The Paper Volume 1, Number 5 (May 17, 1973)

Item

Title
Eng The Paper Volume 1, Number 5 (May 17, 1973)
Description
Eng Page 1: (photograph) repelling down the clock tower [Gov. Dan Evans];
Page 1: Evergreen State College Wounded Knee returnee interviewed;
Page 1: channel six unplugged, again;
Page 1: McCann debate aired;
Page 2: Art students get 'specialized' group contracts;
Page 2: Paper editor applications requested;
Page 2: Memorial fund established;
Page 3: Administration announces new faculty members;
Page 3: ESP projects reviewed at trustees meeting;
Page 3: Library DTF examining 1973-74 possibilities;
Page 3: Stepherson named Counseling Director;
Page 3: $800 grant awarded;
Page 4: Staff Credits;
Page 4: (cartoon) [channel six plugged and unplugged];
Page 4: information;
Page 4: Guest Editorial: White Racism;
Page 4: Letters: blessings;
Page 5: Forum: another fable for our times;
Page 5: Letters: smoking again;
Page 5: A dream come true?;
Page 5: Coming of the saucers;
Page 6: News briefs;
Page 6: Naturopathic methods examined;
Page 6: RAP LINE: Food Service;
Page 7: Books;
Page 7: Cinema;
Page 7: (photograph) struttin' - "a lifelike cock and balls";
Page 7: (photograph) batik with cheek - "pink lady";
Page 7: records;
Page 7: Letters: smoking;
Page 7: classifieds;
Page 8: Happenings
Identifier
Eng cpj0022.pdf
Creator
Eng Shore, Stan
Eng Praggastis
Eng Williams, Charles
Eng Prentice
Eng Judy
Eng Campbell, Bill
Eng Orwell, George
Eng Vail, Eldon
Eng Hall, Michael
Eng Guttman, Burton S.
Eng Berger, Knute O.
Eng Welti, Laura
Eng Freeburg, Bill
Eng Conley, Michael
Eng LeGrow
Eng Smithe, Charles
Contributor
Eng Ryan, Andy
Eng Ellis, Doug
Eng Hoffman, Anne
Eng Burman, Julie
Eng Shore, Stan
Eng Williams, Charles H.
Eng DeVoe, Nina
Eng Berger, Knute Olssen H.G.S
Eng Fleming, Jill
Eng LeGrow, Peter
Eng Herger, Michael B.
Eng Mae, Sandy
Eng Praggastis, John
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 The Evergreen State College
Eng Wounded Knee
Eng Pine Ridge
Eng Washington D.C.
Eng Seattle
Eng Pacific Northwest
Eng Dutch
Eng Norfolk State College
Eng , Virginia
Eng Galesburg, Illinoise
Eng Naperville, Illinoise
Eng Portland
Eng Cleveland Ohio
Eng New York
Eng Delaware
Eng Middle East
Eng Mt. Rainer
Subject
Eng Wounded Knee
Eng theatre
Eng Applications
Eng Administration
Eng Expermental Structure Program
Eng white racism
Eng Smoking
Eng Flying Saucer
Eng Dance
Eng Debate
Eng Memorial Fund Establishment
Eng The Evergreen State College Faculty
Eng Naturopathic methods
Eng Food Service
Eng Nathan, Rich
Eng Hunter, Sally
Eng Taylor, Nancy
Eng Kormondy, Edwardward J.
Eng Clabaugh, Dean E.
Eng Winkley, Ken
Eng Schillinger, Jerry
Eng Moss, John
Eng Smith, Perrin
Eng Sparks, Paul
Eng Williams, Kathy
Eng Coleman, Ron
Eng Burke, Gerald
Eng White, Sid
Eng Waste, Stephen
Eng Wiedemann, Al
Eng Herman, Steve
Eng Lilly, Sarah
Eng Gordon, Chuck
Eng Laurence, Benjamin T.
Eng Salkin, Ma
Eng Smith, Robyn
Eng Swift, Tamara
Eng Humphrey, Don
Eng Wilcox, Ruby
Eng Harding, Phillip
Eng Moats, Dick
Eng Norton, Gary
Eng Carstens, Dave
Eng McDonald, Lee
Eng Weston, Mike
Eng Moos, Jerry
Eng Norton
Eng Gary
Eng Brother Safidi
Eng Martin, S. R. (Sennie Rudolph), 1935-2016
Eng Meyers, Dave
Eng Pratt, Mel
Eng Williams, Charles
Eng Lee, Bruce
Eng Nixion, Richard
Eng Prentice, Judy
Eng Whitney, Mabel
Eng Wolfe, Cathy
Eng Berger, Knute
Eng Cody, Christine
Eng LaParade, Debbie
Eng Anderson, Seleste
Eng Rainy, Tom
Eng Nilsen, Paul
Eng Landry, Amelie
Eng Baker, Scott
Eng Harris, Kim
Eng Garner, Lynn
Eng Smithe, Charles
Eng Goldman, Karen
Eng Gowan, Ernie
Eng Gillis, Bonnie
Eng Burns, Pete
Eng Yak, John
Eng Ryan, Andy
Eng Ellis, Doug
Eng Burman, Julie
Eng Hoffman, Anne
Eng Shore, Stan
Eng DeVoe, Nina
Eng Williams, Charles H.
Eng Berger, Knute Olsen H.G.S.
Eng fleming, Jull
Eng LeGrow, Peter
Eng Herger, Michael B.
Eng Hogan, Kevin
Eng Leahy, Lester
Eng Martin, Don
Eng Wright, Marvin
Eng McCarty, Willard
Eng James, Jennifer
Eng Cavett, Dick
Eng Sampson, Tom
Eng Stern, Bernice
Eng Steinbeg, Larry
Eng Saul, Mike
Eng Hitchens, Dot
Eng Harter, Lucy
Eng Allen, Thomas
Eng Delany, Joan
Eng Bollinger, Steve
Eng Youngquist, Allen
Eng Kahan, Linda
Eng McLauren, Norman
Eng Zeffierlli, Franko
Eng Raushenberg, Christopher
Eng Dater, Judy
Eng Matur, Berry
Eng Wilson, B.
Eng Chan, donald
Eng Winden, Willim
Eng Winden, Joan
Eng Johnasen, Bernard
Eng Johnson, David
Eng Herger, MikePhillips, Kevin
Eng Wilder, Ainara
Eng Stoppard, Tom
Eng Meyers, Jim
Eng Esquivel, Cruz
Eng Phare, Darrell
Eng Hillaire, Mary
Eng Nelson, Mary
Eng Evans, Daniel J.iel J.
Eng Hauge, Russ
Eng Hauge, Jennifer
Eng Badgley, Jenne
Eng Albee, Edward
Eng Edwards, Harry
Eng Sattewhite, Owens
Eng MacLauren
Eng Winden, William
Eng Osborn, Kenneth
Eng Jarrett, Michael
Eng Kaos
Eng The Red Cross
Eng The Paper
Eng The Evergreen State College
Eng Bureau of Indian Affairs
Eng Komo Television
Eng The university of Washington
Eng Norfolk State College
Eng knox College, Boston College
Eng The University of Illinoise
Eng Northern Illinoise University
Eng North Centeral College
Eng Harvard Divinity School
Eng Reed College,Galesburg Symphony
Eng Oberlin College
Eng The university of Oregon
Eng Knox College
Eng Western Reserve university
Eng Brandeis University
Eng The National Science Foundation
Eng Baltimore Hotel
Eng Goodyear
Eng Washington Comunity College
Eng Wenatchee Valley College
Eng Bon Marche
Eng Frederick and Nelson
Eng South Puget Sound Veterinary Medical Association
Eng Delphi Valley Review
Eng Thurston County Humane Society
Eng Rainy Day Records
Eng Tacoma youth Symphony
Eng Chamber Singers
Eng Jazz Ensemble
Temporal Coverage
Eng 400BC../1973
Type
Eng text
Eng images
extracted text
Non-profit Organization

