The Paper, Volume 2, Number 1 (September 24, 1973)

Item

Title
Eng The Paper, Volume 2, Number 1 (September 24, 1973)
Description
Eng Page 1: Students bit by housing crunch;
Page 1: White named action officer;
Page 1: Kuehlne attacks Evergreen State College; seeks police academy;
Page 1: Hot flash;
Page 1: Program transfer process simplified;
Page 2: Security precautions urged;
Page 2: Cornish explains power cuts;
Page 2: Evergreen Doc scales Dhauligari (image: David Peterson);
Page 2: Evergreen State College offers expanded placement services;
Page 2: (advertisement) Shakey's Pizza;
Page 2: (advertisement) World Shop: gifts of distinction;
Page 2: (advertisement) Evergreen Christian Center;
Page 2: (advertisement) Peterson's Foodtown;
Page 3: Production Center opens Oct. 1;
Page 3: Credit change clarified;
Page 3: ODA plans welcome;
Page 3: Evergreeners turn Burfoot into park;
Page 3: (advertisement) Red Apple Natural Foods;
Page 3: (advertisement) Colony Inn;
Page 3: (advertisement) Evergreen Christian Center (at Shakey's Westside);
Page 3: (advertisement) Kresek's on the Mall;
Page 3: (advertisement) Lacey Foods;
Page 3: (advertisement) Cleaner's Plaza;
Page 3: (advertisement) The Guardsman;
Page 4: Staff Credits;
Page 4: (cartoon) [students need not apply - housing];
Page 4: salutations;
Page 4: RAP LINE;
Page 4: Letters to the editor: dull;
Page 4: Letters to the editor: bigots;
Page 4: Letters to the editor: rat;
Page 5: News briefs;
Page 5: Co-op Ed. receives HEW grant;
Page 5: meat prices surveyed;
Page 5: Access Center aids information flow;
Page 5: Accountability DTF formed;
Page 5: (advertisement) Rainy Day Record Co.;
Page 5: (advertisement) The Asterix and Cheese Library;
Page 6: Doc climbs peak (continued from page 2)
Page 6: (photograph) Isochedron;
Page 6: Activities allotments listed;
Page 6: Students earn money, credit;
Page 6: (advertisement) Maggie's Shoppe;
Page 6: (advertisement) SAGA [Food Services]: Mother's Oats (The Evergreen State College Grocery & Deli);
Page 6: (advertisement) J.B.'s Western Wear;
Page 6: (advertisement) Wigs & Accessories;
Page 6: (advertisement) The Music Bar on the Mall;
Page 6: (advertisement) Pay 'n Save;
Page 7: where to find what you're looking for at Evergreen State College;
Page 8: orientation day
Identifier
Eng cpj0025.pdf
Creator
Eng Fleming, Jill
Eng Sandford, Jodi
Eng Laportt, Pierre
Eng Shucate, Ed
Eng Silvermann, Howie
Eng Holly, Peg
Eng Holly, Mike
Eng Holly, Jim
Eng Mae, Sandi
Contributor
Eng Murphy, Brian
Eng Fleming, Jill
Eng Praggastis, John
Eng Ryan, Andy
Extent
Eng 8 pages
Format
Eng application/PDF
Is Part Of
Eng The Cooper Point Journal
Language
Eng eng
Publisher
Eng The Publications Board and the Evergreen community
Rights
Eng http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Source
Eng US-WaOE.A.1973-01
Spatial Coverage
Eng Olympia
Eng Lacey
Eng Tumwater
Eng Spokane
Eng Bellingham
Eng Mt. Dhauligari
Eng Mt. Everest
Eng New York
Eng Delhi, India
Eng Katmandu, Nepal
Eng Pokhara, Nepal
Eng Thurston County
Eng The Evergreen State College
Eng Melbourne, Australia
Eng India
Eng Indonesia
Eng Malaysia
Eng Thailand
Eng Tulare County, California
Subject
Eng Student Housing
Eng Legislature
Eng Dance
Eng Security
Eng Lighting
Eng Mountian Climbing
Eng College Credits
Eng Photography
Eng Meat
Eng Student Veterans
Eng White, Joe
Eng Kuehnle, James
Eng Goltz, Barney
Eng Martin, S. R. (Sennie Rudolph), 1935-2016
Eng Russell, Gary
Eng Cornish, Tex
Eng Peterson, David
Eng Peterson, Kathy
Eng Martian, Gail
Eng Eldridge, Lester
Eng Kormondy, Edward
Eng Youtz, Bryon
Eng Wilhelm, Ken
Eng Hirzel, Woody
Eng Yung, Marjorie
Eng Grochow, Robert
Eng Liebman, Becky
Eng McCombs
Eng Fox, Russel
Eng Burfoot, George
Eng Kresek, Jack
Eng Fleming, Jill
Eng Neupert, Barbara
Eng Ernist, Carol
Eng Hirshman, Bill
Eng Rosenbergh, Ginny
Eng Carey, Ross
Eng Swift, Ned
Eng Donohue, Ken
Eng Barnes, Doug
Eng McCauley, Robert
Eng Russell, Larry
Eng Whittaker, Donna
Eng Marshall, Lorraine A.
Eng Gordon, Chuck
Eng Chambers, Lee
Eng MacLeoud, Bod
Eng Loangston, Peter
Eng Katz, Dean
Eng Gunning, Sarah
Eng Hoff, Nancy
Eng Perez, Elena
Eng Calderon, Alfredo
Eng Pratt, Peter
Eng Klyn, Stan
Eng Wilder, Ainara
Eng Crocker, Bob
Eng Lewin, Anne
Eng Parry, Don
Eng Roskelley, Jon
Eng Unsoeld, Willy
Eng Holmberg, David
Eng Hansen, Marsali
Eng Hunter, J.R.
Eng Sampson, Tom
Eng Sterchi, Denise
Eng Steilberg, Pete
Eng Stenberg, Larry
Eng Baxter, Jana
Eng Moss, John
Eng Rose, Al
Eng Mayer, Kenneth
Eng Nathan, Rich
Eng McCarty, Doris
Eng Gordon, Church
Eng Nichols, Dick
Eng Prentice, Judy
Eng Wong, York
Eng Swecker, Dan
Eng Lange, Steve
Eng Smith, LeRoi
Eng Peffer, Lou-Ellen
Eng Knapp, Helen
Eng Gillis, Bonnie
Eng Dill, Cher
Eng Martin, Gail
Eng Smith, Bill
Eng McCarty, Craig
Eng Dorsey-Travis
Eng Edwina
Eng Stein, Janet
Eng Mercer, Lynne
Eng Jacobs, Ken
Eng Lewin, Ann
Eng DeVoe, Nina
Eng Munson, Marcia
Eng Carnahan, Dave
Eng Smith, Sue
Eng Duncan, Jim
Eng Murphy, Brian
Eng Praggastis, John
Eng Robinson, Kristi
Eng Marrom, Rod
Eng Kahn, Kingaley
Eng Slaymaker, Bard
Eng Teske, Charles
Eng Patterson, Lynn
Eng Mathau, Walter
Eng Lemmon, Jack
Eng McCann, Charles
Eng Farley, Frank
Eng Schwartz, Tom
Eng Mimms, Maxine
Eng Machlis, Mark
Eng Villa Capri Apartments
Eng Colony Inn
Eng The Evergreen State College
Eng Board Of Trustees
Eng The House of Representitives
Eng Eastern Washington State College
Eng Western Washington State College
Eng Central Washington State College
Eng Sharkey's Pizza Parlor
Eng World Shop
Eng Evergreen Christian Center
Eng Peterson's Food Town
Eng St. Martins College
Eng Olympia Vocational Technical Institute
Eng Innter-City Transit Center
Eng Lacey Foods
Eng Lacey Market Square
Eng The Guardsman
Eng Kresek's On the Mall
Eng Shakey's Westside
Eng The Paper
Eng Time Magizine
Eng Department of Health, Education and Welfare
Eng Safeway
Eng Petersons Foodtown
Eng Food King
Eng Geoduck House
Eng Organic Farm
Eng The University of Puget Sound
Eng Tacoma Comunity College
Eng St. Martins college
Eng Monash University
Eng Wshington State Arts
Eng National endowment of the Arts
Eng Greyhound Bus
Eng South Sound Center
Eng KAOS Radio
Eng KGY News
Eng Rainy Day Record Co.
Eng Nasa
Eng Jazz Ensemble
Eng Geoduck Yeat Club
Eng MeCha
Eng Maggies Shoppe
Eng Mother's Oats
Eng J.B.'s Western Ware
Eng the Music Bar
Eng Wigs & Accessories
Eng Pay and Save
Eng South Sound National Bank
Eng Junior Cadillac
Eng The Asterisk and Cheese Library
Temporal Coverage
Eng 1971/1975
Type
Eng text
Eng images
extracted text
m itntSS ~o<!&ur Disbom& jfollp
Students bit by housing crunch

