The Paper Volume 2, Number 6 (October 25, 1973)

Item

Title
Eng The Paper Volume 2, Number 6 (October 25, 1973)
Description
Eng Page 1: Vote Medic 1;
Page 1: Evergreen State College suspension policies;
Page 1: paychecks to be held;
Page 1: Oly. nat. park as wilderness area;
Page 1: [Sounding Board];
Page 2: who should go to Evergreen State College?;
Page 2: NASA plans activities;
Page 2: RAP LINE: impeach Nixon?;
Page 2: Medic 1 (continued from page 1);
Page 2: (advertisement) Dirty Dave's Gay 90's;
Page 2: (advertisement) Word of Mouth Books;
Page 2: (advertisement) "What to do in Olympia on a Rainy Day" book;
Page 2: (advertisement) Research Assistance, Inc.;
Page 2: (advertisement) The Tape Dock;
Page 2: (advertisement) Scholfield Sound Co.;
Page 3: first and ten, hit 'em again, Kathy!!;
Page 3: (advertisement) All Ways Travel Service, Inc.;
Page 3: (advertisement) Bob's Big Burgers;
Page 3: (advertisement) South Sound Center;
Page 4: good morning public opnion;
Page 4: (cartoon) [portals and various protestors with signs];
Page 4: The king is a fink;
Page 4: Walking the campus beat;
Page 4: elitism causes rift;
Page 4: Staff credits;
Page 4: Editor resigns;
Page 5: Readers voice opinions: The Paper lambasted;
Page 5: Readers voice opinions: changing scene;
Page 5: Readers voice opinions: more on Stokely[Carmichael];
Page 5: Readers voice opinions: burger lovers respond;
Page 5: Readers voice opinions: minority coalition rapped;
Page 5: Bravo Mr. Nixon;
Page 6: Women as 'Man-Junkies': Steinem views movement as 'revolution';
Page 6: ICS Programs Explores Resource Shortages;
Page 6: Evergreen State College ski school offers new ideas;
Page 6: (advertisement) Rainy Day Record Co.;
Page 6: (advertisement) La Tierra;
Page 6: (advertisement) The Bike Stand;
Page 6: (advertisement) Adult Student Housing (ASH);
Page 6: (advertisement) The Asterisk and Cheese Library;
Page 7: Gig, Speakers Bureau poll results;
Page 7: Absentee Ballot application;
Page 7: spiritual food;
Page 8: Campus News in brief;
Page 8: campus aclu meets;
Page 8: NW culture;
Page 8: (advertisement) SAGA [Food Services]: Mother's Oats;
Page 8: (adverisement) fast eddie's classifed;
Page 8: (advertisement) The Music Bar
Identifier
Eng cpj0030.pdf
Creator
Eng Plautz, Gary
Eng Smith, Susan
Eng Swanberg, Cindy
Eng Barron, Gina
Eng Layton, Leslie
Eng Shawver, Debby
Eng Hogan, Kevin
Eng Stone, Eric L.
Eng Ellis, Douglas
Eng Colstad, Kevin
Eng Wright, Francie
Eng Gilbert, Helen
Eng Johnston, Rick
Eng Murray, Doug
Eng Hall, Michael
Contributor
Eng Flemming, Jill
Eng Praggastis, John
Eng Stone, Eric L.
Eng Hauser, Chuck
Eng Hogan, Kevin
Eng Holt, Cathy
Eng Hunt, Colleen
Eng Layton, Leslie
Eng Plautz, Gary
Eng Shawver, Debby
Eng Galbreath, Patsy
Extent
Eng 8 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 Olympia, WA
Eng Washington State
Eng Thurston County
Eng Lacey
Eng Tumwater
Eng Olympia National Park
Eng Aberdeen
Eng Port Angeles
Eng Wishkah Valley High School
Eng Hoquiam High School
Eng Nisqually
Eng Panorama City
Eng St. Martins High School
Eng Portland
Eng Leavenworth
Eng Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Eng Seattle
Eng Tacoma
Subject
Eng Politics
Eng Medicine
Eng The Evergreen State College
Eng Emergency Services
Eng Ambulance
Eng Parks
Eng School Policy
Eng Sports
Eng Football
Eng Watergate
Eng Elitism, Campus News
Eng Human Rights
Eng Feminism
Eng Womens Rights
Eng Resources, Resource Shortages
Eng Skiing
Eng Adult Student Housing, Opinion Poll
Eng Native American life
Eng Voting
Eng Spirituality
Eng American Civil Liberties Union Meeting
Eng NorthWest Culture
Eng Kanno, Tom
Eng Kormondy, Edward
Eng Hunter, Sally
Eng Swanberg, Cindy
Eng Cellarius, Doris
Eng Hilts, Bonnie
Eng Nixon, Richard M. (Richard Milhous), 1913-1994
Eng Darrin, Carol
Eng Darrin
Eng Delores
Eng Tosland, Kathleen
Eng Stauffer, William
Eng Wolfe, Thomas
Eng Donahue, Ken
Eng Browning, Robert
Eng Flemming, Jill
Eng Murphy, Brian
Eng Carmichael, Stokely
Eng Douglas, Helen Gahagan
Eng Lewis, Sinclare
Eng Roosevelt, Franklin D.
Eng Olivier, Laurence
Eng Steinem, Gloria
Eng Witgenstein, Herta
Eng Gerstl, Ted
Eng King, Ed
Eng Garner, Lynn
Eng Peterson, Mark
Eng Adhikary, Sukadeva
Eng Prabhupada, Bhaktivedanta A.C.
Eng Mahaprabhu, Caitanya
Eng Soule, Sarah Moore
Eng Soule, Oscar
Eng Mozer, Dave
Eng Katz, Dean
Eng Taylor, Harold
Eng Kurtz, Paul
Eng Aldridge, Bill
Eng Hirshman, Bill
Eng Glasser, William
Eng Doyle, Allen
Eng Jost Jon
Eng Davis, Angela
Eng Baker, Ian
Eng Collins, Walter
Eng Montoya, Carlos
Eng Kottke, Leo
Eng McLane Fire Department
Eng Olympia Fire Department
Eng Tumwater Fire Department
Eng Lacey Fire Department
Eng Sierra Club
Eng Eastern Washington University
Eng Central Washington University
Eng Native American Student Association
Eng Dirty Dave's Gay 90's
Eng Word of Mouth Books
Eng Research Assistance Inc
Eng The Tape Dock
Eng Schofield Sound Company
Eng Wishkah Valley High School
Eng Hoquiam High School
Eng The Wishkah Loggers
Eng The American Civil Liberties Union
Eng U.S. Air Force
Eng All Ways Travel Service
Eng South Sound Center
Eng Bob's Big Burgers
Eng The Daily Olympian
Eng St. Martin's High School
Eng Baskin and Robins
Eng Portland Civic Center
Eng Good Samaritan Hospital
Eng The Evergreen State College Ski School
Eng Rainy Day Record Company
Eng La Tierra
Eng The Bike Stand
Eng The Asterisk and Cheese Library
Eng The Gig Commision
Eng The Speakers Bureau
Eng National Indian Education Conference
Eng Papa's Garage
Eng Peace Corps
Eng KAOS Radio
Eng Mother's Oats
Eng Fast Eddie's Classified
Eng The Music Bar
Eng Portland State University
Temporal Coverage
Eng 1973
Type
Eng text
Eng images
extracted text
Vote Medic I

by Gary Plautz

Of particular interest to the
Evergreen community on the November 6 ballot is the special levy
to finance a publicly funded and
operated ambulance service, Medic
~.in Thurston County.
"Medic I moves the emergency
room to the victim rather than
moving the victim to the emergency room," said Tom Kanno,
assistant chief of the McLane Fire
Department. "The purpose of
Medic I is to reach the victim of a
serious emergency within a critical
five minute period, five minutes in
which the victim can oftentimes be
saved."
Lack of Votes
The Medic I system received a
72 per cent favorable vote in the
primary election on September 18.
However, the special levy failed
due to a lack of voter turnout, 500
votes shy of the needed 60 per cent
of votes cast in the last general
election, the presidential election
of 1972.
With school in session and a
much more interesting ballot,
chances for the passage of the
Medic I system this time around
seem better, according to Kanno.
He stresses, though, that everyone eligible in the Evergreen community should vote as one of the
four emergency vehicles will be
stationed at the McLane Fire Department if the levy passes.

