The Paper Volume 2, Number 5 (October 18, 1973)

Item

Title
Eng The Paper Volume 2, Number 5 (October 18, 1973)
Description
Eng Page 1: NASA holds vocational conference;
Page 1: writers gain new critic;
Page 1: gays, minorities differ;
Page 1: Mudbay Ruggers squelched;
Page 1: the geoduck in danger;
Page 2: do unto others;
Page 2: blunders abound in the tale of Carmichael;
Page 2: biting the dust on campus;
Page 2: Staff Credits;
Page 2: (advertisement) Dirty Dave's Gay 90's;
Page 2: (advertisement) SAGA [Food Services]: Mother's Oats: Mother's Oats;
Page 2: (advertisement) The Bike Stand;
Page 2: (advertisement) The Asterisk and Cheese Library;
Page 2: (advertisement) Red Apple Natural Foods;
Page 3: Veterans Affairs office helps cut red tape;
Page 3: Briefs (continues Brief News);
Page 3: credit error found;
Page 3: Commentary rebuffed;
Page 3: (advertisement) Rainy Day Record Co.;
Page 3: (advertisement) Four Seasons Boutique;
Page 3: (advertisement) South Sound Center;
Page 4: events previewed;
Page 4: new faculty member heads marimba group (with image of Abraham Dumisani Maraire);
Page 4: NASA (continued from page 1);
Page 4: Don't applaud the clap;
Page 4: Climbers plan activities;
Page 4: Boss jock needed;
Page 4: (advertisement) Fast Eddie's Classified;
Page 4: (advertisement) Adult Student Housing (ASH)
Identifier
Eng cpj0029.pdf
Creator
Eng Plautz, Gary
Eng Shawver, Debby
Eng Nitzke, Joanna J.
Eng Swift, Ned
Eng Stone, Eric L.
Contributor
Eng Fleming, Jill
Eng Praggastis, John
Eng Stone, Eric L.
Eng Hauser, Chuck
Eng Hogan, Kevin
Eng Holt, Kathy
Eng Hunt, Colleen
Eng Layton, Leslie
Eng Plautz, Gary
Eng Shawver, Debby
Eng Galbreath, Patsy
Extent
Eng 4 pages
Format
Eng application/PDF
Is Part Of
Eng The Cooper Point Journal
Language
Eng eng
Publisher
Eng The Evergreen State College Board of Publications and members of the Evergreen community
Rights
Eng http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Source
Eng US-WaOE.A.1973-01
Spatial Coverage
Eng Washington
Eng Olympia, WA
Eng The Evergreen State College
Eng Seattle
Eng Ethiopia
Eng Portland
Eng Thurson County
Eng Zimbabwe, Rhodesia
Subject
Eng Native American Studies
Eng Writing
Eng Computer Technology
Eng Gay Rights, Ruggby
Eng Psycology, School Shootings
Eng Ceramic Sculpture
Eng Events
Eng Health, Venerial Disease
Eng African Music
Eng Music
Eng Shona, Marimba
Eng Ethnomusicology
Eng Mountaineering
Eng Radio Broadcasting
Eng Webb, Jack
Eng Hughes, Carolyn
Eng Nelson, Mary
Eng Hillaire, Mary
Eng Esquivel, Cruz
Eng Phare, Darrell
Eng Bogdanovich, Peter
Eng Vidal, Gore
Eng Mayers, Martin
Eng Mercer, Marilyn
Eng Langston, Peter
Eng Brown, Ellen
Eng Butcher, Susan
Eng Gauthier, Susan
Eng Zome, Marcel
Eng Jones, Dick
Eng Follett, Dave
Eng Kahn, Lance
Eng Renouard, Joe
Eng Moss, John
Eng Carmichael, Stokely
Eng Stone, Eric L.
Eng Whitman, Charles Joseph
Eng Fruedjung, Sigkarl
Eng Spratt, Jack
Eng Slaymaker, Bard
Eng Dubin, Susan
Eng Mack Tom
Eng Stenberg, Larry
Eng Nkrumah, Kwame
Eng Hall, Larry
Eng Mariare, Abraham Dumisani
Eng Jensen, Bob
Eng Ewing, Hugh
Eng Porter, Demian
Eng NASA
Eng National Advisory Board for Vocational Education
Eng The Evergreen State College
Eng Redbook
Eng Life
Eng Fortune
Eng Esquire
Eng National Council of Teachers of English
Eng Gay Resource Center
Eng Evergreen Minority Coalition
Eng Mudbay Ruggers
Eng Seattle Vagabonds
Eng Western Washington Sate Vikings
Eng Portland State College
Eng University of Washington
Eng The Geoduck Coffeehouse
Eng The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language
Eng Evergreen Office of Veteran Affairs
Eng Mother's Oats
Eng Dirty Daves Gay 90's
Eng The Bike Stand
Eng Red Apple Natural Foods
Eng The Asterisk and Cheese Library
Eng Peace Corps
Eng Aetna Insurance Company
Eng Pacific Northwest Conference on High Education
Eng South Sound Center
Eng Thurston County Health Dept.