SEPTEMBER 24, 1973

THEEVERGREENSTATECOLLEGE
OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON 98505

VOLUME 2, NUMBER 1

By Jill Fleming
lease is signed ($79.50 on a
The squeeze is on. Out of monthly basis). Living at the
nowhere 2,000 students have Colony Inn is comparable to living
descended on the Olympia area, all in a motel room. Each renter has
needing a place to crash. Many his own room, with outside
have made prior arrangements as entrance, that adjoins a communal
witnessed by the 28 person kitchen and bathrooms shared
waiting list for on-campus hous- with three others.
ing.
Rooms come furnished with an
The Colony Inn expects about a optional queen size bed arrange70% occupancy rate, while Adult ment, and laundry and recreation
Student Housing (ASH) has 58
facilities are provided. The Colony
two-bedroom apartments avail - Inn also subsidizes the TESC bus
able. ASH expects to be filled system to make up for its location
completely with the exception of behind the Evergreen Inn, off of
apartments set aside for handicap- the freeway.
ped students.
ASH is for the more affluent
The Villa Capri apartments, Evergreener with rates ranging
where many students spent the from $62.50 to $87.50 depending
fall of '71 before the dorms opened, on the number of people, and
are currently full. Only one whether or not the apartment is
Evergreen student lives there furnished. Electricity is not innow .
cluded in the rent, and it is in the
Off-campus housing is hard to dorms and the Colony Inn. Other
find , with many ads pointedly utilities are covered.
saying "no s tudents," "adults
The dormitories, while con only" or "mature please." Very siderably smaller than ASH, arP
few of the ads for apartments are fairly economical and convenient
aimed towards students. Most are in location.. All utilities are paid,
too expensive and many are
located in Lacey and Tumwater.
Hou ses are easier to find,
though many require leases, no
pets or non-drinkers. People living
in houses generally need a ear to
gel to~ wftb. U VCl'a l ~
, at least for the time being, is 10-story 'A' to pay th e re nt, and more
Building. Many students have found it necessary to investigate more maintenance.
"Your actions can produce even
expensive off-campus quarters as a result of the housing crunch.
Cost- wise, houses are often the
more discrimination or assure
cheapest. The Colony Inn rents for
equality." This statemeHt means
$69.50 a month, if a three month
a lot to Joe White, Affirmative
Action Officer, and self-described
coordinator of equality control at
Evergreen. His job is to assure
equal opportunity within the
Evergreen community and with its
dealings with the outside world.
White will encourage those
directors involved with personnel
The state legislature once again Evergreen in its last legislative
Whether Goltz's error was hirings to break away from
traditional recruitment proheard arg ument s in favor of struggle, composed another intentional or not we don't know.
limerick supporting the college, or
cedures, and to actively seek
terminating Evergreen.
Eastern, Western and Central
at least, opposing Kuehnle.
qualified minority persons and
State Colleges did not
Washington
In the midst of discussing the
"Mr. Kuehnle is back on the
women. He will also help evaluate
fare so well in the discussion. All
state's higher education budget in
floor / Knocking down Evergreen's of the schools received cutbacks promotion and termination prothe House of Representatives,
cedures to ensure full consideradoor /Though he will not owe it/to from their original budgets.
Rep. James Kuehnle, (R any one poet/I think he-uh-it
As for Kuehnle's amendment, it tion of the facts involved in these
Spokane), proposed an amendoften sensitive matters.
should lay on the floor."
failed on a voice vote.
ment that would close down the
"This can be a very rewarding
college.
husiness," said White. "It is
"It is high time the Reed College
sometimes difficult to deal with
of Washington State be closed,"
people who say they don't want to
commented
the
Spokane
discriminate but don't respond
republican in his second major
emotionally by producing positive
attempt to cut off funds to the
action.
school," and that we build a police
That is going to be one of the
academy or good trade school or
biggest problems at Evergreen
something of practical usage."
because there are people in
For those who have found of the program."
significant positions that won't
Rep. Barney Goltz, (D-BellingThe one card transfer method
themselves enrolled m the wrong
respond emotionally and produce
ham), who stood to defend
pro){ram or contract and wish to compares to last years method this positive action."
change, the process has been made which required several pieces of
White's position was established
a lot easier according to Academic paper and seven signatures.
by the Board of Trustees recently.
Dean Rudy Martin.
"The first day, Sept. 23, will be He reports directly to the Prespent trying to get all those people sident, which he sees as an
"We're going to set up on the not. yet assigned to a program indication of how seriously the
Junior Cadillac will be at Ever- first Door of the Library Building," signed up," Martin said. Sept. 24 Board regards the equal opporgreen from 9 p.m. 'til midnight Martin explained, "and ask that a and 25 will be for :.ose who want tunity program.
Friday for the opening dance of representative from each program to switch programs."
Dissemination of information
the 1973-74 school year.
be stationed in their program
concerning students' rights,
area. The people can come to our
Registration will begin at 9 a.m. renters' rights, and job discrimiThe dance, which will be held in
table and we'll give them a single each day.
nation, will be one of White's
the second floor lobby of the
card to have signed. All they need
responsibilities.
He will work
Library Building, costs TESC stuis the name of the program that
Anyone desiring to change actively with different minority
dents 50 cents.
they're in, the name of the programs after Sept. 25 will have groups and women's groups and
Everyone is invited to come program that they wish to transfer to work through the Registrar's will seek their help in job
into and the approval of the head office.
dance or just sit and listen.
recruiting.

including local phone usage. The
dorms are rented on a quarterly
basis, a change from last year's
monthly rental.
From a random bulletin board
sample of notices put up in
September, there were 11 openings for roommates. Females outnumbered the males 2 to 1. Two
farms offered land space for in
exchange for work. Nine people
were looking for places to live.
Roommate preferences included
vegetarians, natural foods freaks,
and Black Sabbath fans.
The TESC housing office keeps
listings of off-campus living accomodations for student perusal.
Most of these listings are for
roommatps in the houses or apartments already rented.
Phones are a problem for those
who live off campus. While
necessary if one lives in the sticks,
the cost is prohibitive. Installation
is $25 with a $40 deposit if one
promises not to make more than
$10 worth of long distance calls a
month.



Kuehnle attacks TESC;
seeks pol ice academy

Program transfer

process simplified

Hot flash

JOE WHITE
"I see the minorities, the
women's groups, staff, students
and myself as a team against
discrimination. I have no interest
in controlling funds of any group
but I am interested in how they
deliver their !!ervices."
White used a parable to describe
the way diserimanatory actions
are made. A young man with a
bird in his hands approaches an old
man. He asks the old man whether
he thinks the bird is alive or dead.
The old man considers it and
replies "as you wish it."
The similarity lies in the fact
that the young man eould have
killed the bird or let it live all in a
matter of seeonda. "Each of us can
make these split seconds decisions
as to how to respond for a request
for information," says White.
These decisions very often are
diserimanatory ones that are made
uneonsciously soleJy on the basis of
race or sex.