The three other emergency
vehicles of the Medic I system
would be stationed at the Olympia,
Lacey and Tumwater Fire Departments. The vehicles stationed at
Lacey and Olympia would be
manned by Paramedics with 1,000
hours of emergency training and
would be equipped with lifesaving
equipment including a defibrillator, portable pacemaker, portable electrocardiogram, and oscilloscope. Special radio equipment
in the two Medic I vehicles would
be able to transmit the vital signs
of a victim to doctors in the hospital who could use this information to aid the paramedics in their
work.
Here at McLane and in Tumwater, vehicles known as Emergency Medical Technicians (EMT)
would be stationed. These vehicles
would be manned by Emergency
Medical Technicians with 81 hours
of training, would be equipped
with emergency care equipment,
and would also be connected by
telephone to doctors in the hospital.
"With these four vehicles, we
can cover 80 per cent of the population of the county in five minutes," said Kanno. "Medic I is not
designed to replace private ambulance services, though. Medic I
transports to the hospital only
cases of a serious nature."
There are some critics of the
Medic I proposal. They contend

Medic I would increase taxes, take
over the job of the private ambulance services, and not be covered
under many people's insurance
policies.
Better Service
"We think the most important
point to remember is the better
service Medic I has to offer,"
Kanno said. "Because of its 'speed,
the victim is aided quicker at the
scene of an emergency, perhaps
cutting down on later hospital
costs."
Cost for the Medic I system in
its first year would be $250,000
which would be raised by the passage of the one-half mill special
levy. As for increased taxes, a person owning a $30,000 home in
Thurston County, for example,
would pay $7 a year toward the
support of Medic I. In future
years, other special levies may be
required to support the system or
alternate tax-supported funding
may be sought. It is expected
there will be a charge for the use
of the system but this cost cannot
be determined as yet.
Medic II
The McLane Fire Department is
also involved in a county-wide
program called Medic II. The goal
of Medic II is to provide training
for a community-based network of
people to handle emergency situations. The ultimate goal of Medic
(Continued on page 2}

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OCTOBER 25, 1973

THEEVERGREENSTATECOLLEGE
0(;.\!~-f\/ASH,GTON

ftiOS

NON-PROF-IT, ORGANIZATION

VOLUME 2, NUMBER 6

TESC suspension policies
"We will not have an automatic
sanction."
Vice President and Provost Ed
Kormody stressed this point as he
discussed academic standing at
Evergreen. The policy has not yet
been implemented but is quickly
and carefully being prepared for
operation.
Academic standing is defined in
small, frequently overlooked sections of the catalogue and supplement. The policy concerns the
status of full -time and part-time
students, leaves of absence and
aeademic penalties, e.g. probation, suspension and dismissal.
Acco,rding to the policy, a
student earning less than 7 of 9
units for three quarters, [now 9 of
12], can be put on probation for the
next quarter. If the student earns
less credit than registered for in
that quarter he "will normally be
suspended for a minimum of one
year,
[three
consecutive
quarters.)" If the student, upon
returning from suspension, does
not earn fuU credit, he may be
dismissed from the schooL
No one has been suspended or
dismissed under this policy as of
yet, and probably won't be until
Administrative Assistant to the
Provost Sally Hunter finishes her
study, on the academic hassles
students have had in the school's
first two years.
Hunter has been spending long
hours studying the academic
records of all students who have
attended TESC. She is compiling
lists of how much credit has been
lost, where and by whom. She
pointed out that there are a lot of
variables to be dealt with such as
the variance of credit value from

one faculty member to the next.
Are the students getting an equal
break'!
"As soon as Sally finishes the
report," Kormondy explained,
"we'll sit down with the academic
deans, evaluate the findings and
prepare the policy for action."
The probation regulations still
face several questions before
they'll be ready for implementation. Extenuating cirrumstances
such as personal tragedies and
illnesses have to be taken into
account along with personal conflicts between facilitator and
student. Also, year-end evaluations can create a situation where
a student can be hit by probation
without any warning. Students
receiving credit quarterly won't
have this problem.
The policy does have an elastic
clause that can cover the tragedy
and conflict situation. It states
that "The action of suspension is

subject to consideration by the
deans before it becomes effective."
However, the year-end evaluation
system can't be handled as simply.
"We have to get faculty
members to give reports at the
end of each quarter," Kormondy
said," and tell us if credit were
given, how the students were
doing."
Another aspect that has been
considered is financial aid. Under
certain kinds of federal loans a
student has to be receiving at least
9 of 12 credits to be eligible. This
has been used as an aid for the
academic guidelines, but only as
an aid.
"We haven't suspended anybody
through the academic standing
policy up to this point," Hunter
said," and we probably won't until
we have made it as human as
possible. But, a machine is only as
human as the people who run it."

Paychecks to be held
by Susan Smith
Circulation Librarian
One of the major functions of the
library circulation systems is to
provide a way of sharing college
resources and keeping track of
these resources. The library is
having considerable trouble getting materials back when they are
due; this is especially true of
media loan equipment. Demand
for many items has become so
great that we must impose shortterm borrowing periods and/or recall materials as needed.
While most students are conscientious in returning items on
time, some faculty and staff are
not. We have been charging service fees to students, staff and
faculty not honoring the circulation policy. Until now, there has
been no effective way to collect
those charges from staff and faculty. Because we feel that the
same regulations should apply to

0/y. Nat. Park as wilderness area
by Cindy Swanberg
In accordance with the Wilderness Act of 1964, the Olympic National Park (ONP) is finally holding hearings on wilderness classification for the park. These are extremely important hearings, the
last chance we have to designate
the park, or portions of it, as wilderness.
As proposed, over 90 per cent of
the ONP has been suggested for
wilderness, but when special interest groups have their say, things
may change. This is why individuals are so important, not only to

testify orally', but to lend support
at the hearings and testify in writing.
IMPORTANT: Notice of intent
to testify must be sent to the Hearings Officer c/ o Superintendent,
ONP, 600 E. Park Ave., Port Angeles, WA 98362, by Friday Oct.
26. If you care, get a postcard in
the mail tonight.
The important hearing to attend
is in Aberdeen, Thursday, Nov. 1
at 9:30 a.m. Because this is a
working day, many concerned citizens will be unable to attend, making our responsibility even greater. There is a second hearing in

Port Angeles on Nov. 3.
The Sierra Club is organizing a
car pool for the hearing. Anyone
interested in attending is asked to
contact Cindy Swanberg, 943-5928
in Evergreen Environment or
Doris Cellarius, 943-6875. There
will be a brief meeting at noon,
Tuesday, Oct. 30 on the 1st floor of
the Lab. bldg. to discuss the plan
and our part in it.
If you are concerned about
beauty, nature and solitude or
wouldn't care to see a hostel in Enchanted Valley or a road through
the mountains' heart, care enough
to let someone know.

all members of our community, we
are revising our billing policy as
follows and consistent with the
billing procedure for students.
If faculty and staff fail to return
materials on time, they will receive a letter saying that materials
are overdue and that they have
been assessed a mandatory service
fee to be paid at the cashier's office. If the equipment is not returned within forty-eight hour:.,
they will be billed the retail price
of the equipment and so advised in
writing. This bill will be backed
out if the materials are returned.
If no action is taken on their part,
after these two letters are sent,
their next paycheck will be held.
Of course, all this can be circumvented if materials are returned
on time. Hopefully, we will not
•have to use this procedure because
the community will respect the
need to share limited resources.

The Sounding Board is an
important focal point for exchange of information and discussion of concerns as a part
of Evergreen's governance
process. The process for selecting student representatives and alternates to this
year's Board has yet to be determined . A meeting to determine the process will be held
on Monday, Oct. 29 at 3 p.m.
in CAB 110,
Ideas regarding the representative selection process
should be submitted to Bonnie
Hilts in Student Services,
Lib. 1217. Ideas submitted in
advance will be used as a
starting point for discussion.