VOLUME I NUMBER 5

Ditness([oQ&urDisbom&jfollp
THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

Off Campus: 10 Cents

Olympia, Washington 98505
MAY 17, 1973

TESC Wounded Knee
returnee
By Stan Shore
Jim Castillo, an Evergreen
student of the Metizo Indian
tribe, just returned from
Wounded Knee, will participate
in a panel discussion of the
situation at 3 p m., May 22,
outside of the KAOS offices on
the third floor of the CAB.
"I had to sneak out of
Wounded Knee pretending that I
was a lawyer's assistant," he
explained to a PAPER reporter.
"They have federal indictments
out for 280 people who were
there during the seventy days."
There was a great deal of
shooting going on at the
Wounded Knee occupation, for
according to government
estimates eighteen thousand
rounds were fired at government
agents and 85,000 were returned .
Two Indians were killed,
according to the TESC
undergraduate, including one
special ex-green beret sniper.
"It's not important," Castillo
said, dismissing a question on the
number of federal agents killed.
"They haven't released full
statistics on it-and they were
pigs anyway ... "
Part of his criticism also
concerned the problem the media
presented. Although they were
large1y responsible for the wide
attention that the occupation
got, once the Indians were cut off
and the press couldn't get to
them some things started fouling
up, he said.
"The Red Cross came in by
helicopter one afternoon when
we were all hungry, they (federal
authorities) had roadblocked us
trying to starve us out," he
stated. "They served orange juice
and packed sandwiches to
everyone, then left again Later
they called a press conference
and told everybody how they had
been successful saving all the
Indians from starvation. And
Watergate killed us; all the
publicity that got. .."
Background

RAPPELLING DOWN THE CLOCK TOWER--Governor Dan Evans
practised last Tuesday afternoon for a ceremonious descent of the clock
tower. He was scheduled to perform the feat today at 11 a.m. as part
of the dedication of the Recreation Center. (Photo by Praggastis)

Originally the Wounded Knee
occupation was planned to get rid
of the Pine Ridge Regional
director, Dick Wilson, who,
among other grievances acording
to the TESC student, was
pursuing a policy of cluster
housing that was not truly
favored by the majority of the
reservation
Under Wilson's
policy cluster housing, "like the
mods," the Indians are grouped
closer together instead of being
given separate acreage.

interviewed

"He (Wilson) is doing this
because it's 'in' or something." he
said. "Also to be criticized are
Wilson's policies, those of the
Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA)
and those of the government
system in this country-they all
favor the half-breed.
This is the case, he explained,
because a full-blooded Indian is
only allowed to get loans through
the BIA for land and farming
materials, whereas the half-breeds
are allowed rights both as citizens

and as Indians-allowing them to
get normal bank loans.
This goal of getting rid of
Wilson changed, though, as the
people assembled began to realize
they could try to ask for more.
They therefore demanded a five
person panel of lawmakers come
from Washington D.C. to come
and discuss with them the 1868
treaty with the tribe. This was
successful, he admitted, and there
will be a meeting this next week
between representatives of the
(Continued on page 3)

Channel six
unplugged, again
By Charles Williams
The Evergreen Video
Exchange is defunct! The
closed-circuit television
broadcasting last Thursday under
a newly organized "coordinating
group" headed by faculty
member Sid White, dismantled
and returned its equipment to
Media LOan Tuesday.
Monday, in a letter to the
other three members of the
group, White withdrew his
sponsorship of broadcasts
planned for the remaining weeks
of the quarter.
White said, "I am doing this
because I have not had a reliable

McCann
debate
aired
By Stan Shore
At 7 :30 p.m. tomorrow,
KOMO television's VIEWPOINT
will feature a classic
confrontation between the
alternative educator and the
straight politician. The show was
taped Tuesday at KOMO's
studios with TESC President
Charles McCann and
Representative Ken Eikenberry
of the 36th district (in Seattle)
playing the lead parts. Art
McDonald, host of the show, was
acting as moderator.
The talk show unfolded like
some kind of formula
Establishment Counter Culture
lack of communication
presentation All the usual
questions about no grades,
(Continued on page 6)

group of people with whom to
work, and because I cannot, as a
matter of conscience, acredit
what I regard to be a last minute
disk jockey operation devoted

work. This is not what our
contract called for. This is not
what I regard to be significant
learning or creation."
White said that it was
unrealistic to believe that the
group could meet the
one-week-in-advance deadline, as
called for in the original contract, .
for screening materials for weeldy
broadcasts.
The other members of the
coordinating group, Max Salkin,
Terence Locke, and Tim Killeen
were totally surprised by White's
move. They were two days
behind schedule for this week's
broadcast when the notice came.
1In separate interviews on
Tuesday, Salkin and Locke
'objected to the content of
White's letter.
"The whole letter was bullshit,
said Salkin, "Sid just got burned
out on this, and quit.
He didn't look rationally at what
we were doing. I mean what can
you expect? We were catching up
with ourselves. I'm not looking at
this as our fault this time. It's a
cop out on Sid's part."
(Continued on page 2)

INSIDE
Opinion •..•.• 4,5
News Briefs ..... 6
Rap Line .......6
Entertainment ...7
Classifieds ...•...7
Happenings •.....8

.

PAGE 2

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

Arts students get

MAY 17, 1973

ecialized' group contracts

~----~~--~----------~

Group study contracts in
drama, music, dance and the
visual arts are being added to the
Fall quarter curriculum,
according to Academic Dean
Charles Teske. Faculty members
Ainara Wilder, Bud Johansen and
Robert Gottlieb will be available
for group contracts, as will one
new visual arts faculty member
not yet hired. Faculty member
Peggy Dickenson will offer
individual contracts.
The decision to offer
additional group contracts was
reached after "considerable
discussion," Teske said.
"Originally representatives of the
visual and performing arts met in
March and decided their efforts
for the 1973-74 academic year
should be concentrated in
Coordinated Studies programs,"
he explained. "We had so few
artists that they had been largely
absorbed by advanced and rather
highly specialized students, and
the artists themselves felt this
caused morale problems."
Other faculty members had
some questions about the

THE DYNAMICS OF DANCING- Vickie Kretchmar (upper) and Roxanne Schammel (lower) portray one
form of modern dance. Both Vickie and Roxanne are prospective students in the new Theatre and Dance
group contract beginning next fall. (Photo by Herger)

Paper Editor
applications
requested
Applications for editorship of
THE PAPER for the 1973-74
academjc

(From page 1)

transferability of credit, cost per
student and TESC's "freaky
hippy types," were asked.
Featured was a review of the UW
survey, subject of a recent Seattle
Post-In_telligencer article, which
covered transferability of credits
from alternative institutions like
Evergreen.
Host McDonald was obviously
in favor of TESC's academic
innovations and gave Eikenberry
a hard time. McCann whose slow
manner of speaking with
thoughtful pauses had caused
some administration sources to
worry privately that he would
not be able to come off well in a
TV talk show format, responded
quickly and with a precision that
McDonald later stated "made you
listen."

(From page 1)

In response to the question on
the UW survey, McCann stated,
"the study was a valid one insofar
as the UW student body was
concerned. They were tryin' to
find out if the university could go
to a credit/no credit or pass/fail
system more than they have. It
was an opinion survey with
questions along the lines of 'What
would you do iL?'
"There is one question," he
continued, "that said something
like 'what extent would you
accept credit from an innovative
institution, and it footnoted
Evergreen and Antioch."
That incompleteness McCann
concluded, and the fact that the
survey was taken before TESC
even graduated its first class is
enough to dismiss it as invalid for
evaluating TESC, He also lWured

the television audience and those
present that some sample student
credit files had been shown to
representatives of many graduate
schools and that they had been
optimistic about them.
McCann appeared a bit
nervous before and at the
beginning of the show, and he
explained off the air that he had
"never done this kind of thing
(TV) before" and that "it
requires a certain knack that you
get through practice ...and I
haven't had the practice."
After the show, while eating a
hot fudge sundae in Seattle near
the studio before driving back to
Olympia, a relieved McCann
mused to Dick Nichols, head of
College Relations, "it was so
short-1 didn't have time to get to
so many questions ...especially his
referral to Hippy freaky types ..."