Eng Evergreen health Services Clinic
Eng African Music College
Eng KAOS Radio
Eng Fast Eddie's Classified
Temporal Coverage
Eng 1973
Type
Eng text
Eng images
extracted text
. -<

~~~~~
THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE
OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON98505

Rlitness ~oettr RliS'bom&_:follp

NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION

OCTOBER 18, 1973
VOLUME 2, NUMBER 5

NASA holds vocational conference
·by Gary Plautz
Native American Studies, a departure from conventional ethnic
studies programs, hosted a workshop Tuesday to discuss the vocational education needs of Native
Americans. This workshop was
the first of many special events
that will be a vital part of Native
American Studies this year.
The National Advisory Board
for Vocational Education (NABVC)
has set up a task force to study the
vocational needs of Native Americans. The Tuesday workshop featured a representative from
NABVC, Carolyn Hughes, who
discussed vocational needs with
students and faculty from Native
American Studies, Indian students
from other local colleges, and a selected group of Native-Americans
from the area.
One of the problems discussed in
the workshop was the lack of
Indian representatives on the task
force. As Mary Nelson, faculty
member of Native American Studies, put it, "It is a key issue that
there are no Indians on a task
force discussing the vocational
needs of Indians. Whenever a
problem comes up, they always set
up a task force but the members
are almost always white. There
are many, many educated Native
Amencans\iiitl\leadershtp capacity who could easily be representatives on such task forces."
Program Deseribed
Native American Studies is a
unique coordinated studies program. It is, according to Mary
Hillaire, coordinator of the program, a program designed by Indians for Indians. This is a different approach to an ethnic studies
program which has in the past
been organized and run primarily
by whites.
The four faculty members of
Native American Studies, Cruz
Esquivel (Colville), Mary Hillaire
(Lummi), Mary Nelson (Colville),

and Darrell Phare (Lummi), are all
Native Americans, a fact different
than almost all other ethnic
studies programs in higher education. Presently, all 50 students enrolled in the program are Native
Americans.
"The purpose of the program is
to establish an educational service
relevant to the needs of Indian
people," Hillaire said. "The selfdetermination of Native Americans in their own education is
essential. It is time for Indians to
have an effect on their education
rather than the education having
an effect on Indians."
Goals

According to Hillaire, the ultimate goal of the program is for
Native Americans to establish a
discipline in higher education designed from the values, and established in the Native American proficiencies characteristic of their
lifestyle. The specific aims of the
program are to "encourage and
assist Native American people to
translate life experiences into educational equivalencies, initiate
community-based projects from
which students can establish a career goal as a means of obtaining
college credits, provide college
students with an appropriate
model for understanding the

Native American way of life, and
establish a means for Indian
people to perpetuate the values of
their culture in the state and national public education systems."
Native American faculty members recognized last year that
Evergreen did not have much to
offer the Indian student that related to his special needs, said
Hillaire. For instance, in Evergreen's first year of operation,
Darrell Phare taught a program on
Native Americans that had an enrollment of only two Native American people. Experiences like that,
Hillaire said, made it necessary for
the designing of a new concept in
Native American education.
Essentially, the program is divided into two groups, explained
Hillaire. One group centers its attention on campus and the other is
community-based.
"We are striving to develop the
growth of personal consciousness
of the individual student and community development," said Hillaire. "The faculty plans to divide
their time three ways in the program. We will spend a third of our
time on campus with students, a
third communicating with Native
American communities, and a

Writers gain new critic
by Debby Shawver

If you are interested, it is now
possible for you to analyze and imDo you identify with this stateprove your writing technique with
ment?
the help of a computer.
"I know I have learned a lot and
Faculty member Jack Webb,
experienced a lot in the last few
and computer programmer Peter
years. But every time I sit down to
Langston, along with Evergreen
try to express my ideas on paper I
students Ellen Brown, Susan
feel my ability to write hasn't kept
Butcher, and Susan Gauthier,
pace with the rest of me." (From
have designed a self-paced, corr ·
Computer Assisted Instruction
puter
assisted instruction program
(Continued on page -4)
Program Book)
for writing.
The process is simple:
(1) Buy a 100 page instruction
book (cost is $1.50 and money goes
into self-paced learning projects).
The cover is PINK.
Center as members of the Min- attempted to present the Center's
(2) Read it.
ority Coalition, made by a Gay case for inclusion in the Coalition.
· (3) Call (206)-866-6232 to get
Center member upon receipt of Zome was asked to submit a letter your "computer user number" for
the Minority Coalition letter.
stating his case and was informed The Evergreen State College (yes,
As the above two quotes that he would not be permitted to you have your very own, and it
indicate, the Evergreen Gay make his presentation in person.
turns the computer on too!).
Resource Center has been denied
The Gay Center position wa8
(4) Go to one of the computer
admittance to the Evergreen that being a "legitimate oppressed terminals. There are 10 in Lib.
Minority Coalition. At a meeting minority," they had a rightful .1308; four in Lab . .1047; and three
of the Coalition on Wednesday the place in any coalition of oppressed in Lab 3059.
request of the Gay Center to be minorities on the Evergreen
(5) ~ollow the directions in
admitted to the Coalition was campus. They alsO argue that . the PINK BOOK," and simply tne
discussed and voted down.
Gays are not only oppressed . your manuscript into the comFriday, Oct. 12, at the regular sexually. but socially and economi- . puter. '
meeting of the Minority Coalition, cally as well.
Then wait for . your feed-back.