PAGE2

Who
should .
go to

TESC?

by Leslie Layton
Evergreen's admissions policy
has reached a turning point. DTF's
and study groups, being set up by
the administration, will be making
decisions this year that will
determine the future of the
admissions poiicy and in what
ways Evergreen survives as an
alternative.
There are several ways in which
the legislature could assume more
control of admissions. While
enrollment is dropping at most
Washington schools, Evergreen's
wai~ing list grows. Although other
Washington state colleges sometimes feel Evergreen is "stealing"
students that might otherwise
enroll there, how many Evergreen
students would be enrolled at
Central or Eastern, if TESC
weren't open, is questionable. A
large part of the students on the

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE
waiting list are residents of will not distinguish itself from
Washington. About twenty-five other alternative institutions by
per cent of the presently enrolled not reserving its educational
student body are from out-of- opportunities for a select group.
state; this is extra-ordinarily high
Statistics in this area do not
for a state college.
show great success. Of the largest
If the legislature should decide ethnic minority group
in
that Evergreen cannot accom- Washington, 1.2 per cent of the
modate Washington residents, as total student body is Chicano. This
it is also important to keep a high is a drop from 1.3 per cent
number of out-of-state students in enrollment last year. Last year 82
order not to become provincial. black students were enrolled here,
Hopefully Evergreen .can work and this has dropped to 60 this
this out for itself and without the year. Minority applications are
guiding hand of the state down 50 per cent. The lack here of
supportive services is evident, yet
legislature.
As the number of applications if only middle-class white liberals
continue to increase, it is obvious can afford alternative education, is
that the first-come, first-serve it "alternative" to anything?
policy can't survive. The fact that
Minority enrollment and the
Evergreen may be taking the changes necessary in admissions
liberty of choosing students from policy are some of the issues the
among its applicants means that, admissions office is trying to come
(1), it must first decide on a set of to terms with.
standards, and (2), either it will or

Impeach Nixon?
Ken Donohue:
"Yes, because he is in violation of a court order. Besides he is guilty by
implication of everything he's been charged with in the press."

by Gina Barron
Do you think President Nixon should be impeached?

Grant Bunker:
"Peachey."

(Editors note: this poll was taken before Nixon released the tapes.
Consequently some of the respondents may have changed their
opinions.)
·
Brian MDbrath:
"I think he should resign."

Steve Green:
"Yes, I do think he should be impeached, because he has played with
the American public too long. He has gone against what he said he would
do with firing Cox. He said that he wouldn't fU'e him except in extraordinary circumstances and he fired him for his own use. I think
impeachment would bring to the front what Nixon really is and what the
office of the president should be. And that the mockery imposed on the
American public would be exposed."
Jan Fisher:
"Yes, I think he should because he loses whether he is guilty or innocent. Because if he's guilty of Watergate he's guilty but if he's innocent
then he's pretty stupid because he didn't know what was going on behind
his back. So he's a pretty lousy president anyway."
AI Rose:
"What are the alternatives? I would say yes but to make a blanket
statement like that. What are we going to do, put a king in his place? Or
are we going to have an anarchy or an oligarchy or are we going to stay
with a democratic system and just elect a new president or what?"
Dan Slaven:
"Yes, in order to prevent another Hitler."

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Jasper Hunt:
"To begin with I'm reacting against people's emotional response to it,
and I don't think it's a question of whether or not he should be
impeached. I think it's a question of how you should react to what he's
been doing, and I think you have to take a hard look at the possible
advancements he's made in foreign policy against the very real threat of
nuclear war between the U.S. and Russia.
Irregardless of anything else, irrgardless of his immorality in
Southeast Asia you've still got to take into account the possibility of
destroying his advances, which can't be denied, with Russia. I think
people have to slow down and stop being so emotional about it."
Merv Cadwallader:
"It is very important, I think, that Nixon resign for our good, for the
nation's good, and for his own family's good. If he won't resi then we
should probably urge our congressmen o debate H1e mpeac meht
resolution before the House."
Bill Freeburg:
"I think he broke the law, I think he's in contempt of court for not
releasing the tapes. And I don't think that he's above the law, above the
courts. For that reason I think he should be taken out and shot."
Jim Carpenter:
"I do think Nixon should be impeached, because I think Nixon is really
running from something. It's really fucking up the country."

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ER 25, 1973

NASA
plans
• • •

actiVItieS
The Native American Student
Association (NASA) is a student
organization on campus designed
for Indians from Evergreen and
the surrounding area, and any interested non-Indians. Currently,
NASA is planning a variety of activities of service to Native-American students and of education for
non-Indians at Evergreen.
According to a written statement prepared by NASA, the
organization's philosophy is to be
of the most service to Indian
people in regards to education and
social problems. NASA encourages Native Americans from the
community to participate in activities at TESC and also to use the
college as a resource center.
One of the main reasons for
NASA's existence is the prejudice
and stereotypes that plague the
image of Nat!ve Americans in the
United States. Many whites understand what has happened to
Native Americans in the past but
refuse to acknowledge that many
of the same crimes which occurred
in the 1800's are still happening
today. And the crimes are definitely still occurring.
Another reason for the existence of NASA is, according to the
NASA statement, Evergreen's
unfulfilled commitments to Indian
(Continued on page 7)

Medic I
II is to have at least one member of
each family trained in lifesaving
techniques.
"All maintenance, fire department, and security personnel on
campus have been trained in
Medic II," said Kanno. "By the end
of October, it's expected 580
people in the county will be
trained and we expect 800 by the
end of November."
There will be five cardiopulmonary resuscitation classes (Medic II)
held on campus this c(_)ming week.
Two classes will be held on both
October 25 and November 2 and
one class on November 5. These
classes are open to all of the Evergreen community and those interested in the program should register at the Information Center
immediately. To receive the training, a person only has to go to one
of t.he five sessions.

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OCTOBER 25, 1973

THEEVERGREENSTATECOLLEGE

PAGES

. Kathy ..II
First and ten, hit 'em aga•n,
by Debby Shawver
Wishkah Valley High School is
located about 12 miles out of Aberdeen on a narrow winding road.
After getting lost, and showing
up at Hoquiam High School, we retraced our steps, and asked a few
gas station attendants where this
place was. Each time, we received
advice not to give up our search
too soon because it was "Quite a
ways out".
We kept going in hopes of finding a drive-in where we could get
an ice cream cone before tackling
our football interview. There are
no ice cream stands on the way to
Wishkah Valley High School.
Our disappointment was relieved, however, by the drive
which was really beautiful. The
road took us part of the way along
a river, and then it headed out
toward the woods where each
small clearing was planted in grass
to be used for the local dairy operations. We could sense that we
were approaching the high school
when we narrowly escaped a headon collision with some of the local
cruising crowd.
There are 100 students, seventh
through twelfth graders, at Wish kah Valley High School. Eleven of
them decided to turn out for football this year. Three of those 11
are girls. Although the courts
have refused to allow Carol and
Delores Darrin, and Kathleen Tosland to play in league games, they
still turn out to ttelp~ hei;eam practice.
Initiation Rites
We covered the football initiation ceremonies at the school last
Thursday. Football initiation rites
at Wishkah Valley High include a
dump in the creek. Actually, initiation ceremonies are carried on all
year long, and it really is okay if
you've already been initiated. You
can do it again - whether you
want to or not. The Wishkah Loggers believe in thoroughness. You
don't even have to be a football
player to get dunked.
The causes for getting thrown in
vary. Kathy Tosland frequently
gets it because she likes to put
rocks down people's pants. Cheerleaders get it because - well, you
know those games. Even innocent
reporters are occasionally threatened (it's something like being a
war correspondent).

·_.·······.'....

___ ···._·

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Manager Spellks
While the team was practicing
we interviewed the Logger's manager, eighth grader William Stauffer. We asked him if he thought
that women in general were as
capable of playing football as men.
"Yep," he said with only slight
hesitation.
There was no hesitation in his
voice, however, when he answered
a strong affirmative to the question, "Are these girls good players'!" The team hasn't won a game
since 1970 and he felt that they
would have had a good chance of
breaking this losing streak if the
girls had been allowed to play in
league games.
We also asked him if the team
ever has any rowdy parties. He
said, "If we win one game this
year, after we get home, every body goe" in the creek."

"
LEEN

.

.

