students and
faculty in on what's happening with reorganization at a stormy meeting
1
last Friday. (Photo by LeGrow).

Reorganization ( from page 1 )
tittle concern, though, was anticipate a drop of college
centered on the contents of the enrollment nationwide, caused by
document but rather on the cessation of the draft, end of the
process that had gone into baby boom,
and general
drawing it up. "Hysterical disenchantment with higher
paranoia has ripped this place," education.
Shoben stated, referring to
Then, according to McCann,
constant rumors about the plan. when the Seilate slashed out
In answer, McCann divulged some funds by 1.7 million dollars he
of the details of the plan as they felt compelled to hurriedly draw
stood on Friday, and called for up a "quick, dirty" draft of the
further meetings. The meetings reorganization plan for the Board
took place early this week, and as of Trustees to see.
a result it was decided two
Four weeks passed, while
proposals would be given to the within the administration private
Board.
discussions occurred, and outside
of it rumors ran rampant. Then
Reasons for
Reorganization
a bout a week-and-a-half ago
The main reason for Rudy Martin, an outspoken
reorganization in the first faculty member of Politic,
place-which began even before Values, and Social Change, met
the legislature went into with McCann and informed him
session-was that projected that many people were angered
enrollments were found to be too by the secrecy and tentative
high. The school had planned, structure of reorganization. In
according to Vice-President of response, McCann issued a memo
Business Dean Clabaugh, to grow scheduling last Friday's meeting,
at a rate of about one thousand .and explaining that because he
students per year until reaching a had been so busy with the
top enrollment of 12,000 by the legislature, he didn't realize the
year 1984. But the plans didn't amount of community concern.

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

April 19, 1973

The Evergreen State CoUege
Olympia, Washington 98505
Vol.l No.1

"ThreeCheersforwaringeneral" Aprill9, 1973
-Mussolini

THE PAPER is a newspaper published hebdomadally by The
Publications Board and the Evergreen community. Views expressed are
not necessarily those of The Evergreen Stat~: CoUege administration, or
John Yak. THE NEWSPAPER is located on the third floor of the
Governor Daniel Evans Library, room 35C2A, phone: 753-3993.
STAPH:
Editor............................................ ._ ......................................Andy Ryan
Mangling Editor .......................................................................Doug Ellis
Business SecretaJy .............................................................. Julie Donnan
News Editors ................................................ Stan Shore, Anne Hoffman
Feature Editor ...........................................................Charles H. Williams
Editorial Editor·--······························· Knute Olsson H.G.S. Berger, (ret)
Entertainment Editor ........................................................... Jill Fleming
Photographic Editors .......................Peter A. LeGrow, Michael B. Herger
Happenings Editor...............................................................Kevin Hogan

Editorial Policy
The editorial page of The Paper will not be restricted to
college and community oriented topics and issues. It is the
hope of the editors that this page will develop into the most
open and diverse vehicle of personal and group expression .
immediately available to the Evergreen Community. There
will be no restrictions as to the area, scope, level and viewpoint of the editorials, letters and articles of opinion that will
appear on this page. Interested parties are urged to submit
material.
There will be a letter column and all signed letters are
welcome. Names will be withheld at the writer's request if
adequate reason is shown. Letters are subject to editing
where deemed necessary.

OPINIONS

Reorganization
Had the Evergreen Administration decided that it wanted to intentionally disrupt the community, tarnish its own credibility and launch a
wave of paranoia throughout the faculty, staff and students, it could
hardly have done a better job than it did these last few weeks in its
handling of reorganization.
The final form of the reorganization plan that will be presented to
the Board of Trustees today was not known to us at press time, but the
secretive process of arriving at that plan, coupled with what is known
about it, has been enough to cause alarm not only at THE PAPER but
throughout the entire community.
First of all, even if the secrecy surrounding the plan could have been
justified for reasons, perhaps, of efficiency or as a special personnel
matter, such reasoning falls lame in the face of the uncertainty it has
placed on all but a few members of the staff. As re<;:ently as Friday,
Vice President for Busine~s Dean Clabaugh stated that there were still
between 15 and 25 persons who did not know the status of their jobs and maybe didn't realize their jobs were under any threat at all. This
revelation, typical of the "surprises" the administration has been springing, came at a time when the morale of the working force on this
campus has already been severely undermined by constant rumors of
who will get cut next.
The second, perhaps more important, issue that is raised is: Why was
the reorganization handled this way in the first place? Previous decisions at this college were made with some amount of consultation, openness and honesty. The reorganization plan - the original draft of which
even President McCann called "a dirty thing" - was handled as if
official silence and secrecy were normal operating procedures at this
college.
When McCann at last came out with a memo attempting to quiet
down the anger of some community members, he could do little but
apologize, stating he "wasn't aware" that there was a problem and that
he had been busy with other matters. Such excuses do not touch on the
real question of why normal operating procedure has been so radically
altered. Nor do they do much to relieve the concern that with the new
reorganization, where with only two people reporting directly to him,
the president will be too isolated and unaware of what is happening in
the community.
Last Friday, with only six days left before the Board of Trustees was
to meet, McCann called for meetings on Monday and Tuesday to discuss reorganization openly, in detail, for the first time. Such action
cannot seem to be anything but too little, too late. Clabaugh, answering pleas for more time to discuss the plan, could only say, ironically,
that any further delays might be "inhumane."
The concern over the way this "dirty thing" was handled will linger
even after the final plan is agreed upon by the board. McCann, Clabaugh and the other administrators involved have cast serious doubt on
their own credibility by disregarding the spirit of honesty and openness
on which this community was founded. Their secretive actions, dodging
of questions and half-hearted attempts at appeasement set serious prec-.
~dents. This is not, as McCann says, "the way it's s'posed to be .... " and
without further delay an honest explanation should be forthcoming
frnm those involved.