Channel Six

Locke, who is not a member
of the Video Group Contract,
commented "I really don't
understand Sid, but at least he's
consistent. He screwed us twice
in a row. The first time, I said
Sid's got valuable points, so let's
try to do it his way. But then this
action right here just really
destroyed my faith in him. We
were really working hard, and
really working together. These
labels calling us 'unreliable,'
calling us a 'last minute disk
j oc key operation' ...That first
week we weren't able to perform

miracles. Our own productions
were to occur this week. If we
had been allowed another week,
I'm certain he would have been
happy."
"We're dealing with the simple
fact,'' said White in an interview
Tuesday, "that it requires much
more time for us to coordinate
our energies than we allowed
ourselves. Tapes have to be
screened for quality and content
because we're not in a position to
instantly broadcast anything:'
White pointed out that a

number of institutional issues
regarding accountability must be
clarified and resolved by the
Broadcasting DTF before a
campus television station can
resume operations again.
The Video Group Contract
remains intact for the duration of
the quarter. White plans to work
on a one-to-one basis with those
students ''who are actively
engaged in creative work, and
who are preparing for evaluation
in accordance with the conditions
of the contract."

year

have

been

requested by the Evergreen Board
of Publications. All interested
students are asked to submit a
complete application to Judy
Prentice, Publication Board
secretary, Library room 3114, by
5 p.m., May 23.
Applications should include: a
statement of the applicant's
editorial policy; a resume of the
applicant's experiences relevant
to the position and an
explanation of the applicant's
time commitments for the next
year, specifying any foreseeable
conflicts.
Persons interested in applying
for the editorship are invited to
attend a briefing session May 19,
at 2 p.m. in THE PAPER office,
room 3502 A, with editor Andy
Ryan and/or associate editor
Doug Ellis.
Applicants will be interviewed
the afternoon of May 24, by
members of the Board of
Publications. The board will meet
tomorrow at 3:30 p.m. in room
3121 of the Library Building to
determine the scope of the
interviews.
The editor, whose tenure will
begin with publication of the
second issue next fall, will be
announced in the May 31 issue of
THE PAPER.

*

*

*

*

*

*

strength of commitment to
inter-disciplinary studies. Besides,
there was no opportunity to
incorporate artistic concerns into
Coordinated Studies programs."
After next year's curriculum
was announced and faculty
assignments made, Teske said , "it
became increasingly clear that
there were many legitimate
claims for having artists assigned
to both coordinated studies
programs and advanced learning
contracts.
"As a result, we decided to fill
almost any "extra" positions
there might be available on next
year's faculty with artists," he
added. Recruitment for those
artists is now in the process, with
emphasis on visual arts, dance
and music.
"The artists who have been at
Evergreen will be assigned to
group contracts. The newcomers
may be assigned to Coordinated
Studies programs, even though it
means we have to ask those who
have already served on contracts
to do so again," Teske added .
Teske also noted that the new
group contracts are not formally
organized as yet and that
students who are interested in
enrolling in them "should be
aware that teamwork will be
encouraged among the artists
participating in the group
contracts-both faculty members
and students ,"

Memorial
fund
established
The Evergreen State College
Board of Trustees has established
a memorial loan fund in memory
of the late Donald Heard, a
faculty member who died in
1971.
Heard, a well-known Pacific
Northwest artist, joined the
Evergreen faculty in the summer
of 1971 and was killed in an
automobile accident that fall.
The loan fund has been
established in his memory
through contributions of family,
friends, students and colleagues.
Further donations to the loan
fund, which will provide .
emergency help for needy •
students, may be made through
the Controller's Office at
Evergreen.

John C . L. Deverson
discovered the carte-maloush. '

Plane engines will not work
below sea level, even in Death
Valley. Even so, the Dutch have
an air force.

DONALD HEARD, late faculty
member.

PAGE 3

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

MAY 17, 1973

Administration announces new faculty
By Judy Prentice
The administration has
announced the appointment of
three new members of the faculty
for the 1973-74 academic year.
Vice President and Provost
Edward J. Kormondy said the
three new faculty members are:
Linnea Pearson, an associate
professor of English at Norfolk
State College, Virginia; George E.
Dimitroff, an assistant professor
of mathematics at Knox College,
Galesburg, Illinois; and Edward
N. Reynolds, assistant professor
of psychology at Boston College.
Pearson holds both bachelor's
and master's degrees in English
from the University of Illinois.
She also holds a doctorate in
literature from Northern Illinois
University. The 34-year-old
professor has been a writer,
reporter, book reviewer, public
information officer, editorial
assistant for educational
television, and a public school
teacher. She has also taught at
Nothern Illinois University and
North Central College in
Naperville, Illinois.
On leave from Norfolk State
College, Pearson is currently a
post-doctoral fellow at the
Harvard Divinity School.

Meanwhile, contracts have
Dimitroff received a bachelor's
degree in mathematics from Reed been offered to three additional
College in Portland in 1960. He perso.ns, Academic Dean Oscar
earned his master's degree in Soule reported. Their areas of
mathematics from the University academic expertise are languages,
of Oregon in 1962, and a economics, business and public
doctorate from the U. of 0. in
1964. That same year, he joined
the faculty of Knox College as an
assistant professor. The
35-year-old professor is an oboist
for the Galesburg Symphony, has
as an alderman for the City of
Galesburg, and has an extensive
knowledge of Russian language.
Reynolds is a 1962 graduate
of Oberlin College, where he
earned a bachelor's degree in
Last Thursday the Board of
sociology and psychology. He has
Trustees was entertained visually
earned two master's degrees from
by a slide show which related the
Western Reserve University-one
progress of the Experimental
in psychology, the other in
Structure Program (ESP). Also on
psychiatac social work. He holds
the agenda were rulings on a
a doctorate in social psychology
Donald Heard Memorial Loan
from Western Reserve, and has
Fund, authorization of
served one year as a post-doctoral
administrative personnel to enter
research associate at Brandeis
into purchasing contracts, and
University.
modifications of policy on staff
A former assistant professor of
benefits. A suggestion by Thomas
sociology at Kent State
Dixon , a board member, for a
University, Reynolds, 34, has also
retreat to determine the exact
worked as a research associate in
role of an Evergreen trustee, was
Cleveland, Ohio; as a psychologist
also discussed.
for a VISTA Training Center, and
After a call to order by
as a psychology intern at a Chairperson Trueman L . Schmidt
veterans' hospital.
and the acceptance of last

two persons are leaving-Richard
Anderson and Francita Lampert.
Ida Daum will take a year's leave
of absence and Jose Arguelles will
While newcomers are joining _ take a two-quarter leave.
the faculty, Soule said that oniy

at Trustees meeting

1973-Z~ossibilities
Reorganization of the Library
staff and business priorities in the
wake of legislative budget cuts is
putting to practice one of the
avenues of governing
participation open to faculty,
staff and students. Commissioned
by Provost Ed Kormondy, new
decision-maker for Library
affairs, the Library DTF is
compiling a report on projected
policy priorities for the next two
years.
Directed by Rudy Martin , the
DTF has been revamping its long
list of Library business into a
concise and clear policy schedule
report to be on the Provost's desk
by June 1. At stake is how much
money will go into which
Library-directed services. Such
services include media loan and
repair , the set and model shop,
the acquisition, maintenance and
cataloging of materials, and the
Library staff itself.
According to Martin, the
necessities deal essentially with
"personnel and money. Because
of a limited amount of money,"
he said, "we want to be sure that
the most urgent and beneficial
business gets top priority." As
Andrea Matchette, Library staff
DTF member, said "We don't
want to acquire a large amount of
new material and then not have
the personnel or the money to
stock them. It's this that we are
planning against."
The advisory group hopes that
with this structure top priority
items will receive first and full
attention while second and third
priority business would be
attended to less frequently, but

administration . Soule said
recruitment is not yet complete
on additional_art faculty.