.
~

T~SLAND

this year. When asked if they
would play again next year they
were undecided. They want to
wait and see how many guys turn
out. They probably wouldn't have
turned out this year if there had
been more male enthusiasm for

The girls were very disap pointed at the court's decision
against them. Carol called the reasoning behind the decision a
"bunch of baloney ." Kathleen said,
"Well, if I ever get a divorce I'm
not going to go to Judge Schumacher."
The ACLU is appealing the case
again, but the time element leaves
little hope for the girls' chances of
being able to play league football

practice, according to Carol, who
is a junior and the oldest of the
three.
Other Interests
The girls are not interested only
in football. Carol who is perhaps
the most outspoken of the girls
also rides horseback at home and
she likes to cook and sew. She
plays the tenor saxophone in the
band and is taking bookkeeping,
journalism, U.S . history, German,
and home economics. She is inter-

DELORES

ested in going into aviation after
she graduates, and hopes to become a pilot. After two years of
college she'll join the Air Force.
''By that time they ought to
have a good program for women,"
she said.

Delores, who is a freshman and
much quieter than the other two,
also plans on college. She hasn't
yet decided whether or not she
wants to attend Evergreen.
Kathleen Tosland, also known
as O.J ., plays girls' basketball and
turns out for track. She has a boy
friend in Wisconsin who hasn't yet
made his opinions of the football
situation known. Kathy wants to
go to college, but then again she'd
rather not. She'd like to become a

social worker and try to "unscrew
this world."
"Mostly I'd like to stop pollution
and the energy crisis, and find a
way to prevent wars."
Kathy said that she probably
wouldn't have voted at all in the
last presidential election, and at
the time of the interview, she
didn't believe that impeachment ol
Nixon would be very good publicity for the system.
The girls have becvme nationally known and they receive piies
of mail daily. One corresponden•
wanted a picture of them so that
he could blow it up and put it on
the wall of his den. Another
thought that they should become
lady wrestlers. There have been
several requests for pen pals.
Kathleen ended the interview
with, "I don't know, I've always
wanted to be a movie star, but
now I don't know. Since all this
stuffs gone on I don't think I ever
want to be again."

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MIJA'S



PAGE4

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

OCTOBER 25, 1973

Good morning
public opinion
After several odd years spent in the streets attempting to
make our government face up to its own corruption it is finally
beginning the job of doing just that. Less than a year of
Watergate and the current move to impeach President Nixon
have done more to arouse the political passions of the populace
than all the broken heads and bodies of Selma, Chicago, and
Kent State.
·
Perhaps the broken heads were the mileposts on the road to
this current legal insurgency. It took a long time for the United States public to reach a point of outrage at which they
could no longer remain apathetic. It is curious however that
the straw which finally broke the camel's back was a relatively
insignificant one compared with the atrocity of Vietnam, with
Kent and Jackson State. How many dead has Watergate left
littered in its wake? How many foreign cultures has it de- lii..IJWllUl!IJilWJWWIUUIIIIIJil\
stroyed?
However, it is not a time for sour grapes. Yes, probably the
United States should have awakened from its slumber sooner,
but the point is that it didn't. It now has woken up and is in the
process of stretching. It is capable of stretching pretty far
. even though its tired bones aren't used to it. It has to stretch
to its full ability, it has to crack its knuckles some, snap its
neck around if it is to stay awake.
In all of the current goings on, one keeps hearing the word
"precedence." It is as if the United States wants to retreat
into the comfortable womb of its past. As the title of one of
Thomas Wolfe's books so aptly states, You Can't Go Home - Evergreen is a community of things unnoticed. It's a community with
Again, and the people of the United States must continue to faculty members sleeping in parking lot F, four sides of a clock tower,
make it clear to our government that it cannot hide behind each telling a different time, and two thousand odd students crawling
past experience. The country is in the process of making prec- around the grounds each day. The students probably were attracted
here by the life style or progressive attitude, but nobody is sure; nobody
~dence and must not be afraid of abandoning its previous
at
Evergreen knows any more about the type of student that patronizes
mistakes.
the
paths then they do the electron microscope that sits in the science
For the first time in many years the people of the United
building;
or the custodian who tears signs off the windows; or the night
States are asserting their will over a government too long out
security person who claims, "I've been here longer than anybody, even
of their control. The usual ignored requests for letters to rep- before McCann."
resentatives, for petitions, for some kind of citizen action are
Evergreen is a community for individuals and a mecca for different life
finally being met. By all their myriad of means the people of styles. Evergreeners have more body hair per student than any other
this country are finally doing their part. Let's hope things stay college in the nation, but who cares. Most women in the community don't
that way even after the end of this current series of events.
shave their legs... many never .d'
o
·
to

ing the
campus beat

Elitism
causes
rift
Evergreen, a school accused of many things, has now become a haven for elitists. Approximately 120 in number, these
elitists have shown their colors by wearing grey sweatshirts
with green insignia. Members of P.O.R.T.A.L.S. (Personalized Options Reaching Towards Affective Learning Skills), a
basic coordinated studies program, received their sweatshirts
complete with ritual last week and effectively separated themselves from the Evergreen community.
Which is more important, the program or the community?
Should we factionalize ourselves until we are 30 or 40 "nations"
and aU .N. has to be formed?
What about those students not in programs? Does this mean
each individual contractor must assert himself in his clothing?
Should there be separate shirts for modules? Imagine running
home and changing between program and module.
We sincerely hope that Evergreeners have more sense than
to be fad followers. The program sweatshirt craze should end
where it began, in P.O.R.T.A.L.S.
Evergreen doesn't need any more identity problems.

strangers. Pencils, pens, paper clips, old coffee cups, attd a "lo'ng hairs"·
vegetable matter, are found by security when they patrol the staircases
in the CAB.
A librarian has books to put away -there since yesterday. Several
young women, compelled by social and ethical upbringing, are running
away from home to Evergreen because they don't want to grow up and
become housewives. Each day students talk to Ken Donohue in
Co-operative Education, where a student will want an internship with
the legislature; another with the Daily Olympian; yet another with a
lawyer in Seattle; but everybody will get an opportunity at an internship
if they want one, "which," says Donohue, "is why I'm here."
Some of Evergreens best informed people are secretaries, who rarely
have time to talk, but always listen, like the Deans. Program secretaries
listen to comments made by students walking by after a seminar. They
listen closely. They listen carefully. Within fifteen minutes they can tell
you which faculty member to avoid for the day and which can be spoken
to.
• into the loop at
At Evergreen each evening a small green jeep pulls
the dormitories, and out hop security guards armed with flashlights and
badges reading, "Security Office-John Doe." These patrol people
proceed to search the dark corners with their yellow beams, sometimes
until early the next morning, when they return to the office and then
home.
By this time the campus is deserted by all but a few strolling
insomniacs, some late night lovers, and hard core studiers who keep
their rooms lit day and night pushing pens and pencils or reading books.
Around 6:30 a.m. the morning custodial force can be seen scampering
across the plaza in expectation of another days activity. Faculty,
students, and the remainder of the staff show up and you know
Evergreen is alive for another day.