Letters
To the Editor:
During the height of
Evergreen's budget battle in
the recen tty-adjourned
Legislature, many of us spent
extra time contacting
lawmakers, urging them to
restore funds that had been
cut earlier in the session. We
also asked friends, parents of
students and other
supporters to contact
legislators on our behalf.
Now that the session has
ended on such a positive note
for Evergreen, it seems only
appropriate that we spend a
little more time expressing
our thanks to all those
legislators who rallied to our
support. If you know a
legislator or have a friend
who knows one, a brief
''thank you" note from
either of you would be very
much in order. It also would
be helpful if students and
parents would express
gratitude to their legislators.
Notes to whom? Any
legislator is fme, but the list
certainly should include
Senators Harry Lewis of
Olympia, Gordon Sandison
of Port Angeles and John
Murray of Seattle (plus any
member of the Ways and
Means or Higher Education
Committees) and
Representatives Del Bausch
of Tumwater, John
Hendricks of Olympia,
Charles Savage of Shelton,

Robert Charette of
Aberdeen, Alan Thompson
of Castle Rock, A. N.
Shinpoch of Renton and
John Bagnariol of Seattle
(plus members of the Ways
and Means and Higher
Education Committees). If
you need names and/or
addresses, contact the Office
of College Relations.
Dick Nichols,
Director of
Information Services

Fraternities
Dear Sir:
I have, over a period of
time beginning with my first
day of school here, become
more and more concerned
with a serious lack in the
social fabric of the Evergreen
Community. It would seem
with the beginning editions
of the school paper that now
would be a most auspicious
occasion upon which to
mention this problem and
call for some serious
discussion of it.
The deficiency of which I
speak may not seem so
crippling to some and there
may well be those who will
attempt to ridicule my
speaking out in favor of
filling this void. Let them, I
say! What is needed here at

Evergreen more than any
other thing is the
establishment of a
Fraternity-Sorority.
The arguments for this
proposal are many. Consider
that the establishment of a
fraternity here could go far
toward furthering many of
those honored and
time-tested traditions which
we hold so dear. Consider
that without these
institutions, which have
proven themselves all over
the country, we lack a
considerable stabilizing
influence. I say that
Evergreen cannot long
survive without some steps
being taken in this direction.
It is my intention to begin
taking some of those steps as
soon as I can muster the
support. I am sure that I am
not alone in my stand on this
issue. There must be a large
silent majority of quiet
people at this school who
would welcome the chance
to be charter members of the
first Evergreen FraternitySorority.
Anyone interested in
helping me with this great
enterprise and carving a place
for themselves in the history
of this wonderful school of
ours can contact me at
Evergreen for the Pacific
Eight Conference, room
3502A, TESC etc.
signed,
A. J. Moore

April 19, 1973

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

PAGE 5

Key Seventy-three
Preying on people who are
supposed to be experiencing a
"philosophical and religious
vacuum," as well as dropouts of
the more liberal churches, a handful of evangelists headed by Billy
Graham is conducting a
"Christian blitz" called Key 73.
This is no small time revival, but
a well-orchestrated $5 million
mass media campaign to sell the
Lord.
In a recent article in Billy
Graham's own magazine, the
conservative protestant evangelist
compared the Kingdom of God
to a
"vast modem complex whose
purpose and function is to
produce the Gospel of love. God
our heavenly father is the Owner
and President; the Lord Jesus
Christ is General Manager; and
the Holy Spirit is in charge of
sales ...The Kingdom of God
cannot operate the way it should
unless men and women bring in
some orders and some
customers ...We have the finest
product on the market..."
Apparently Graham and his
cohorts are taking the position of
PR men in this corporate
structure called heaven. This year
they have a new marketing
gimmick. The goal of Key 73 is

to confront 100 million people,
who have been "demoralized by
the rebellion and revolt of the
1960's," with THE WAY of
Jesus.
The mass media idea was
conceived by Graham's
father-in-law in 1967, and Billy
underwrote a special meeting of
42 clergymen to plan the
campaign. It now includes ISO
groups and churches and has
become an ecumenical umbrella
operation.
William Walton, president of
Holiday Inns International, is
chairman of the fund raising drive
for media promotion. He intends
to raise $5 million in private
contributions.
The overall plan is focused
around several television specials
featuring Billy Graham and Pat
Boone among others. These
shows consist of personal
confessions, Christians in
different walks of life, mod
music , and lots of shots of happy
children and people walking
along the beach - their bliss
comes from Jesus' good vibes.
The tax-exempt organization gets
free TV air time since the local
stations show the programs as a
"public service" to fill the FCC
requirements.