ESP proie(ts reviewed

Library DTF examining
BY BILL CAMPBELL

me~bers

adequately.
Also advising the Provost on
the priorities for channelink
funds are Dave Carnahan, acting
head of the Library, and Dorothy
Briscoe, chief of Library User
Services. These two groups are
only advisory and, according to

business manager; and Arnold
meeting's minutes, the slide show
began. The Experimental Koerksen, purchasing agent, by
Structure Program showing was the trustees. This ruling gives
presented by Gary Norton, a more administrative flexibility in
student participating in the' purchasing and lightens the load
experiment. The presentation by distributing the purchasing
explained the progress of the power to more administrators.
Semantical revisions of the
program throughout the 1972-73
General Policies and Procedures
academic year.
The ESP contract students document concerning staff
then gave verbal presentations on educational benefits were also
sewage, electrical power and approved pending further action
on the exact wording by the
weather recording devices.
The Donald Heard Memorial administration.
Later in the meeting Dixon
Loan Fund was reviewed and
approved by the Board of suggested that the trustees at
Trustees at the meeting. This Evergreen should go on a retreat.
action instated a $403.56 Dixon inferred that the retreat
donation for a student loan fund would help in determining the
in memory of the late faculty exact roles of an Evergreen
member. (see story, page 2)
trustee .
Authority for purchasing
Executive session followed to
contracts was given to Charles discuss personal problems
McCann, president; Dean concerning the board.
CIa b augh, administrative vice
The next meeting will be
president; Kenneth Winkley, tentatively set for June 7.

Martin, stated their re'port would
be at least "a germinal factor."
The DTF meets again this
Tuesday, at I :30 p.m. in the
southwest corner of the third
floor of the Library.

Stepherson named
Counseling director
Lemuel A. Stepherson,
director of counseling at The
Evergreen State College, will
rotate into the faculty next fall,
and Faculty Member LeRoi
Smith will assume directorship of
the Counseling Center.
''This action marks the first
time Evergreen faculty and staff
have rotated positions in quite
this way," Dean of Student
Services Larry Stenberg said.
"We've talked about doing this
for some time, but this
arrangement is unique," he
explained. "Stepherson will teach
for two years. Smith will serve as
director of counseling for the
first of his two years away from
the faculty. He will be assisted by
Lou-Ellen Peffer, currently
director of resident activities and
slated to become a staff
counselor in the fall. The second
year, Peffer will become director
of counseling and LeRoi will
assist her."
The Peffer-Smith team offers
counseling "a unique
combination of talents which will
really compliment each other,"
Stenberg added. _"Each of them
will have special desk assignments
through the entire two-year

period, but, for the most part,
they'll be changing roles each
year."

$800
grant
awarded
Bill Tomlinson, a second year
student at Evergreen, has been
awarded an $800.00 grant from
the National Science Foundation.
The grant will cover ten weeks of
intensive micro-biological
research at the University of
Washington, starting June 18.
Tomlinson, who is currently
involved in the Life on Earth
program, was one of five students
selected from the Science
departments of all the major
colleges and universities
throughout the Northwest.
When asked how he felt about
receiving the grant, Tomlinson
replied "Wow ..1 don't know
man .."

JUST BACK FROM WOUNDED KNEE--Metizon Indian Jim Castillo
recounts experience of Wounded Knee occupation. (Photo by Shore)

Wounded Knee
(From page 1)
Indians and those of the
government.
"We were recognized by a
number of countries as a separate
nation for those seventy days,"
he continued, "and their
knowledge of what we did and

the government's breaking of
treaties will put pressure on
Washington. It will put on record,
finally, what their attitude is
towards the treaties-before now
they have refused to acknowledge
them-so this is a big step."

PAGE 4

Vol.1 No. S

The Evergreen State CoUege
Olympia, Washington 98505

.
May 17, 1973

"War is peace - Freedom is
slavery - Ignorance is strength. "
George Orwell

I

CRAN~EU .· 6
~
Ptivate.

mE 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. mE PAPER is located on the third floor of the Daniel J.
Evans Library, room 3502 A. Phone: 753-3993 or 753-3997.
STAFF
Editor ............................ ; ............. Andy Ryan
Associate Editor ................................... Doug Ellis
Managing Editor ............................... Anne Hoffman
Business Secretary .............................. Julie Burman
News Editor ..................................... Stan Shore
Feature Editors ................. Nina DeVoe, Charles H. Williams
Editorial Editor ..................... Knute Olsson H.G.S. Berger
Entertainment Editor ............................. Jill Fleming
Photographic Editors ............. Peter LeGrow, Michael B. Herger
Graphics ........................... Sandy Mae, John Praggastis

Information
The TESC Information Center is in the midst of change.
Operated since its inception by Carol Costello, it will be
turned over to new student personnel this summer when she
is let go due to reorganization and budget cuts.
Also to change, according to Dick Nichols, head of College
Relations, is its location. Next year it will be located in a
kiosk in the Activities building, and it will have a reduced
number of functions.
We feel that as long as the Library DTF is still in session,
and the role of the Information Center is being actively
questioned by many administrators, consideration should be
given to shifting the Center from the authority of College
Relations to the Library. College Relations has shown that it
does a good job of publicity relations with the outside
community, but this is not always the same as impartial,
factual information distribution.
In fact, it seldom is. As long as the role of the Information
Center is being studied, we suggest its movement to a more
independent, unbiased department than the College
Relations.

Guest editorial:

White Racism
Some reactions to last issue's article on Harry Edwards,
guest sociologist of Ujamaa last week: aside from his name
calling, which I don't feel is worth discussing, there were a
number of points in the article that I responded to. Mr.
Edwards was reported as stating that "No whites are
non-racist. You have to recognize the limitations (i.e., racism)
whites are operating under."
If he meant that all whites are racist because of "White"
social conditioning, he's wrong. All whites (Caucasians) aren't
racist, for the same reasons that all whites haven't been
conditioned by "white". society to be Republician
war-mongers and facist-imperialists.
If he means whites are racist because of a predisposed
compulsion to the self, then all blacks must be racist too.
If he means racism as any action to place a value
judgement on differences (physical and otherwise), then
blacks would be as guilty as whites because they have egos.
And if he means racisim as making and believeing sweeping
and depersonalizing generalities about a group of people,
then he is racist by his very statement.
And, if his statement is true, then, as I explained above, it
is true for all blacks too. His omission of a point such as this
is implying the opposite, in a statement of the nature that he
made.
In any case, Mr. Edwards is himself guilty of overt racism,
or in this case, reverse racism, which is essentially reacting to
(Continued on page 6)

Blessings
To the Editor:
Just received my copy of
The Paper in the mail and I
thought I'd fire off some
reactions from the trenches.
I've been stranded on this
internship in the middle of
this God-forsaken desert for
the entire year and it's given
me a unique perspective on
the squabbles surrounding
Evergreen.
So what the hell are you
clowns up to? From this first
paper I've seen it looks as if
the Daniel J. Evans library
building is only a half a step
away from being fenced,
subdivided, and sandbagged
into at least seventeen
factions fighting the battle of
back-biting bureaucratese. I
mean the bouts with the
Legislature and the larger
community are at least
understandable but this
incredible internal bickering
must cease! Step back
people. I know that most of
the students and staff are
basically (bravo) psychic
rejects from the System but
those behavior patterns of
choosing up sides to save the
people should be out of place
at Evergreen.
President McCann looks as
if he's taken things into his