Editor resigns
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 . . . .. . . ............................. Jill Fleming
Business Manager ........................ John Praggastis
Editorial Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... Eric L. Stone
Staff... Chuck Hauser, Kevin Hogan, Cathy Holt, Colleen
Hunt, Leslie Layto.n, Guy Plautz, Debby Shawver
Photography ... Patsy Galbreath

"A man's reach should exceed
his grasp, or what's a heaven for?"
- Robert Browning.
That is what I have done. I attempted to serve as editor before I
was completely ready. Not wishing to say I failed, because I don't
believe I did, it was decided by the
staff to be in the interest of The
Paper if I resigned. Too many personality conflicts only compounded
an already unstable situation.
There are no hard feelings
amongst the staff that I am aware
of. Jill Fleming, previously the
managing editor, has now taken

over as editor and has been handling the position quite well. The
experience brought the staff closer
together, supporting Jill, and we
should begin producing a greatly
improved paper.
My job began as an extension of
myself, a form of expression, but
too soon I became an extension of
my job. The editing experience
was worthwhile but now it is over.
I shall continue with The Paper as
a writer. As an editor, I'm retired
and am a much happier man for it.
- Brian Murphy

The kinQ

IS a
fink
by Kevin Hogan
There is something about the
coldly scientific methods of public
opinion sampling practiced by the
Gallup/Harris school of influences
which not only succeeds in
polarizing thought, but cleanses
from it any hint of emotionalism.
There has been a trend in the last
five years towards eliminating
emotion from issues, except for
those well-orchestrated and safe
demonstrations of concern that
were kicked off by Earth Day, and
followed by an even tighter
display in last spring's meat
boycott.
Both of t~ese, of course,
addressed themselves to very real
issues, but in a manner in which
the public concern and reaction to
each was so carefully nurtured,
stroked and withheld till the best
possible moment for release, and
then presto! we have a movement,
prepackaged and ready for exploitation, just add sheep.
It takes crafty leadership to
direct people towards any particular ideology. Hitler was a master
at this, for he recognized and used
two very important tools; emotion
and the press. These two appear
to have led to the downfall of Dick
Nixon in his attempts to put a ring
tln "lug'' ~he
character.
Nixon's formula, and to a degree
it was a successful one, was
simply; "ignore the people and
maybe they'll go away." It almost
happened. If Nixon had made an
effort to flatter and control the
press, (who by and large supported him in the beginning), and
cultivate rather than ignore
emotions, he could have declared
himself king long ago.
Prior to his coming to office
there existed a mood of fervent
attachment to one's particular
ideology. Twice we had massive
turnouts for peace in Viet Nam,
and the other side was just as
political, but when the day came
that Nixon told us he recognized
our presence in the streets, but it
didn't make any difference to him
it began not to make any
difference to those who opposed
the war, and marching in the
streets became our first tactical
casualty of Nixonism.
In past crises, Nixon has
managed to anesthetize his opposition by simply ignoring them,
and as a result, the Americian
consciousness has reached an all
time level of desensitization.
Nixon expects that if the public
is subjected to the news of
Watergate for a long enough
period of time they'll simply get
tired of it, roll over, and go to
sleep, as they have done so many
times before. This may be
happening, but it is no longer
public opinion which is sharing the
bed with Dick Nixon, for his fate
lies in far better hands, namely
Congress and the press, for they
are still riding the wave of
emotionalism which faded out for
the public years ago.
It is a good sign that the spirit of
the Americian people has not been;
killed by Richard Nixon, it's jilstj
been put to sleep.

OCTOBER25.1973R

e

0

de r

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

5

The Paper
lambasted
To the Editor:
The Paper in its present form is
an insult to the traditions of college journalism and a waste of student funds. It has become apparent from the issues published this
year that there is a need for
drastic revision in format, content
and organization of the paper.
Although coverage of current
events is essential, clearly a newspaper that only appears weekly is
better suited to in-depth reporting
and feature articles. The Paper
suffers from inconsistent writing
style and shoddy reporting techniques. Indeed the only consistent
technique the paper adheres to is
lack of quality. Perhaps one improvement would be the return of
regular columns researched by
well-informed, articulate students.
Also included under style are the
visual techniques which, when
poorly done substantially detract
from the content of the article.
Layout and graphic design, a fundamental part of any newspaper,
have all but been ignored. Substantive changes in format, like
longer stories, would hopefully
necessitate a corresponding
change in artistic style. Perhaps a
graphics artist could revitalize The
Paper's appearance. If the content
of current articles and editorials
persists, however, it is doubtful
that substantial style changes
could be anyttihig more ·than superficial.
The absence of any kind of editorial viewpoint characterizes only



Bill Knowles
Don Martin

In reply:

High School. Next week we will
have an election issues summary.
While you have made several
We are trying. Our group eonconstructive suggestions, you have tract is not devoted entirely to The
faDed to take some important fac- Paper. KAOS' news is produced
tors into consideration. We have by contract members, while others
just undergone a staff shake-up, are working on television and pubwith this issue being the first full lie relations.
issue published under new manWe are restricted to some exagement. Next week we are tent by advertising. Ad sales are
changing to a new format, which necessary to our budget, just as
will be conducive to longer fea- smaller papers help us save money
tures. We assigned the Trident so The Paper can be produced all
submarine story last week, for year.
publication in the near future, and
We appreciate your suggestions
are in the process of doing investi- and we need the help and support
gative reporting on local housing of the community.
discrimination, Panorama City,
and the dosing of St. Martin's
Jill Fleming
Editor

scene
To the Editor:

most tenable. Obviously in a two
hour period he could only lightly
touch upon many of these points,
hoping only to · stimulate thought
in his audience. However he did
stress that his audience become
more active, as opposed to dealing
mainly with theories and ivorytower idealism, such as one of the
letters so explicitly outlined.
Global struggles are composed of
individuals, groups, communities,
and nations, to think otherwise is
to negate the dialectical process of
development from a lower to a
higher level. If we are to pursue a
"higher education" here at Evergreen, or anywhere, I believe
more speakers like Stokely

The harsh reality is: our PR man
is the most respected philosopher
in the school. He's been giving pregame predictions for all the
schools in the area including ours!
Our subsequent image renovation
is supposedly getting us a lot of
bucks, but actually only getting us
a lot of nickels. Image recruitment
may be fine for finishing schools,
but how about an indiscriminate
method where the school's educational premises and merits attract
whomever they might?

Minority
Coalition
rapped
To the Editor:

Howie Silverman
I think that the Minorities CoaliThe administration of Ever(alias: Robert Darba) tion has a lot of nerve when they
green has consciously altered the PS .. . the rat eats away at the
say which minorities can and
school's image in an attempt to heart of millions
cannot join their little club. When
appease an intangible they. Actuminorities start forming exclusive
ally, the school has been more of a
organizations, it's time that they
brunt for its own paranoid concepshould take a step back and look at
tion of what the public thinks than
themselves.
for any concrete examples of a dissatisfied public. As a salve for its
The Minority Coalition claims ".
own flagellation, the administra... historically shared experience
tion implemented programs to rein the systematic exclusion from
cruit a different student. This year
the benefits found in a country we
we are the product of last year's
helped to build." How can they say
specialized recruitment.
they were the only ones denied huSome people might remember
man rights, education, and ". . . .
the Evergreen image of the first To the editor:
exploited to help build empires."
We found 2001 - a food oddity Anyone who did not fit into rigid
year. A Channel13 TV personality
called TESC the newest funny just scrumptious! We just adored social standards has been historifarm in the state. A faculty mem· the way you let all those organic cally discriminated against. This
ber was to visit this personality on types have it. How anyone can has included everything from
TV and upon receiving any prefer brown rice over french fries being born on the wrong side of the
comment about his long hair would is beyond us. We do differ with tracks, to speaking with a foreign
remove his host's toupee. I never you on your choice of hamburgers, accent, to being an oyster shucker
heard if anything happened. Ever- as we find the Herfy Hefty and to homosexual behavior, to
green at that time was to be a superior to all including the Big name only a few.
full -sized Fairhaven with propor- Mac and Bob's Big ~urger.
What gives the Minorities CoaliHow would it feel to plunge into tion the right to judge people by
tionate increases in LSD, Irish
setters, and syphilis. The presi- a bowl of bean sprouts instead of a the color of their skin?
dent of the school could be found burger after the big game? Or how
Bill Freeburg
seated lotus style atop the clock about matching cartons of yogurt
tower, pointing to the exact center instead of banana splits after a
of his radiating left palm. The groovy double date?
tower itself snuck off to downtown
We hope you continue to uphold
Oly at nights to mate with the new motherhood, apple pie, the boy
highways building. The school was next door, and junk food.
If you notice the piano missing
made of concrete so flame thrower
from the library, don't worry, it
demonstrations could be held in·
Chemically yours, hasn't been stolen, it's just been
doors. Male students trailered flea
Jill Fleming moved to the fourth floor of the licircuses in their braids and female
Gina Barron brary.
students had unshaven legs like
cowboy chaps of brillo.
But now students are sitting in
Red Square swatting ants with
their copies of Zen and the Art of
Archery. I caught waft of some
guy in the library bathed in
English Leather. Black Mountain
is the newest at Baskin and Robbins. Rugby makes the front page
of The Paper. Recruitment has
ushered in a late fifties fun and
~~,~~
games sensibility - swallowing
What are we going to do without Richard Nixon to kick around anytelephone booths, stuffing goldfish
into a piano - that's rampant on more? Can you, the reader of this column, imagine a world without Dick
more traditional campuses. We're Nixon'! I was born in 1952. Dick Nixon was running for vice-president
then and not for his life. Poor ole Dick, even then he was embroiled in
all pre-BP.atles again!
scandal. Checkers pulled him out of that one. Where is Checkers now?
Where is the 7th Cavalry?
Helen Gahagan Douglas was put into her little red niche in 1948 by a
younger, no less feisty Dick Nixon, with a chip on his shoulder and a
copy of The Prince by Machiavelli in his hand. "Power is its own excuse,"
is a line from It Can't Happen Here by Sinclair Lewis. It is fortunately or
unfortunately, depending on your point of view or power base, one of the
few bits of true wisdom written in the past century. Dick Nixon, at least
Carmichael are needed to provoke in his heart, knows the line well and makes no bones about invoking it.
thought and force those of the Philosophically speaking, Richard Milhous Nixon is one of the few honest
listening audience to carefully men left in politics today.
What has happened to dirty politics? It's still there of course, no one
examine alternative ideologies and
philosophies of our time objec- could be so foolish to think that it's gone. And what of a person who
tively. The ultimate goal of these wants to be President of the United States, to hold life and death power
efforts being that we may state over an entire planet? There are no good guy Presidents, the immense
practically, from experience and power involved excludes any possibility of such an occurrence. What
study what ideology we feel will be manner of President then is Richard Nixon? Is he failing in any way,
best applicable in a world, or more shape or form to fulfil the role delegated to him by the voters of the
immediately a campus such as United States? Of course he isn't. Richard M. Nixon is playing his p..-t
Evergreen, composed of many better than any President has played it since Franklin D. Roosevelt
blatant reactionary and bourgeois made his bid for glory on the stage and screen of power politics.
Rather than the hook, Nixon deserves at least a standing ovation, rave
influences.
reviews for this off-Broadway triumph of his. Best actor in a leading
Tamara E. Swift role. Sir Laurence Olivier never fit one of his roles more to a tee. As a
conscientious reviewer of this particular power play, I can only award
my highest plaudits to this master of the presidential art, Richard M.
Nixon.

