The Paper, Volume 1, Number 2 (April 26, 1973)

Item

Title
Eng The Paper, Volume 1, Number 2 (April 26, 1973)
Description
Eng Page 1: Reorganization ok'd after policy debate;
Page 1: Faculty evaluations underway;
Page 1: Death claims two;
Page 1: Baldwin awarded $4,000 fellowship;
Page 2: Organic Farmers plant Spring crops;
Page 2: Board recalls illegal funds;
Page 2: New Dean named;
Page 2: Vitamin C tested;
Page 3: Evergreen State College decision-making reviewed;
Page 3: Reorganization: 'action officer' to report to Pres.;
Page 3: contest;
Page 3: Harry Edwards lectures here;
Page 3: College sponsors poetry contest;
Page 4 Staff Credits;
Page 4: (cartoon) [Charles McCann gravestone in a cemetary] "1926-1973: Charles McCann: r.i.p. : 'i was my own D.T.F.'";
Page 4: security;
Page 4 guest Editorial: smoking;
Page 4: opinion: oversight;
Page 4: opinion: key 73;
Page 4: opinion: on Holly;
Pahe 5: enigma;
Page 5: east -- west;
Page 5; RAPLINE;
Page 5: the SAGA [Food Services]: Mother's Oats;
Page 6: Barry: man of many roles;
Page 6: health fair scheduled;
Page 6: evaluations;
Page 6: deli closed saturdays;
Page 6: Financial Aid... : BEOG vs. SEOG;
Pahe 6: theater: (photographs) pantomime;
Page 7: What's new at the Bijou;
Page 7: Beck stages film series;
Page 7: album notes;
Page 7: cinema concerts;
Page 8: public image examined in symposium;
Page 8: Ward exhibit: ceramics stong, skillful;
Page 8: Happenings
Identifier
Eng cpj0019.pdf
Creator
Eng Shore, Stan
Eng Ellis
Eng Madsen, Barbara
Eng Prenrice, Judy
Eng LeGrow
Eng Smith, Don
Eng Fleming, Jill
Eng Hergeer
Eng Wilde, Oscar
Eng Musgrove, Harley "Cam"
Eng Ness, Christine M.
Eng Wright, Marvin Wayne
Eng Brockmann, Bruce
Eng Jehu, Kristy Ann
Eng Lindsey, Hal
Eng Maureer, barbara
Eng Dambrot, Stephanie Gould
Eng Hall, Michael
Eng Ice, Steve
Eng Berger, Knute Olssen H.G.S.
Eng Campbell. Bill
Eng Freeburg, Bill
Eng Sun, Western
Eng Herger
Eng Blomgren, Jennifer
Eng Carpenter, Jim
Eng May, Sandy
Contributor
Eng Ryan, Andy
Eng Ellis, Doug
Eng Burman, Julie
Eng Shore, Stan
Eng Hoffman, Anne
Eng DeVoe, Nina
Eng Williams, Charles H
Eng Berger, Knute Olsson H.G.S.
Eng Fleming, Jill
Eng LeGrow, Perer A.
Eng Herger, Michael B.
Eng Hogan, Kevin
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/; http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-RUU/1.0/
Source
Eng US-WaOE.A.1973-01
Spatial Coverage
Eng The Evergreen State College
Eng Washington State
Eng New York, New York
Eng Seattle
Eng Evergreen Point Bridge
Eng Lake Washington
Eng Paso Robles
Eng California
Eng Olympia
Eng Ohio
Eng Portland
Eng Los Angeles
Eng Harvard, Stanford
Eng Cornell University
Eng Thurston County
Eng Floral Grove
Eng Michigan Wrighterrs Conference
Eng King County
Eng Mississippi River
Eng Gulf Of Mexico
Eng The United States Of Americs
Eng Panama Canal
Eng Cape Horn
Eng Central America
Eng Texas
Eng Vancover
Eng East Coast
Eng Harlem
Eng Linwood
Eng West Richland Washington
Eng Rome
Eng Columbia KC
Eng San Fransico
Subject
Eng Scholarships
Eng Universities and colleges--Faculty - Evaluation
Eng Death
Eng Organic farming Washington (State) - Olympia - Evergreen State College
Eng Vitamin C
Eng Decision making
Eng Poetry - Contests
Eng Security
Eng Smoking cessation
Eng Washingtion (State) - Legislature
Eng Sickell cell anemia
Eng Motion pictures--Study and teaching
Eng McCann, Charles
Eng Dixion, Tom
Eng Kormandy, Ed
Eng Aldrdge, Bill
Eng Cadwallder, Merv
Eng Baldwin, Terssa
Eng Morrison, Edward A.
Eng Corrigan, Mark D.
Eng Young, Patricia J.
Eng Hancock, Leo
Eng Young, Shannon
Eng Guttman, Burt
Eng Hancock, Delores
Eng Hancock, Leo Jr.
Eng Hancock, Daniel
Eng Hancock, Michael
Eng Hancock, Joey
Eng Hancock, Patricia
Eng Reslock, Mary-Lou
Eng Habbick, Frieda
Eng Sluss, Robert
Eng Gilbert, Jeff
Eng Berg, Mike
Eng Asbornsen, Leslie
Eng Steilberg, Peter
Eng Pugh, Per
Eng Patterson, Lynn
Eng Kormondy, Edward
Eng Perez, Elena
Eng Pauling, Linus
Eng Soule, Oscar
Eng Eickstaedt, Larry
Eng Parson, Willie
Eng Carey, Ross
Eng Steinberg, Larry
Eng Dixon, Tom
Eng Edwards, Harry
Eng Singleton, John
Eng Wild, Oscar
Eng Richy, Theodore
Eng Peterdorff, Lionel
Eng Dukelow, Donald
Eng Valley, Georgett
Eng Pugh, Peter
Eng Humphreys, Will
Eng McCauley, Chris
Eng Greenhut, Naomi
Eng Schmidlabt, Herbert
Eng Kahn, Doug
Eng Hoffman, Mary
Eng McCarty, Craig
Eng Berry, David G.
Eng Nixon, Richard M. (Richard Milhous), 1913-1994
Eng Eldridge, Lester
Eng Baldwin, Marion
Eng budd, Kathie
Eng Colson, John
Eng Rabin, Paul
Eng Locy, Clinton
Eng Bean, Roy
Eng Newman, Paul
Eng Hunter, Tab
Eng Keach, Stacy
Eng McDowell, Roddy
Eng Bisset, Jacqueline
Eng Gardner, Ava
Eng Huston, John
Eng Williams, Andy
Eng Fellini
Eng Dreyer
Eng Godard
Eng McLaughlin, John
Eng Chinmoy, Sri
Eng Cobham, Billy
Eng Laird, Rick
Eng Hammer, Jan
Eng Gooddman Jerry
Eng Reed, Rex
Eng Loggins, Kenny
Eng Messina, Jim
Eng Band, J. Geils
Eng Cooper, Alice
Eng Mayfeild, Curtis
Eng Ward, Jill
Eng Nicols, dick
Eng Detering, Janet
Eng Renault, Gregory
Eng Williams, Jennifer
Eng Williams, Bob
Eng Evergreen Board Of Trusteees
Eng University of Washington
Eng Department of Human Resources
Eng City Administrator
Eng United State Air Force
Eng Evergreen Organic Farm
Eng South Sound National Bank
Eng Kaos Radio
Eng Peace Corps
Eng Ohio State university
Eng Phi Beta Kappa
Eng Yakima Valley Council for Comunity Action
Eng Puget Sound Governmental Confrence
Eng Committee on Governance
Eng The Evergreen State College
Eng College Forum and Sounding
Eng Disappering Task Forse
Eng All-Campus hearing Board
Eng Olympic Games
Eng Cornell University
Eng Harvard University
Eng Life Magizine
Eng Newsweek
Eng Ramparts
Eng The Black Acholar
Eng Time
Eng Intellectual Digest
Eng Today Shoe
Eng Paul Richardson Band
Eng Jamming Jammers
Eng Herbert Fuller Poetry Award
Eng The Paper
Eng Associated Press Wire Services
Eng Surgon General of the United States
Eng Office Of Facilities Planning
Eng Nipthiz Press
Eng Carry College
Eng Non-smokers Liberation Movement
Eng KAOS Radio
Eng The Daily Olympian
Eng Ralphs Thriftway
Eng SAGA [Food Services] Food services
Eng washingtion commission of the Huminaties
Eng National Endowment for the Humanities
Eng Washington Connission
Eng Turston-Mason County Mobile Health Unit
Eng Arthritis Foundation
Eng Thurston-Mason county blood Bank, Group Health
Eng Social and Health Services
Eng Community Mental Health Clinic
Eng Beltone Hearing Aid Center
Eng Olympia Mountaineers
Eng YWCA
Eng McLanne fire Department
Eng Basic Educational Oppertunity Grant
Eng The Supplimentary Educational Opertunity Grant
Eng The National Defence Student Loan
Eng National Direct Student Loan
Eng Congress
Eng Washington Council For Higher Education
Eng Columbia River high School
Eng Rational Psyco Therapy Institute
Eng New York Urban corp
Eng New Lafayette Theatre
Eng Mahavishnu Orchestra
Eng Pink Floid
Eng Emerson
Eng Lake and Palmer
Eng Rainy Day Records
Eng the Music Bar
Eng Komo-Tv
Eng Alman brothers band
Eng Blood, Swet, and Tears
Eng Seals and Crofts
Eng poco
Eng Bo Diddley
Eng Jazz ensamble
Eng Chamber Singers
Temporal Coverage
Eng 1926/1970
Type
Eng text
Eng images
extracted text
Non-profit Organization

Off Campus: 10 Cents

VOLUME 1 NUMBER 2

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

Olympia, Washington 98505

April 26, 1973

Reorganization ok'd after policy debate
By STAN SHORE

TRUSTEES await arrival of Pres. McCann at board meeting last Thursday afternoon. (Photo by Ellis).