Sampson-McCann
The job of college president is often found to be su"ounded by
controveny. With the furor created by the budget cuts and
reorganization, Evergreen President Charles McCann has suddenly
found himself to be sitting in the "hot seat': PAPER staff reporter
Tom Sampson interviewed the president last week, with these results:
Sampson: Would reorganization have occurred had the state legislature not cut the college's budget?
McCann : Not as suddenly. I've been worried for a long time about
the h_andwriting on the wall with regard to Evergreen's growth and what
the .stz~ of our administration implied given that slower growth. Reorgamzation would have occurred eventually but given the Senate's action, it became imperative.
Sampson: Do you see potential conflict arising from placing the
Affirmative Action Office under personnel? As you know , at Columbia,
Georgetown and some other colleges, the affirmative action office is an
arm of the president's office.
, McCann: I_'m not arg~ing that personnel is a better place to put it.
I ~ o~en to Ideas on this subject. My own personal style of administr~tiO~ Is to have as few people as possible working directly in my office.
I d like_ to see my offi~e remain basically me and my secretary. I feel
that this arrangement mcreases my time for productive contact with
stud~~ts, f~culty and staff. I don't want the old Navy or Army style of
admm1strat10~ where anyone who wants to talk with me has to go
through the lines. I expect to have anyone in the Evergreen community
talk with me freely about what they're concerned about.
Sampson: Some individuals on campus feel that the- Development
Offi~e sh?uld be an integral unit within the president's special realm,
helpmg him share a duty that falls especially to him. How do you feel
about that?
McCann : That makes good sense. Many times it is the president who
has to pop the question when it comes to asking for money, but there
are hours of research to be done before you ever meet a prospect and I
don't want to be in the position of supervising the supervisor of an
office of development. I'd like to have responsibility delegated. I want
the de~elo~ment officer free to talk with me directly and I'm going to
talk With h1m about those things we need to talk about directly.
Sampson: It has been suggested that the adjudication and discipline
~rocess be assigned to the director of the Counseling and Health servIces or to the _ sec~rity office but some people have felt that this might
create a confl1c~ m roles and that the dean of student services might be
a more appropnate level of responsibility to assign this function. What
is your position on this particular issue?
McC~n: I think that those first two possibilities are probably inappropnate.
Sampson: Do you feel that student services should be divided in
terms of where responsibility lies?
McCann: I think some division might make some sense, but on the
other hand, a good argument might be made for leaving that conglomeration the way it is. I think there are arguments either way.
Sampson: Is there a DTF now considering the reorganization plan?
Has there been one in the past and will there be one in the future?
. McCann: No. If ~ere is a problem with reorganization naturally that
Will be the first thmg that happens. We'll have to look into it and
suggest an alternative.

The target audience is men
and women 18 to 45 with
"particular impact" on the 25 to
35 age bracket. The producers
describe this group as those
people "trying to find a
meaningful life in the midst of
what often seems to be an
urban-technological crossword
puzzle ...They have lost their
sense of the supernatural. They
sense that there must be a God
and they want answers from Him.
Our target audience is
REACHABLE through
television."
Key 73 also has do-it-yourself
resource materials for canvassing
cities. For $5.95 an ambitious
Jesus freak can get a packet
containing radio spots, glossies of
the noon prayer, Key 73logos in
one and two colors, prayer call
posters, table grace cards, bumper
stickers, Prayer-a-grams, etc. For
bigger cities there is more of the
same for $34.50. Beyond
door-to-door solicitation, Key 73
planners are pushing canned news
releases for local papers. Two
news releases say :
The cup of God's patience may
finally be filled to the brim with
rebellion, immorality, and
disobedience of man ... If
Christians will turn from apathy,
indifference and the sin of
self-satisfied pride, God will hear
from heaven and 'heal their
lands.' And: A huge portion of
the continent has flagrantly
repudiated the Word of God,
choosing rather to feed on the
Impoverished ideas of humanism
and relativism.
Perhaps the most disturbing
aspect of Key 73 is the praise and
participation it is getting from
President Nixon. He agrees with
Graham that the unrest and
protest of the '60's was not a
response to war, racism or
poverty, but was "fundamentally
caused by a sense of insecurity
that comes from the old values
being torn away." He further
attributes unrest to
permissiveness, and the lessened
influence of the church and
family. Originally the Key 73
promoters had intended President
Nixon to appear on their TV
specials, but decided against it
"lest there be political
implications."
Grahams's rantings prove that
Key 73 is an attempt to revitalize
Christianity by returning to the
fundamentalist Protestant ethic.
He holds that the poor get what
they deserve - and only the
deserving should get. Eugene
Meyer of the Washington Post
calls Key 73 "a neo-Social
Darwinism that sanctifies and
excuses the corporate giants. It is
absolutely moralistic, but not
particularly moral. It commends
law and order, but fails to apply
the same standards to white
collar crooks, corporate welfare
cheaters or Watergate
wire-tappers. This established
religion is, for reasons of
self-interest, the religion of the
establishment. The flag and the
cross are so superimposed on the
national psyche that most
Americans no longer notice the
double exposure ...So it's Onward
Christian Soldiers as America
marches off to its
destiny ...Richard Nixon carrying
the flag, and Billy Graham
bearing the cross."
Key 73 is a new low in history