Marcel Zome, acting liS the
The Minority Coalition in its The computer counts the irerepresentative of the Gay Center, · letter of denial states,· that, "The quency of certain characteristics of
people in the Coalition are not only expression in your writing such as
a minority in the numerical sense, the kinds of phrases, sentences,
but they have historically shared and function words you use. It also
experience in the systematic counts the numbers of words in
exclusion from the benefits fo~nd your sentences and paragraphs.
fractured kneecap in the RuggerThe PINK BOOK will explain
fest. Renouard, one of the best in a country we helped to build.
Our
human
rights
have
been
the
significance of the computer
scrummers around, according · to
denied, we have been denied ·numbers to style. Because most
Sullivan, will probably be .sideeducation, we have been exploited . professional writers know how to
lined the rest of the season.
to help build emp~es, ,while most use language to its fullest capac·· ·
ity, the stylistic devices for use in
The next action for Mud Bay is of us live in poverty."
The
Jetter
from
the
.
Miriority
the program were taken ·from a
Saturday against the lfniversity of
Coalition also expresses hope that: study of 50 articles written by difWashington in Seattle.
the decision to exclude the Gay ferent professionals. The articles
Center ·from its organization will were taken from national maganot also exclude the possibility of zines such as Redbook, Life, ·
joint efforts on specific projec~s:
Fortuae, and Esquire, and written
If, as it seems to be, the Gay by such authors as Peter BogdanCenter cannot be a part of the ovich, Gore Vidal, Martin Mayers;
week. It's not that no one goes but once they're there they don't Minority Coalition, most of the and Marilyn Mercer. ·
This program, developed at
buy anything. Maybe one cup of members of the Center feel that it
coffee and they nurse that cup all and the Coalition can help · each Evergreen through a Board of
other with particular problems. Trustee's Grant, is the first of its
night."
In response to this problem, The "There is racism in the 'G ay kind in the nation. In November,
Geoduck personnel have urged community and there is sexism in Webb will explain the new promore students to get involved with the ethinic minority community gram to the National Council · of
renovating the room, and for more and we and the Minority Center Teachers of English Conference in
people to come in the evenings (8 should be able to help each other in Philadelphia. Webb, co-chairman
p.m.-midnight) either to eat or to dealing with these problems," was of the conference, will serve as
help with the open mike entertain- the feeling expressed by several of speaker/consultant on "The Comthe Gay Center members.
puter in the Teaching of English."
ment.

Gays, Minorities differ
"Our goals and purposes are very
different. In our eyes, your main
concern is sexual freedom, while
ours is to improve the well-being
of all non-white people in every
aspect of this society." - A
paragraph from the letter refusing
admittance of the Gay Resource
Center to the Evergreen Minority
Coalition.
"We have to work to educate
people as to the fact that there are
more issues involved in the
oppression of Gays then simply the
sexual one." - A comment regarding the exclusion of the Gay

Mudbay Ruggers squelched
Despite the impressive play of
Dick Jones, Dave Follett, Lance
Kahn, and others, the Mud Bay
Ruggers fell to defeat twice last
weekend at the Second Annual
Rainier Ruggerfest held on Evergreen's new playfields.
Five Northwest rugby teams
showed up for the event and three
games were played in all. On
Saturday, Seattle's Vagabonds
crushed the Western Washington
State Vikings 12-0, and, in a game
marred by penalties, Portland
State defeated Mud Bay 13-0. In
Sunday's lone contest, Fort Lewis
nipped Mud Bay 3-0 in what was
obviously the most exciting match
of the tournament.
"Fort Lewis played like they
had learned the game at West
Point," Mud Bay coach Steve
Sullivan said. "Consequently, we
lost. But it was a close, hard-fought
game all the way."
Sullivan also commented that

FACULTY MEMBER JACK WEBB eumiaes results from aew
computer assisted writiag iastructioa program.

the Army team scored their three
points on a play that may have not
been perfectly legal.
Sullivan said the weekend contests were the first rugby actions
ever for many of his charges. He
went on to compliment the play of
Jones, Kahn, and Follett, and also
Joe Renouard, who suffered a

The Geoduck in danger
The survival of The Geoduck,
Evergreen's coffee house, is now,
after only one week of operation,
threatened. If the past week is indicative of a trend, according to
John Moss, director of Auxiliary
Services, then cutbacks in the
CAB 104 coffee house are going to
have to be made.
"Although closing the place is a
little severe," Moss said, "something is going to have to be done.
We are losing a hundred dollars a

~P~A•G•E~2~----------------------------------~THEEVERGREENSTATECOLLEGE

Blunders abound •
tale of Carmichael

·Do unto
others

by Joanna J. Nitzke
&
Ned Swift

For a campus community that is so friendly, loose, laid back
or whatever, people sure are inconsiderate. Why is it that
every time cement is poured, someone puts a foot, a stick or a
bicycle in it? Why do cars run the stop signs, scaring both
pedestrians and bike riders?
Take a look at the cafeteria. The tray return is generally
piled high with trays shakily balanced against paper cups and
old spinach souffle. People applaud when the conveyor belt
starts and the dishes crash to the floor. Try stacking your
dishes so they won't topple, and if you really are considerate
try removing the paper from your tray so the dish room
people don't have to do it.