Sparks flew between President
Charles McCann and the Board of
Trustees last Thursday at a
crowded Board meeting where
McCann's reorganization plan was
discussed and. with minor
modification, approved.
Although reorganization was the
agenda item being discussed, it
was the president's and the
trustee's respective roles as policy
implementer and policy setters
which became the topic of a
heated exchange.
The debate started when the
board began pondering (against
McCann's wishes) delaying and
possibly modifying action on the
plan .
Eventually, after a closed
executive session, the Board
changed the affirmative action
officer's position, so that he
reports directly to the President.
(See reorganization story.)
"l may be operating under a

Facu Ity eva Iuations un derway ~::~. ,~~;~~;i·,~~.·~.~":·:~~

"Then why are we here?" one
of the board members responded.
The exchange continued, McCann
continually asserting his role as
decision maker. He said that the
board set policy and he saw to it
that it was carried out It was not
the board's role, according to
him, to decide specific
implementation procedures.
"The president," McCann said,
"is the one who must decide."
"Can your decisions be
scrutinized?" board member Tom
Dixon asked angrily _at one point.
"Always." McCann shot back.
In response to concern about
the number of personnel that had
to be laid off ("these are not just
little boxes," one faculty member
exclaimed, "they're people ... "),
McCann promised that the
institution would "expend its
fu lies t energies" in helping
employees get new jobs.
In other Board action, the
Trustees passed a motion to
repay interfund and commercial

;":;~;.;·~>~;· .:.'::::."~· .~

~~~~--~~------~~--~----~~~~~e~i~t~e~w~~in~w~h~ic~h~th~cwc~h~ic~f~~a~u~th~o~n~·z~e~d~a~n~e~w~r~o:a~d~ar~o~u~n~d~~

By BARBARA MADSEN
"You are a humanist and an
idealist, interrelating people. You
make students feel good, you are
loved by students. You create a
climate for learning but what do
you teach?"
Faculty Evaluations at
Evergreen are underway.
Provost Ed Kormandy asked
the preceeding questions of Bill
Aldridge during a rather bizarre
evaluation encounter last
week-bizarre because the
sessions are usually private

affairs. But via the newsletter,
Aldridge asked "friends and
non-friends" to his evaluation last
April 16, urging all to bring food
and drink for eating and sharing,
inviting all interested persons to
"stay and observe."
In contrast to most colleges
and universities, the question of
firing or reappointing teachers at
Evergreen is not decided by the
traditional tenure system.
Instead, every year faculty
members meet with the dean
responsible to their area of
studies. Before each meeting the

Baldwin awarded
$4,000 fellowship
Teresa Baldwin, a senior, is the
sole Washingtonian and only one
of 20 students throughout the
nation to receive a $4,000 awarrl
in the City of New York's Annual
Urban Fellowship Program.
Competing against more than
300 applicants from colleges,
· universities and graduate schools
nationwide, Baldwin was selected
to begin a nine-month internship
program next September.
The New York City Urban
Fellowship, the first of its kind in
the country, is administered by
the Office of Administration
under Deputy-Mayor City
Administrator Edward A.
Morrison and is directed by
Deputy City Administrator Mark
D Corrigan. Students selected are
provided with responsibilities in
administrative problem-solving,
research, policy planning and
related management areas.
B a! d win will receive full
academic credit from Evergreen
for her internship. She will be

sponsored by a member of the
college's Contracted Studies
faculty through the Office of
Cooperative Education, which
coordinates the internship
program at Evergreen
"I'll have my choice among
several different internships once
I get back to New York"
Baldwin said, "but, I'm hoping to
work in either housing or
~>nur:~ tion ."
Those two areas have been of
prime academic concern for
Baldwin during the past two
years. As a student at the
University of Washington, she
was a planner for the Youth
Division of the Department of
Human Resources for the City of
Seattle. Following her transfer to
Evergreen, she worked with an ad
hoc committee responsible for
drafting a proposed Landlord
Tenant Bill for the State of
Washington. In January, she
began a full-time study internship
(continued on page 6)

participants exchange portfolios,
then write an evaluation or
commentary on the other person.
based on what they read.
These reflections are shared
verbally during the evaluation
session. Questions arc asked,
questions are answetcd.
Encompassing the views of
others, participants leave with a
better understanding of the dean
or faculty member they have
confronted. After this meeting
the dean writes afterthoughts or a
postscript of his session with this
particular faculty member.
When each and every faculty
member has met with a dean, the
deans and the provost meet.
During this marathon session,
they review all the faculty
members. The postscripts which
were written immediately after
one-to-one encounters are read
and discussed. The decision to
re-hire or fire is made at this
meeting.
Although teachers are
reviewed each year, their
eligibility for reappointment only
arises every three years. So in a
sense, a faculty member is "safe"
for three years.
Evergreen's Board of Trustees
is SUSpiCIOUS of this
non-traditional process. As Merv
Cadwallader put it, "We'd have to
fire someone to prove to the
Trustees we have balls!" He
added, "I believe we'll have
proved ourselves if we don't fire
someone. I'd feel great!" He
expects his attitude to be greeted
with accusations like: "You're
soft, you've got no guts!"
Aldridge's answers to
Kormondy's questions are a good
example of what the evaluation
(continued on page 6)

a min 1st rators organtle
responsibilities and work
each other is one of the
direct responsibilities of
President ."

t 1e1r
with
few
the

s 100 prop r
were cut off from the old road
when Evergreen bought up the
property near their houses.

Death claims two
Patricia Young, a 26-year-old
Evergreen student and Leo
Hancock, 42, a maintenance
technician. also from Evergreen,
died in separate incidents last
week-end.
Young and her five-year-old
daughter, Shannon, were killed in
a head-on collision on the
Evergreen Point Bridge over Lake
Washington Sunday night. A
graduate of Paso Robles,
California, High School, Young
was studying under the guidance
of Faculty Member Burt
Guttman.
LEO HANCOCK

PATRICIA J. YOUNG

Hancock, an employee of
Evergreen since October 1971,
died of an apparent heart attack
Saturday night . An Olympia
resident, Hancock retired from
the Air Force as a master sergeant
in 1971 after 22 years of service.
He is survived by his wife ,
Delores; his sons, Leo, Daniel,
Michael and Joey; and his
daughter, Patricia.

INSIDE
Opinion ... 4, 5
Entertainment ... 7 ,
Rap line .. . 5

PAGE2

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

April 26, 1973

Organic farmers plant Spring crops
By JUDY PRENTICE

MARY-LOU RESLOCK tries new milking technique on Rhoda .

Board recalls
illegal funds
A $1 ,500 allocation rna~ by
the Services and Activities blard
in mid-March proved to be illegal
in view of a state law prohibiting
funding of academic programs by
S and A boards. At the time of
allocation the board recognized
the question of its' legality and
stated that the actual money
would be approved pending
research concerning its' legality.
The funds were to have been used
to fmance an Arizona field trip
by a group of students involved
in the Evergreen Environment
program, but since the funding is
illegal the money needed will
have to be obtained through
other channels.
Other business covered at the
meeting was the approval of a
$75 grant from South Sound
National Bank to KAOS for use in
programrnmg, a $282 allocation
to finance the anticipated
traveling expenditures of various

recreation clubs, and the
revamping of a $290 budget given
the Visiting Photographers Group
to include funding of workshops,
guests, and lectures dealing in art
mediums other than
photography.
The board also reached a
decision to issue a memorandum
to all faculty and staff calling for
volunteer board members since
the said members now serving on
the board have either conflicting
schedules, or are unwilling to
sacrifice their personal time to
attend board meetings.
Subjects to be raised in the
next regular meeting of the board
include the recapturing of the
unused portions of previous
allocations, and the formal
appointment of Elena Perez to
represent the S and A board in
the upcoming Internal Budget
Hearing on Service and Activities
fees.

Collecting eggs, milking Rhoda
the Ge rnsey, and shoveling
fertilizer are just a few of the
more earthy aspects of studying
organic horticulture and animal
husbandry at the organic farm on
The Evergreen State College
campus.
Sharing equal responsibility
for care of the farm's one cow,
12 chickens and one acre of
garden, 15 students have been
working together for the past
year and have just about finished
their spring planting.