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

PAGE2

Security precautions urged
Are you the owner of a stereo, television, typewriter, camera or
other expensive piece of equipment? If so, it would be a good idea
to fill out a personal property card.
According to Security Officer Gary Russell,larcenies and
burglaries accounted for a "substantial number" of the cases
handled by the Security Office last year at an "enormous amount
of dollar loss to the community."
The property cards, which should be filled out to include serial
and model numbers, are available at the Information Kiosk and the
Security Office. They should be turned in to Security on
completion.
In addition to the property cards, the college has acquired an
electronic marking device. Security people will be visiting the
dorms during the first few weeks of the quarter, and persons
wishing to permanently inscribe their names and social security
numbers on their property will be able to make use of the device at
this time.
College policies on firearms, parking, pets and bicycles will be
strictly enforced this year, says Russell.
"I think the problem of having firearms on campus speaks for
itself," he said, "but the pets were a definite problem last year and
it's something that we'd like to curb very early this year. We will
be making an all-out effort early in the quarter to round up strays.
that we find in violation of the pet policy.
"We have spent many thousands of dollars on bicycle parking
blocks around buildings and in convenient places," Russell
continued, "and we would ask that people use them. Bicycles found
parked in buildings will be removed."
Parking permits are now on sale at the student accounts window
in the Library. The price: $25 a year. Every vehicle on camp1.1s
must display a valid permit.

SEPTEMBER 24, 1973

Cornish explains power cuts
With the coming of the energy "we had cut back 15.3 per cent
crisis, (or is it better to say the from last February for economy's
final realization oO. Evergreen is sake."
doing its part to cut back power
Lights in the building will be
usage in cooperation with the reduced by 33 per cent, Cornish
governor's decree according to said. "We're taking one tube out of
Utilities Production Manager Tex all the office lights with three
Cornish.
tubes and two tubes from the
Outside lighting is being reduc- lights that have four," he explained by 50 per cent. Most noticeable ed. "They're doing that right
should be the some what darkened now.
parking lots.
"Also," Cornish commented,
"Actually, until we got the "we're cutting back on building
governor's letter," Cornish said, temperatures. "The heat won't go

.

on until it gets down to 68 degrees
and the air conditioning won't go
on until 78 degrees. The governor's cutback calls for an 80 degree
limit but we have a computer that
won't take that."
Both the heat and air conditioning were triggered at 72 degrees,
prior to the reduction.
Water temperature in the
dorms and in the washers have
been reduced from 150 to 110
degrees and 180 to 140 degrees
respectively.

Evergreen Doc
scales Dhauligari
almost losing my toes on Mt.
·Everest in 1971, I just didn't want
to risk losing them again."
Logistics proved to be one of the
biJ{gest problems for the climbers
and required some creative
solutions.
"We packed in only three of our
16 tons of equipment," Peterson
explained. "We air dropped the
rest of it-the first time air drops
have been used for a major
expedition."
The drops began on April 1 and
took about ten days. Peterson said
the pilot would bring his plane
"within ten feet of the ground" and
just drop his load. One bundle
flattened a,n unoccupied tent.
series of senior seminars which
No Oxygen Tanks
will focus on such topics as resume
Another means of reducing their
writing, interview techniques, and burden was the elimination of
. car~fc preference self~analysis. ,
ox ygen tanks~ '"I;hlt' was only the
"A§ . tfie•' ''selec!t ''tlieit" c~s·; second time this mountain had
.r
been scaled without oxygen," be
students need to analyze the kind said. "It was more risky, but
of life styles they want and the easier lov,istically . To compensate,
long range goals which are we had to breathe a lot, but
important to them," she said. "We slowly, and take very short steps."
work closely with the Counseling
The trip began in the end of
Center to help students with this January when Dave and his wife
self analysis so that they can go Kathy, drove to New York and
after the job which will enable flew to Delhi, India and
them to reach their lifetime goals." Katmandu, Nepal where they
As Les Eldridge, director of were delayed for three weeks due
F AP explains, "The college is to a shipping foul-up.
Chicken Herds
trying to avoid crisis career
The climbers began their
counseling in the senior year. We
strive to bring students into the 90-mile drive to Pokhara, Nepal in
counseling office shortly after they early March. The trip took seven
hours over what Peterson called
1 come to Evergreen so they can
begin thinking about the varieties "the best road in Nepal."
"It was one of those peasant
of careers available to them."
David Peterson, a part-time
physician and faculty member at
Evergreen, joined a party of 16
Americans who scaled the 26,795
foot Mt. Dhauligari in the
Himalayas. Before he finally got
"cold feet", Peterson had come
within 700 feet of the top.
"I wasn't really upset about not
reaching the top," he commented.
"I was gelling cold toes and after

TESC offers expanded
placement services
When more than 300 seniors as one of "helping students learn
return to The Evergreen State how to find jobs, not finding jobs
College campus this fall for their for them."
final ;rear of c?llege, ,ap e'Wand~Q,, , "This• will not. be. the last time
P.-=!m4~tti!tive placement service will these studen.t:s _yvill ~a-.:~ !O look..f~r .
be tea'dy to help 'tHetn' 'prepare w~·· ''' jobs," she explains. "I feel it's of
the world beyond graduation.
· utmost importance to teach them
Heading up the expanded effort job search skills now which they
is Financial Aid and Placement,
will be able to use again and again
F AP Counselor Gail Martin, a as their careers develop."
former
Evergreen
faculty
To aid students in development
member, who sees part of her role of those skills, Martin will offer a

AtSBAKBT'
S
we serve fun
(also pizza)

"

DAVID PETERSON
roads everyone ~leeps on, plays in
and herds their chickens along. So,
the v,oing was very, very slow."
The hike into the first base camp
was equally slow. The 120-mile
trip took the entire group more
than two weeks-the last 30 miles
being on snow and batt of it being
in bli?.7.ard conditions. The winds
whipped the party daily blowing
from 50 to more than 100-miles-an hour.
Physically Drained
"Our bim~est problem was
feelinJ~ phy~ieally drained all the
time," commented Evergreen's
l'limbinJ{ physician. "We had to
move so slowly and could only
work two or three hours a day
without sufferinf{ rapid physical
deteriora lion."
The party only had three good
climbinJ{ days during their ex pedition. They had to rise by 3 or 4
each morning to get their climbing
(Continued on page 6)

PETERSON'S
FOOD TOWN
<Wo'tld dhop

IN-STORE
BAKERY

§l{f£ of fhl£1:lnel:lon

Bridal Registry-Graduation Gifts-Cards
Westside Center H, Olympia

357-4353

Fresh Meats
Fruits
Vegetables

EVERGREEN
CHRISTIAN CENTER
"Serving people at
1000 Black Lake Blvd."
35'7-5591

SHAKEY'S
PIZZA PARLORS
Olympia
Downtown 827 S. Plum 943-7575
Westside ·Westside Center
357-7575

• Worship Services Sunday
8:30 & 11:00 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
• Bible Classes-Sunday
8:30 Children
9:30 Adults and Youth
11:00 Children
• DAY CARE CENTER
Monday thru Friday
7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.

Wine & Cold Beer to Go
Kitchen Wares

Hours:
9-9 Daily - 11-'7 on Sunday

WESTSIDE
CENTER Q

Phone 3524868
• Beereatlon seheduled regularly in church gym.
''Join Ute Happy Hundreds at Evergreen Christian Center"

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

SEPTEMBER 24, 1973

PAGE3

Credit change
clarified

COMMUNICATIONS AND MEDIA have access to a complete range of audio and visual production
facilities, including the T.V. production studio shown here.