Have you thought about using the walkway to go to the
dorms instead of the construction site? How many magazines
or books have disappeared from the library simply because
you were too lazy to check them out and too lazy to put them
back?
How many people are kept awake in the dorms because
some drunk decides to howl in the courtyard? What about bike
riders who terrorize walkers by zooming up silently from
behind?
We would like to see people be friendly, laid back and
considerate. It makes life around here just a little better.

Eric Stone's commentary of Oct.
11, entitled, "Mau-Mauing the
Radical Chic", was a vicious defamation of both the character and
the speaker, Stokely Carmic!hael,
and those attending the speech.
Stone's commentary was not
directed to the content of the
speech, given by Mr. Carmichael
on Tuesday Oct. 9, but employed
malicious accusations and implications which reveal Stone's ambiguous slipshod journalism.
The ambiguities begin in the
first paragraph in which he gives a
definition of the shell game. This is
left unrelated to the continuing article. The accusations follow when
he accuses Mr. Carmichael of
being a capitalist, hustler, kingpin,
champ, heavyweight, ex-Man,
snake tonic peddler, evangelist,
carnie, a holographic escapee from
a time capsule, and spouter of
pompous drivel, among others.
Eric Stone, what do you mean
by this diatribe of slanderous
name calling?
We can only infer that Stone's
rationalization for calling Mr. Carmichael a capitalist is that he
.accepted money for a speaking en'gagement. But what reasoning
constitutes the other more mali-

l\

: mE PAPER is published hebdomadally by the Publications cious empty charges? Take for one

· 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.J..ibrary., room_.3120.
-Phene: (206) 866-6213.

example, what does he mean by
calling Mr. Carmichael a "hustler"?

The Ameriean Heritage Dictionary
of the Engllsb Language cites the
following definition of a hustle ". .
T b . (
).
'.
. . o o tam mone~ m ~uestJOnable ways · · · · To-<se~ b~ !Ug'h
0
mduce
Editor ............ ... ................ . ..... Jill Fleming pressure means ·b1· ·. ·
(someone)
to
gam
em
a
game
.
h'
T
I'
. set
Business Manager ........................ John Praggastis
up ag&~st liD • • • • 0 ~0 ICI~. cus'Editorial Editor . . . .... . . .. . ...... . . . ......... . ....... Eric L. Stone tomers or or asl a ~ro~tltute. ~e
can see no corre atton etween t e
Staff. . . Chuck Hauser, Kevin Hogan, Cathy Holt, Colleen speech and Stone's slanderous
implication of calling Mr. CarmichHunt, Leslie Layton, G~y Plautz, Debby Shawver
ael a hustler. The names he used in
Photography ... Patsy Galbreath
describing the speaker are neither
explained, or as we have seen in
the case of the hustler, justified. It
is clear that Stone neither underII.IP THI' (Ill f'U\
stands nor defines the terms he
used. This ambiguous usage of
terms reinforces Stone's shabby
display of journalism and is a tactic
used as a cover-up for his shortsightedness into the content of Mr ·
Carmichael's speech. What was
the content of Mr. Carmichael's
speech that could possibly warrant
this torrent of name calling? The
commentary
is full of inferences
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does Mr. Stone quote, or for that
matter, directly refer to any part
of the speech.
Stone's first reference to the
content of the speech relays his
own ignorance when he tries torefute the dialectical materialism, as
presented by the speaker. Stone's
first quote inadequately simplifies
and this misleads the reader in
translating Mr. Carmichael's explanation of dialectical materialism. A few minutes spent in the
library will yield a wealth of repu- ·
table references that explain the
nature of this theory. We can only
conclude that Stone's article
simply was not researched.
Stone, in his second quote from
the speech, misquotes Mr. Carmichael. During the question and

~

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'FRAME SETS

u9 o

t~e

dust

In 1963 Charles Joseph Whitman an A's and B's architecture student
and an Eagle Scout climbed to the top of the clock tower on the
University of Texas campus and before he was through shot 16 people
dead. Mass murder? Lunacy? Fun and games? No, therapy! Hip,
innovative psychology. Role play therapy had hit its high water mark.
Now The Evergreen State College has its own clock tower, and a fine
one at that. Think of the possibilities:
Sigkarl Freudjung, newly hired staff psychologist at the good ole
creative The Evergreen State College has stated his belief that the "fear
of death is the one great obstacle to a true and creative learning
process." Doctor Freudjung believes that humans spend too much time
worrying about their future and consequently not enough time to be
.
excellent m the present. The S & A Board has voted to allocate $10,000
' f~r Doctor Freu~jung's "sniper therapy."
· At 9 a.m., on a crystal clear November day, Jack Spratt, third year
Evergreen student, member of the Power and Personal Vulnerability
· on h'1s way t o semmar.
·
A s hot rmgs
·
·
program 1s
ou t'. A worker 1ookson m
horror as Jack Spratt falls dead onto a newly poured concrete walkway.
Throughout the day the scream of ambulances is heard, as bodies are
carted off the grounds. The final total is 8 dead, 27 wounded, though
most. of the wounds are superficial. All day long, students continue to
attend classes, but wherever they run, they run for cover. Doc Freudjung
has made it apparent that he means business.