All this again brings
own hands a little too much
questions
to my feeble mind
regarding reorganization
(whatever the heU that about what Evergreen can, is
means) but it also appears and should be. On the one
that others in the community hand I'm sure Evergreen is
are so attuned to being
shafted that their reactions nothing but a residual burp
approach the proverbial left over from the stomach
troubles of the 60's but on
paranoid.
the other hand I want to
What I seem to be trying believe that the school is, or
to say is this - if I've leaned. at least can be, a place for
anything from this internship rediscovering and
in the "real world" it's that rededicating ourselves to life
we're all unbelievably lucky in the twentieth century.
Rather a grandiose delusion
to be involved in an I'm sure but I'm still
institution like Evergreen. So innocent enough to believe
count your blessings, it's possible.
children, and go back to
sleep. No, that's not it either.
One last bitch: Hey
Try this. Most of us came to community, help The Paper
Evergreen fighting personal staff out on this little
and public battles of our publication of ours. I hate to
own. If there's anything we see all those trees wasted just
have learned to do it's to so the college will have a
detect bullshit. Now, believe weekly bulletin. There are no
it or not, Evergreen happens rules saying that a newspaper
to be involved in a lot less cannot be literate so brush
bullshit than most places. out a few cobwebs and invest
But it seems as if we all need some time and/or writing.
It'll be worth it. There's
to find a right, left and
center and react to the world nothing better than a
in those terms. Quit newspaper that works.
Anybody write me and
name-calling, labeling and
generally screwing up, especially you, Jon Cruz.
people, and really get serious
about resolving your
differences. I'm not around
and I do not know exactly
what's going on but I do
know that not a goddain one
of you is Absolutely Right in
this thing.

Eldon Vail
Doolittle Drive
Moses Lake, Wash.

98837
(Continued on page 5)

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

MAY 17, 1973

PAGE 5

Another fable for our times
Once upon a time there was a
silly goose who lived with a lot of
other geese in a barnyard.· The
geese lived fairly happy lives,
even though there was never
enough grain to make them really
fat. Their major problem,
however, was with a number of
sly foxes who lived in the local
woods and tended to make life
hellish, as foxes are wont to do.
-one day the goose was
wandering around the barnyard,
pecking at odd grains of corn and
watching for foxes, when she
suddenly stopped and said to
herself, "What am I doing here? I
am an intelligent and noble
animal • who could be doing a
great deal for my people, but I
am simply wasting my life away.
The trouble is that I haven't
enough education. I need to go
away to a college where I can

learn how to get us more food
and keep us safe from foxes, so
we may take our proper place in
birddom. I will educate myself.
Then I will come back to the
barnyard and educate my people,
So the silly goose packed her
bag and set off for the nearest
bird college, a place run mostly
by seagulls which advertised that
it had something for everyone,
regardless of race, song, or
plumage. "I want to enroll," she
said to the Dean, who was a wise,
old herring gull." What programs
do you have to offer me?"
"Well," replied the Dean, "we
have had very few geese here and
I don't know what your interests
are. We have an excellent
curriculum in flock sociology and
mating psychology. If you are an
artist, we have some orioles who
are superb nest weavers. Perhaps

Letters
(From page 4)

Smoking again
To the Editor:
It is with some sadness
that I must report on the
progress of the Nonsmokers'
Petition drive. When my
editorial appeared in "THE
PAPER" and was aired on
KAOS, there were twenty
copies of our petition posted
on bulletin boards around
campus. The petition
requested that "before a
tobacco smoker lights up in
an enclosed public meeting
area on TESC, that he or she
ask the permission of the
other people in that enclosed
area." The petition also asks
that "this problem may be
dealt with in the spirit of
mutual consideration."
Remember the
smoke-fllled photograph in
the May 3, edition of "THE
PAPER"? Well, the mentality
exhibited by "THE PAPER"
staff in that picture seems to
be widespread on the
Evergreen campus. A

majority of the Nonsmokers'
Petitions were ripped off.
Some of those that were not
ripped off were defaced.
Profundities such as ·"sissy"
and "cry baby" were
scrawled over the names of
people who signed the
petition. So much for mutual
consideration.
The petitions that we
were able to salvage,
however, indicate strong
support. Due to the
vandalism, the exact number
of supporters can never be
determined. However, we
estimate that several hundred
members of the Evergreen
Community have now signed
the petition. Probably the
most gratifying aspect of the
whole thing was the couple
who told me that they quit
smoking cigarettes as a result
of the editorial and petition.
Petitions are still available
at the KAOS studios.
Interested people are urged
to gather signatures and
spread the word.
Michael Hall
(Continued on page 7)

knute o. berger ,
-~-

r: -.

you want sctence. we nave one of
the world's greatest experts in
aerodynamics of flight who is
· also a highly respected
philosopher and rock-climber. Do
those programs interest you?"
"Not at all," said the goose.
"You gulls and songbirds may
have time for intellectual frills,
but geese have never been
allowed the privileges you have,
and I want to help my people. I
want cours.es in egg counting and
fox-trap building and fence
mending. Most of all, I want to
learn how to run a barnyard and
do barnyard finances."
"Didn't you learn
egg-counting in chick school?"
asked the Dean.
"Barnyard schools are not
financed like gull schools,"
replied the goose sarcastically.
"But you are talking about

vocational education. Now if you
would study science you would
be able to invent new methods of
fighting foxes. If you would take
an eggonomics program, you
would not only learn the math
necessary for egg counting but
also principles you could apply to
practical affairs like barnyard
finances."
The goose ruffled her feathers
angrily. "Why can't you teach me
barnyard finances directly?"
"We don't teach heron
rookery management or swallow
colony finances, either," replied
the Dean, "but those birds are
very successful with the
education we give them."
"Yes," screamed the goose.
"Gull education, for living in a
pure, white, gull world!
Airy-fairy aerodynamics! Weaving
for middle-class snobs with

nothing better to do! Geese don't
want to be gulls, and we don't
want our education to be gull!"
And with a loud hiss and a great
display of feathers, she picked up
her bag and went back to the
barnyard.
Her friends were surprised to
see her. "What are you doing
back so soon?" they asked. "We
expected you to get an education
and bring back knowledge that
would help us."
"They don't want geese in
that college," said the goose.
"They are a bunch of racist
bigots and they have nothing to
offer us. We will have to find
some other way, some truly
goosey way." And with a sigh she
went back to pecking corn,
watching over her shoulder for
foxes. ·
BURTON S. GUTTMAN

david ettinger

A dream come true?

Dreams are fragile. We hide
them in our consciousness
because we dare not expose them
to the harshness of reality.
Occasionally, however, men are
brave enough to put forth their
dreams and try to create a new
reality. Evergreen falls into this
category.
The dream which was
proposed in Evergreen's initial
catalogue rejected many of the
values inherent in our modern
universities. It rejected
professional training as the
primary purpose of a college
education. It rejected the notion
that each discipline should be
studied in isolation from other
disciplines; and it rejected the
unquestioned transference of
"facts" from the professor to the
student. What all this "rejection"
amounted to was an attempt to
restore to the college its
traditional function as a critical
force capable of exposing
irrationality.

The dream was rational and
remains so, but it can only hope
to become actual with the full
commitment and creative energy
of the entire Evergreen
community. The irrationality of
modern society threatens to
crush us both from without and
within. The opposition from
without must be expected
because Evergreen is a new idea
which remains unproven. The
opposition from within is much
more deadly.
Evergreen students and faculty
are no less products of American
society than their counterparts at
the University of Washington.
The average student comes to
Evergreen from 12 years of
COMPULSORY education -the
average Evergreen professor
comes from the lecture halls of
America. To ask that the student
suddenly become responsible for
his own education and that the
faculty member become a
"co-learner" is to ask for a radical
transformation, but THIS IS
WHAT THE DREAM
DEMANDS.