Production center opens. Oct. 1
A Mini Media Production Center
will open for students and faculty
October 1.
Designed to provide services
which complement academic programs, the MPC will be headquartered in room 1002 of the
Library, and will be open from
noon to 8 p.m. weekdays.
The MPC coordinated by Ken
Wilhelm, is equipped to meet the
needs of students and faculty who
possess an intermediate level of

skill in the use of audio and visual
equipment," Wilhelm said.
Possible activities in the new
center include: Multi-media production, 16 millimeter and super-8
film viewing, color and black and
white television viewing, black
and white video dubbing and
editinl{; audio recording, dubbing,
editing and mixing; audio listening; slide sorting, viewing,
copying and mounting; slide/tape
production; portrait and product

Evergreeners turn
Burfoot i.nto,.P~· ~k ·
A small group of Evergreen
students have completed an assessment of the resources on the
former Burfoot property, located
on the east shore of Budd Inlet.
The site is to be developed into a
20-acre park by the Thurston
County Parks and Recreation
Department.
Involved in the study were
Marjorie Yung, Robert Grochow,
Becky Liebman and John
McCombs. Faculty member Russel
Fox directed the group.
The students examined the
general nature of the property, its
topography and slope, drainage

c--

---

:~Health
~~

patterns, geology and soils, vegetation and water quality. Many
maps of varying types were
drawn. They spent several hours
conferring with representatives
from numerous state and county
agencies and with George Burfoot,
former owner of the land and
present owner of adjacent
property.
Results of the six -month study,
Fox said, include a 30-page
document presented to the Parks
Board, display size maps and a
complete set of slides of both the
site and of other recreational
facilities in Thurston County.
.-

Foods &

*
Chess was
invented.

:

*

discovered,

••

••
••
••
••
••
••
••


---- -

COLLEGE FORUM
DISCUSSIONS ON CHRISTIANITY
at

SHAKEYS' WESTSIDE
IN WESTSIDE SHOPPING CENTERHARRISON STREET, OLYMPIA

Sundays 9:30 to 10:30 a.m .
Sponsored by

EVERGREEN CHRISTIAN CENTER
Phone 357-5591 or 456-8860 for more info

welcome
The Olympia Downtown Association -a segment of the
chamber of Commerce-has announced plans for the third annual
"College Days" welcome to
students from Evergreen, St.
Martin's and Olympia Vocational
Technical Institute, (OVTI), to be
held on Sept. 29;
The event consists of a general
welcome to students from the
cities of Olympia, Tumwater and
Lacey. There will be feature
special sales, free downtown
parking, free snacks or drinks in
several stores, plus a number of
spet•ial activities. More details will
be contained in a special supplement of the Daily Olympian on
Sept. 27.
The local businessmen have
made arrangements with the
Inter-City Transit System and .the
Evergreen Bus System to allow
students free rides from the
campus through the three cities on
Sept. 29. The Evergreen Bus will
make four round trips from
cam
·
noon, 2 a.m. and 4 a.m. Students
then may transfer to city buses to
travel around and get acquainted
with the tri-city area.

"The Friendly Grocer in Town"

Wood"ed S~lllng · Dramatic vl~w

10% Discount To Evergreen Students

onlv $69.60 oer mo.
AlL UTILITII:S PAID

Situated b~tween th~ Capitol and th~
Bus s~rvlc~ to th~ coli~~s

Coli~~· ·

1

Fa':."nnJ:~~~ofP..~ ~c~~~~j,r:c·s~~l'::i

or~s ~OL5bnJ!: r~~r:::,s 9~-7330

-

1818 Evergr~~n Pork Orlv~
Just Beyond Ev~rgreen Inn

---

6

CIIANIIIS

PLAZA
&AUHDrl

491-3730

VILLA PLAZA 588·1131



PONDERS 588·4084
LACEY 491·3730
TILLICUM 584·0743

MERIT MART BREMERTON
ES 3·5011

Phone 357-8779 - Westside Center - Olympia

--

·ODA plans

FOOD STAMPS WELCOME
not

Red Apple Natural Foods
~

(Continued on page 6)

OPEN 9 a.m. to 11 p.m., Monday- Saturday
10 a.m. to 7 p.m., Sunday

------Sinales Communitv

-

SUPPLEMENTS· BOOKS ·COSMETICS
GRAINS .JUICERS·GRINDERS ·TEAS

*

receive four "new" units, each
equivalent to four credit hours,
and totaling 16 (4 units x 4 quarter
hours= 16 quarter hour credits].
"This had a second beneficial
effect," Youtz said, "in that it
allowed us to introduce the
modular courses in the late
afternoon and evening as a

---

-- --·

Vitamins~

"Nature's Best in Organic Products"

photography; photo-copy and
print mounting; 16 mm and
super-8 film editing, and graphics
arts production .
Proficiency cards will be required for check out of certain
media equipment and facilities this
fall. Workshops and testing
periods for the cards will begin the
first week of October. Schedules
fnr the workshops and test
sessions, which will be held from 3
to 4:30p.m. daily, will be posted in
the MPC and the Media Loan area.
Primary emphasis for the entire
MPC operation will be to provide
an assortment of equipment in an
operational mode at all times,
at·cording- to Woody Hirzel, actingcoordinatQt gJ .)ledia PJ:I)duc i n
Services. "MPC will allow users to
cont·enlrate on the production task
rather than on acquiring equipment, setting it up, packing it back
up and returning it to Media
Loan."
"All work stations and carrels
will be scheduled in advance when
and wherever practical, and priority for certain areas may be
negotiated to accommodate academic prog-ram needs," Hirzel
said.

By Jill Fleming
An atomosphere of confusion
has surrounded the change in the
number of units awarded per
student per quarter. A memo sent
to the students by Provost Ed
Kormondy has apparently added
to the misunderstanding of the
credit change.
Bryon Youtz, interim academic
dean says, "There's been a lot of
confusion about the change in the
size of the Evergreen credit. It is a
change which will work to the
advantage of all Evergreen
students.
Youtz explains, "This was one of
the recommendations of the
Quinault Curriculum meeting held
in November of 1972.
"Under the old system a
coordinated studies program or
full load for Evergreen students
was given three units (per
quarter). Relating that to a
quarter hour equivlj,lency we used
a multiplier of five so that the
maximum quarter hour equivalency we used a multiplier of five so
that the maximum quarter hour
equivalency load per student was
15 each quarter (3 units x 5
quarter hours = 15 quarter hour
credits).
"In taking a survey of current
practices at other state institutions we found the average
load on other campuses was 15.9,
effectively 16 quarter hours. It
seemed to us that Evergreen
students were being penalized in
that their maximum was 15.
"This had the effect if an
Evergreen student transferred to
another campus, he arrived at
· campus with a defkiency-·a belbw
average quarter hour equivalency."
·
The reoommendation made was
that a student carrying a full load

•••
••
••
••
••

••
••
••

i<;wW

Where The Beet Co1t1 Le11
LACEY MARKET SQUARE

ON THE MALL

BACK
Distinctive
Women's Apparel

TO

SCHOOL
FASHIONS

116 SOUTH t.OUND CENTER
OLYMPIA <LACEY), WASH

JACK KRESEK
491-1620

SOU

SOUND CENTER - LACEY

Open Mon. Thurs. & Fri 'ti I 9 p.m •

PAGE4

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

SEPTEMBER 24, 1973

,--.

THE PAPER is published hebdomadally by the Publications
Board and the Evergreen Community. Views expressed are
not necessarily those of The Evergreen State College
administration. PAPER offices are located on the first floor of
the Campus Activities Building, room 103. The Business office
is in room 3120 of the Daniel J. Evans Library, room 3120.
Phone: (206) 866-6213.
Editor .................................... Brian Murphy
Managing Editor ..... . . . ......... . ........... Jill Fleming
Business Manager ............... . ........ John Praggastis
Editor Emeritus ....... . .............. . ....... Andy Ryan

I
E.NTERIN6

OL!mPJA

Salutations
As THE PAPER begins what it hopes to be its first full
year of production, complete with a contract in journalism, we
wish to make clear what we feel is our position in the
Evergreen community.
This first issue is designed to be strictly an informational
medium for those new to the college. In the future, we will
take the opportunity for expression and communication. All
members of the Evergreen community are encouraged to use
THE PAPER to make themselves heard.
We hope to print any decisions of policy, curriculum or
other item of concern to the college so that each person may
keep up on what is going on.
THE PAPER is funded primarily by the Service and
Activities Fees Board. This year THE PAPER received---.
$7000, well below the original request, but more than any
other organization. Most of the difference was made up by the

L.