by DON MARTIN

of attempts to salvage
Christianity. Jesus and the Word
of God are being marketed like a
laxative or a sleeping pill. It is an
evangelism that calls for national
repentance and faith, but ignores
the problems caused by the
failure of those old values it
intends to restore.
If it succeeds in deluding the
minds of 100 million people with
its synthesis of ONE WAY
mentality and worship of the
corporate state, Key 73 comes
dangerously close to establishing
fundamental protestantism as a
state religion, with the full
support of the president. It really
makes one doubtful of the

chances of one's survival under
such an arrangement.
Clearly, the old protestant
values are no answer for the
social crises confronting us,
unless one claims that racism,
poverty, war, sexism, pollution of
the environment and unfair
economic distribution do not
really exist. Jesus can fill a
"philosophical vacuum" only if
one withdraws from society,
believes the end of the world is at
hand, everything is bad and all
that can be done is to wait for
Him to come and end it all.

Quotes excerpted
Ramparts.

from

Horoscope
Aries - Someone close to you
is going to die . Avoid crowds.
Taurus - Now is a good time
to hunt ex-Nazis. Beware of
scorpions in your boots.
Gemini - The stars indicate
that you will slip on a bar of
soap, slide out the bathroom
door, bump into your best friend
and cause him to burn his arm
with a cigarette - which he will
take and stuff up your nose.
Carry Kleenex.
Cancer - Seek a lobotomy
and happiness and contentment
will be yours. You have a knack
for being honest. Now is a good
time to cure it.
Leo - You' re not what you
think you are . People laugh at
you behind your back. Your
spouse loves another. Fill the
bathtub with warm water, slash
one wrist and get in. Have
another razor blade propped
upright within easy reach and
slam the inslit wrist down on it.
Lay back with a cocktail and
wait.
Virgo - Your aura will turn

purple as your portfolio bums.
Beware of bread.
Libra - A smile button will
erase your memory. Karmic
schizophrenia burns your astral
trip.
Scorpio - Your soft-headed
liberal friends are out to get you.
Arm yourself with the Yakima
Eagle. Best defense is good
offense; blow them out of the
water lest they shaft you first.
Sagittarius- You will continue
to mold.
Capricorn - All other signs
despise you - and for good
reason . Don't try to hide; no
place is safe. Suicide holds best
escape. Nobody likes Capricorns.
Aquarius - Tooth decay and
chronic dandruff are in store for
you this week. An old friend may
rip you off. Mountains of camel
dung will rain down upon you.
Jupiter is up Uranus.
Pisces - People would like to
see you dead. There is hidden
meaning in an overflowing septic
tank. Distrust your senses.

Martin Bormann
KNUTE OLSSON
H.G.S. BERGER
The German government says
that they have determined, to
their satisfaction, that Martin
Bormann is indeed dead, having
died while trying to escape from
Berlin in 1945, and that they are
in possession of his skull. I do not
believe it.
It is well known that there are
many former German SS officers
and Gestapo members living in
Germany who are unofficially
protected by the German
government. They are protected
in the sense that they are ignored.
I believe that Martin Bormann is
alive and is now an elderly man
living in the company of other
ex-Nazis. After the war high
ranking third Reichers used the
millions of marks that they had
stashed away to buy new
identities and transport them to
other parts of the world. They
were able, with this money, to
establish businesses in many
· some
countries, and thus gam
political control.

In recent years the search for
Martin Bormann has been
intensified, and various Nazi
hunters have been releasing to the
public their theories as to his
whereabouts. Perhaps they were
close, for it seems strange that
just at the peak of the popularity
of the Bormann search that the
German government discovers
two skulls in a railroad yard that
have been there since WW II. I
believe that former third Reichers
used their political push to force
the German government into
taking the heat off of the old
Nazi Bormann so that he may live
out the rest of his days in peace,
eating pablum and planning the
fourth Reich.
I do not believe all this is bad.
I do not see that justice is being
served by trying to find these
men, Martin Bormann in
particular, and make them in to a
public example of evil. We should
live, and let die, for we have
already learned as much as we arc
going to about what they did .