Theoretical support for
interdisciplinary study, personal
responsibility, the seminar and
community is abundant, but I
fear that we are lacking the
essential commitment to make
these concepts work. Many
students avoid the problem
plagued co-ordinated studies
programs. Faculty members have
taken a new "hard line,"
assuming responsibility for
students who have been unwilling
to accept personal responsibility.
Poor seminars have become
acceptable, and anyone who
speaks of community is labeled a
utopian.
This is how dreams die; they
· are not defeated, but abandoned.
Too many of us expected to find
the dream ready made on arrival.
We are all anxious to walk into a
seminar with 15 well prepared,
critical and articulate co-learners;
to create such a situation is more
than we are sometimes willing to
do.
Dreams are fragile.

'\.
/

Coming of the saucers
I have always wanted to see a
Flying Saucer, which I define as
any UFO that remains
unidentified. When driving home
late at night or in ~:arly morning,
in the dark when the stars are
out, my eyes often leave the road
and I let them search the horizon
or the treetops in hopes that
some "radiant, disk-like object"
will come "shooting across the
sky faster than any plane or jet."

I hope that it may appear and
"hover over the road, causing the
car's electrical system to short
out." I even hope that I will wake
up, two days later, without
memory of anything after my
midnight drive, having a few
radiation bums and some peculiar
scars on my forearms, and a car
with "unusual markings on the
hood." As all hopes, mine appear
to be in vain.
I have had several scares,
though. My sister was once

terrified by the Goodyear blimp
as it floated silently over our
house one night about ten years
ago. Its lights were on and she
was in the mood to be terrified.
The same blimp scared me in the
same way some time after that. I
was in the mood also. Just a few
years ago, as I lay with a friend in
a field in Delaware, we observed a
blinking UFO that seemed far
overhead, but still within the
atmosphere, as it circled the sky
above us. Being Westerners, we

were not used to seeing fireflies.
Despite our momentary terror,
we were very disappointed.
The Flying Saucer craze is well
over, and it is only occasionally
that we hear anything about our
old 'friends-in-fear.' Our friends
are no longer newsworthy, or else
too easily explainable. Whereas
the man in 1958 was attacked by
several small, furry Martians
while walking along a wooded
trail, he is now attacked by a
band of roving dogs. Swamp gas

has replaced "glowing, metalic
saucers" and George Adamski
fades into obscurity.
It is not that I do not believe
that saucers are still there, for I
think they are, and it is not that I
don't believe I will see them one
day, for it is likely that I shall, it
is just that I am afraid that it will ·
be too easy for me to explain it
all away.

* * *
The Biltmore Hotel in New
York is horrible.

PAliE 6

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

MAY 17, 197'

Naturopathic methods examined
By Laura Welti
The "Happenings" sheet
distn"buted through the LJ"brary
Information Center will be
discontinued and the information
currendy being found on that
sheet will be on the back page of
THE PAPER until the end of the
quarter.

••

* *

Today is the last day for
submitting entries to the
Evergreen Art Show. Critic Jack
Byerley will be here tomorrow to
view the show.

* * ••

Evergreen booth locations at
the University Sidewalk Fair this
week-end will be between 15th
and University Avenue on 41st
Avenue (down past Arabesque).
Booth space is open to any
Evergreen student who wants to
sell at the Fair. Students who are
selling are asked to be at the
booths by 8:30a.m. on Saturday
morning. Contact Steve Bollinger
at 7 5 3-3 388 for more
information.

*

* *

People interested in studying
piano (where it's at NOW) with
Norman Durhee or versatile
guitar with Tom Maddox are
asked to contact Donna
McMasters in L 1501 as soon as
possible.

Poetry by Tom Graham,
student at Evergreen, will appear
in the next issue of MIRROW
NORTHWEST. The fourth issue
of the MIRROW NORTHWEST
creative arts magazine will be
ready for sale by June. New this
issue will be writings by
individuals who are not students
or instructors at Washington's
community colleges. This
innovation was made in order to
provide a magazine outlet on a
state-wide level. The cost of the
magazine is $1.50. It may be
purchased directly from
Wenatchee Valley College (please
include 25 cents for postage), or
from local and college bookstores
including University of
Washington Bookstore, Bon
Marche or Frederick and Nelson.

* •• *

Arrangements are being made
for people interested in
skydiving. For information
contact the Kiosk in the CAB.
The cost is $40 for lessons and
the first jump.

* * *

The Delphi Valley Review ll
will be available at the circulation
desk of the Library.

*

...

*

Interested in working with a
conductor and group of voices?
Reciting, chanting, poetry and
sounds in at least two parts, aU
rhythmically adlibbed, will be
part of the fun.
Rehearsals will be twice a week
for a concert at the end of May.
Contact Suzanne Grent at
753-3975 and leave your name
and number.

Interest must be shown to
determine whether a qualified
student could teach or a new
faculty member will be hired for
a lithography contract next year.
Art at Evergreen is under scrutiny
this quarter. The interest shown
this spring will determine the
extent of the art program
development next year. Students
interested in printmaking and
lithography are needed to
develop workshops for the last
few weeks in spring quarter and
summer quarter; Evergreen
presently has all the materials
necessary for lithography.
The process is quite involved
and a regular program situation
would be much more suitable
than workshops. Bill Richy from
the University of Washington
may be down in a couple of
weeks to do a workshop. There is
also the possibility that other
people will be down through the
summer to do workshops if there
is enough student interest.
Contact Steve Bollinger in the
CRC or call 753-3388 for
information. Sign up sheets can
be found in the Lab 2016.
Workshops will be offered in
three general areas - advanced,
intermediate and beginning.

*

*

*

A listing of films which are
being shown in various programs
can be found on "post number
2" in the Information Center.



South Puget Sound Veterinary
Medical Association, in
conjuction with Thurston County
Health Dept., will be presenting a
rabies clinic Saturday May 19 at
the Thurston County Humane
Society from 2 until 5 p.m. Do~
and cats may be vaccinated for
$2.50 per animal. This is a good
chance for aU you Evergreeners
to get medical attention for your
pets.

* ••

The Recreation Building, for
those who have not yet been
enticed enough to investigate this
domain, is operating noon - 8:30
p.m., Monday through Friday;
from 1 - 6:30 p.m., Saturdays;
and from 1 -6:30p.m. Sundays.
This schedule will be in effect
through June 8. The building will
be open during the summer
months but the schedule is yet to
be determined.
The facility, including
swimming pool, multi-purpose
room, exercise and weight
training areas, saunas and lockers,
was built primarily for campus
usage. It is also open to the
general public at a cost of 75
cents per person, per visit, which
includes access to aU facilities,
equipment, check-out, towel
services and swimming suits.
All facilities, except the
handball and paddlebaU courts,
may be made without reservation
between noon and 5 p.m., the '
day prior to anticipated use.
Week-end reservations must be
made only on Friday. Call
753-3388 for information and
reservations.