More on Stokely
To the Editor:
Stokely Carmichael, by my
observation, seems to have
aroused not only the blind
reactionaries of this Evergreen
Community, but also the students
of change. Though the previous
letters to the Editor are well
received, they lack the prime
substance of Mr. Carmichael's
.philosophy, practice. "Practice is
the highest form of knowledge," a
quote attributed to Mao Tse-tung,
bears this out.
Through Dialectical and Historical Materialism, Mr. Carmichael
outlined some basic principles of
"Scientific Socialism", which if
researched I'm sure w~ uld prove



vo1ce op1n1ons
Changing

the most juvenile of journalistic attempts. Why must Evergreen's
only analysis on political and social
issues be confined to crude satire.
Certainly one cannot answer that
there is a shortage of topics, considering the national and international events of the past few
weeks. One can only conclude that
the reason is an apparent lack ot
social consciousness and a poverty
of imagination. It is hard to imagine the future dredging of Nisqually Delta, Trident submarines
in the Sound, and the Alaska pipeline are so distant that a full-time
paper group contract cannot research these issues. This lack of
content is not confined to editorial
policy alone, but is reflected by
nearly every reporting beat.
It occurs to us that organization
of the staff is crucial to the paper's
smooth functioning. This means
having certain people in charge of
the specific duties of assigning
stories, editing copy, doing layout
and writing. Just guessing it looks
like everyone does everything and
no one is responsible.
With a new name, a clear understanding of its scope and format,
and a smooth functioning organization, the paper could have tremendous artistic and political potential. Since it has received the largest amount of student funding and
is supported by a journalism contract, there is no excuse for its
present quality.



PAGE5

Burger
lovers
respond

••••••••

Bravo

Mr. Nixon

PAGEa

·

OCTOBER 25, 1973

THEEVERGREENSTATECOLLEGE

Women as 'Man-Junkies':

Steinem views movement as 'revolution'
by Debby Shawver

"It's very tough for the ruling
class to be seen without its pants
on" according to Gloria Steinem
who spoke to a crowd of some 4000
women in Portland's Civic Center
last Friday. She said that feminine
nudity in advertising is politics,
politics being redefined as any
power relationship in our daily
lives.
When a woman puts her
husband through graduate school
and the favor is never returned that's politics.
When most women in this
country are only one man away
from welfare - that's politics.
Wht>n the qualities which are
considered acceptable for a woman
in thi~ society are the same ones
that make her cheap labor that's politics too.

Growing Up Female
Steinem was part of a program
called "Adolescence and Its
Problems: Growing Up Female"
sponsored by Portland's Good
Samaritan Hospital. The day long
program included slide shows,
open mike discussion, role playing
skits, and a panel of high school
girls discussing the problems of
growing up fe!'Ilale.

Steinem said that part of the
problem of growing up female is
that women are led to believe that
they are nothing without a man.
They become "man junkies"
placing the value of themselves on
the status of their boyfriend in
high school, their husband, or
their boss.

New York psychiatrist, Dr.
Herta Wittgenstein who is also a
jet pilot, architect, and a mother
spoke on women and tiealth, both
mental and physical.
She said that "what is considered normal in our society is the
fucked-up condition of the
woman."

needed tests and tranquilizers, the
unfair treatment of women in
emergency rooms, and the higher
prices of maternity rooms in
hospitals.
She said, "A lot of what
women's liberation is about, is to
give you confidence that you're not
crazy and that you don't have to be
treated second best."

Once the woman deviates from
her role she is considered insane;
in need of tranquilizers and weekly
psychotherapy. Wittgenstein said
that it was about time women
started speaking out, asking their
doctors questions, and demading
fair service in hospitals. She gave
several examples of discriminatory
medical practices against women
such as the prescribing of un-

Revolution
Gloria Steinem received full
support from the packed
auditorium when she said that the
women's
movement
is
a
REVOLUTION, not a public
relations movement. Revolution
implies more than a mere takeover of the army and radio
stations. It is a deeper, anthropoligical revolution; a long term

ICS Programs Explores Resource Shortages
Water, gas, and food shortages will carry out a year-long project
in the U.S. will get worse - criti- studying the effects of stress on
cally worse - before they get families; specifically their reacbetter. It is estimated that at pres- tions to stress which are elicited
ent rate of use, America will by comparatively drastic shortexpend its natural gas supply in 40 ages of resources (i.e., fuel, elecyears, its oil supply in 20 years, tricity, water, food and clean air).
and its coal supply in 2 or 3 hunThe group will ask 25 middle
dred. Before the end of this year class families from the OlympiaWashington residents will exper- Shelton area to live for one month
ience the effects of the most under simulated stress conditions.
severe water shortage in 100 years Each will be subjected to the
of northwest history. What will following limits:
happen?
Gas: 4 gallons per week (an
A project seminar headed by
80%
reduction in amount used by
faculty member Ted Gerstl in Individual in Contemporary Society average American family)
Water: 300 gallons per week
plans to find out. The group of 23

(80% reduction)

Electricity: 700 kwh per week
(average is 48,000 kwh per month)
Heating source: maximum of
60 degrees (8 degrees below norm)
Food: $5 per person per week
(normal is $10 to $15 per person
per week)
Luxuries: 17 cents per day.
There will also be from time to
time shortage alerts resulting in
additional rationing as well as
"smog days" where the family
must remain within the home.
Students will keep close contacts with the families, collecting
data on bow people cope with the

stress of an energy crtslS; their
change of habits, interpersonal relationships, and the process and
content of how they solve problems.
In mid-April the group will publish and present their findings to
the Western Psychological Conference in San Francisco.
This project, a combination of
learning experience in social
psychology with a current crisis, is
of immediate use to society. The
students plan to spend the month
of May publiei!liftg- their flndlncs
and many of them plan to continue
work in this field.

TESC Ski School Offers New Ideas
Now is the time for all good, bad
and beginning skiers to sign up for
The Evergreen State College Ski
School. Anyone interested in the
program can pick up applications
in the Recreation Office.