"We've got sweet peas,
potatoes, spinach, lettuce and
onions planted already," said
Frieda Habbick, a New Yorker
who is one of the farm's
organizers. "We've still got a lot
more beds to plant. We're hoping
to put in com, tomatoes,
eggplant, peppers, turnips, beets,
peanuts,-all kinds of crops which
the students would like to
observe coming up."
The student-initiated project,
begun more than a year ago , is
intended to serve as a long-term
campus learning resource where
new ideas and skills can be
developed by students, faculty
and staff, as well as by interested
residents of the surrounding
Olympia area.
In its first year the farm was
limited to basic research and
planting and building projects.
Students conducted soil and
vegetation surveys, made repairs
to or removed old buildings,
made land use studies and did
some farming. As more
information has been gathered,
the farm and its caretakers have
moved beyond the basics of
farming into areas such as- new
insect-resistent strains of crops
and improved methods of organic
farming.

Most of the students now
working on the farm are studying
under individual academic
contracts with one of five
Evergreen faculty members. Their
fields of interest cover everything
from botany to animal
husbandry, chemistry to
entomology , They share a reading
list and hold weekly seminars to
compare information. They also
attend workshops directed by
one of the sponsoring faculty
members or a farm specialist
fr<:>m the surrounding area.
Faculty member Robert Sluss,
an entomologist, spent two hours
at the farm last week lecturing on
methods for the identification
and control of insect pests
without the use of dangerous
chemicals. He pointed out the
ability of bugs to develop
resistances to nearly all kinds of
pesticides.
One student,
frantically
taking down Sluss's advice on
how to control the pests,
summed up the gardners' despair
with, "Wow. It sure seems like
the bugs are gonna win."
Sluss agreed that the
possibility was a real one, but
said the Evergreen farm "has no
real problems with insects yet."
Several of the students,
interested primarily in gardening,
spend most of their free time at
the farm, but are earning
academic credit in other areas.
Jeff Gilbert, an Ohio student,
said the garden supplemented his
studies in chemistry and plant
taxonomy under guidance of
faculty member Mike Berg, a
chemist.
Leslie Asbornsen, a
third -year-student from Portland ,
describes
.aa "a city girl
who just loves the farm.
"I've done everything from
taking care of Rhoda, the cow,

study where half of the group
take Vitamin C daily and the
other half, a placebo.
Each week, when members of
the study get their new supply of
pills, they fill out a questionnaire
reporting any illnesses that they
suffered during the previous week
and any stress or reaction they
might have had to the pills.
, The study began the first week
of Spring Quarter· and will
conclude around June 1, at which
time the data will be collected
and evaluated. Before the end of
the year, the information will be
distributed to members of the
study and to any other interested
persons.

Last week in an article
about Reorganization Peter
Steilberg was quoted as
saying, "this is ea:urely
against the spirit of the
place ... " This was a
misquate. The statement
should have been attributed
t-o
"-• -,.,lle411a;............. .;lil
administrative intern in
Student Services.

New dean named

Vitamin C tested
Each day over 100
Evergreeners dutifully pop two
pills-the contents and effects of
which they won't know until
after June 1.
They are taking pills in
conjuction with vitamin study,
organized by the Human Ecology
program to test Linus Pauling's
hypothesis on Vitamin C.
Paulings believes that Vitamin C
can prevent the common cold or
at least cause a person to have
fewer and less severe colds.
Human Ecology professor, Ida
Daum and students Debbie
Griftis, Laurie Hutton and Mason
Van Buren are heading the blind

when she was sick, to planting,
and I really enjoy it all," she said.
"You just don't get exposed to
this kind of thing in downtown
Portland."
Funded by a $2,000
appropriation from Evergreen
Services and Activities Fees this
year, the farm yields about ten
eggs a day and bountiful crop
each summer.
"Last year we just gave the
produce to any members of the
Evergreen community who
wanted it,"
Habbick said.
"The eggs and the little bit of
milk Rhoda produces don't go to
waste with 15 hungry farmers on
hand much of the time.n
Plans for the rest of the year
include construction of a
greenhouse where seedlings can
be given a start, plus planting of a
flower garden, an orchard and a
berry patch. Eventually, more
land will be brought into
production, more animals
obtained and new structures
erected.
For now, students are
anxiously awaiting a new arrival
in their pasture this summer.
Six-year-old Rhoda, a registered
Gernsey who was donated to the
farm by a local dairyman, is
expecting a calf July 24 ,

LYNN PATTERSON addresses seminar. Her appointment to associate
dean was announced yesterday by Provost Ed Kormondy. (Photo by
LeGrow).

By DON SMITH
Lynn Patterson, currently
involved in the "Future" Group
Contract, has been named to fill
the new Associate Dean position
at TESC . Provost Ed Kormondy
announced her appointment
yesterday, replacing Oscar Soule,
who has decided to rotate back

to the faculty next Fall.
A former Peace Corps
volunteer for two years,
Patterson earned her bachelors
degree from Ohio State
University, her masters in
anthropology from the University
of Washington, and is a candidate
for a doctorate in anthropology,
also from the U. of W.

In
announcing her
appointment, Kormondy said
Patterson "will bring to the office
of the deans an acute sense of
future directions in the State of
Washington as a result of her
group's studies this year. She will
also bring the insights of a social
scientist as we begin to explore
ways of evaluating the overall
effect of our institutional
evaluation. "And finally,"
Kormondy said, "she will bring
to the office of the deans beauty
and charm."
A member of Phi Beta Kappa,
Patterson developed a migrant
demonstration program for the
Yakima Valley Council for
Community Action in 1968. She
authored a 1968 career
development and training
program model for the
Seattle-King County Economic
Opportunity Board. She also
served as an associate training
development specialist for the
Office of Economic Opportunity
in Portland, and in 1970 was the
principle investigator for the
Puget Sound Governmental
Conference in Seattle.
Other faculty involved in the
competition for the associate
deanship were Larry Eickstaedt
and Willie Parson, both of whom,
along with Patterson, were
screened more than two months
ago by a DTF. Parsons, however,
,asked that his name be
withdrawn from consideration.

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

April 26, 1973

PAGE 3

TESC decision-making reviewed
By JILL FLEMING
Editor's note: This article is first
of several on decision-making at
all levels at Evergreen.
The decision-making process
at TESC is unique to the school.
The traditional governing bodies
of both students and faculty are
nowhere to be found at
Evergreen.
Instead of mini-democracies
with student representatives and
Robert's Rules of Order, several
simple channels are open to those
who want funds, exposure for
their ideas, or problems solved.
Guidelines for decision-making
are found in Governance and
Decision-making at Evergreen
(COG document) drawn up by

the Committee on Governance.lt
is subject to revision two years
after inception (this May) and
every five years thereafter.
The COG document sets forth
three channels of communication
within TESC. The Information
Center is a direct result of this.
The College Forum and Sounding
Board, also established by the
COG document, are both means
of presenting an idea to the
Evergreen community. Neither
have binding decision-making
powers but are rather places and
times for issue-airing.
Sounding Board member Ross
Carey describes it as "a discussion
body where issues are brought
up. It's a place to go if you don't
know who to go to. Occasionally
a disappearing task force (DTF)
will be started up from

discussion.
Where does the power lie? As
far as funds are concerned, the
Services and Activities Board (S
and A Board) holds the powers of
life and death over student
organizations and groups.
Money requests are reviewed
by the S and A Board, which
Dean of Student Services Larry
Stenberg sees as operating like a
foundation granting board. The
board is made up of eight students
randomly selected from the
voluntary service list, one staff
and one faculty member, plus
Stenberg.
Veto power, as required by
state law, is held by Stenberg
who has been delegated this
authority by President McCann.
He has yet to exercise this power.
A DTF is currently reviewing

S and A Board procedure and
policy.
Students will have a chance in
May to set priorities for student
funding in 1973-1974 by means
of a mailed questionnaire. Last
year nearly a 50 per cent
response was received, while the
average turn-out in other colleges
for elections is only 25 per cent.
Standing commit e e s are
another college "institution" that
never made it to Evergreen. DTF's
which, as the name implies,
disappear after the problem is
solved, are their replacement, but
not substitute here.
A DTF is generally formed of
several students, faculty and
staff, plus the personnel whose
jurisdiction the matter comes
under. The DTF does not have
actual binding power, but rather

makes careful recommend~tions
which are generally followed.
Disputes, greivances and
appeals procedure is only set up
for use after all lines of
communication have broken
down between the parties. A
hearing board can then be called
by Sounding Board or another
appropriate facilitator.
The hearing board will consist
of five members selected by
random choice from identified
members of the disputants' peer
groups. Certain decisions of this
group can be appealed to an
All-Campus Hearing Board set up
in similar fashion. The only
appeal beyond thi~ is by petition
to the Board of Trustees.
Next week: Social contracts and
their effect on students.

Reorganization
1

1

Action oHicer to report to pres.

PresidentMcCann's proposal
for reorganization was approved
last Thursday by the Board of
Trustees with only one
modification. The affirmative
action officer (who oversees the
racial balance in hiring and
admissions) will now report
directly to the president instead
of to the administrative vice
president as McCann wished.