* * *

Jack Palance is ugly.

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

PAGE 6

T.E.S.C

April 19, 1973

-SUMMER 1973

MISCELLANEOUS INFORMATION
A wide range of learning opportunities will be available this summer
at Evergreen during the summer term scheduled· to begin on June 25th
and to continue through August 29th.
Coordinated Studies, group contracts, course modules and individual
con tract study opportunities are available , each depending upon sufficient enrollment. For this reason students are encouraged to register as
soon as possible. Normally , all students enrolling at Evergreen for the
first time will be asked to choose work in either a coordinated study or
a group con tract. Continuing students can enroll in any of the learning
modes. Part-time students are encouraged to enroll in course modules ,
which will be announced by May 15th. Those continuing students desiring individual contracts should make arrangements with available faculty prior to May 15th if at all possible .

••••••••••••••••••••••••
Important Deadlines

May 15 - Individual Contracts should be signed and registration materials completed.
May 25 - Registration materials for all continuing students
should be completed.
June 1 -All new student registrations must be completed.
June 15- Tuition and Fees must be paid.
June 25- Summer Term begins.
Aug. 29- Summer Term ends .

••••••••••••••••••••••••

HA Y_FE~ER_ appare.ntly isn't ~ proble.m for Patsy Parish as ~he closely examines the petal arrangement
of a sh nnkmg ~olet. Fteld botantcal studtes are only one of a wtde range of learning opportunities available
at Evergreen thts Summer. (Photo by Herger).

Programs available:
COORDINATED STUDIES

FINANCIAL AIDS

It appears that fmancial aids will be quite limited this summer. For
information call or write:
Les Eldridge, Director Financial Aids
The Evergreen State College
Olympia, Wash. 98505
Phone (206) 753-3180
HOUSING
Summer housing will be available through the college housing office
(first floor Library building - phone 753-3129). A special summer rate
of $120 for the entire summer quarter will be charged. Students who
rent college housing will be given free rent from June 8 to June 25 and
payments of $60.00 are due on June 4 and July 6. In addition students
choosing college housing will be given free storage from the end of
summer quarter to the beginning of fall quarter 1973-74.
FOOD SERVICE
Snack bar lunch service will be available in the College Activities
building. College apartments include cooking facilities.
RECREATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES
Recreational facilities, including the lovely new swimming pool and
sunning area, handball courts, exercise rooms, saunas and gym areas will
be available for use. Weekend hiking and camping areas are easily accessible in the Olympia Peninsula and Park region and the Washington
Cascades. The Washington beaches and the waters ofPuget Sound provide possibilities for further breaks from weekday studies.
FEE PAYMENTS
Tuition and fees will be the same as those for any other term at the
college. They are:
Tuition and Fees
Resident- Full-time student, per quarter
Resident- Vietnam Veteran - full-time, per quarter
Non-resident - Full-time student, per quarter
Resident- Part-time student , per quarter
Non-resident -Part-time student, per quarter

$165.00
120.00
453.00
115.00
115.00

New Student Application Fee
and Advance Deposit
Application fee
15.00
Advance deposit - full-time
50.00
Advance deposit - part-time
20.00
Students currently enrolled or who have been officially admitted for
Fall Term have already paid the application fee and advance deposit.
No additional payment is required for summer.
Other Charges
Insurance for Summer Term
14.90
This ch:trge will be billed unless the insurance waiver is signed and
rt•turned with registration materials. Students are encouraged however
to carry this insurance.

The Individual and
Community in American Life
(100 students) Call or write Tom
Rainey (L 2508, 753-3940)
Critics of White American society
have commented on the inability
of Americans to create "a
community of human beings."
One- Native- ~--tKls evett
noted that all "the White
American has been able to create
on this continent is a violent
conglomerate of individuals held
together by force and fear." A
major aim of this coordinated
study will be to test the validity
of this general line of criticism.
Another would be to understand
the efforts of the American
"Utopians" to create communal
experiments. Yet another will be
to examine the efforts of such
experimental educational
"communities" as Black.
Mountain College and The
Evergreen State College. This
coordinated study is open to all
students, those currently enrolled
as well as new students.
GROUP CONTRACTS
Group contracts are being
planned by a number of faculty
or faculty-student combinations.
The following groups are in the
process of forming and
completing contract details. If
you are a continuing student
already enrolled at Evergreen, or
intending to return from a leave
of sbsence, contact the faculty
member listed below directly. If
you will be new to Evergreen this
summer direct your inquiries to:
Donald G. Humphrey,
Academic Dean
The Evergreen State College
Olympia, Wash. 98505
I. International Film Production
For further information call or
write Gordon Beck (L 2121 ,
phone 753-3975); also see page
56 of the 1973-74 catalog
supplement.
2. Urban Planning- (5 students)
Call or write Russell Fox (L
3232, phone 753-3990);
restricted to currently enrolled
students.