Each day at 9 a.m. as students and faculty start work, so does the
Evergreen sniper. Each day at 5 p.m. when the whistle blows to punch
in the old card and head for home, so does the sniper. As the days wear
on, the death toll diminishes and the Evergreen community becomes
more and more blase about its sniper. "I wonder if I'm going to get
sniped today?" is an often expressed but suprisingly casual question.
People at Evergreen are beginning to be bored with death.
As the years wear on, Evergreen alumni, no longer concerned with
their deaths, begin to do well in the world. A few Senators are elected.
Inventions are invented. Six Latin American coup d'etat's are
sucessfully led by Evergreen bred revolutionaries. Finally a President
of the United States is elected from the ranks of Evergreen alumni, she
forges a true international detente, providing for world peace and
harmony for eternity. Doc Freudjung has done his deed!
Thank you Charles Joseph ¥rhitman!

Oldest Continuous Mfg. of Bikes in the World
Jack Taylor
Sakai
Colnago
Winchester
Cid
Winsor
Torpedo
Frejust
Pa!_ts<._Acc-ories, Service

(Continued on page 3)

on campus

ST.EVR - CLUBMAN
BIKES
GITANE

answer period someone from the
audience asked the speaker to
which charity he was going to give
the money, and the article by
Stone quotes Mr. Carmichael as
answering, "I ean't tell you that!"
Those people at the speech as well
as anyone listening to the tape will
know that Mr. Carmichael's actual
reply was, "I don't have to tell you
that!" This is, without a doubt, an
inexcusable, blunderous error.
Also amid the article, is a floating
quote from an unkown source
regarding the Black Power Movement. This attempt at quotation is
just another example of the
abomindable journalistic style of
the article.
N_o t only does Stone indict

Biting

The Bike Stand

j
Then You Probably Don't Know
Our Milk and Cheese Is Cheaper
Than Down Town,
Either

OCTOBER 18, 1973

' II

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NATURAL
FOODS

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The Asterisk¥
and Cheese Library

Aniversary Sale
Oct. 22-27

Health Foods & Vitamins
Westside Center 'W'

Mon.-Sat. 9:30-6
357-8779

OCTOBER 18, 1973

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

PAGE3

V~terans Affairs Office

helps cut red tape

Dodging bullets in Vietnam
doesn't always prepare veterans
for dodging red tape in post-military life. Helping veterans by providing needed information resources is the primary objective of
the Office of Veterans Affairs at
Evergreen.
The office wants to be of practical use to veterans and their dependents in the Olympia area. In
three weeks of operation since
opening this September, 90 people
have received assistance in problems ranging from G.I. bill applications to home loans and vocational
rehabilitation.
Programs are being developed
to be active in the area of recruitment advice, tutoring, and analysis
of needs. People who are interested in these and other potentially active areas are being invited

to contact the office for any
further desired information.
Despite seemingly popular belief to the contrary, the Selective
Service Act still requires the registration of all eligible males. The
office can not only provide registration on campus, but feels that it
may be able to do some good in the
field of draft counselling.
Though the office itself is located in the Library Building at
Evergreen it hopes that members
of the entire Olympia veteran and
dependent community will make
use of its services and resources.
As Bard Slaymaker, Vietnam
Navy vet and coordinator of the
office said, "We are working as advocates of the people, rather than
of the system. We are most desirous of community input and wish
suggestions on how we can expand
and improve our services."

Anyone interested in becoming
a sailing instruetor should meet at
the Geoduck House, Wednesday,
October 24, at noon in order to
take a sailing test. However, prospective instructors should take a
swimming test at the pool before
Wednesday's meeting.
As soon as instructing positions
are filled, people interested in
sailing lessons can watch the outdoor kiosk for announcements.

*

BARD SLAYMAKER

Corrections

Credit error found
An error in converting to the
new Evergreen unit of credit has
been detected and is in the process
of being corrected. Only those
students that transferred here
prior to this fall, and who had
credits ' from other colleges, are
affected.
The error arises from having
applied the wrong multiplier, 1.33,
as appears on the newly issued
transcripts, instead of a multiplier
ofl.25.
For example, if a student
transferred 60 quarter credit

hours to Evergreen, he would
have received an Evergreen
equivalency of 12 units under the
old system. (12 Evergreen units x
5 quarter hours = 60 quarter
credit hours)
Under the new system, the
same student should receive 15
units of credit. (15 Evergreen
units x 4 quarter hours = 60
quarter credit hours)
Corrections are currently being
made, and those affected will be
issued new transcripts as soon as
they are done.

In last week's issue of The Paper
there were two mistakes that we
have since had our attention
called to. First of all we would like
to apologize to Susan Dubin whose
name we signed to her letter as
Susan Dalin.
Secondly, we had meant to
make a correction of the quote by
Stokely Carmichael at the end of
Eric Stone's commentary. The
quote we printed as incorrect and
the correction mentioned in this
week's article by Johanna J.
Nitzke and Ned Swift is the
correct quote. Thank you for your
diligence in noticing our mistakes.

Commentary ·rebuffed

f'

II'

I

o 1('

I

(From page 2)

Stokely but all those people who
attended the speech as well. He
proclaims us to be, all the hustlers
within a 50 mile radius, prey,
members of the lunatic fringe,
suckers and marks. (A mark is a
"person who is an easy target for a
swindler, dupe." - American
Heritage Dictionary of the American Language.) By insinuating
that the audience is stupid, Stone
attempts to reinforce his hustler
image of Stokely Carmichael.