\

j

00 !

Academics Department. So, we hope to produce a polished f~
and informative newspaper.
~
~
Sine~ ther~. is presently· no existing publicat.ion piece for
creative wr1tmg around campus, we hope to prmt a monthly
or bi-weekly supplement to THE PAPER for creative writers ._..._,....
~
beginning sometime in November, budget allowing.
As for the name THE PAPER, we will continue to maintain
that name until such time that a more fitting and appealing
title is offered.
With all diplomatic rhetoric aside, we hope to serve the To the Editor:
community and draw in as much participation as is possible.
We welcome a!l criti~ism, (construc.tive, that IS}, and wish to
What exactly can a "con1
hear from you 1f you JUst happen to like us. Good year to all.
cerned citizen" have to say
1 about how someone else runs
their newspaper? Well, actually I've already thought up a
thing or two or else I would
not be writing this letter.
First of all, having endured
several issues of last years
Evergreen State College
Newspaper, I am of the hope
"How would you get rid of your roomate?"
that this one won't be quite so
dull. Perhaps when you have
JILL FLEMING: "The best .method is to be extremely nothing to say in the future,
noisy. You turn up your stereo very loud each night. The first rather than simply find lots of
night they move in you bring in 10 or 15 people - preferably filler, you simply ought not
of the opposite sec - and have them be very rowdy. Have say it. There is even an
people come in during parties and pass out on their bed, throw occassional thin copy of Time
up in the bathroom, throw kegs through the windows. Have Mag. sent out to the newsanimals like pet rats that they don't like and put them in the stands. I don't think you
shower because you say they can't sleep in your room.
ought to be intimidated by
Let me say that I was in a five-student apartment fall lack of news.
quarter and four of the roomates moved out for their own
At any rate if you do have
reasons. I've gone through about nine or 10 roomates in a to use filler, better you
year. Another thing to do is break their dishes. Eat therir should use your imagination
food. Have your animals eat their ~ood."
to make up more entertaining
BARBARA NEUPERT: "Eating their food is the first one. filler rather than continually
Leave my hair in the drain. Leave clods of soap. Don't flush making more out of less.
the toilet. Don't ever wash anything. Say: 'I didn't make the Have you never heard the
mess,' and always be gone when there's work to be done. word fiction?
Never vacuum; just by and large never do anything to help
Secondly, I'd like to see
year. Another thing to do is break their dishes. Eat their food. this year's paper at least have
Have your animals eat their food."
some semblance of an idea as
CAROL ERNST: "Could set fire to his matress - drive my to what it is all about. Is the
roomate out, huh - let me think - besides short-sheeting paper going to report on
and sand in his bed~ huh, it's hard to say- guess I'd just set community occurances, or is
fire to his mattress."
it simply going to stick to the
BILL HIRSHMAN: "How would I drive my roomate out? usual excessive repetition of
Probably I'd get a little container of fleas and go in his room. Evergreen State College
Stick 'em just under the sheet and it would take about a day or news? Perhaps the paper
so for the little fleas to figure out how to get from under the could include community tidsheet, and by that time they would have affected his body bits that are capable of being
or her body - well if it were her body I think the body would interesting without being
be staying - I would continually sing 'Oh My Darling technically "newsworthy."
Clementine' for hours on end and off key."
Such gems as an occassional
GINNY ROSENBERHG: "That's an absurd question. You article on the eating habits of
gonna put that in the paper?
the state legislature as comThat's an issue?"
pared to the eating habits of
ROSS CAREY: "I'd haunt my roomate. I'd plant speakers Evergreen Students. Am I
or something in his room and haunt him until he left."
just hungry? Is that why I'm
N~DSWIFT:"I wouldn't clean the kitchen."
writing this? Who knows?

~~
~
1 ""'"'

.l~n

_

.,,.p .._.,_... ...-._.• .,.

Dull

..,.l l

~

Anyways, what more can I
say, other than, here's hoping
that you fail miserably in any
efforts to be boring.
Pierre Laportte

behind?
Well, I guess I've got it out
now. Maybe I'm just missing
something. But, maybe I'm
not.
Ed Shucate

Bigots
I came to Evergreen,
believing I would find a group
of open -minded, liberal
people I could live with. I was
right and I was wrong.
There definitely are a lot of
liberal people here, (or is
liberal an out word, these
days) and I can certainly live
with them. But they are the
worst bigots I have ever met.
No matter how strongly I
have ever felt about an issue,
I've always tried to see the
other side. God knows, I've
even tried to see the· good in
certain elected officials in
high places.
But here in the land of
freedom of speech and openness, I've seen people told to
leave the place because of
political party affiliation.
At Evergreen the great, I
understand the people are
trying to break away from
narrowmindedness that
labels them because of long
hair, unshaved legs of unusual clothing. Yet, when
somebody says they belong to
a certain group or organization or belief, they're
tagged and have a hell of a
hard time shaking it. This
just doesn't seem to jibe at
least, not to me.
What makes this all so
frustrating and hard is that I
generally agree with the
views these liberal bigots are
professing. But I can't go
along with their style, that's
'ends justifies the means'-ing
it. And isn't that the kind of
rationale that the Ehrlichmans and Mitchells are hiding

Rat
To the Editor:
I'm not an Evergreen
student, you understand, but
I heard that it didn't matter
whether I was or not because
I heard you guys/and/or
women or to be more
specific, folks are going to be
presenting an alternative to
the regular campus ,newspaper and start turning- 0ut
something which would be
more of people's paper, if you
get my drift, and that would
be something I could really
dig writing for or at least
reading. I heard all of this
from a friend of mine who
doesn't go to Evergreen
either, so it's all kind of
second hand, but from what I
heard it sounds like a pretty
good idea, as I said before.
My friend also said (and
incidentally, you should try
and get ahold of him because
he writes some DYNAMITE
poetry) that the name of your
paper was going to be 'The
Rat', which was the only
thing I couldn't really see
because after all there are
really a lot of much cooler
animals which would symbolize like more of a people's
paper. Marmots, for example, are really together
animals. Everything else that
my friend told me, though,
really intrigued me. I eagerly
anticipate the advent of your
first edition.
Howie Silvermann

SEPTEMBER 24, 1973

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

PAGE5

Co-op Ed. receives HEW grant
Annual, quarterly and monthly
parking permits are available in
room 1106 of the Library Building.
The permits must be on cars by
Oct. 2 and may be paid for by
cash, check, payroll deduction or
student accounts billing. Daily
permits will be available at the
Ticket Booth and F Lot Ticket
Spitter starting Monday.

--------------·
Lorraine A. Marshall, an
English teacher from Australia,
has accepted a one year appointment to the TESC faculty,
according to Vice President and
Provost Edward J. Kormondy.
Marshall, 28, completed her
master's degree in education at
the University of Puget Sound this
past year while teaching part time
at Tacoma Community College and
St. Martin's College. She is a
graduate of Monash University,
Melbourne, Australia, holding
degrees in education and history.
In Melbourne, Marshall taught
English, history and geography at
the junior high school level
although her specialty is in
reading education. She has also
traveled extensively through
India, Indonesia, Malaysia and
Thailand.