The reasoning behind having
the affirmative action officer
report directly to the president,
according to board member Tom

Dixon is that any other one-seventh, is the combination
placement could possibly be of the Admissions and Registrar's
office into one director of
construed as limiting the officer's
function. "In order to assure his admissions and records, the
elimination of the executive vice
authority over the whole
president and shifting Security
structure," Dixon argued, "he
from reporting to the business
should report to the president."
manager to the administrative
The Library's role and the
vice president. Also being merged
placement of the Recreation
are the functions of controller
Center, Student Services and
Media Services are still under
consideration by two J.LI.&:.li....__ _...J.-'.~.Y..-YMi!MA~...,.jM~IAM.-WM-....
Among the major
director
contained in the new plan, which the director of plant operations
cuts back the staff by will also become one job: the
director of facilities.
New to the whole
administrative structure will be a
director of development, who
ED KORMONDY briefs Sid White on reorganization. (Photo by Herger)
will be responsible for fund
raising, publicity and legislative
liaison work. The need for this
office was strongly felt this last
year when legislative ties were so
weak as to endanger the existence
of the school, according to
McCann.
veteran of over 300 lectures at
Qr. Harry Edwards, renowned
schools such as Harvard,
educator, lecturer and writer who
University of California at Los
gained national prominence as
Angeles, and Stanford, Edwards
leader of a boycott by black
has been the subject of articles in
athletes of the 1968 Olympic
Life,
Newsweek, Ramparts, The
Games, will be the featured
Bemused embarrassBlack
Scholar, Time, and
speaker at an ali-day conference,
ment, giggles, derogatory
Friday, May 4. The program will Intellectual Digest. He has
remarks, and straight out
also feature poetry reading, appeared on the "Today Show,"
insults accompanied the
and other discussion shows on
dancing and music.
first issue of this
CBS
and NBC networks.
Edwards, who received his
publication. So now, after
The conference gets underway
Ph .D. in sociology from Cornell
enduring ridicule and
at 9 a.m. in the multi-purpose
University, has published articles
behind the scenes
room of the Library with the
in numerous periodicals. His
weirdness, we are going to
Paul
Richardson Band and the
books include: "The Black
come out of the closet and
Jamming Jammers performing
Student," "Sociology:
STUDENT
make public what all of us
until I p.m . There will be a
Relationships, Consequences,
on the staff already know:
SERVICES
requested donation of $1.
Alternatives," "The Black
"THE PAPER" is a
Poetry and dancing commence
Student Movement: What
moronic name.
at noon in Lecture Hall I , and
Now?," "The Revolt of the Black
FACILITIES
To rid ourselves of it we
will be immediately followed by
Athlete," and "The Sociology of
are going to have a contest.
Edwards, who will speak from 1
DIRECTOR
Sport," a text book
The editors of THE PAPER
to 2:30p.m.
The 30-year-old six foot eight
have already chosen a new
name which will be
ADMINISTRATIVE
1+---1 PERSONNEl
revealed
towards the end of
VICE PRES
the year. The lucky
Evergreener who sends in
the correct new name that
PLACEMENT REQUIRES COMPLETION r - - AUXILIARY
matches the one we have
OF CURRENT STUDIES:
SERVICES
on file will win four pounds
Awards will be made on
More than 200 entries have
of banana skins, three dried
- MEDIA PRODUCTION
Writer's Day, May 6, beginning at
been submitted to the 1973 Carol
prunes,
and
a
yearly
DIRECTOR
OF
-COLLEGE RECREATION CENTER
7:30 p.m. in the Evergreen
and Herbert Fuller Poetry Award
subscription starting next
DEVELOPMENT
- RECREATIONAL ACTIVITIES
Library. Bluegrass and folk music
the
two
contest,
sponsored
by
year. Please get your entries
- RESIDENT ADVISING
will highlight the evening's
Olympia attorneys and The
into
our
office
(3502A)
- S & A BOARD & ACTIVITIES
Ewrgreen State College as part of presentations.
befCII'e May 23, 1973. Or
SECURITY
the Governor's Festival of the
CHIEF
C.U: (l06) 753-3997.
.....__
Arts.
John Singleton Copley is dead.

Harry Edwards
lectures here

Contest

College sponsors
poetry contest
• • •

~

==~~~--~~~~

PAGE 4

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

~Jf?(f

April 26, 1973

The Evergreen State College
Olympia, Washington 98505

Vol. l No.2

The Only form of lying which is
absolutely beyond reproach is April26,1973
lying for its own sake.
Oscar Wilde

THE PAPER is a newspaper published hebdomadally by the
Publications Board and the Evergreen community. Views expressed are
not necessarily those of the Evergreen State College administration, or
John Yak. THE PAPER is located on the third floor of the Daniel
Evans Library, room 3502 A. Phone: 753-3993.
Staff
Editor .......................................... Andy Ryan
Managing Editor ................................... Doug Ellis
Business Secretary .............................. Julie Burman
News Editors ....................... Stan Shore, Anne Hoffman
Feature Editors ................. Nina DeVoe, Charles H. Williams
Editorial Editor ..................... Knute Olsson H.G.S. Berger
Entertainment Editor ............................. Jill Fleming
Photographic Editors ...........Peter A. LeGrow, Michael B. Berger
Happerungs
.
Ed"t
. Hogan
a or ............................... Kevan

~

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I
I'

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I

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1

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Security
In the midst of budget cuts, staff reductions, and administrative
reorganization, it may seem out of place to call for an increase in one
department's budget, but THE PAPER is calling for just that. The
Security force on this campus needs more funds. The urgency of this
situation can best be felt when one considers that there is no Security
on campus between 3 a.m. and 6 a.m. During this time no one is
patrolling the campus and the Security office is unmanned.
Olympia police do not come out to the campus, since we are not
within the city limits, and the County Sheriff only has one officer
patrolling our area of Thurston County.
THE PAPER cannot help but think that allowing this slack in
security in the middle of the night may be an invitation to trouble.
Security's budget, along with most everyone else's, is up for review
now. We think it is urgent that they be given enough funds for 24-hour
patrol.

Guest editorial: smoking
I quit smoking cigarettes about five years ago. Quitting was a long
and difficult struggle and i won't go into all the bloody details. I'll just
say that it took a whole lot of determination and a moment of cosmic
awareness that i was murdering myself. So i quit. My mind and body
felt really good about quitting ...but i struggled to suppress any feelings
of selfrighteousness. I have no use for missionaries. I decided that if my
friends wanted to inhale tobacco smoke, then it was their right to do
so. If the people i was around in public places wanted to smoke, then it
was fine with me ... they could do whatever they wanted with their
bodies. But it didn't take me very long to figure out that when i was in
a closed area with people who were smoking, i inhaled a lot of tobacco
smoke. But i never said anything .. .i didn't want to inflict myself on
other people. I just quietly choked on the smoke and silently wished
that people would put out their cigarettes.
Somehow, i thought The Evergreen State College would be different.
I reasoned that seekers of truth and beauty would naturally be
considerate people Well, i was wrong. I found myself gagging on tobacco
smoke in seminars, workshops, lectures, meetings, movies ...even in the
elevators. It was particularly bad during the early days ot ye olde
budget crises ... so many meetings and so many nervous smokers. But i
never said anything ...didn't want to lay my trip on anybody.
But i've been reading a lot of news stories lately. Been reading about
research being done around the world on tobacco smoke and its effects
on human beings. One study quoted by Associated Press wire service
found that smoking cigarettes in a closed room soon results in a very
high concentration of nicotine and dust particles. So high a
concentration, in fact, that the nonsmoker inhales as much harmful
tobacco byproducts as a smoker inhales from four or five cigarettes.
Another study found that "smoke from an idling cigarette contains
almost twice the tar and nicotine of smoke inhaled while puffing on a
cigarette."
The Surgeon General of the United States has declared that exhaled
tobacco smoke can raise the carbon monoxide level in an enclosed area
to a harmful level. A Danish study goes on to say that the carbon
monoxide in tobacco smoke is even more harmful than the nicotine.
That study also indicates that women who smoke are more likely to
have premature or underweight babies ...and a higher number of
smoking women suffer from spontaneous abortions or stillbirths.
Presumably, the same applies to women who spend time in smoke-filled
rooms. Still another study found that smokers' children are ill more
(continued on pageS)

Oversight
To the Editor:
It is our feeling that we

should identify ourselves
before addressing the object
of our letter. We are those
persons who must accept the
credit, or responsibility for
"THE PAPER," printed for
the Evergreen Community in
its' year of realization. We
consider ourselves The Paper
Co-Operative.