In view of the facts presented:
1. That Stone charges of Mr. Carmichael being among other things
a hustler, and that these libelous
charges are left unsubstantiated,
leads us to the conclusion that Mr.
Stone has judged the personal
character of the speaker and not
the content of his speech. 2.

Because he refers to the administration and to those who attended
the speech as being among other
things, "suckers", we demand a
printed retraction and apology to
Stokely Carmichael and the Evergreen Community.
Perhaps Stone's intention was
to be funny when he wrote this
"reaction" to the speech of Mr.
Carmichael. We feel it was utterly
tragic! Evergreen was not duped
out offunds by Mr. Carmichael for
his speaking engagement as was
contended by Mr. Stone, but was
presented here through the sincere efforts on the part of many
people including UJAMAA (Evergreen's Black Student Union),
President McCann, Larry Stenberg (Dean of Student Services)
and many others. It was their and

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*

*

A meeting to plan a new bus
sehedule will be held Wednesday,
IOctober 24 at 3:30 p.m. at the Bus
System Kiosk on the second floor
of the CAB. If you have anything
to say about the future of your bus
system, attend this meeting.

our intention to introduce to Evergreen a personage of world notoriety and respect. The maliciousness and sloppiness of the article
by an editor of The Paper sheds a
very poor light on the educational
quality of Evergreen's paper, and
its staff and training. It is very
tragic, indeed, to think that a
speaker can not come to Evergreen without being maliciously
attacked or even libeled in our college newspaper!
". . . . I wonder sometimes
whether the press as a whole appreciates its enormous responsibility .... the power of the press to
do good is immense, but its power
to arouse the worst emotions in
man is even greater
Kwame Nkrumah.

The Ceramic Seulpture Workshop will begin Tuesday, Oct. 23 at
1 p.m. instead of Oct. 15 as had
been originally scheduled. It will
run through Oct. 26 with a starting time of 10 a.m. for the Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday sessions.
People wishing to register for
the program can do so at the Recreation Office from 10 a.m. to 6
p.m. weekdays. The cost is $12 for
students and $25 for other
community members which includes 25 pounds of clay and instruction from Ben Sams, a wellknown artist. The class will meet
behind the Lab Annex.

* *

Next Thursday, Oct. 25, at
noon, the Senior seminar topic will
meet and discuss resume writing.
Peace Corps and VISTA rep- Part of a regular series, the semresentatives will be recruiting inar meets in CRC 202.
on-campus October 24 and 25.
They can be found on the second
floor of the CAB.
Also visiting Evergreen for reA planning meeting to organize
cruiting purposes will be representatives from the Aetna lniiUI'Ulee a men's Gestalt eo-op and conCompany. They will appear the sciousness raising group will take
place Thursday, Oct. 25, at noon in
morning of November 1.
the Women's Center, lib 3213.
Sponsored by the Women's Center, the group will meet at times
as a co-ed group with the Women's
It's too late to receive a full Gestalt co-op.
tuition refund if you're leaving
school. However until Oct. 30 half
tuition refunds are possible.
Students receiving fmancial aid

* * *

* * *

*

*

*

*

*'

*··

•*

*

can pick up cheeks now at student
accounts.

Tom Mack, graduated in June
from Evergreen, has completed
Peace Corps training for Ethiopia,
where he will serve for two years
Evergreen will be the host for
as a health volunteer. He will be the annual meeting of the Pacific
joining more than 7,000 Americans Northwest Conference on High
working through ACTION, an Education. The theme of this
agency for volunteer service, in 58 year's conference will be "The
countries.
·Uses of Diversity in Higher
Education".
The dinner speaker and principle resource person for the
conference will be Dr. Larry Hall,
a former consultant to the
There will be an organizational
Department of Health, Education
meeting for Messy Arts, Friday,
and Welfare, and currently is an
. Oct. 19, at 1 p.m. in the Messy
Associate Dean of the School of
Arts room in the basement of the
Social Service Administration at
library. Equipment needs, superthe University of Chicago. The
vision times, and clay glaze orders
conference will run from 6:30 on
will be decided at this meeting.
Thursday, October 18, to noon
October20.

*

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* * *

* * *

BARNES FLORAL
BLUME REAL TV
BOOKMARK
BRUNO'S STUDIO
SOUTH SOUND FINANCIAL
CAPITAL SOUTH SOUND TRAVEl
EGYPTIAN WIG SALON
ERNST HARDWr..,.<t
EVERGREEN SAVINGS
FIDELITY FIN..,I'Il.l:.
GOODYEAR
GUARDSMAN
GUARDHOUSE
HICKORY FARMS
HOUSE OF FABRICS
IN SHOP
IVANS DINER
IVANS ON THE MALL
J.B. WESTERN WEAR
J. K. GILL

KARMEL KORN
KINNEY SHOES
Kl RBV COMPANY
KRESEK'S
LEED'S SHOES
LERNER'S SHOPS
LeROVS JEWELERS
LW
LEW'S HALLMARK
L VON'S APPEREL
M&B ELECTRONICS
MAICO HEARING AID CENTER
MAGGIES
MAD SHOP ( HOLLY HILL HOUSE)
MARZA'S SOUTH SOUND SALON
MODE 0 DAY
MOTHERHOOD MATERNITY
MR' LEES BEAUTY SCHOOL
MR. RAGS LTD..