A project in microbiology
3. Constitutional Law and Civil
with special emphasis on the
Liberties (20 students)
problems of venereal disease.
Call or write Jeanne Hahn (L
Call or write Willie Parson (L
2106, phone 753-3975).
1404, phone 753-3965).
4. Experimental Structures13. Media Production
Drawing, Planning Design,
(20 students)
Construction (20 students)
Project oriented work in
Call or write Phil Harding (L
multi-media, slide-tape, film,
35 18, phone 753-3995);
video and informational displays.
emphasizes individual project
Call or write Sid White (L
work.
5. Forest entomology (5 students: 2120, phone 753-3975).
Call or write Steve Herman
INDMDUAL CONTRACTS
(Lab 2015, phone 753-3945)
The following faculty are
6. T A/CA Observation in Behavior
a v a i 1a b I e for sponsoring
Call or write Mary Hillaire (L
individual contracts. These study
3225, phone 753-3990)
opportunities are normally open
7. The Dance - (20 students)
only to students currently
Call or write Bernard Johansen
enrolled at Evergreen.
(L 3218, phone 753-3972); open
1. Medardo Delgado (5 students)
to full-time or part-time students.
2. Cruz Esquivel (20 students)
8. Mobile School Unit in Elemen
3. Theodore Gerstl (5 students)
tary Education (33 students)
4. Naomi Greenhut (5 students)
Call or write Maxine Mimms
5. James Gulden {10 students)
(L 1506, phone 753-3982) or
6. Phil Harding (5 studer
Mark Machlis (L 1506, phone
7. Mary Hillaire (3 stu(
753-3982). This is the first
8. David Hitchens (open)
quarter of a full year group
9. Willard Humphreys (open)
contract in experimental
10. Stan Klyn (5 students)
education.
11. Earle McNeil (5 stuciP.nts)
9. Coming of Age at Evergreen
12. Elizabeth Kutter (2)
(20 students)
13. Charles Pailthorp {open)
Especially designed for
14. Lynn Patterson (5 students)
students corning to Evergreen for
15. David Powell (5 students)
the first time. The program will
16. Thomas Rainey (open)
provide an orientation toward the
17. Jacob Romero(I5 students)
Evergreen environment, resources
18. Leon Sinclair (20 students)
and methods. Call or write Carol
19. LeRoi Smith (20 students)
Olexa (L 1410, phone 753-3965)
20. Ainara Wilder ( 15 students)
or Greg Portnoff (L 1408, phone
21. William Winden (5 students)
753-3965).
22. Larry Eickstaedt (20)
10. On Time- (20 students)
The physical basis of temporal
INTERNSHIPS
frameworks, the factual basis of
All interns
human awareness of time and the
must have faculty sponsors.
philosophical aspects of temporal
Students wishing assistance in
awareness.
locating internships through the
Call or write Charles Pailthorp
office of Cooperative Education
(L 3404. phone 753·3995).
should contact that office as soon
II. The Natural History of the
as possible in order to complete
Pacific Northwest (60 students)
intern agreements and to locate
A tlelO onented program
faculty sponsors.
including geological,
It is recommended that
agreements be negotiated early .
archeological, zoological and
Interns must complete
botanical studies of Washington
registration by June I and must
and the adjacent regions.
complete all details of intern
Call or write Mark Papworth
agreements through the office of
(L 1508, phone 753-3982) or
Cooperative Education no later
Chester Royse (Lab 2026, phone
than the fee payment deadline of
753-3945). Some travel expense
June 15th.
may be involved.
No new students will be
12. Microbes and Man
allowed to enroll as interns this
(20 students)
summf'r.

April 19, 1973

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

,,~~-!b»~·~·~!·=·=·=·=·=·=-=·=-=-=«~.-;·.x•;•;-;-;--.-;e;e;-;-;-;--~~..-~=-=-=·=~\~

-

~

I RECORDS MyFeetAreSmiling~I
~

Leo Kottke :::
Capitol ST-tt164:r;

·~\\,,

·-~~----rtr!...Jl.fl'_e!~ti'~~·!'-.'!.'-~.'!.·!•!•'':•!•!•~·'!•'!J!•!•!•!•'!•:•:·:·:·:·:·:•:•:.•;,:•;•;,;•:•:•;-:•:•;·.·.-.·.·················~·······1;!·