As a co-operative our
reaction to the April 19,
1973, issue of "The Paper,"
printed in cooperation with
the newly conceived
publication board, was one
of relief-to finally know
that the bureaucratic deadlock
on a newspaper's acceptance
had ended. We encountered
some hesitation, however,
when we realized that what
we were reading was-"The
Paper, Volume 1, Number
1." We had already printed
volume 1, number 1 of "THE
PAPER." We must assume
that the newly organized
newspaper has felt that our
masthead was worthy to use

on their first publication. lt misrepresented them to the
is truly flattering to us: this reading public and therefore
symbol of their acceptance proved that the title of a
of our existence as The Paper recent book is quite true:
Co-Operative. It is our hope,
however, that the duplication
"Satan is Alive and Well
of the volume number of
on Planet Earth"
"THE PAPER" was merely
-Hal Lindsey*
an oversight,
Content that this issue will *available at your local bookbe considered, we wish to stand.
commend the efforts of
those willing to accept the
Barbara Maurer
current, somewhat
Office of Facilities Planning
restrictive, publication
procedures.
Harley "Cam" Musgrove
Christine M. Ness
Marvin Wayne Wright
Bruce Brockman
Kristy Ann Jehu

On Holly
To the Editor:

Key 73

"Holly Raps McCann"
gave us no insight into
exactly what Mr. Holly was
To the Editor:
not "delivering" which led to
The article appearing in him subsequently being fired,
the April 19, 1973, issue of though perhaps his hurtling
The Paper about Key 73 of petty personal insults
shows several things about spoke more clearly than any
the writer of same. He has explanation.
misinterpreted the goals of
Stephanie Gould Dambrot
the Key 73 movement,

April 26, 1973

Enigma
The Life of Alvin C. Karpaper, by
Theodore Richy, Nipthiz Press,
Floral Grove, 1973.$8.95.
I have long wanted to write
about Alvin C. Karpaper, the
enigmatic hero of "intersectional
literature" but even after reading
all of his 38 known works, I
found myself possessing little
more than a few grains of truth, a
few blurry images and
impressions of the man. I found
that. despite all my reading, I
knew little more about him than
a new-born baby.
His elusive enigmatic qualities
are, I suppose. what intrigued me,
so that I have found growing
within me a burning desire to
find out as much as I can about
the man and expose him to the
bulk of the modern world.
Unfortunately, despite my
search, I have come up, again,
with nothing tangible beyond his
name and reputation among the
few who are familiar with his
writing. Richy's book, though a
fine attempt to do the same thing
I have and am trying to do ,
reveals little more than is already
known . Thus, I find his book
unsatisfying.
f do not mean to use this
space to pour out my
frustrations, but rather to give
you an idea of what kind of
subject Richy and myself have
been trying to deal with: an
elusive genius whose very
existence has been questioned for
years, but whose work cannot be
questioned for his work does
indeed exist. The possibility has
been suggested that Karpaper is
some other modern writer ,
writing under a fkticious name. I
do not believe that this is so. for
the works arc uf such sensitivity
and beauty. and have gained such
praise, that any author would
gladly step forward , perhaps into
the arms of a Nobel prize. to lay
claim to the material.
Richy's book, while
unsatisfactory to a Karpaperite
like myself, would no doubt be
of interest to those who would
like to catch up on all the known
information about this man. The
book contains a one page
biography consisting of all the
known facts about Karpaper
including his one alleged public
appearance at the Michigan
Writers Conference in 1965. It
also contains a complete
bibliography listing and
discussing all of Karpaper's 38
known works, and works about
Karpaper. There is also a 45 page
chapter on the search for
Karpaper, mentioning the work
of Richy, myself, and Dr. Lionel
Peterdorff of Carey College.
Perusal of this book is bound
to whet the appetite of anyone
who is interested in experimental
and "intersectional" literature of
the twentieth century, but this
may prove to be highly
frustrating. With many diligent
minds working on the Karpaper
mystery, we are bound to come
up with something .. .however we
may not, and if this is true, those
who choose to read this book and
whet their appetitites may be
damning themselves to a hell that
will be truly everlasting, and that
will take us to the world where,
in Karpaper's words, "the
homonids stalk their doom ... "*.
*from Karpaper's
Talk, a novel.

PAGE 5

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

Too Much

Knute Olsson H.G.S. Berger

Smoking

(from page 4)

knute o. berger

frequently than nonsmokers' children, usually because of respiratory
disease. Dr. Donald Dukelow of the A.M.A.'s department of education
stated a year ago: "It is becoming increasingly apparent that the
nonsmoker who must be present in the traditional 'smoke-filled room'
characteristic of many conferences and social gatherings has an
exposure to tobacco byproducts quite similar to the exposure of the
There are, of course, many
smoker."
difficulties with this plan, some
Well, i could go on and on will! facts and figures and quotes ... but
of which are: the evacuation of
. ' _......
.).:..>
what's the point? It must be pretty obvious to everyone by now that
westerners from the East, the
smoking is dangerous to nonsmokers. More and more, i have been
deportation of easterners to the
getting angry about having smoke exhaled in my face and angry about
East, the Texas question, and the
having idling cigarettes put to rest below my nose and angry about
arrangement of a neutral point
having the air in closed areas that i have to breath polluted against my
where families, split by the wall,
will. I have asked people in unventilated public areas around campus to
could meet on occasion. These
please not smoke cigarettes while i am there breathing the air. Smokers
may be discussed in a later article
usually honor my request for ten or fifteen minutes and then light up
entitled "Is California A West
again. It gets pretty frustrating.
Coast State?"
For a long time, i thought i was the only nonsmoker around who was
concerned about this problem. Other nonsmokers around me just
I believe that it would be
* * *
wrinkled their noses and quietly suffocated. But an article in the April entirely appropriate for the
8 Post Intelligencer made me realize that there is arising in this country citizens of the Western States to
The Daily Olympian showed
a new movement of oppressed people: Nonsmokers' Liberation construct a large, impenetrable excellent taste in its article
Movement. I quote the P-I: "Nonsmokers in the Seattle area, along with wall on the eastern shore of the concerning this years first issue of
like-minded persons elsewhere in the state and nation, are mounting a Mississippi River, from the The Paper. We accept the Daily
campaign to move the war on cigarettes into a new phase. No longer is Canadian boarder to the Gulf of Olympian's compliments and
the concern limited to the harm the miserable addict does to himself. Mexico. The purpose of this wall good wishes with the utmost
The new concern is about the harm the smoker does to nonsmokers. would be not only to begin the
humility and appreciation. We
The nonsmokers are circulating petitions, writing regulations. and process of breaking down the
hope they continue to display the
insight of which we now know
drafting laws. Moderates in the movement want separate areas for United States into more
smokers and nonsmokers in public places. Zealots in the movement manageable geographical areas,
they are capable, and that they
sound as if they are after a law that would render the use of tobacco a but to keep the easterners out of ' will continue to compliment us,
deservedly or not, like an
criminal act, except when performed by consenting adults behind the West, and secure the
closed doors." The article goes on to further describe the efforts of Mississippi River for swimming unerring machine. However, I
nonsmokers in the Seattle area to free their lungs. The petitions being and commerce for the westerners.
would like to make a small
clarification. The Daily
circulated around Seattle ask that nonsmokers not be forced to breath
Similar walls would have to be
smoke-filled air in public places. Action taken by the Seattle P.T.A. constructed elsewhere, along the
Olympian's article unfortunately
opposes all on-campus smoking at public schools. One of a number of Canadian and Mexican boarders
speculated as to the existence of
proposed new state laws would prevent "unwanted and unconsented so easterners, desirous of Knute Olsson H.G.S. Berger,
saying that the name was
exposure to tobacco smoke" in any "enclosed public facility" in the attaining the full advantages of
stateofWashington.Probablythestrongestwordingofsuchproposed the West would be unable to
"probably an elaborate
state laws is to be found in a House Bill sponsored by State circumvent the wall. It would
pseudonym". I would like to
Representative Georgette Valley, a Democrat from King County. That also be advisable to close the
assure the Daily Olympian that,
bill spells it out this way: "The smoking or possessing of smoking cigar, Panama Canal so that any attempt
being what I am, I do indeed
exist, my name being uncommon
cigarette or pipe in any enclosed public facility .. .is prohibited, unless all to inftltrate by sea would be
and of Nordic derivation and that
persons present within the room or enclosure have been consulted and made more difficult-the only
have consented to such smoking." The April II P-I carries a story about way being the Cape Horn route
I do not take their speculation as
the California "1973 Nonsmokers Bill of Rights" that won unanimous which would prove costly, long,
an ethnic slur since I am mostly
Scotish. Apoligies are not
approval from a California Assembly committee. That bill makes it a and arduous . Those who might be
misdemeanor to fail to set a~s~id~tt~n~o~n~s~w~ek~in~H~~~~~~~IMIIMI.,....~-~--11(111~~-~~--~..,.~~-!Jiiil·liii··~···I..IIII!!I!!!!.J
hospitals , theatres and public meeting places in enclosed facilities.
the Panama would no doubt be
"elaborate pseudonym" to the
So it seems that people like myself who are sick and tired of dispatched by Central American
host of other things I have been
breathing other peoples tobacco smoke are organizing themselves and revolutionaries, or malaria.
called.
taking some positive actions. A good starting point for some positive
actions at TESC would probably be a petition. If a large number of
people from the Evergreen Community sign a petition asking that we
not be forced to breath air polluted by tobacco smoke without our
consent. then there's a good chance that some progress can be made in
BY STEVE ICE
saving our' lungs. If a petition doesn't stop the pollution ... then on to
"What's your opinion of the administration's handling of
some more forceful action.
reorganization?"