--------------·
On Oct. 5 the Eye-5 program
will sponsor a meeting at TESC for
Eye-5 participants and for groups
interested in participating in the
program. The.meeting will be held
in the College Activities Building,
Room 110, beginning at 9:30a.m.
Sponsored by the Washington
State Arts and the National
Endowment for the Arts, Eye-5 is
a loose coalition of local groups and
instructions which aims to present
a broad selection of artists in the
community on a regular basis. All
Eye-5 sponsored events, wherever
they occur are free to the public.
The meeting has several
purposes: (1) to discuss the Eye-5
program - its philosophy and
rationale, its method of operation,
its current financial status, and its
plans for 1973-74; (2) to get input
from particip~s about artists
th~ would like J!}ye-5 to sponsor;
and (3) to schedule.. for the coming
year a number of the artists whom
Eye-5 participants would like to
sponsor for a week's visit to the
area.

·-------------Evergreen's own collection of
rare books is currently on display
in the library. They can be found
in the display cases near the
circulation desk on the second
floor.

·--------------·
An organizational meeting of all
Evergreen folk dancers will be
held Sunday at 7 p.m. in C.A.B.
second floor lobby.

Er-5

The Department of Health,
Education and Welfare has awarded a $26,000 grant to TESC for
establishment of a Career LearnThe Evergreen bus will be ing Program.
Ken Donohue, director of
running between the downtown
Olympia Greyhound Bus Depot Evergreen's Office of Cooperative
and the campus on September 23 Education, said the grant will
and 24 as a special service to enable his office to nearly double
students moving into campus its staff and to expand and refine
housing units according to Chuck its program, which has placed
Gordon, coordinator of the bus more than one thousand students
in a wide variety of internships
system.
with business, industry, the proThe bus will leave the downfessions, and social and governtown depot at 8:30 and 10:30 p.m.
mental agencies.
on Sept. 23, 1:10 a.m. , 8:30 and
"The Career Learning Program,
10:30 p.m. on Sept. 24 and at 1:10
which focuses on career prepara.m. on Sept. 25. Riders will be
ation and employment of juniors
dropped off at the mods and the
and seniors, will allow students to
dorms.
select internships a year in
During the rest of the school
advance," Donohue said.
year, the bus will make six runs a
"This will enable them to better
day with stops downtown, in
South Sound Center and at the
Colony Inn. Schedules will be
available in the Information
Center.
The bus, funded by Service and
Activities fees, costs only ten
cents a ride.
"The Access Center is an
information center for all art and
science facilities in the Lab.
complex."
That's the description In structional Technician Doug
All interested people are enBarnes gave for the new program
couraged to attend a joint meeting
designed to help give students
of the Gig Commission and the
Speakers Bureau Tuesday, at 1 easier access to college art and
p.m. Oct. 2, in the third floor science equipment.
"Last year there were no
lounge of the CAB Building. The S
informational services to tell
& A Board allocated $3400 to the
people how to get in to some of the
Gig Commission and $3200 to the
arts facilities," Barnes explained.
Speakers Bureau for the 1973-74
The new art/science inyear.
formation center will be based in
The purpose of the joint meeting
is to determine how students want
monies divided for films, dances,
concerts, workshops, speakers,
etc.; how students want to expend
the funds once they are divided;
and if and how students want to
obtain additional funds for carrying on activities throughout the
year. Once these questions have
been condidered, the meeting will
be divided into smaller groups to
A DTF has been formed to
actually plan and coordinate activire-evaluate and suggest needed
ties for fall quarter.
changes, improvements and reThe ideas and information
finements in the membership,
gathered at this meeting will be
goals, accountability, and/or proused as guidelines by the Campus cess of the Service and Activities
Activities staff and will be Fees Board based on input from a
especially useful in making recomwide cross-section of the campus
mendations and commitments for
community.
the rest of the year.
Persons with information of use

prepare themselves academically,
and it will also give employers a
chance to plan for their interns,
thus insuring a better internship
for both the student and the
employer."
The program "emphasizes the
importance of long-term off-campus work experience," he said, and
offers the students a two-year
package, which includes as many
six-month internship experiences
as possible.

Meat prices surveyed
In Olympia it is possible to
spend 14 more cents a pound than
necessary for ground beef. It is
also possible to pay up to 50 cents
a pound more for bacon. It all boils
down to where to shop.

Access Center aids
information flow

---------------·

Accountability
DTF formed

Lee Chambers, a 30 ·year old
senior, will be manager of KAOS
for the fall quarter.
Chambers, who served as assistant engineer of KAOS last
year, said he hopes to have the
station on the air full time by the
beginning of the quarter. The
station's headquarters are located
in room 304 of the CAB building.
Members of the advisory board
for KAOS are Bob MacLeod,
director of KGY news; Computer
Programmer Peter Langston;
faculty member Leo Daugherty;
students Dean Katz and Sarah
Gunning, and Olympian Nancy
Hoff.

"The idea is to allow students
1ix months on an internship, then
three to six months back on
campus to refine their academic
skills. Then they return for six
more months in the field," he
added. "This should give them
both an understanding of their
career field and a competitive edge
in the employment market
because their academic experience
will be directly tied to their onthe-job training."

room 1047 of the Lab. Building.
The center will attempt to turn
interested students on to all the
equipment in the Geoduck House,
Luhr House, 211 Bldg., Organic
Farm and Messy Arts as well as in
the Lab facility.
"We have lots of equipment,"
added Robert McCauley another
institutional technician. But not
enough people to man it. I guess
we'll have to depend on the quote
"community" for the teachers that means the students. I don't
see where else .t's coming from."
Joining Barnes and McCauley in
the Access Center will be Larry
Russell and Donna Whittaker.
"Students don't know how to get
to the facilities," Barnes said. "Our
job is to make it easy for them to
get the tools."

In an informal survey on
Monday of the three major stores
patronized by students, Safeway
was by far the place to buy meat.
Located in downtown Olympia, it
may seem uneconomical to shop
there if living on-campus, but the
difference in price more than
makes up for the gas mileage.
Peterson's Food Town in Westside has a poor selection of fish and
a barely adequate supply of meat
and chicken. Ground beef is $1.09
a pound, while lean ground beef
runs $1.29 a pound. The regular
ground beef has a strange coloration.
Safeway has a generous selection of meat, chicken and fish.
Ground beef is $.95 a pound, with
lean ground beef at $1.15 a pound.
Hormel bacon is $1.39 a pound,
while Banner is $1.19. The meat
counter looks clean and is welllighted, as contrasted to the dingy
appearance of the other two.
Food King, on 4th in Olympia,
has the poorest meat counter of
the three. Bacon runs as high as
$1.69 a pound, while a dubiouslooking house brand is $1.19 a
pound. Their ound beef prices
were the same as e erson s. urbot, the only fish displayed, was
$.98 a pound, a good 10% increase
over other stores.

YOU'LL nteD 00~CTHI~G
TO LI0T~N TO

to the DTF in their deliberations
regarding the S & A Board are
encouraged to submit suggestions,
proposals, complaints, etc. in
writing to the office of Recreation
and Campus Activities by Oct. 5.
People are also encouraged to talk
with individual members of the
DTF regarding their feelings and
ideas about the S & A Board. DTF
members include the following
folks: Elena Perez (Chairperson),
Dean Katz, Alfredo Calderon,
Peter Pratt, Stan Klyn, Ainara
Wilder, Gary Russell, Bob
crocker, Anne Lewin and Don
Parry.
The first meeting of the DTF
will be set sometime in midOctober and will be announced in
the Information Center.