Around 400 B.C., toward the
end of the Golden Age of Greece,
a highly revered physician named
Hippocrates founded what has
been called the first logical
system of medicine, naturopathy .
Based on long, close observation
of the interaction of humans with
their environment, his methods
favored natural therapies such as
air, water and exercise to
overcome illness and maintain
health. Hippocrates told his
students, "Never do anything to
harm the patient."
Behind these deceptively
simple words lies wisdom still
relevant to modern students,
patients and physicians.
The naturopath departs from
allopathic practice by never
suppressing the symptoms. They
are evidence that the body is
putting forth an organized effort
to recover its normal balance of
energy Rather than subdue
symptoms with drugs that may
eventually hinder self repair, the
naturopath uses techniques that
encourage symptoms and
precipitate what is called the
"healing crisis."
The "healing crisis", in which
symptoms are carefully brought
to a head according to Dr. J
Hewlett-Parsons, "hastens the
elimination of toxins (and all
results of the disease process) .
from the system. It frees the
cells, blood, lymph, etc. from the
clogging effect of this
accumulation, and the new found
freedom ... speeds us the
elimination of impurities from
the system while new, wholesome
and constructive elements are
brought to help rebuild and

repair ..."
The naturopath must spend a
great deal of time educating and
explaining to the patient. Most
important, however, is to involve
the patient in his treatment
through activating his sense of
responsibility towards his own
health and eventually dissolving
his dependence on the doctor.
Naturopathy is more than a
system of medicine: it is an art of
natural living. All of the forces
within a person-physical, mental
and spiritual- must operate in
dynamic balance with each other
as well as with external sources of

.

energy. This is why a cure
only be affected by scrutinizin
and adjusting every facet o
living-eating and drinkin
breathing, bathing, working an
resting, social life, mental an~
sexual activity.
Cure in this sense irnplie
prevention. Another motto of th
Greeks, "Nothing in excess'
might, if truly observed, serve ru
a satisfactory definition o
naturopathy. It has to do wit
living harmoniously, bot
externally and internally, wi
natural law- This is the only re
naturopathy.

I I!

II ~@@@
.. ©®CFWD©@
BY BILL FREEBURG
"What do you think of the
food in the cafeteria?"
CHRIS ALTWEGG: "It's not
bad, overpriced, though. The
roast beefs not rare today, but
it's usually O.K., fair to middling.
They don't use union labor, or
union lettuce. . .so I think the
whole thing is a scab schmuck,
but other than that~t's not bad.
I'm in favor of food; you can
quote me on that."
DIANE BRENNAN: "It's
greasy and costs an awful lot."

Guest editorial

(From page 4)

hate with hate, a tragic re!lction which could take its toll
when charismatically instilled into_ already paranoid black
mind.
One wonders if Mr. Edwards is working for the
brotherhood of man, or is in the frame of mind that Malcolm
X was in before he went to the Middle East.
Later in the article, he was quoted as saying that
communication between blacks ·and whites is difficult
because "they're (whites) off on some women's liberation or
ecology trip while we're fighting for survival."
What does he think ecology is concerned with other than
survival? And as far as women's liberation goes, anyone that
proposes that women, a viable social group, are not oppressed
in much the same manner and degree as the blacks, is just
refusing to think.
Racial segregation isn't the only form of oppression, and
psychological violence can be just as demanding as physical
violence.
Mr. Edwards spoke about what he termed black
incompetence. He said, "We (blacks) have failed to
understand the things which influence our lives." Later in the
article he was reported as saying that, "This generation is no
more aware of the real problems than other generations."
Mr. Edwards is no exception, although he lets on as if he
is. What Mr. Edwards fail'l to comprehend is that he, a
member of the black culture, is dealing with white culture,
not Caucasians per se, but white culture-a neurotic, power
mad, facist-imperialist civilization, that has no concern for
nature, including man himself.
To fight a sick society on its own terms (racism, hate and
power) may work, you may gain "liberation", but at what
expense? In adapting "white" tactics and values, you'll wind
up in only one condition-WHITE. And where's that at?
I suggest Mr. Edwards have a chat with Darrell Phare, or at
least read the article on Mr. Phare below his own
advertisement in the last issue.
C.onleY

BETH HARRIS: "I only ea
here when I have company an
they pay for my lunch."
SUSAN HARRIS: "Good ol
institutional cooking."
JIM MEDFORD: "It's great
What else can you say?"
KIT PAGEL: "The only thing
good here is the fishwiches. I like
fishwiches."
DON SMI'fH: "I like the girls
I see here in the cafeteria."
YODAR KRITCH:
••compared to Centra
Washington State, people here a '
Evergreen have it good."
RAOUL CROUTON: "I lik
the salads, but they could have
croutons in them; my famil
business is going downhill. No,
really don't like the salads. The
blue cheese dressing is too thick:
The oil and vinegar dressing is to
oily, and- there's not enou~
vinegar in it as well and th
Italian dressing tastes lik
pneumatic tire fluid."
TONY FORREST: "Som
days it's not worth anything
some days it's barely edible.
Some days are worse th31]
others."
LAZLO KOCKS: "It make1
pretty good compost, but l
wouldn't eat it."
ROBERT DARBA: "I wis
they'd have more health foods
granola, yogurt and stuff lik
that. Avocado sandwiches anc
cream cheese, they're really good
with some honey and bea
sprouts on them."
DOUG KAHN: "I had ·
stuffed tomato and a bacon
lettuce and tomato sandwich. I
wasn't bad, except it was kind
overpriced. The stuffed tomat
was 45 cents, and it was a sm
tomato. Egg salad can't be tha
expensive."
JOHN MORGAN: .. Tn
sandwiches wrapped i
cellophane all taste the sa
from coast to coast. That's why
eat them, because they'r
consistent. Not good, bu
consistent "

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PAGE 7

EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE


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L ~~A~

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I

Breakfast of Champions, or
Goodbye Blue Monday, by Kurt
Vonnegut, Jr., Delacorte Press,
1973. $7.95.
Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. has written
a new novel. It looks like this:

STRUTTIN'--"A Lifelike Cock and Balls" rendered for the Evergreen
Art Show by Martin J. Oppenheimer. (Photo by LeGrow)

1

It is his fiftieth birthday
present to himself. He feels as
though he has reached a peak in
his life. He implies that the rest is
all downhill. He feels lousy about
the book, but he can tell you
why. He can tell you what the
book means, and you'll probably
read it anyway.
I don't want to say too much
n1ore about this book, though.
What I say is worthless. It is a
very personal book. It seems to
be a necessary book for him to
write, being fifty years old and
full of junk. But he'll tell you
.about
that.
BATIK WITH CHEEK--"Pink Lady" entered in the Evergreen Art
The
book is about a lot of
Show by Ellen Green. (Photo by LeGrow)
people, some of whom he's
talked about before, some not. It
is about two people in particular:
Kilgore Trout, the writer and
Dwayne Hoover, a Pontiac
salesman. It also talks about
STEPHEN STILLS/MANASSAS
ATLANTIC SD 7250
Throughout the career of Stephen Stills, it seems that nothing has
gone wrong. After the break-up of the much heralded Buffalo
Springfield, Stills became a walking myth-like folk hero. Shortly after
that breakup, Still recorded "Super Session," with the current darlings
of the blues world, Mike Bloomfield and AI Kooper. This gave Stills'
career another big boost, and an even larger audience. He followed that
with the birth of Crosby, Stills and Nash (whose sound people are still
unsuccessfully trying to copy), appearances in the movies "Woodstock"
and "Celebration at Big Sur," and three gold albums with Neil Young.
He followed that up with no less than two gold records on his own. All
this was behind him before Manassas was ever formed.
Stills may be worshipped by millions, but he does have his fauJts and
his work has its blemishes. The last CSNY album, "Four Way Street,"
seemed to be a slipshod effort on the part of that group to get one last
record out without having to go into the studio. I fmd it sad to think
that this is the last effort they have to show as a group.
With the formation of Manassas, Stills has found the balance he so
badly needs. With past efforts Stills seemed to draw all the attention.
With that came the feeling of Stephen Stills as an egomaniac. His
strengths were always apparent, but his weaknesses became open sores.
Manassas has trimmed down to a working band of seven members
with this album and it shows. There were so many talented people on
the first Manassas album that it seemed there was an over-arrangement
on many of the songs. In giving everyone a good part to show their
stuff, it gave a muddy feel to the music. This minor flaw has been
conquered here with a better, tighter Manassas.
Stills' fine guitar playing is balanced by Chris Hillman's guitar and
exceptional mandolin, AI Perkins' masterfuJ pedal steel and banjo, and
PauJ Harris' fme piano playing. Dallas Taylor and Joe Lala share the
percussion role, and Fuzzy Samuel rounds out this truJy fine band on
bass.
The coarse soulful voice of Stills, which often became overbearing
on his solo LPs, is balanced nicely by the easy milky voice of Hillman
and the background harmonies of the rest of the band.
"Down The Road" has some great music ranging from Rock and
Country to Folk. Stills and Manassas are a hard-working band, and they
show it with this album. They are exploring and breaking some new and
interesting musical ground.
If you buy this album, I guarantee you'll get a different Stephen
Stills than you've ever heard before. He's not as flashy as he once was,
but he works hard and puts out better music, on the whole, than he
ever has. When you've got credentials like his, you've got to work hard
to beat them.
Thanks to Rainy Day Record Co. for providing the albums for this
column.
Jim Carpenter

including Kurt.
It is filled with Kurt's own
drawings, and it is written simply,
as if for a child, perhaps many
children. SLAUGHTERHOUSE
FIVE is a hard act to follow, as
they say. The party is over, and
it's time to clean the house.
Sometimes that can be very
interesting. And so on.