There are petitions being circulated on The Evergreen State College
campus now. You will find copies at the campus information center, at
PETER PUGH: "I think reorganization is being handled properly
the KAOS studios and in the dorms. Anyone wishing to help gather
now, although it was not so in the past. I wish the administration had
signatures, please contact me at the KAOS studios. Please sign your
seen fit to ask for other people's advice prior to being forced into doing
name and express yourself.
so. Nonetheless, I feel that to continue talking about it now would be
Oh, and if you want to express yourself the next time that person
continuing to kick a dead horse. The way it's being handled now is as
next to you lights a cigarette ...PLEASE DO. I'm sure there are many
adequate as any."
people who are interested to know how you feel.
WILL HUMPHREYS : "The reorganization will make Evergreen a
tighter ship, and that's both good and bad. The secrecy and rumors
michael hall
have been very depressing. I haven't known-and still don't
know- whom to say 'sorry' and 'thanks' to. But then, maybe at
Evergreen you're not supposed to express those feelings openly."
CHRIS McCAULEY, student: "Seemed like The Paper was pretty
down on it and I suppose that's where I've gotten most of my
impressions as to what's going on. Seems like it's been fairly secretive. I
don't know whether it's just normal administrative red tape or what..."
NAOMI GREENHUT: "They had campus-wide meetings on it. I
must mark up its prices by an
don't
think that there was much input from anybody about it. The
average 25 per cent to insure
D'espite a campus-wide
decisions
were pretty much made by McCann."
monopoly on grocery sales and a itself against a loss. This
HERBERT
SCHMIDLABT: "It's a bit of a sticky wicket I'm afraid.
$2,600 annual rent subsidy from compares with a mark-up of
Seems
to
have
released a rather wide-spread phase of paranoia, you ·
the college, the Evergreen approximately 18 per cent at
know."
delicatessen has been unable to
Ralph's. At present prices the
DOUG KAHN: "Yes, reorganization. I-oh, oh, I seem to have lost
provide an adequate service or to
Deli returns an average profit of
it.
"Reorganization ..Hmmmm. R-E-0-R-G and then there is
return an acceptable profit. The
$50 per week which, says
A-N-1-S-A and T-I-0-N .. .Mmmm.
store features a severely limited McCarty, is not sufficient to
"I can't, I think I've lost it. Got lost somewhere in that damn
selection at prices which average justify the capital and labor Saga
reorganization
shuffle."
23 per cent higher than Ralph's
invests in the store.
HOFFMAN:
"I hear a lot of hearsay, and most people seem
MARY
Thriftway. As a result most
Perhaps the college should
to think that it hasn't been handled properly, but I don't have enough
Evergreen and ASH residents do
reconsider the service return it
first-hand information. I haven't talked to Charlie ..."
their major grocery shopping at
receives in exchange for the

East - West

~\
)

RltP

david ettinQer

The SAGA saga

one of the downtown
supermarkets.
According to Craig McCarty,
who manages the Deli for Saga
Food Services, the high prices are
caused by low sales, not vice
versa. The low sales level
(approximately $100 per day)
means that Saga must buy in
relatively small quantities at high
· prices. It also means that Saga

$2,600 worth of free overhead it
gives the Deli. McCarty readily
admits that Saga's major interest,
capital, and energy is in the meal
service . Saga's sole concern in the
delicatessen has been to avoid a
large loss until it re-negotiates its
contract with the college this
summer. At that time it will ask
penrusston to give up the store
operation. It will base this

...................................~

request on the store's financial
failure, a failure which Saga has
made no serious effort to avoid.
According to McCarty, the
Deli will no longer be open on
Saturdays, starting April 28.
It has been the college's
position that a campus grocery
service is both viable and

necessary , With 500 students
HVlng on campus and in ASJ-1
there is no reason why a quality
service cannot be provided at
competitive prices. If Saga will
not provide this service it should
be asked to give up its food
service monopoly and let a more
interested group operctte the
store.

PAGE 6

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

April 26, 1973

Barry: n1an of n1any roles
By BILL CAMPBELL
In the five years David G.
Barry has been associated with
Evergreen. his activities have been
managed by a personal and
professional creed: "the
relationship between the campus
and the society will expand and
grow in complexity, and we must
prepare to enter into these new
relationships."'
For Barry this has been
manifest through roles as the first
vice president and provost
charged with recruiting deans and
faculty, as a liaison between the
legislature and the school, and,
more recently, in a state-wide
capacity as Chairman of the
Washington Commission of the
Humanities.
In the wake of the 43rd
session of the Washington
Legislature, Dr. Barry's most
recent services may best be
understood in considering his
task as the school's legislative
liaison during that session. In
recent interviews with legislators
it was more apparent that
Evergreen is not "the diamond in
the palm.'' As one legislator
stated, "Politicians direct
attention to anything that is
unusual and politically weak.
Higher education is politically
weak; Evergreen is highly
unusual." Said Dr. Barry, "The
task was to respond with more
accurate descriptions of campus
programs and to provide firm
data on the nature of our
program, our budget requests,
our accreditation status, and the
ready transferability of Evergreen
credits to other institutions."
Many legislators were also
concerned with the "product" of
Evergreen as regard to it's image.
One noted that, "As students
leave the college (TESC) and take
positions in business, industry
and government, this will build

the image." Dr. Barry referred to
Evergreen's Cooperative
Education and intern programs as
providing this sort of experience
and already displaying successful
results." He said that, "More
importantly, Evergreen's
philosophy of interdisciplinary
education provides students with
the skills necessary to handle the
specific tasks of society today
with a more than peripheral
understanding."
In referring to his participation
in education in an administrative
capacity, he said, "It is the
responsibility of administrators
to show the public the
importance of the balance of
science and humanities today

Health fair
scheduled

DAVE BARRY

and, for Evergreen, how our
programs are adapting themselves
to that balance."
His new undertaking, The
Washington Commission for the
Humanities, remains consistent
with his activities at Evergreen in
that its theme is Education:
Changing Perspectives and its

Baldwin receives fellowship
(from page 1)
in the Governor's office,
concentrating on progress of bills
through the legislature.
This summer the Vancouver
student will conduct research on
innovative education as a staff
member for the Washington
Council on Higher Education.
Interviewing along with 40
other finalists for the 20 New
York fellowships was "really a
fascinating experience," for the
2 I -year-old graduate of Columbia
River High School.
"I've never been to the East
coast before, much less to New
York," she said. "I met a lot of
the applicants and was
tremendously impressed with
them. I didn't think I had a
chance." She said many of the
applicants were from Ivy League
schools, some from graduate
schools and "one even had his
doctorate."
Challenged during her
interview to explain the relevancy
of her studies in Washington to
the problems of the nation's
largest city, Baldwin said, "My
aim in government work has
' always been to be a people
advocate. I told the interviewing
committee that, while the size of
the cities may be different,
Jltople problems are pretty
universal and I've had quite a bit
,,f ~XJltrience in handling them."
Th~ $4.000 fellowship will

target is the out-of-school, adult
public. The commissions (there
are now 40 across the U S.) focus
on themes significant to each
state's needs and review projects
which probe specific social
problems. They also serve as
vehicles for funding through their
parent, The National Endowment
for the Humanities.
Although Dr. Barry will leave
his post as vice president on June
30th due to enrollment drops and
accompanying reduction of
funds, as Chairman of the
Washington Commission he will
continue to relay to the public
the relationship it holds with
education and how schools like
Evergreen can meet specific
needs.

cover living expenses for her
nine-month stay, but Baldwin,
one of four children of Marion
Baldwin of Vancouver, says, "I've
still got to raise tuition from
some place." Two of her siblings
are also attending college - a
brother at Evergreen and a sister
at the University of Washington.
Her youngest brother is in junior
high school in Vancouver.
Planning to graduate next
June, Baldwin has set her sights
on government work. ••t want to
help people interface with
government and deal with its
complexities," she said. "People
need help not only in working
with the laws, but with the
myriad of governmental agencies
as well."
Baldwin will not be alone in
New York. Five other students
from the Cooper Point campus
are completing internships there
now: Kathie Budd ofVancouver,
John Colson of Olympia and Paul
Rabin of Olympia are working at
the Rational Psycho Therapy
Institute; Leslie Smith of
Bellevue is interning with the
New York Urban Corp., and
Raymond Turner of Lynwood,
California is studying at the New
LaFayette Theater in Harlem.
Five more Evergreen students,
who have not yet been selected,
will be studying in New York
next fall.

Sickle cell anemia test,
immunizations for communicable
diseases, venereal disease checks,
dental examinations, blood
pressure test, hearing tests, and
simple blood tests will be among
the free services to be provided
by the Thurston-Mason County
Mobile Health Unit as it
highlights a May Day ..health
fair" jointly sponsored by Health
Services and the College
Recreation Center.