There will be two different programs offered in the ski school,
conventional and short ski. The
cost of the conventional program is
$60 with transportation (bus) and
$28 when transportation is pro-

NEW & USED ALBUMS

vided by the ski school member.
The short ski program costs $80
for TESC students with transportation and $95 for other community people. If the ski school student
p•·ovides his own transportation.
$32 will be reduced from the cost
of the short ski program.
Students are urged to look into
the short ski program, Ed King,
director of the ski school and associate director of recreation at Evergreen, said, primarily because of
the excellent bargain they will receive on ski equipment rental.
"The student will be given $250
worth of all new equipment provided by ski shops in Olympia for
the duration of the program," said

A

King. "For this, the student will
pay only $20 out of his registration
fee."
King emphasized that students
should register for the two ski
school programs as soon as possible because openings in the programs are filled on a first come,
first served basis. As an added incentive for &arly registration, a $5
discount will be given to those who
sign up before November 15.
Also offered through the ski
school will be weekend trips to
Leavenworth for cross -country
skiing. The cost for these expeditions is $35 for students and $40
for community people which includes transportation, lessons,

STUDENT
COMMUNITY

process of humanir.ation for all.
The movement is not imitative.
The object is not to repeat
masculine mistakes.
"We don't want a piece of the
existing pie. We want a new pie."
This means that there is room
for men in the movement also.
Men have also been placed in
unfair roles in this society.
Steinem welcomes men "who have
the courage to give up their white
skin and male privileges and to
behave like human beings which
takes courage." Perhaps there is
more virtue where there is more
choice.
It is to be expected that women
who rebel against the caste system
will be called insane, aggressive,
masculine, and, within fifteen
minutes of discussion, "manhating-lesbians".
"Maybe we should just say we
all are," said Steinem. As far as
man-hating-lesbians go, however,
"It's not the lesbians who hate
men, it's the women who live with
them who hate them."
Dissention
At one point during the program
Steinem gave up the microphone
to a representative from a group of
protesters picketing the con ference because of its week-day
schedule and four dollar admission
price making it difficult or
impossible for working or poor
women to attend. Some older
women in the crowd shouted, "We
paid our money to hear Gloria
"Sre nem.
ea- e
representative tried to speak.
Steinem reacted by saying, "The
unfortunate thing about paying
your money to hear Gloria is that
she considers herself a trojan
horse."
This dissension was slight,
however, compared to the
enormous feeling of unity
expressed by the crowd when
women from the audience spoke on
topics such as child care, health
care, and daily experiences with
the caste system.

food, lodging and equipment.
Deadline for registration for the
ski school is December 24 but, as
King said, students should sign up
as soon as possible to assure a
place in the program. Actual lessons begin on Wednesday, January6.

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The Asterisk
and Cheese
Library

OCTOBER 25, 1973

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

PAGE 7

Gig, Speakers Bureau poll results
The October 11, 1973, issue of
The Paper contained a poll which
allowed the Gig Commission and
Speakers Bureau to obtain broader
representation of student interests in films, dances/concerts, and
speakers.
The poll which asked students to
indicate their three preferences in
each of these categories will be
used by the two S & A funded organizations as a guideline in determining which specific activities
will be presented on campus this
year.
Reasons, such as financing,
dates of availability, facilities,
etc., may preclude the occurrence
of a particular activity but the primary impetus of the Gig Commission and the Speakers Bureau will
be in the direction of accommodating these designated interests. If
anyone has any 1'd eas or suggestions which would make any presentation here more practical,
please contact either Lynn Garner
or Mark Peterson in CAB 305 or
call ext. 6221.
The results of the poll (the responses of approximately 125 students) are indicated in the
following categorized lists of
names and numbers.
Suggestions receiving only one
vote have not been listed because
of the small space available.
FILMS
Z)58)

2001 (44)
Milhous (A White Comedy) (38)
Lenny Bruce Without Tears (36)

El Topo (3.2)
Modern Times (l 9 )
Steel Yard Blues (18 )
The Conformist (15 )
400 Blows (12 )
Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse
(9)
I'm A Fugitive From a Chaingang
(9 )
Fantasia (7)
King of Hearts <6 )
Freaks (6 )
Weekend (5 )
Yellow Submarine (5)
Five Easy Pieces (5)
Forgotten Ancestors (4)
Breathless (4)
MarxBrothers(3)
The Ice Man Cometh (3)
Reefer Madness (3)
The Savage Eye (2)
Anna Christie (2)
Dracula (Old Silent) (2)
Sometimes a Great Notion (2)
Cool Hand Luke (2)
Fritz the Cat (2)
The Graduate (2)
Quick Billy (2)
Easy Rider (2)
Kelly's Heroes (2)
Thousand Clowns (2)
Felini Satyricon (2 )
DANCES/CONCERTS
Leo Kottke (70)
Hot Tuna (45)
Jesse Collin Young (27)
Les McCann (27)
John Lee Hooker (26)
Doc Watson (24)
Elvin Bishop (17)
Philadelphia String Quartet (15)
Sons of Champlin (14)

Harvey Mandel (13)
Cold Blood (9)
U ~fW Woodwind Ensemble (8)
Neil Young (8)
Ballin' Jack (8)
Entropy Service (8)
Albert Collins (6)
Lance Romance & the 3 Minute
Boogie (5)
Notary Sojac (4)
Benny Goodman (4)
Dan Hicks & his Hot licks (4)
U of W Percussion Ensemble (3)
Paul Richardson Trio (3)
Sand (2)
Brown Sugar (2)

John Prine (2)
New York Pro Musica (2)
Taj Mahal (2)
Pete Seeger (2)
Charl.es Lloyd (2)
Herbie Mann(2)
Bill Major (2)
Grateful Dead (2)
Walter Zuber Armstrong (2)
SPEAKERS
Ken Kesey (96)
Angela Davis (63)
William 0. Douglas (60)
Jane Fonda (34)
Jack Anderson (25)

Nixon Daughters (23)
Kate Millet (15)
Spiro Agnew (11)
Warren Harding (9)
Barry Fatland (8)
Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. (7)
Henry Jackson (5)
Baba Ram Das (5)
Gay Talese (4)
Buckminster Fuller (4)
Craig Honts (3)
Del Martin & Phyllis Lyons (3)
Krishnamurti (3)
Gale Shangold (3)
Alvin Tofler (3)
John Lilly (2)
Gloria Steinem (2)

NASA plans activities
(From page 2)
students and faculty here. The
unfulfilled commitments refer to
the lack of adequate counseling
services for Native Americans.
NASA desires two Indian counselors, one to be a public relations
counselor working with the community and Indian !ftudents who
are on contracts on reservations
and nearby communities and the
other to work full-time with
campus students in recruitment,
admissions, housing, financial aid,
food stamps, and to get through
other "white" tape at Evergreen.
Last year, NASA represented
Evergreen at a variety of conferences throughout the Northwest
dealing with Indian concerns.
Members of NASA participated in

political actions such as Wounded
Knee, the Trail of Broken Treaties, and the local fishing rights
demonstrations at Nisqually.
NASA also were lobbyists at the
state legislature, participated in
the fishing right trials, and
worked with Indian inmates at
correctional institutions. They organized special events on campus
last year and helped design the
Native American Studies coordinated studies program in operation this year.
Plans, at the moment, call for
the funding of the National Indian
Education Conference in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, November 13-16.
NASA is planning to send repre-

sentatives to this conference
which is to discuss "Indian education on Indian terms." NASA is
asking everyone on campus to
make donations, if they wish, in
the forms of money, food, transportation, manpower, etc. To
make these donations or for further information, call 866-6024 or
come to the NASA office, Room
3220 in the library.
Addendum. On page one of last
week's Paper, a headline read
"NASA Holds Vocational Conference". NASA did not hold this conference but Native American
Studies, the coordinated studies
program, did. We regret this careless and unfortunate error.