Leo Kottke began his recording career five years ago on John
Fahey's Takoma records and has been compared musically to Fahey
ever since. "My Feet Are Smiling," Kottke's fifth album, is built on the
strong points of his first four albums, combined with his strength at
present.
Kottke as a performer
Recorded from a December '72 concert, this album proves once
again why Kottke has become known as one of the best - if not the
best - steel string guitar pickers in the world. I am sad to say, though,
that this album fails to capture the feel and warmth of a Leo Kottke
concert.
In concert, Kottke is a modest, real, laid-back performer. A Kottke
concert is like being in your own living room with Leo Kottke there to
play for you. He is one of the most delightful people I've ever had the
pleasure of meeting and one of the fmest and funniest story tellers I've
ever heard.
But, on this album Kottke sounds bored, and slightly stupid when he
speaks between songs. The funny stories seem to be taken out of context, making little or no sense and are not funny at all. Fortunately,
this fault is a very minor one, taking up only a small part of the album.
Kottke coming into own as vocalist
This album is made up mostly of Kottke's incredible finger picking
guitar work, plus a few fme vocals. On the liner notes of his first album
Kottke described his voice as sounding like "geese farts on a muggy
day." But on this album Kottke proves without a doubt that he is
corning into his own as a vocalist. The best example of this is his
treatment of Paul Siebel's fine song "Louise".
Leo Kottke's music is beautiful. His guitar playing is inventive and
played with a feel of emotion that is often sacrificed for technique by
many great guitarists. You can tell just by listening to this fine album
that Kottke's music is his life; he loves what he is doing.
Records reviewed, courtesty of the friendJy tolks at Rainy Day
Record Co., Westside Center.
Jim Carpenter

Fine Arts budget cut
by JENNIFER BLOMGREN
The Drama, Music, and Fine
Arts Building construction funds
have not been approved by the
Senate. Ainara Wilder, who
presently is the only faculty
person involved in total theatre
production, is rotating next year
into a Coordinated Studies
program. There will probably be
no group contract in theatre arts.
nor will there be individual
contracts in drama. As it now
stands tltere will be no new
faculty person hired who will
specifically teach Theatre Arts.
Though the initial investment of
close to $10,000 has been made
in lights and performance
equipment, no scheduled use is in
sight.
From these facts, it would
seem that the future of tile
performing arts at Evergreen is
bleak. However, as far as physical
facilities go, tile Senate has
approved a capital construction
budget which includes a second
phase of tile Lab Building. It will
probably be open by summer and
inclue art space: audio-visual,
multi-media, graphics, and studio
art. The present Lab Building has
the bottom floor devoted to art
space.
The Arts faculty has also
indicated its commitme.nts.
Coordinated studies and group
contracts have the arts as a viable

Seattle Lightfoot performance found lacking
by JIM CARPENTER

Since the beginning of his
professional career in the early
sixties, Gordon lightfoot has
become one of tile finest and best
known folk artists of our time. In
his recent concert at the Opera
House in Seattle, Lightfoot
played a tight and polished
performance, with little sign of
effort.
With tile accompaniment of
Rick Haynes on bass and the
outstanding guitar work of Terry
Clements, Lightfoot performed a

cross section of the songs that
hav~ brought him to his present

stature as a songwtiter:. Choosing
to play mostly from his 1'Don
Quixote" album, he sang of his
home in Canada, past loves, and
being on the road.
The concert was carried off in
a flawless, professional manner,
but I found Lightfoot's
performance seriously lacking.
There was little feel to his music
and he seemed almost bored with
what he was doing. Lightfoot is
doing the same kind of music he's

been into for the last ten years.
Consequently there w~ little
variety .to his music, and little
imagination to his performance as
a whole.
He played his songs, and his
songs were nice, but he gave
nothing of himself to his
audience. He left me wishing for
the return of Mimi Farina - the
opening act - to the stage.
Gordon Lightfoot appeared to be
a man playing his music for the
money.

Peter Elbow talks about new hool{
by nLL FLEMING
''This book tries to show how
to gain control over words," says
the preface of Evergreen faculty
member Peter Elbow's new book,
"Writing Witllout Teachers."
This book is not a
how-to-write-inten-quick-and-easy-lessons kind
of book. It helps the writer to
generate more words, more
freely, and to improve his
"editing" ability as to what
writing to keep and what to
tllrow away.
Why would anyone want to
write about writing? Elbow says,
"I've always had a hard time
writing. When I began to feel I
had a clue to the solution I
wanted to tell oilier people. It's
part of my teacher's urge to tell
everyone.
"I have always had a strong
urge to figure out what's true and
tell people. If I had better luck
witll nuclear physics I would have
told tllem that.
"Writing is especially loaded.
It's like tile secret of tile universe
or sexuality."
One way suggested in the
book to generate more words is

PAGE 7

.