Knute Olsson H.G.S. Berger

Tonight Eclipse, directed by
Antonioni begins the week-end's
entertainment as part of the
Cinemarchives series, showing in
Lecture Hall1 at 7:30.
The Friday Night Films bring
you, by the man who gave us
"King of Hearts," De Broca's
GIVE HER THE MOON. Shows
are at 7 and 9:30 p.m. in Lecture
Hall 1. Saturday night at 8 p.m.
will be the Bent Reel Film
Festival in Lecture Hall 1, which
is surely better than what's
playing in town.
At the State Theater in
Olympia, FIVE FINGERS OF
DEATH and THE WILD BUNCH
play, 3574010. For some GP
entertainment, TO.KLAT (the
movie about the big bear) and
ON ANY SUNDAY are currently
showing at the Capitol,
357-7161. '
Tonight is the last night for
SCORPIO and ADIOS SABATA
at the Olympic, while the

STEWARDESSES starts
t o m or r ow . F o r c u r t ai n
information call357-3422.
In Seattle tonight in concert
are BOZ SCAGGS and DR.
HOOK at Paramount Northwest.
Tickets are $5 and showtime is 8
p.m.
Next Tuesday PROCUL
HAREM ' is performing at
Paramount Northwest at 8 p.m.
Tickets are $4 in advance and
obtainable at the Music Bar in
Lacey.
Locally THE NEW SEEKERS
are coming to Capital Pavilion at
St. Martin's May 26. Tickets are
$3.50, $4, $4.50, and seating is
reserved by section. For more
information and tickets check
with Captain Coyote's or Rainy
Day Records in Westside.
Your best bet this week-end is
clearing out for Seattle and
hitting the University District
Street Fair, and related events.
-Jill Fleming

(From page 5)

Smoking
To the Editor:
[ have been a medium
smoker (about a pack a day)
for six· years and yet-r'm in
total agreement with Michael
Hall about the rights of
non-smokers.
The truth of the matter
oug , JS a we smo ers
are a very egotistical lot. We
think only of ourselves. I, for
one, will not smoke in my
own room. [ can't stand the
smell of smoke. But get me
in a crowded room, seminar
meeting or any public place,
and out comes a cigarette.
This isn't always a
conscious act. We smokers
are sick. It's the subconscious

trying to prove our
masculinity or femininity,
trying to make us look grown

This is, however, only true
about 30 per cent of the
time. The other 70 per cent
is a mixture of guilt
complexes, homosexuality,
and latent pyromania.
But let us not quibble
over matters of such little
importance. The point is that
non-smokers are risking their
lives by even stepping out of
their houses. In fact they are
in some danger by remaining
in their homes from the 20
per cent of the smokers that
in Westside. Contact Judy at are convicted arsonists.
753·3816.
Probably the best idea and
only real solution (next to
suicide) would be for all
FOR SALE
non-smokers to lock
Harptone 12·string guitar. Will
themselves up in a cement
sell or trade for a good six·string.
room
and stay there.
Contact Dave at the print shop in
Leftover
bomb shelters
the Library or call 753-3178.
work well.
Prison reports have shown
that 95 per cent of the
PERSONALS
Bicycle repair by expert criminal population smokes
mechanic. Contact Ed Deery, and if you turn this around it
Mod 310 A, 753-6093.
means that 95 per cent of the
smoking population are
criminals. Hard to believe,
WANTED
isn't it? And this doesn't
Need to rent a farm within a rural even
account fot
setting before June. Contact
misdemeanors.
Scott, 943·6864.
So the next time you see 2
person smoking, call a
policeman. He's probably a
FOR SALE
Going to Israel and want to sell murderer.

Glass i ~i e@s
WANTED
Need help? Want information?
Call the KAOS Action Line,
753·3140.

FOR SALE
1949 Chevy pick-up. Excellent
body, paint and interior.
$250.00. Contact 753-6759.

FOR SALE
1965 Dodge window van with
cracked block. For sale at a good
price. Contact Dave at the print
shop in the Library or call
753·3178.

WANTED
HELPr I want to live in a real
house next year. Does anybody
know now if they will need a
roommate in the fall? Preferably
within bike distance of school or

my VW bug ('61). Needs minor
work. Contact Marc at 943·8523.

Charles Smithc

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

PAGE 8

Please contact THE PAPER in 3502 A for submission of items in the
Happenings by 5 p.m. on Friday.

ARTWORK BY SANDY MAE

Gay Resource Center: 10 a.m. -4 p.m., L 3120.
noon, CAB 304.
Gay Resource Center: 10
Photo Lab: noon · 5 p.m., ..............,,~~
Arts Facility

College Forum: 1:30 p
Evergreen
found in the main
Riding Instruc
About Learning
riding and lecture. "'uJ""""•
Broadcasting DTF
of accountability.

Photo Lab: 1 - 6 p.m., Building 211.
Activities to sign up for at the Eve:rgr,eenNos,lf'
Mt. Rainier climb
Two-day hike along the Hoh
A bike ride to McKenna
A kayak trip down the
HallY,:
Gestalt Weekend for
: The progr~U
Hikogawa. There is a $5
for Evergreen students,
the fee will be
higher for others. For lil\f,,.,.,n,,.
registration contact Marlene at 352-7323, or at
753-3142,L 3119.
Dance (rock): There will be two bands, Moxie "P41~~~u"''"•
- 11 p.m., 1st floor Library lobby.

Art Gallery, Library

Bent Reel Film Festival: 8 p.m., Lecture Halll.
r,..,.-,.,~m•en

, Messy Arts Facility

.m., L 2411.
: 7:30 p.m., CAB
TV's "Viewpoint" program: KOMO
2nd floor lobby of the Library.

Introductory Lecture: Anyone interested
first two introductory lectures today and
on Saturday. To day's lecture is at 4
Brewsaugh at 943-2375. (If no answer

mee~g:

1 p.m., L 3502 A.
3 p.m., L 3502 A.
complimentary concert) 3 p.m., 2nd

met~~g:

Gestalt Week-end
: This is the second

' program: 7:30
Eye-5 l're!>ent:atl(
Limited, will
Department. There
is welcome to stop by.
the paper, sets the type, does
more than 80 private dealers, university and city
c.ollectors. He will also appear at 8 p.m. in the
Ubrary.

libir~~~~tfJ"'"-~"""""'­

Power and Decision in American Society meeting: 4
Art Display: A presentation by Evergreen dn,.M"
media. 4th floor Library Art Gallery.
Meeting to plan for next year's Bud Budget and ........,uu•<>
3 p.m., L 1221. '

Messy Arts Facility.
Vitamin Study subjects pick up your pills: noon- 3 p.m., L 2411. '
Cinemarchives: "The Servant" directed by Joseph Losey, 7:.30 p.m.
Lecture Hall 1.
Media
cpj0022.pdf