MUSIC BAH
PARKLANE HOISERV

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TUESDAY' WEDESDA Y SATURDAY lOam to 6pm

PAY 'N SAVE
PEOPLES STORE
PIZZA HUT
RADIO SHACK
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SNAPPY PHOTO
SWEET SHOPPE
TOP AUTO
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F.W. WOOLWORTH
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WORLD OF FABRICS
SOUTH SOUND MUSIC CENTER INC
MIJA'S



...,
PAGE4

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

OCTOBER 18, 1973

EWED

EVENTS

events, workshops, and exhibits,
will appear weekly. Any contributions or feedback will be appreciated.
SEATTLE
Angela Davis and Walter Collins
Woven wall hangings exhibit,
entitled "Dream Shields" at Child- to speak Oct. 25, 8 p.m., Hec
hoods End Gallery, (507 S. Capitol Edmundson Pavillion, U. of W.
Way) by Alan Doyle, Evergreen Non UW students, $1.25, General
public, $1.50. Tickets available at
student. November 1 thru 30.
door.
Black Arts/West, "To be
Wednesday Night Film "The Young, Gifted and Black," 3406
Passenger" and short "Night and East Union, 322-0211. Every
Fog" TESC, Lecture Hall One.
Thurs., Fri., and Sat. through
Oct. 20. Call for reservations and
Y. W .C.A. Single Mother's information.
Workshop Saturday, Oct. 20 from
Evening of Organ Music, first in
9:30 a.m. to 3:00 p.m., United series of four, Oct. 19. St. Marks
Church (South Capitol Way and E. Cathedral, lOth Ave. East and
11th.) Sack lunch and $1 donation. East Galer St. Organ workshop
Register at 352-0593 or 456-1320.
next day, $4 general, $2 student,
$12 series. Evening and workshop
Folk Dancing (TESC) every by Marie-Claire Alain.
Sunday in the Multi-Purpose Rm.
Jose Feliciano and Charles
Tuesday, 2nd floor Activities Lloyd in ACLU Benefit Concert
Bldg. Everyone welcome, teaching Sunday Oct. 21, 8 p.m. Hec
included.
Edmundson Pavillion, U. of W. $5,
students $4. Tickets at HUB
Student Union, Bon Marehe, all
PORTLAND
Portland
Art
Museum outlets .
Jungian analyst Ian Baker, "The
Exhibit: "The Far North: 2000
Years of American Eskimo and Power of Anxiety," Roethke
Indian Art, SW Park and Madison. Auditorium, U. of W. tickets at
$2.50 adults, $1 students, Oct. 3 door, general $2.50, students,
$1.50.
thru Nov. 18.

. New faculty member
heads marimba gro~p

"Events Previewed," a conscientious effort by the Paper to
compile a list of local and regional
OLYMPIA
~ Movies: Olympic Theater, "On a
:Clear Day You Can See Forever,"
and "Paper Moon". State Theater,
:"Macintosh Man" and "The Thief
: Who Came to Dinner". Capitol
1Theater, "Fantasia". All showing
: through this week.
' Little Theater Production "You
:Can't Take It With You", last
· week. Curtain time 8:15, 1925 E.
. Miller, $2.50.
'

i

YUkon cllinbing expedition slide
' /lecture show, TESC, 7:30 p.m.,
: Lecture Hall One, free of charge,
: Oct. 19.
"Nights of Cabiria", and "Tales
of the Bronx", movies at TESC, 7
and 9:30 p.m., Lecture Hall One,
50 cents. Oct. 19.
:

Olympia Mushroom

Show,

j Olympia Community Center, 1314
1E. 4th, Oct. 19, 7:30 p.m., $1
I adults, students free.



t

' Independent filmmaker Jon
Jost in a 90-min. production of his
town films, Monday Oct. 29, TESC
. ~ecture Hall3, 8 p.m.

Don't applaud the clap

l'--

-

Venereal disease, considered to
be the leading communicable disease in the United States, is on the
rise in this area, especially in the
population under 25. Despite
widely available and effective
-1m'!ftft·s of pre"Vention; thousands of
new eases are reported every
year. Not known are how many
cases go undetected and untreated, especially in women.
Evergreen and the Thurston
County Health Dept. both have excellent detection and treatment
centers. Evergreen's Health Services Clinic hours are Monday and

Tuesday; 1-4 p.m. and Thursday
and Friday; 9 a.m.-12 noon.
The Clinic is run on an appointment basis, but drop-ins are
scheduled so that everyone gets
seen. Treatment and prescriptions
for venereal disease are free, but
g~neraily , pati~n.ts must pay 'f~r
prescriptions. The phone number
is 866-6200.
Another service for women new
this year is the Womens' Clinic, in
Rm. 1222. Since a woman may not
be alerted by venereal disease
symptoms, it is important that she
have a checkup regularly.