The Mobile Health Unit will be
among more than 20
organizations to be
headquartered in the two main
foyers of the Library from 9 a.m.
to 7 p.m. for the fair.
Agencies planning to
participate include The Arthritis
Foundation, Thurston-Mason
County Blood Bank, Group
Health, Social and Health
Services, Community Mental
Health Clinic, Beltone Hearing
Aid Center, Olympia
Mountaineers, and the YWCA
Displays, films, and
demonstrations including
exhibit .of the Tumwater rescue
truck and the McLane Fire
Department will be given
throughout the day to acquaint
students and the area residents
with the wide variety of facilities
and services available to them.

Deli closed
Saturdays
Closure of the campus'
Delicatessen seems eminent for
April 28, and every Saturday
from now until the end of the
quarter. Students are urged to
buy needed foods on Fridays.
When asked why the store is
being closed Craig McCarty, head
of the Saga Food Service on
campus, said "we need to bring in
$60 every Saturday just to break
even and so far we average
around $25 ." He says that to
keep the Deli open is just not
worthwhile, not to mention
unprofitable. Therefore, weekend
shoppers take note-no food on
Saturdays.

The longest sermon on record
was delivered by Clinton Locy of
West Richland, Wash. in Feb.
1955, and lasted 48 hours, 18
minutes.

ED KORMONDY briefs Bill Aldridge during faculty evaluation
(P h o t o by Herger)

Evaluations
(from page 1)
process is like. A few excerpts
from that exchange follow:
ALDRIDGE: "Personally, the
subjects I teach to the students
are not the major importance,
but rather, how to function,
basically. I serve as a resource in
educational psychology."
KORMONDY: "More of your
personal interests are reflected in
your portfolio."
ALDRIDGE : "I agree. I could
gather the intellectual material."

KORMONDY: "True
although now your portfolio i
not complete ...once the learnin
situation is established
teach! ...In what directions woul
you like to see Evergreen grow?'
ALDRIDGE: "There's creativ
possibilities in coordinate
stu dies we haven't eve
scratched ... Evergreen is no
tradition-bound yet but we're
closer than we were sixtee
months ago."

Financial aid .

• •

BEOG vs. SEOG
By BILL FREEBURG

Would you trust your college
education to Richard Nixon?
Well, you may not have a choice.
Congress appropriated $872
million dollars for college loan
programs April 18, although
President Nixon now has the
choice to veto or impound the
funds. The programs, which were
allocated against Nixon's wishes,
are the Basic Educational
Opportunity Grant (BEOG), the
Supplimentary Educational
Opportunity Grant (SEOG), and
a reconstruction of the National
Defense Student Loan to the
National Direct Student Loan
(NDSL).
As it stands Congress divided
the money like this:
$122,100,000 for BEOG,
$2 I 0,300,000 for SEOG,
$270,200,000 for College Work
Study Program (CWSP) and
$269,400,000 for the NDSL
program.
BEOG applications all go to a
central federal office. It is this
program alone that Nixon
wanted This central office,
according to Director of
Financial Aid Les Eldridge, will
not allow for regional differences
in the cost of living. It will also
expect a larger contribution from
independent students and greater
parental contribution from
dependents.
The SEOG approved by
Congress works differently in
that funds are allocated by the
state to the individual schools.
The financial aid officers would
then take responsibility for
distribution of money according
to the students need.
The NDSL allows for more
flexibility. It is allocated by the
individual college, has a
processing time of three days and
has an interest rate of 3 per cent.
Had the S872 million dollars
been distributed according to
Nixon's wishes, the NDSL would

be discontinued and the BEOG
would replace the SEOG dividing
the money into B.e.Q.G
'CWSP

MONEY FLIES- Les
Eldridge, director of financial aid
and placement, illustrates
uncertainty of the future of
federal grants and loans for
students. (Photo courtesy

Western Sun).

April 26, 1973

PAGE 7

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

What's new at the Bijou
''There's going to be peace and
I don't care who I have to kill to
get it," says Judge Roy Bean in
THE LIFE AND TIMES OF
JUDGE ROY BEAN . This is the
premise of a comedy-western
where every other new character
is hung.
Aside from the frequent and
vivid hangings, this movie with
Paul Newman in the title role, is
quite entertaining. But that is
about all it is. It smacks of

sentimentality and is too drawn disappointing.
out. The part found most
Parts of the movie are
touching is when a pet grizzly incongruous to each other. When
bear dies.
While "The Life and Times of Newman, pet bear and girlfriend
have a picnic under the old
Judge Roy Bean" has an all-star
cast (including Tab Hunter, Stacy sycamore tree, with Andy
Keach, Roddy McDowell, Williams singing about molasses
and marshmallows in the
Jacqueline Bisset, and Ava
.
. .
.
.
background, tt is hard to believe
Gard~er) tt ts ~ ordmary movte .• it is the same movie that opened
Nothmg m~kes It stand out from with Newman shooting 13
other movtes of the same genre. 1people
John Huston's direction is
''Th.e
Utie an d T"tmes ofJ u dge
·
Roy Bean" is little more than
simple entertainment, but it does
do that well. It is currently
playing at the Olympic theater in
Olympia through Saturday.
Playing with the Judge is
INNOCENT BYSTANDERS. It is
an average spy thriller concerning
a "hot Soviet agronomist" and
the three parties after him. It is
comprised of a lot of novel forms
of violence, excellent on-location
photography, and an average
quality plot.
The most interesting part is
Spy Number One's sexual
problems, caused by an electric
shock machine. These are of
course overcome by a sweet
young spy. Other than an
exceptionally corny ending,
"Innocent Bystanders" makes for
GORDON BECK
good viewing.
Jill Fleming

Beck stages film series
By JENNIFER BLOMGREN

PANTOMIME came to TESC Monday in the person of Stanley
Sherman, Portland mime artist. His versatility of expression, shown
above, was most effectively used to portray alienation. His talents were
appreciated by all, especially the children as illustrated below by the
youngster's rapt expression. (Photo by Herger).

by HLL FLEMING
Entertainment offerings are
numerous this weekend in both
the cinema and concert worlds.
Tonight, a Fellini film, I
VITELLONI, plays as part of the
Cinemarchives series in Lecture
Hall one at 7:30.
The Friday night series
features COCOANUTS and THE
BIG STORE, both Marx brothers
comedies. This is a welcome
change from last week's kinky
Chafed Elbows. Shows are at 7
and 10 p.m. in Lecture Hall one.
!n Olympia, the THE LIFE
AND TIMES OF JUDGE ROY
BEAN and INNOCENT
BYSTANDERS (both reviewed
on this page) fmish their run at
the Olympic, phone 357-3422.
Also in town is AVANTI which
made Rex Reed's ten worst
movies list last year and PUlP,
both at the State, 3574010.
In Concert
Tomorrow night in Seattle
KENNY LOGGINS and JIM
MESSINA are in concert at Hec
Edmundsen pavilion. Appearing
with them is the J. GEILS
BAND. Tickets are $5 the day of

the show.
SHA NA NA and GENTLE
GIANT also piay tomorrow at 8
at Paramount Northwest in
Seattle. Tickets can be obtained
at The Music Bar for $4 in
advance.
Monday,May 7, the
GRATEFUL DEAD and the
NEW RIDERS OF THE PURPLE.
SAGE play at the Seattle Center
Arena. The show starts at 7 p.m.
and tickets are $5 in advance.
Evergreen ticket-holders for
the Dead concert are meeting at
4:30, May 7, in the library loop
to organize carpools.
A three-hour festival, will be
presented on "In Concert" on the
late-night "ABC Wide World of
Entertainment" series Friday
night from 11:30 p.m. to 2:30
a.m. over KOMO-TV, Channel 4,
Seattle.
Alice Cooper, the Allman
Brothers Band, Blood, Sweat and
Tears, Curtis Mayfield, Seals and
Crofts, Poco, and Bo Diddley will
star in this special program which
spans the musical idiom from
hard rock to the softer music in
the country and western style.

The Cinemarchives film series,
shown on Thursday evenings in
Lecture Hall 1, has been available
to both the Evergreen
Community and the public. The
films, rented for the series, are
funded as a direct option from
the Image and Idea program. or
are taken from Gordon Beck's
personal collection.
The fllms are an integral part
of the work of the group contract
led by Beck besides being shown
to the public.
Aside from a few outstanding
foreign classics, the major focus
has been on American fllms .
Beck, who runs the series, says:
"Since I 945, American films
have had very little creative vigor.
Only in the last ten years has
there been a renaissance in the
fllm making industry and an
increase in artistic vigor."
Among the ftlms being shown
in April and May are I Vitelloni,
directed by Fellini, Ordet,
directed by Dreyer, and Vivre Sa
Vie, directed by Godard. These
ftlms will be shown April 26, May
3, and May 10, respectively.
Cinema next year
Since a coordinated studies
program as intensively directed
towards the media as Image and
Idea will not exist next year,
some of the planned programs
will offer instruction in the skills
of photography and ftlmmaking.