~LBU~O

I

T~P €tS

~UcSIC

TO PUT YOU~
FttT DOtlJN TO 0~
60UNikS TO L~Y YOU
B~CK
Wt.ST.SIDt
CtNT£~

'I

The Asterisk~ and Cheese Library
WESTSIDE CENTER Z (233 NORTH DIVISION STREET> OLYMPIA. WASHINGTON 98!502

206/3!57-7573
Peg, Mike & Jim Holly

+sELECT WINES AND CHEESES, DOMESTIC AND IMPORTED
MONDAY- SATURDAY lOam to 7 pm

PAGES

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

SEPTEMBER 24, 1973

Activities
allotments
listed

Doc

climbs
peak
(From page 2)
in before the storms hit . John
Roskelley, a 24 -year-old from
Spokane, and two others reached
the summit on May 12. Six days
later, the party was off and headed
for home.
Kathy Peterson spent her
spring in Nepal working on her
master's degree in Tibetian
Buddhitology. She joined her
husband on May 21 and they hiked
out of the mountains together.
"The hike out was the worst
part of the trip for most of us,"
said the male half of the Peterson
duo. "We were just wasted when
we came off of the mountain.
Everyonfl got dysentery on the
120-mile walk out. Everything we
ate or drank was contaminated
and we all had to be on antibiotics
for six weeks afterwards."
Land Of Enchantment
Dave and Kathy are anxious to
get back to their "land of
enrhantment" and they hope to
take some Evergreen students
with them.
"We made a lot of contacts while
we were over there and we'd like
to set up a one year group study
contract. It's a fascinating country
, with it's contrasts in religion,
culture, geography and climate."
He said both of them have already .
begun to explore the possibilities
at Evergreen for their group
contract, which they would like to
set up by the spring of 1975 with
faculty member Willy Unsoeld.

ISOCHEDRON - Mobile School Unit Program members Tom Schwartz (back to camera), MaxinP.
Mimms and Mark Machlis put finishing touches on one of their portable curriculum tools, a 20-sided
globe (or isochedron) which will be used in teaching a social studies program.

Stud~nts earn money, credit
Two Evergreen students will be
receiving both pay and academic
credit for living in the Sierras this
fall. But it isn't quite as easy as it
seems.
David Holmberg and Becky
Liebman are Evergreen interns
for SCICON, and environmental
center located in the Sierras in
Tulare County, Cal. For doing
interpretive nature studies they
will receive room and board plus
$25a week.
The SCICON internships are
just two internships out of 600
available this year from the Office
of Cooperative education. Last
year over 500 students were
placed by the Co-op Office, with

Shoppe
A

An internship open currently
with the Department of Revenue
will include a tour of duty with the
Governor's budget office. This
internship is half-time and will
have a stipend of approximately
$300 a month.
A student interested in interning should fill out an internship
request form, and then meet with
both the Co-op Coordinator and his
faculty m sponsor. Faculty approval is needed before any
serious discussion can take place.
An internship agreement must
also be signed.

Credit changes clarified
(From page 3)
possible one-quarter time load
instead of a one-third time load
which we would have been stuck
with under the old system.
"We didn't want them to become
a very big part of the student's
load."
For students who have already
amassed Evergreen units, notes
are being attached to the official
transcripts saying that equiva-

=maggies
THE DRESS SHOP WITH APPAREL
p
I!
A
L
153 SOUTH SOUND CENTER
OLYMPIA <LACEY l, WASHINGTON

about 302 ~f those placPrl ,·ece1vmg
some kind of financial compensation.
Recently, the nine unit limit on
intern credit was lifted, so that a
student could theoretically intern
for four years. The reason for
dropping the limit Co-op director
Ken Donohue said was, "The
method by which the student
learns is not important as long as
he learns. If a student can benefit
from an internship, let the decision
depend on the individual circumstances rather than an arbitrary
rule."

Iencies viewed prior to the date of
the credit value thatge should be
multiplied by 1.33. Internally the
school is converting all former
work to the four unit system for
bookkeeping purposes.
This plan has been worked out
thoroughly with other schools and
the Council on Higher Education.
It has been approved by the Board
of Trustees. Says Youtz, "We
don't envision any difficulties."

Allocating $40,000 to organizations requesting over $140,000 is
not an easy job.
The TESC Service and
Activities Board, (S&A), met for a
weekend at the Alderbrook Inn on
Hoods Canal and spent a couple
nights in the mods in an effort to
distribute the available S&A
monies amongst TESC's clubs and
services.
Members of the board were
Marsali Hansen, J .R. Hunter,
Elena Perez, Tom Sampson and
Denise Sterchi.
Also attending the meetings
were Recreation and Campus
Activities Director Pete Steil berg,
Dean of Student Services Larry
Stenberg, S&A Board Secretary
Jana Baxter, Director of Auxiliary
Services John Moss and College
Activities Building Manager AI
Rose.
The meetings were tense and
tempers flared fairly frequently
but despite disagreements and
shouting duels, personal conflicts
were overcome and after the
fighting and bickering ended the
board agreed to allocate the funds
as follows:
0n{anization
Allocation
KAOS Operating
$3861
KAOS Wire Service
Rus System
3340
Art Works
4200
I >ay Care Center
2920
Gi1~ Commission
3400
Speakers Bureau
3200
The Paper
7000
Outdoor Equipment
400
On~anic Farm
860
NASA
2800
Ja:~.z Ensemble
400
Music Theatre
180
Women's Commission
2000
Recreational Folkdance
400
l!JAMAA
.
3000
Geoduck Yacht Club
0
MeCha
2760
MudRay Ruggers
0
Afro-American Festival
500
Gay Resource Center
674
Evergreen Basketball
157
S & A Roard Operations
~7
44,609

•et-eooo

Mother's Oats ...
The ' Evergreen State College
Grocery & Deli

~

J.B.'s

WESTERN WEAR
For the Latest in WESTERN WEAR
SOUTH SOUND CENTER

"On The Mall"

Phone 491-3699

Watch For Weekly Specials
HOURS:

12 to 7 Monday-Friday
11:30 to 8 Saturday
This is your store - if we don't have what
you need, tell us, we will try to provide
what Evergreen eats.

EQUIPMENT &
QUALITY

location: CAB Building, Next to Bonk
What We CorryWhat Do You Wont?

ON THE MALL

WIGS & ACCESSORIES
Harpers
4132 Market Square
Lacey- 491-1730

404 East 4th
Olympia- 943-2900

SERVICE
117 South Sound Center
Olympia, Washington 98503
491-2922

OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENTS

Camera Dept.
Cosmetics
Sound Dept.
Phermecy
Sporting Goods
Notions
OPEN MON-FRI 9 to 9 SAT & SUN. till 6

m~~·n ~~:~·wrn~
CENTER

SEPTEMBER 24, 1973

THE E.V ERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

PAGE7

Where to find what you're looking for at TESC
The following is a tear off sheet designed to help you find your way through the red tape of
Evergreen. For more complete listings, please refer to your directory.

SERVICE
ACCESS CENTER

LOCATION

PHONE

Lab. 1047

6061

Lib. 1102

6170

Information center for art and science
equipment in Lab. complex, 211 Bldg. ,
Geoduck House. Luhr House, Organic
Farm and Messy Arts .

ADMISSIONS
BANK
(South Sound Nat'l.) Full service barolo.ing.

BOOKSTORE
Books and supplies for sale.

BUS SYSTEM

COMPUTER SERVICES
Computer-aided instruction, student
computer numbers and computers
systems development

COOPERATIVE EDUCATION
Coordinator
Asst. Coordinator
Student Coordinator

DAY CARE CENTER

8-5

Kenneth Mayer, director
Rich Nathan, counselor

8-5

2nd floor CAB

6216

Doris McCarty, manager

CAB 203

6026

Chuch Gordon, coordinator

9:30-4:30

6220

AI Rose, Manager

Lib. 3114

6128

Dick Nichols, director
Judy Prentic.e, Information officer

Lib. 1414

6232

CAB 1020
CAB 1022
CAB 1024

6391

Lib. 1219

6151

CAB203

6026

COUNSELING SERVICES
Individual and group counseling, career
planning and referrals to comm<Jnity
service

Doug Barnes, Larry Russell, Robert
McCauley, Donna Whittaker

943-6210

COLLEGE ACTIVITIES BUILDING

Community contacts, and information
and internal / external communications

HOLJRS

2nd floor CAB

Ten cents for a ride to Oly., South
Sound, Colony Inn, etc.