The hours are: Mon. and Tues. 9
a.m.-noon; Wed. all day, 9 a.m.-5
p.m., with evening clinics every
other Wednesday, Thurs. and Fri.
1 p.m.-5 p.m. For those wishing
services from the Womens' Clinic
it is necessary to pay the cashier
and bring the receipt to the Clinic.
The phone number is 866-6238.
The Thurston County Health
Dept. in the Court House Annex
on 11th and Washington provides
free care, with no charge for prescriptions. Drop-ins are welcome,
and the telephone number is
753-8068.

Climbers plan activities
"We're not trying just to get to skills, group continuity, and enjoythe top all the time. We try not to ment of the outdoors.
Jensen and eo-"head" of the
have such big objectives that we
forget the real reason for moun- program, Hugh Ewing, are considtaineering, to enjoy the mountains ered resource persons in the group
and the outdoors," said Bob Jen- and not leaders in the traditional
sen, one of the instructors of the sense. One of the goals of the class
Basic Mountaineering course be- is to place leadership in the group
rather than just on a couple of
ing offered at Evergreen.
The philosophy behind this people.
Five hikes will be attempted by
mountaineering program is different than most others, Jensen said. the mountaineering class fall quarMany mountaineering courses ter. The flrst one is on October 28,
stress summit climbs, individual a day hike to the saddle between
accomplishment, and endurance Castle Rock and Pinnacle Peak in
but the class at Ev~rgreen empha- the Tatoosh Range. The quarter's
sizes the development of basic instruction will conclude Decem-

ber 1 and 2 with an overnight
outing to Paradise Glacier on
Mount Rainier.
In preparation for each of the
weekend hikes, a two-hour discussion will be offered on the Tuesday
before. The flrst discussion was
held Tuesday and was open to all
members of the community but future sessions will be open to
course members only.
The deadline for signing up for
the class is Friday, October 19 and
prospective members can register
in CAB 305. Cost for the class is
$20 for Evergreen students and
$30 for all other people.

Abraham Dumisani Maraire is a
member of a Shona Marimba or
African music performing group
that at the moment has no instruments. But it will get them, he
says. It also has few members. But
it will get them because Dumi is a
very potent energetic man.
He has come to the Individual in
Contemporary Society program
from the University of Washington where he has been a lecturer in
the School of Music, Ethnomusicology Department, since the fall
i of 1968.
,t "Besides that," Dumi says, "I
have a Rhodesian Teaching Certificate and did two years of music
training at African Music College
ABRAHAM DUMISANI
in Zimbabwe, Rhodesia from
MARAIRE
where I received a diploma. I have
also done one and a half years of
research on ~bona music. The
Shona are my tribe; I am an
·
African."
Dumi is taking a group from the
ICS program who are interested in
(From page 1)
music through the different phases
third on personal and professional
· of American Rock, Blues and Soul
growth."
Music, heading towards a study of
Coming of Age
African music at the end of the
Hillaire said the emphasis of the
year.
program for students will be in
They are studying the politics,
two areas. One . is the traditional
economics, performing and societal
sense of Indian values and · the
aspects of music on differing
other is the 1'transitional sense of
layers of American society and
the partnership ·of all people that is
ethnic groups. They are also makdistinctive in a democracy."
ing a study of the effects of music
"Native Americans are coming
on the performer, the audience,
of age," Hillaire said. "We are now
the society, and the world.
ready to express the needed voice
Dumi has been teaching the
of Native Americans within the
marimba (like a xylophone), mbira
framework of democracy."
(like an Afro harp), and ngoma
"Democracy has not and will not
(drums) to American students
work unless we all work together,"
since 1968. He would like to conshe stated. "Two or more people
tinue that here at Evergreen.
must work together in order for
Anyone interested in learning to
democracy to succeed but Native
play African instruments, or
Americans have not been actively
taking up African dancing, African
involved in this process in Amer- singing or learning about African
ica. We hope the Native American
culture is urged to contact Dumi in
Studies program is a step in the Lib. 2120. Anyone interested in
right direction for a true and work- joining the Marimba group should
ing democracy."
also contact him.

NASA .

Boss iock needed
"And that was Dion and the Belmonts on the Big 89, Boss KAOS .
. ." This could be YOU. Music
director Demian (AI) Porter has
announced that there is a position
open for Saturday morning's "jive
jock" on KAOS radio.
"We're looking for someone
who's stepped right out of the
early fifties, complete with the
hyped up rap, oldies music and

CJr)A

pimple cream," he said.
Because of the expected onslaught of applicants, only the
"right" person will be considered
for the job. Persons interested in
entering the competition for · this
"hot" position should contact Porter at the radio station, or submit
a demonstration tape with a
sample of their radio "personality."

STUDENT
COMMUNITY

\

PLACE
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People needed to bulk order hay from
Eastern Washington. $87 /ton
Gary--943-1695

BATIK, TIE DIE & MATERIAL DESIGN CLASSES
Starts Oct. 25, 7:30pm
323 N Cushing (near westside center)
Call 357-6784 after 5pm or come by over
LOST-- ORANGE FLUFFY CAT
answers to Chubby -- laid back apperance
Left new home, 436 N. Rodgeers, could have returned
to old home, Mod 311 b. call Carman 943-5597

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MEET ALL

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OF YOUR HOUSING NEEDS

an apartment camplax
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