PETER ELBOW
to do "freewriting" exercises.
These consist of sitting down and
writing continuously about
anything for ten minutes,
witllout looking back over one's
work. While some may feel all
tlley are producing is garbage,
freewriting helps words to come
more spontaneously.
Elbow compares the process
of writing to both growing and
cooking in his book. Why did he
pick cooking?
"It just came to me. My
publisher didn't like it. I had

already been using it in the sense
of how a chemist uses it, words
chemically interacting."
As to whether he followed his
own advice in writing his book,
Elbow replies, "I sometimes
worried - here's all this advice
and I'm not following it. To a
certain extent I didn't believe it
or understand it until it was
written. It didn't fully digest
until then."
At one point in tile book
Elbow says that he is not a
creative writer. "I don't feel 100
per cent comfortable calling
myself a writer. That brings a
poet, or someone who is
compelled to write, to my mind."
"I write when I have a feeling
I've figured something out. It
usually was about teaching, then
writing. It was wanting to
convince people that something I
believed in was true."
An integral part of "Writing
Witllout Teachers" explains the
teacherless writing class. This is a
committed group of people who
discuss each other's writing with
certain guidelines over a ten-week
period. One such class is already
set up witllin Elbow's program,
Mind and Body.

SWEET'N SOUR - Theatre Art group contract members Dave
Johnson and Patsy Parish clown for PAPER photographer.
force. very much alive and
available to a greater number of
students. Form and Function
with Stan Klyn will focus on tile
design process, art in science, and
design in nature. America's Music
holds possibilities for Dramatics,
but is limited to students
primarily interested in music.
Peggy Dickinson will handle
individual contracts in the visual
arts. Sid White, with the Arts and
Society study program, plans to
deal with two components: the
seminar to deal with
contemporary arts and their
relation to today's society, and
the workshop component
involving students in a number of
artistic functions.
There is also a group of

students spending a year in Italy
studying cinema.
The Coordinated Studies
program tllat includes the study
of Athens and tile West will
examine Greek and
Contemporary Drama, with
possible opportunities for
expression in skit-type
performances. The Word and
Image program will include tlle
arts in communication.
All of tile faculty contacted
felt that despite the setbacks
from budget cuts, the joy of
creative expression and limited
performance would continue to
thrive. Sid White put it tllis way:
"The arts are here to stay, to
become an alive force at
Evergreen."

What's new
at the Bijou
Cinema buffs have a wide
selection of movies for their
viewing pleasure this week-end.
Tonight, LA TERRA TREMA,
directed by Visconti, will play at
8 in Lecture Hall I as part of the
Cinemarchives series sponsored
by Gordon Beck. Admission is
free.
Tomorrow the Friday night
film series presents SIMON AND
THE
DESSERT,
a
Bunuel-directed religious satire.
Also on the bill is CHAFED
ELBOWS directed by Robert
Downey of Putney Swope fame.
CHAFED ELBOWS' hero Walter
Dinsmore opens the sl10w by
having a hysterectomy and closes
it by marrying his mother.
Shows are at 7 and 9:30 in
Lecture Hall 1. Admission is free.
In 01 y mpia, UP THE
SANDBOX and CHA TO'S LAND
finish tlleir run at the Olympic
tonight. The former stars Barbra
Streisand as a frustrated housewife
with fantasies, while the latter is
a western.
Tomorrow THE LIFE AND
TIMES OF JUDGE ROY BEAN,
Paul Newman's latest picture,
begins its run here. Call tile
Olympic for · times at 357-3422.
An animated musical cartoon
based on tlle children's classic
CHARLOTTE'S WEB is currently
at tlle Capitol theater. Times can
be acquired at 357-7161. REMUS
is playing at tile State theatre,
phone 3574010.
FUTURE FLICKS
The Friday night movie
people, Jim Kagan, Chris
Ra us chen berg, and Frida
Habbick, have announced the
flicks for spring quarter. April 27
has two Marx brotllers comedies
lined up, THE BIG STORE, and
COCONUTS.
WHERE'S POPPA and two

Norman McLaren shorts HEN
HOP and BLINKETY BLANK
show May 4. A Czech film classic,
CLOSELY WATCHED TRAINS
and another McLaren short PAS
DE DEUX are planned for May
II.
May 18 is tentatively
scheduled for some Alfred
Hitchcock movies, while the May
25 selection has not been made.
Suggestions are welcome and
should be left with Lynn Garner
in CAB 305.
All movies in the Friday series
will be free this quarter, since tile
original $2,500 investment has
been made back.

Jill Fleming

'6' premiers
Channel 6, "The Evergreen
Exchange," began video
broadcasting this week ove-r the
college closed-circuit television
system.
will be on
the air Tuesdays and Thursdays
at noon, and 7 p.m.
Nine
students operate the station
under guidance of Faculty
Member Sid White.
The goal of the station is to
serve as an information exchange,
and its supporters are determined
to provide community access to
its facilities.
Students witll program ideas
should speak to any of the
contract members in Room 2129
Monday through Friday from I 0
a.m. to 10 p.m. The studio
equipment includes black and
white telemation gear plus a Sony
porta-pack camera, and is
available for student use.
Channel 6 can be seen in the
cable viewing rooms located
throughout tile library and in all
on-campus housing units.

April 19, 1973

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

For the week starting

J

PAGE 8
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