COLLEGE RELATIONS

PERSONS

York Wong, director

Lab. 1008

6290

Lab. 1013

6295

Lab. 1004

6310

Lab. 1002

6521

1st floor CRC

6530

8-5
8-5
8-5

Ken Donohue
Dan Swecker
Steve Lange
LeRoi Smith, director
Lou -Ellen Peffer
Helena Knapp, Career Counseling
Bonnie Gillis, director

DEANS
Rudy Martin - Curriculum planning,
Counseling in humanities and arts
Charles Teske Part time study,
modules, individual contracts, counsel in
humanities and arts and public events
Lynn Patterson - Graduation, counsel
in Social Sciences, faculty recruitment
Bryon Youtz - Summer session, 1974
self-paced learning and counsel in natural
sciences / mathematics

8-4:30

8-5

8-5

8-5
8-5
8-5
8-5

EQUIPMENT CHECK-OUT
Outdoor recreational equipment avauable to all TESC stude nt~. Camping gear,
tennis , baseball, hiking and much more.

' '

FINANCIAL AID AND .PLACEMENT
Student plo o: ement, registration for
financial aid, food stamp registration. and
career planning.

FOOD SERVICE
Cafeteria and delicatessen by Saga

HEALTH SERVICES
First aid and health care for students

~

~

4...!._ •

Ll



I •

J

~ .1_

'

;

A,·

~

Lib. 1214

1

~

"·l'>"'''

HOUSING OFFICE

INFORMATION CENTER
Access to all TESC phone numbers,
serv1ce locations, general information, and
master calendar of all events.

KAOS
Evergreen 's FM good music and boogie
station .

LIBRARY
Books, m~gazines, filmstrips, refer ences, people and much more.

LOST AND FOUND
Articles held for three days and then
turned over to Security.

MEDIA LOAN
Cameras, video tapes, cassette recorders, etc .

MAIL SERVICES
PAPER, THE
TESC's weekly news rag .

RECREATION AND CAMPUS ACTIVITIES
Hours Man -Sat noon - 8 :30 p.m.,
Sun . noon - 6:30p.m .

REGISTRAR
Provide transcripts to students on
request, registration processes, residency
affairs, and setting up and maintain
academic records of students.

ROOM RESERVATIONS/
SCHEDULING OFFICE

undecided

·' .-.-1 ~

6205

Gail Martin, director

8-5

Les Eldridge and Bill Smith
CAB 107

6281

Craig McCarty

Lib. 1205

6200

Edwina Dorsey-Travis
David Peterson

WOMEN'S CLINIC
On -campus assignments transters ooou
n .aintenance. Listing of available off-campus housing .

Chere Dill

Bldg. A., Rm. 220 & 322

6132

Kiosk 2nd floor CAB

6000

Janet Stein
Lynne Mercer

Ken Jacobs, director

Ned Swift, Ann Lewin, Nina DeVoe,
Marcia Munson

3rd floor CAB

5627

Lee Chambers

2nd floor Library

6250

Dave Carnahan (until further notice)

Kiosk 2nd floor CAB

6300

Library

6270

Kiosk 2nd floor CAB
CAB 103

Sue Smith

8-5

8-5

8-5

8-Hl M-F
·10-5 Sat.
'1-8 Sun.
8-5
8-5

Jim Duncan, director
6213

Brian Murphy

John Praggastis

Pete Steilberg Director of Recreation and Activities 8-5

CAB305

Court Reservations
Lib. 1102

6180

Bldg. 201

6340

Kristi Robinson

8-5

6140

Rod Marrom

8-5

6447
6296

Kingsley Kahn, Supervisor

8-5

Reserve roomp for special events and
activities.

SECURITY
To serve and protect TESC.

STUDENT ACCOUNTS
In charge of all student billing .

ST ... DENT SERVICES
Mediation and due process. :nterpretation of COG Document and Social
Contract.

VETERAN'S AFFAIRS COORDINATOR
Information clearing. house for vets,
develop programs for vets, recruitment of
aid to veteran students.

by steam plant
Lib. 11(}8
Lib. 1209

8-5
8-5

Lib. 1209·

6192

Bard

Slaymaker

8-5

THEEVERGREENSTATECOLLEGE

PAGES

SEPTEMBER 24, 1973

All Day -

Individual Faculty-Student Conferences, Don't
forget this important meeting with your faculty
member-make an appointment with your program secretary.

7 - 9 p.m. -

B.ig Time Movie- Kotch. Starring Walter Mathau,
d1rected by Jack Lemmon.

9:15-11:15 p.m.- Big Time Movie Reshown.

9- 10 a.m. -

Welcome by Chal'tes McCann. Second floor lobby of
the Library.

10- 1 p.m. -

Academic Fair and Giant Coffee Break. Faculty
from all the academic programs will be available to
answer questions, provide program information
and schedule individual faculty-student conferences. Free coffee. Second floor lobby of the
Library.

Noon to 1 p.m.- Pied Pipt;!r Tours. This event will familiarize you
with the location of the people resources you will
need during the year. Information Center in the
CAB Building.
1:30-4 p.m.- At the CAB stands you can get information about
campus organizations and recreational activities.
Sign up and participate. During the Open
Visitation period, you can visit any area on
campus - someone will be in each office to answer
questions and familiarize you with what they do.
4-6 p.m.- Life and Evergreen. You-past, present and future
life-as covered through the media of film followed
by discussion of life at Evergreen. Second floor.
lobby of the Library.
7:30p.m.- Evergreen's Annual Lighter Than Air And Love Is
A Geoduck Show For Campus Talent. Evergreeners playing, presenting and sharing their talents
with other Evergreeners. This is an informal sit
around the fire, impromptu session and you're
invited to participate. You can sign in advance,
(CAB 305, phone 6220), if you'd like or just show
up. Fourth floor of the Library.

Morning- Individual Faculty-Student Conference.
11 a.m. - noon - Financial Aid and Placement, (FAP), Orientation.
All Evergreeners are invited to the F AP
orientation sessions which will cover all faults of
this office. Topics will include how to obtain an
emergency loan, food stamps, revisions in a
financial aid award and where to find information
on graduate schools. Lecture Halls - follow the
signs.
I :30 - 2:30 -

COG II and Social Contract. Find out how the
TESC governance system works before you have to
use it. It's vital to our existence that people know
how TESC runs. If you'd like to read the
documents beforehand, copies are in the catalogue
and available in the Information Center. Please join
us. Lecture Halll.

2:30 - 5:30 p.m. -

Media Presentations. Muiti-media presentations
that have been produced by faculty, staff and
students, showing the nature of Evergreen. There
will be continuous presentations of films,
videotapes and audiotapes.

4- 5p.m.- FAPQrientation

11 a.m. - noon - F AP Orientation

6:30 - 8 p.m. -

Individual Faculty-Student Conferences. Meet
with your faculty member to discuss objectives
with you, your academic program and Evergreen.
These important conferences will be going on all
week. If you didn't sign up during the academic
fair, contact your secretary for an appointment.

9 a.m. - 2 p.m. -

Eat, listen or dance to Entropy Service's
bluegrass/folk-rock music. Second floor lobby of
the Library unless the weather permits a
performance in Red Square.

Noon- Renter's Rights. Frank Farley, speaker, consultant
and expert on renter's rights, will share his
knowledge with us. Lecture Hall1.
3 - 5 p.m. - Meet the housing staff - fmd out housing policies,
information and who to contact in case you need
assistance or have a problem. First floor of Building

A.

11 a.m.- noon- Hikers and Biker's Tour. Grab your bike and boots
and see some parts of campus that aren't cement waterfront, geoduck house, daycare center and
Organic Farm. Everyone is invited to the Organic
Farm for a no-host lunch. (That means bring your
own), Meet in front of the Library, 2nd floor.
4 - 5 p.m. - FAP Orientation
9 a.m. - midnight -Junior Cadillac cruises into the TESC Library
second floor lobby. All sorts of music - come dance
and/or listen.
Media
cpj0025.pdf