Next year Beck will be in Rome
until just before Christmas, with
a group of students who will be
studying cinema at the State
Institute for Cinema and TV
there. They will return in June.
Meanwhile, during the Winter
and Spring quarters, Beck will be
offering two modules on the
History of Cinema. The one
scheduled for winter is open to as
many as 300 students. Its title is
History of American Cinema. The
focus will be on American ftlms
between the wars. Lectures, films
and books will be included in the
material.
Beck is now on a DTF charged
with selecting films for
campus-wide showing next year.
In order to save money, the ftlms
will be paid for from general
funds rather than having separate
programs order and pay for one
ftlm several times. Films cannot
be purchased unless they have
passed into public domain.

Public image examined in Symposium
"Our Public Image" is the
theme of the May issue of
EVERGREEN SYMPOSIUM.
This issue includes articles by
President Charles McCann,
Director of Information Services
Dick Nichols, student Janet
Detering and student Gregory
Renault, who has composed a

rejoinder to several essays
contained in the April
Symposium.
Copies will be for sale for $1 at
the Library Circulation desk and
at the Bookstore beginning May
I . The editors report that a
subscription campaign has been
renewed. Four issues (March,

April, May and June) may be
purchased for $3 at either of the
above mentioned places.
The editors remind potential
contributors that the subject for
the June issue is "Alienation."
Articles may be sent to Editors,
Evergreen Symposium, TESC.
The dealine for submitting
articles is May I 5.

Birds of Fire
Mahavishnu Orchestra
,Columbia KC 31996
John McLaughlin is fast becoming known as the best guitarist in the
jazz, rock, electronic musical regions, presently being explored by such
groups as Pink Floyd and Emerson, Lake and Palmer. McLaughlin has
devoted his musical life to his spiritual guru Sri Chinmoy. He began this
with his album "The Inner Mounting Flame," the first album for the
Mahavishnu Orchestra.
Mabavishnu unified
With "Birds of Fire,'' Mahavishnu has come together as a band. No
longer are they just five very fine musicians - as they were on their first
album - but they have become the tightest band I have heard in years.
The foundation of the band is the fme inventive drumming of Billy
Cobham and the solid driving bass of Rick Laird. Added to that is
M~Laughlin's astounding guitar work, the dynamic organ and moog
skills of Jan Hammer and the exciting violin talent of Jerry Goodman.
The Mahavis~u sound is one of changing dynamics and driving
rhythms, laced With the quick improvisational skills of the orchestra.
Th~ album .begins with a soft gong and a quiet twelve-string guitar, but
q.ut~kly buil~s up to the high register riffs of the guitar, piano and
VIOim, weavtng their way through the rhythm set by the drums and
bass.
Five equally talented musicians
The M~avishnu Orchestra is not a showy rock and roll band. They
are. all senous y~t modest musicians. I had the pleasure of hearing and
see~g McLaughlin and company at Winterland in San Francisco during
Spong break and their display of musical genius was astounding. They
are so good that at times it's hard to distinguish which musician is
playing what riff. They are five equally talented musicians. There is no
one member of the band far ahead of the others. They are an extremely
tight unit, with one of the best albums out so far this year.
Records reviewed, courtesty of the friendly folks at Rainy Day
Record Co., Westside Center.
Jim Carpenter

Ward exhibit:

Ceramics strong, skillful
Jill Ward, an Evergreen
student, whose sculpture,
photography, surni painting, and
ceramics, is currently showing in
t h e 1i b r a r y , d i s p 1a y s
diversifi~tion in her work, but
mastery m only one of her crafts.
Ward's ceramics show the
strength and skill that seems
la~~g in her sculptwe. an~ surni
pamting. The pottery ts stmple,
making the most of the natural
texture of the clay to achieve a
bold, earthy effect.
In a page of poetic
explanation, Ward states: "A
work of art is nature," and all of
her works point towards a

oneness with nature.
Unfortunately, the surni painting
and sculpture seem strained in
this connection. It is perhaps
ironic that in her attempt to get
closer to nature she has injured
herself, moving away from the
modes of expression most natural
to her. The "integration" of art
and nature which she is trying for
comes only when the medium
itself is so well mastered that the
artist can naturally create.
Jill Ward has done this with
her pottery, which is both strong
and simple.
- Stan Shore

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

PAGE 8

April 26, 1973

·'

Deadline for listings in the Happenings column is Friday at 4 p.m.
Submit your listings to the Information center or call 753-3625.

ARTWORK BY SANDY MAE

I

Friday night film series: Marx Brothers in "Coconuts" and ''The Big
Store", 7 and 9:30p.m., Lecture Hall1, no charge.

I

Services and Activities board meeting: 1 p.m., L 1221.
Photo Lab: 12-5 p.m., Building 211.
Zone system workshop: 4 p.m., Building 211.
Gay Rap group: 7:30p.m., L 3112.
Photo Lab: 12 . I 0 p.m., Building 211.
Jazz Ensemble rehearsal: 7 p.m., L 4004.
Go Players: 7:30p.m., L 3400 (Human Development lounge)
Transcendental Meditation introductory lecture: 4 p.m., L 3121.
Photo Lab: 1-6 p.m., Building 211.
ACLU membership meeting and salmon bake: 2-4 p.m., Evergreen
Shores Community Hall (on Black Lake). If planning to attend call
352-4266. $5 for adults, children under 12 free.

Meeting for those interested in forming a soccer club: 4 p.m., CRC
202.
Pottery Workshop: 7 · 10 p.m., Library basement, Messy Arts
Facility.
Equipment sale and swap: 2 p.m., Evergreen Outdoors Kiosk.
Sight Singing, open to everyone interested: 2:30p.m., L 4004.
Evergreen Recorder Consort, open playing session: 4 · 6 p.m., L

Folk Dancing: 7 p.m., CAB main floor.
Photo Lab: I-6 p.m., Building 2Il.

2I01 .
Visual Environment Board: 3:30p.m., fourth floor Library gallery.
Draft Counseling: 9 a.m. · 3 p.m., L 2104, call 3-3137 for
appointment.
Kung Fu: 6. 8 p.m., 3rd floor Library balcony. $10 per mon ~ '

{l

Aikido extending Ki to Seattle: 5:30p.m., Parking lot F. _
KAOS staff meeting: 12 noon, CAB 304.
Kung Fu: 6-8 p.m., 3rd floor Library balcony, $IO per month.

~

\'J
{,

11

I

1

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~\ ~-\.l .oil
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Fencing: 7 p.m., Olympia YMCA.
Pottery Workshop: 7-10 p.m., Library basement, Messy Arts
Facility.
Puppeteers Bob and Jennifer Williams will present their latest puppet
play, "The Serpent and the Throne of Light", at 8 p.m. in the Library
alcove. Sponsored by Eye-5.

Chamber Singers rehearsal: 3:30 · 5 p.m., L 4004.
Judo: 7:30p.m., Olympia YMCA.
Rugby practice: 6 p.m., Stevens field.

\

)

Karate: 6:30 ·8:30p.m., Multi-purpose room, CRC.
Photo Lab: 12 · 10 p.m., Building 211.
Cinemarchives Film Series: "Ordet" directed by Carl Theodore
Dreyer, 1955 (Danish).
Lunchtime fllm: "Venice, Past and Present" 12 noon, Lecture Hall

4.

Batik workshop: 2 p.m., Lab basement, $5 materials charge, sign up
in advance at Rec. office.

GI @ss i ~ i e c4 s

Space for the classifieds is donated free for student use.
PERSONALS
Two young ladies are needed for
two days to pose for an artist in a
photograph at thebeach and later
in a painting. If interested call
James Eichelberger, 456-3773.

May Day Festival on Red Square.
Health Services will sponsor a May Day health fair at the central
plaza and main floor Library, 9 a.m. · 7 p.m.
Recreation festival schedule of events:
I p.m.- Tug-o-war contest in the mud pit in front of the CAB.
· 2 p.m. - Frizbee Tournament in Red Square.

John Yak, please come home. We
love you ,
For Sale
1959 Ford Panel - New engine,
excellent mechanical condition.
$700, 753-9734. Ask for Arthur.

3 p.m.- Campus Parkway road running race.
3:30p.m.- Gunny Sack race (Sacks must be gunnies only).
Zone system workshop: 4 p.m., Building 211.
Chamber singers rehearsal: 3:30 · 5 p.m., L 4004.
Folk Dancing: 6 · 9 p.m., main floor CAB.
Judo: 7:30p.m., Olympia YMCA.

1964 Rambler American - Auto.
trans. - new head, good rubber,
low mileage, excellent
transportation. Best offer over
$330- 352-7020.

-------------------

Bible study: 7:30p.m., CAB I08.
Karate: 6:30.8:30 p.m.,Multi-purpose room, CRC.

Complete Stereo system: Sound
R-2500 tuner/amp, 2 Pioneer
speaker systems, Empire
turntable, 2 sets of headphones.
Best offer over $330 - Call

Photo Lab: 12 · 10 p.m., Building 211.

352-7020

Rugby practice: 6 p.m., Stevens field.
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