Absentee Ballot application
Listed below are several county
auditor's addresses. Jl yours isntt
there, come by The Paper office
and use one of our many phone
books to look it up.
Elections Division
King County Administration Bldg.
Seattle, WA 98104
Elections Division
Spokane County Auditor
W. 1116 Broadway
Spokane, WA. 99201
Elections Division
Pierce County Auditor
930 Tacoma Ave. S.
Tacoma, WA. 98402
Elections Division
Snohomish County Auditor
Administration Bldg.
Everett, WA. 98201

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CLIP OUT FORM ALONG THIS LINE

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APPLICAn6N FOR
STATE GENERAL ELECnON ABSENTEE IALLOT
(Together with all other local ballall It can be determined that
the applicant Ia entitled to vote at • aald election)

Spiritual food
Feast with Sukadeva das Adhikary and other Northwest devotees Halloween day in the Red
Square. Live Indian music, yoga
demonstration and free spiritual
food will be included in the festivities.
Sukadeva is a disciple of A.C.
Bhaktivedanta Prabhupada and is
a qualified Brahmin. He will lecture on Bhagavad Gita and the
Golden Avatar Lord Caitanya
Mahaprabhu who taught that we
are not this body but are actually
spirit soul.



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This application is being made for an absentee ballot for the approaching:

lXI November 6,

1973

State General Election

(Date)
I hereby declare that I am a qualified elector
.. ....... . ...... .

., State of

(Name of County)

Washington, and that

am registered for

voting at the following address:
(Street and number, or rural routel

Elections Division
Thurston County Auditor
11th & Capitol Way
Olympia, WA. 98501

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SEND COMPLDID AND SIGNID AJIPUCAnON DI!IC!LY TO YOUI COUNTY AUDITOL

in

Elections Division
Clark County Auditor
1114 Grant
Vancouver, WA. 98660

·-------------,

I

My reason for requesting an absentee
ballot is:
(Checlc appropriate

aqua,.)

0 I expect to ...be absent from my precinct
during the polling hours on the day of said
election.

0 I am so incapacitated that I cannot attend
at the polls and vote in the usual way at
said election.

(City or town)

My voting precinct is:

l"lnt-...,. for poalllve lchntlflcatlonl

SIGN HEIE
(Signatv.. of

voter!

Fill In address where you wish
absentee ballot to be sent
(Otyl

(Slate)

Note: If husband and wife both want absentee ballots, signatures of each are necessary.

.L--------.. -.. -.

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(If poulble 1111 In precinct nome or number)

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OCTGBER.25, 1973

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

PAGES

Campus news


1n brief
Weighing in at six pounds and
12 ounces on Oct. 21 was Sarah
Moore Soule, the first-born of
faculty member Oscar Soule and
his wife Barbara. Soule is
presently teaching in the Evergreen Environment program.

Campus

ACLU
meets
An all-campus meeting of the
Evergreen chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)
will be held tomorrow, Friday,
Oct. 26. The meeting is scheduled
for 4 p.m. in Lecture Hall3.
Dave Mozer, an intern at the
ACLU office in Seattle, will be on
hand to discuss with anyone interested - impeachment procedures,
decriminalization of marijuana,
the proposed return to Capital
Punishment, and any other topics
suggested.
A possible fund raiser for the
ACLU will be to bring the movie
"Reefer Madness" to campus to
help with costs of proposed
projects.

Next Thursday's senior seminar
will discuss "Credential Files and
Personal Portfolios" in CRC 202 at
noon. This is third in a series, "Is
there life after Evergreen?"

"Papa's Garage", a band featuring good ole country music: will
liven up the second floor library
lobby with their music, on
Thursday, Nov. 1, at 8 p.m.

Community input is sought
concerning the present structure
of the Services and Activities Fees
Review Board. A meeting, to
discuss this question and alternatives to the present sturcture, is
scheduled for Wednesday, Oct. 31
in Lecture Ha115 at noon.
Out of each student's tutition,
$48.50 goes to the S & A Board.
Students are urged to attend the
Oct. 31 meeting to voice whatever
opinions they harbor on how their
money should be spent.

....
ACTION recruiters for VISTA
and Peace Corps were unable to
come to TESC on Oct. 24 and 25 as
originally scheduled, and will be
here instead on Nov. 7 and 8 all
day in the CAB.

SEATTLE

Specials on KAOS this Sunday, Oct. 28, will feature "A
Tribute to Pablo Casals" with
Dean Katz, from 9:30 to 12 p.m.
The program will consist of the
music and words of the late master
of the cello and hero of political
civil rights.
Also this Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
will be "The Humanist Alternative" with Marty Oppenheimer.
This weeks program: "Humanism
and the Frontiers of Education",
will feature a tape with Drs. Paul
Kurtz and Harold Taylor, discussing innovative humanistic methods
related to education today.
Following the tape will be a 90
minute studio/listener discussion
with Bill Aldridge, member of the
TESC faculty.

KAOS news director Bill
Hirshman has announced that
news coverage will be expanded
this week. In addition to the
regular 5:30-6 p.m. broadcast, the
news will be aired again from
10:30-11 p.m.
The late program will include
recent news developments along
with the main portion of the early
show. Hirshman also announced
that the news department has an
office located in room B12 of the
CAB basement. The new phone
number is 866- "NEWS".

Jungian analyst Ian Baker, "The
Power of Anxiety," Roethke Aud.,
U of W. Tickets at door, general
$2.50, students $1.50. Thursday,
Oct. 25.
Angela Davis and Walter Collins, Thursday, Oct. 25, Hec Edmundson Pavilion, U of W.
Non-UW, $1.25, General Public,
$1.50. Tickets at door.
"Alice in Wonderland" - at
Empty Space Association, 919 E.
'Pike, 325-4444. Thursday-Sunday
at 8 p.m. Through Nov. 10. $3 general, $2 student on Thursday and
Sunday. Also group rates.
The Krasnayarsk Dance Company of Siberia - Paramount
Northwest, Nov. 3. Tickets at Bon
Marche and all suburban outlets.
Carlos Montoya - Nov. 11, 8
p.m. Seattle Opera House, tickets
at Bon Marche and suburban outlets.
Blood, Sweat, and Tears Seattle Center Arena Friday,
Nov. 9, 8 p.m. Bon Marche and
suburban outlets.
Leo Kottke, Seattle Opera
House, Sunday, Nov. 18, 8 p.m.
Bon Marche and suburban outlets.
Halloween Film matinee - Seattle Art Museum aud. in Volunteer Park, Saturday Oct. 27. 1:30
p.m. 25 cents. "Betty Boop's Penthouse," "Halloween Party," and
"The Horror of Dracula."

OLYMPIA

Kimbrough Trio, from WSU,
Oct.28, 8 p.m. TESC, main library
lobby. No charge.
Friday Night Film - Angela
Davis: Portrait of a Revolutionary,
7 and 9:30 p.m., TESC Lecture
Hall1, 50 cents.
Wednesday Night Film Halloween double Bill: The 1932
"Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" and
short "The Uninvited." TESC Lecture Hall1, admission by ID card.
Independent filmmaker Jon J ost
in a 90-min. production of his own
films, Monday Oct. 29, TESC Lecture Hall3, 8 p.m.
Folk Dancing (TESC) every
Sunday in the Multi-Purpose Rm.
Tuesday, 2nd floor Activities
Bldg. Everyone welcome, teaching
included.
Woven waU hangings exhibit
entitled "Dream Shields" at Child~
hood's End Gallery, (507 S. Capitol
Way) by Alan Doyle, Evergreen
student. November 1 thru 30.
PORTLAND
Portland State University film
series - Lincoln Hall, 7:30 p.m.
Friday and Saturday, 26 & 27 "Marat/Sade," and "Bed Sitting
Room." Sunday Oct. 28, "Phantom
of the Opera."

TACOMA
Asian Day, Oct. 27, Tacoma
William Glasser, author of
Community House, 1311 South "Schools without Failure" at PLU.
"M" St. Tickets 50 cents. Food, East void Aud. 3:30p.m.
dancing, martial arts.

special

3.99

BTBII·s 81TS
MOTHER HAS CLEANED OUT HER
CUPBOARDS ... AND HER HALF PRICE
SECTION BULGES WITH GOODIES
-TRULY-

11:30 to 7:00
Monday thru Friday
Closed Weekends

PAn EDDIE'S
FOR SALE-35mm CAMERA
EXAKTA SINGLE LENS+
TELEPHOTO
4 FREE
ROLLS OF COLOUR FILM
CALL 866-5058 eves.

CIASSIPIED·
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Media
cpj0030.pdf